This weekend features theatre productions, jazz performances, visual arts exhibitions, orchestral works, flamenco and guided cultural experiences, alongside long-running stage works and gallery exhibitions spanning multiple months.
Mona Verdour Rock Choir
30 April – 18 June 2026 | Southside Uniting Church, Yeronga Find out more
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A choral performance series blending rock-inspired arrangements with ensemble vocal works.
Peter Hudson ‘Not Dark Yet’
19 May – 13 June 2026 | Mitchell Fine Art, Fortitude Valley Find out more
A visual arts exhibition featuring works by Peter Hudson presented at Mitchell Fine Art.
Grimm – Tales From the Brothers Grimm
22 May – 13 June 2026 | Cremorne Theatre, Queensland Performing Arts Centre (QPAC), South Brisbane Find out more
A contemporary theatre adaptation reimagining traditional Grimm fairy tales for the stage.
Six Characters in Search of an Author
23 May – 6 June 2026 | Ad Astra – Galaxy, Petrie Terrace Find out more
A theatrical production exploring identity and storytelling through a reinterpretation of a classic work.
Melody Graves & The Hokum Redemption – Red Hot Swinging Jazz
5 June 2026 | The Ruby Jazz Club, Fortitude Valley Get Tickets
A live jazz performance featuring swing and hot jazz styles from Melody Graves & The Hokum Redemption.
HER – Triple Bill
5 – 6 June 2026 | QUT Gardens Theatre, Brisbane City Get Tickets
HER – Triple Bill presents a contemporary theatre program performed across two nights.
The Jazz Room: A Journey to the Heart of New Orleans
6 June 2026 | Grand on Ann, Brisbane City Get Tickets
A jazz performance inspired by New Orleans musical traditions and ensemble arrangements.
Brisbane Street Art & Small Bars Tour
6 June 2026 | Burnett Lane, Brisbane City Find out more
A guided walking tour exploring street art installations and small bar venues in the city centre.
Macbeth
6 – 21 June 2026 | Playhouse, Queensland Performing Arts Centre (QPAC), South Brisbane Get Tickets
A contemporary staging of Shakespeare’s Macbeth at QPAC.
Arte Kanela Flamenco
7 June 2026 | Underground Theatre, Brisbane Powerhouse, New Farm Get Tickets
A live flamenco performance showcasing traditional Spanish dance and music.
Cameraholics Annual Photographic Extravaganza
7 June 2026 | Albion Peace Centre, Windsor Find out more
An annual photography exhibition featuring works from Cameraholics members and contributors.
Bands in Parks: Once Upon a Symphony
7 June 2026 | Brisbane City Hall, Brisbane City Find out more
A family-friendly orchestral performance presented as part of the Bands in Parks program.
Beetlejuice the Musical
7 June 2026 – 2 August 2026 | Lyric Theatre – Queensland Performing Arts Centre (QPAC), South Brisbane Get Tickets
A large-scale musical theatre production running for an extended season at QPAC.
Across the weekend, audiences can experience theatre, jazz, flamenco, visual arts, exhibitions and guided cultural tours, with a mix of contemporary stage works, long-running productions and one-off cultural events across Brisbane venues.
This weekend includes family markets, outdoor movies, live music performances, book events and community activities, with highlights including the Carseldine Wonderland Twilight Markets, St Joseph’s Bracken Ridge Fete and Peter and the Wolf.
Movie Night 2026: Dr Seuss’ Classic, The Lorax
5 June 2026 | Prince of Peace Lutheran Church, Everton Park Find out more
Families can enjoy an outdoor screening of Dr Seuss’ classic The Lorax as part of a community movie night.
Teen Chill Club
5 June 2026 | Little Village Qld, Moorooka Find out more
Teen Chill Club offers a social activity space designed for young people to relax and connect.
Carseldine Wonderland Twilight Markets
6 June 2026 | The Carseldine Farmers & Artisan Markets, Carseldine Find out more
The twilight markets feature food, market stalls and family-friendly entertainment at Carseldine.
Gardenia Early Learning Ellen Grove Open Day
6 June 2026 | Gardenia Early Learning, Ellen Grove Find out more
Gardenia Early Learning hosts an open day for families to explore the centre and its programs.
