With no journalists, the Fairfax city metros have finally become a single paper.
A decent night for MasterChef Australia gives Ten second sport.
The government has announced another $8.8 million for SBS to make up for the failure of the ad averaging bill. But it insists the bill is still just resting.
What an emotional roller-coaster these past 48 hours must have been for Ray Hadley.
Nine scrapes past Seven, while Q & A delivers its best episode of the year.
How do you turn a boring pre-budget speech by Scott Morrison into fun clickbait?
Why does a newspaper need subeditors? The front page of The Sydney Morning Herald holds a clue.
Masterchef serves up some sweet delicious ratings relief for the Ten network.
The Australian can't make up its mind. And Cory Bernardi has a problem with university education.
Fairfax New Zealand had hoped to merge with NZME, but the regulator has blocked the deal. That will likely mean redundancies and reduced printing for Fairfax's New Zealand assets.