Indian Night Market
6 June 2026 | Mt Gravatt Showgrounds, Mount Gravatt Find out more
The Indian Night Market features food stalls, shopping and cultural experiences across the evening.
Jan Powers Farmers Markets
6 June 2026 | Little Bayside Park, Manly Find out more
The Jan Powers Farmers Markets return with fresh produce, artisan goods and food vendors by the bayside.
Free Movies in the Park: The Mask
6 June 2026 | Little Bayside Park, Manly Find out more
A free outdoor screening of The Mask will take place at Little Bayside Park as part of the Movies in the Park series.
Peter and the Wolf
6 June 2026 | Queensland Symphony Orchestra Studio, South Brisbane Get Tickets
Peter and the Wolf brings a family-friendly musical performance to the Queensland Symphony Orchestra Studio.
Shelf Lovers’ Storytime
6 June 2026 | Shelf Lovers, Holland Park West Find out more
Shelf Lovers hosts a storytime session for children, featuring books and family-friendly activities.
St Joseph’s Bracken Ridge Fete 2026
6 June 2026 | St Joseph’s Catholic Primary School, Bracken Ridge Find out more
St Joseph’s Bracken Ridge Fete returns with rides, entertainment, stalls and community activities for families.
Bands in Parks: Tutus and Tiaras
7 June 2026 | Brisbane Botanic Gardens, Mt Coot-tha Find out more
This family-friendly Bands in Parks event features live music in the gardens with a Tutus and Tiaras theme.
A free pop-up disco combines skating and music as part of a Sunday sunset community event.
Kid – Book Launch with Peter Carnavas & Gus Gordon
7 June 2026 | Where The Wild Things Are Bookshop, West End Find out more
Authors Peter Carnavas and Gus Gordon appear for a book launch event celebrating Kid at an independent bookshop.
From outdoor films and twilight markets to storytime sessions and live family entertainment, the weekend program includes a mix of community events, performances and activities suited to different age groups.
This weekend features major touring acts, indie performances, live comedy and electronic music, led by Ball Park Music’s two-night run, Urzila Carlson’s encore comedy show, Notion (UK) and international rock act Escape The Fate.
Ball Park Music
5 – 6 June 2026 | The Tivoli, Fortitude Valley Get Tickets
Ball Park Music returns for a two-night run, bringing the Australian indie band’s live catalogue to The Tivoli.
Danny Brown
5 June 2026 | The Princess Theatre, Woolloongabba Get Tickets
US rapper Danny Brown performs a one-night show, bringing his alternative hip-hop style to Brisbane audiences.
Teletech 009
5 June 2026 | The Fortitude Music Hall, Fortitude Valley Get Tickets
TELETECH 009 brings an electronic music event to The Fortitude Music Hall with live DJ performances.
Mid Drift brings the Good at Avoiding Tour to Brisbane with a live performance at The Triffid.
Elton John Experience
6 June 2026 | Blue Pacific Showroom, Kedron–Wavell, Chermside Book Now
A tribute performance celebrating the music of Elton John takes place at Kedron–Wavell.
Bron Lewis: Chaos
6 – 7 June 2026 | Powerhouse Theatre, Brisbane Powerhouse, New Farm Get Tickets
Bron Lewis presents Chaos, with comedy performances across two nights.
Chanel Beads
7 June 2026 | The Brightside, Fortitude Valley Get Tickets
Chanel Beads performs a live show at The Brightside as part of a touring performance.
Escape The Fate
7 June 2026 | The Tivoli, Fortitude Valley Get Tickets
US rock band Escape The Fate performs a one-night show at The Tivoli as part of its tour.
Freya Skye – Stars Align Tour
7 June 2026 | The Fortitude Music Hall, Fortitude Valley Get Tickets
Freya Skye brings the Stars Align Tour to Brisbane with a live performance.
Kae Tempest
7 June 2026 | The Princess Theatre, Woolloongabba Find out more
Kae Tempest performs live, combining spoken word and music in a one-night performance.
Across the weekend, audiences can choose from indie rock, electronic sets, tribute entertainment, hip-hop and stand-up comedy, with both established Australian names and international touring acts appearing across local venues.
From returning fan-favourite series to new docuseries and international dramas, this week’s streaming lineup spans Netflix, Disney+, Apple TV and Prime Video with a strong mix of crime, sport, animation and prestige storytelling.
A returning crime-comedy series blending family dynamics with high-stakes criminal mishaps, continuing its fast-paced and irreverent tone into a new season.
A documentary exploring legal battles, public perception and the legacy surrounding one of music’s most controversial figures.
This week’s streaming slate delivers a strong mix of returning series and new originals, balancing crime drama, animation, sport storytelling and documentary features across all major platforms.
From intriguing new releases and blockbuster holdovers to stylish arthouse cinema at GOMA, Brisbane screens offer something for every kind of moviegoer this week. New dramas and thrillers arrive alongside major crowd-pleasers including Star Wars: The Mandalorian and Grogu and The Devil Wears Prada 2, while GOMA delivers an unmissable lineup of psychologically rich cult classics.
NEW RELEASES
H is for Hawk
28 May 2026 | Bayside Cinemas (Wynnum), Cineplex (Balmoral), Dendy Cinemas (Coorparoo, Portside – Hamilton), Event Cinemas (Brisbane City, Carindale, Chermside, Indooroopilly, Mount Gravatt, Springfield Central), Five Star Cinemas (Graceville, New Farm), HOYTS (Stafford), Palace Barracks Brisbane, Palace James St Cinema
A moving literary adaptation blending grief, memory and the healing power of nature. This reflective drama is set to appeal to audiences seeking emotionally resonant storytelling.
Backrooms
28 May 2026 | Bayside Cinemas (Wynnum), Cinebar Rosalie Village, Cineplex (Balmoral, Redbank, South Bank), Dendy Cinemas (Coorparoo, Portside – Hamilton), Event Cinemas (Brisbane City, Carindale, Chermside, Indooroopilly, Mount Gravatt, Springfield Central), Five Star Cinemas (Brisbane City, New Farm, Red Hill), HOYTS (Stafford, Sunnybank), Palace Barracks Brisbane, Palace James St Cinema, Reading Cinemas (Jindalee, Newmarket)
Internet horror culture comes to the big screen in this unsettling psychological thriller inspired by the viral urban myth. Expect eerie liminal spaces, escalating dread and a distinctly modern nightmare.
Power Ballad
28 May 2026 | Angelika Cinemas (Woolloongabba), Cinebar Rosalie Village, Cineplex (Balmoral, Redbank, South Bank), Dendy Cinemas (Coorparoo, Portside – Hamilton), Event Cinemas (Brisbane City, Carindale, Chermside, Indooroopilly, Mount Gravatt, Springfield Central), Five Star Cinemas (New Farm), HOYTS (Stafford, Sunnybank), Palace Barracks Brisbane, Palace James St Cinema, Reading Cinemas (Jindalee, Newmarket)
Music, romance and comedy collide in this crowd-pleasing release centred on ambition and second chances. Fans of feel-good cinema with memorable soundtracks may find plenty to enjoy.
STILL SHOWING
Finding Emily
Angelika Cinemas (Woolloongabba), Bayside Cinemas (Wynnum), Event Cinemas (Brisbane City, Carindale, Chermside, Indooroopilly, Mount Gravatt), HOYTS (Stafford, Sunnybank), Palace James St Cinema, Reading Cinemas (Jindalee, Newmarket), United Cinemas Eldorado
A heartfelt drama continuing to attract audiences with its emotional storytelling and character-driven performances. Expect a reflective and intimate cinema experience.
Michael
Angelika Cinemas (Woolloongabba), Bayside Cinemas (Wynnum), Cinebar Rosalie Village, Cineplex (Redbank), Dendy Cinemas (Coorparoo, Portside – Hamilton), Event Cinemas (Brisbane City, Carindale, Chermside, Indooroopilly, Mount Gravatt, Springfield Central), Five Star Cinemas (Brisbane City, Graceville, New Farm, Red Hill), HOYTS (Stafford, Sunnybank), Palace James St Cinema, Reading Cinemas (Jindalee, Newmarket), United Cinemas Eldorado
This major music biopic continues to draw strong interest with its dramatic retelling of a cultural icon’s rise, challenges and enduring legacy.
Mortal Kombat II
Cineplex (Redbank, South Bank), Event Cinemas (Brisbane City, Chermside, Indooroopilly, Mount Gravatt, Springfield Central), HOYTS (Stafford, Sunnybank), Reading Cinemas (Jindalee, Newmarket), United Cinemas Eldorado
Action fans can expect larger-scale battles, returning favourites and heightened stakes in this explosive video game adaptation sequel.
Obsession
Cinebar Rosalie Village, Cineplex (Redbank, South Bank), Dendy Cinemas (Coorparoo), Event Cinemas (Brisbane City, Carindale, Chermside, Indooroopilly, Mount Gravatt, Springfield Central), Five Star Cinemas (Brisbane City, New Farm, Red Hill), HOYTS (Stafford, Sunnybank), Palace Barracks Brisbane, Palace James St Cinema, Reading Cinemas (Newmarket), United Cinemas Eldorado
A tense psychological drama that leans into mystery and emotional complexity. Stylish filmmaking and simmering suspense make this one for thriller enthusiasts.
Passenger
Bayside Cinemas (Wynnum), Cineplex (Redbank, South Bank), Event Cinemas (Brisbane City, Carindale, Chermside, Indooroopilly, Mount Gravatt, Springfield Central), Five Star Cinemas (Brisbane City, New Farm, Red Hill), HOYTS (Stafford, Sunnybank), Palace James St Cinema, United Cinemas Eldorado
This gripping drama blends suspense with emotional stakes, offering audiences a tightly paced story built around secrets and survival.
Project Hail Mary
Cinebar Rosalie Village, Dendy Cinemas (Coorparoo), Event Cinemas (Chermside, Indooroopilly, Mount Gravatt), Five Star Cinemas (Brisbane City, Red Hill), HOYTS (Stafford), Palace Barracks Brisbane, Palace James St Cinema, Reading Cinemas (Newmarket), United Cinemas Eldorado
Science fiction takes centre stage in this ambitious adaptation packed with high-concept ideas, humour and interstellar problem-solving.
Star Wars: The Mandalorian and Grogu
Angelika Cinemas (Woolloongabba), Bayside Cinemas (Wynnum), Cinebar Rosalie Village, Cineplex (Redbank, South Bank), Dendy Cinemas (Coorparoo, Portside – Hamilton), Event Cinemas (Brisbane City, Carindale, Chermside, Indooroopilly, Mount Gravatt, Springfield Central), Five Star Cinemas (Brisbane City, Graceville, New Farm, Red Hill), HOYTS (Stafford, Sunnybank), Palace Barracks Brisbane, Palace James St Cinema, Reading Cinemas (Jindalee, Newmarket), United Cinemas Eldorado
The galaxy far, far away returns to cinemas with one of the year’s biggest family-friendly adventures, blending action, heart and fan-favourite characters.
The Devil Wears Prada 2
Angelika Cinemas (Woolloongabba), Bayside Cinemas (Wynnum), Cinebar Rosalie Village, Cineplex (Balmoral, Redbank, South Bank), Dendy Cinemas (Coorparoo, Portside – Hamilton, Powerhouse – New Farm), Event Cinemas (Brisbane City, Carindale, Chermside, Indooroopilly, Mount Gravatt, Springfield Central), Five Star Cinemas (Brisbane City, Graceville, New Farm, Red Hill), HOYTS (Stafford, Sunnybank), Palace Barracks Brisbane, Palace James St Cinema, Reading Cinemas (Jindalee, Newmarket), United Cinemas Eldorado
Fashion, ambition and sharp humour return in the highly anticipated sequel, offering glamour and workplace drama with contemporary flair.
The Sheep Detectives
Angelika Cinemas (Woolloongabba), Bayside Cinemas (Wynnum), Cinebar Rosalie Village, Cineplex (Balmoral, Redbank), Dendy Cinemas (Coorparoo, Portside – Hamilton), Event Cinemas (Brisbane City, Chermside, Indooroopilly, Mount Gravatt, Springfield Central), Five Star Cinemas (Graceville, New Farm, Red Hill), HOYTS (Stafford, Sunnybank), Palace Barracks Brisbane, Palace James St Cinema, Reading Cinemas (Jindalee, Newmarket), United Cinemas Eldorado
Families can settle in for a charming mystery adventure packed with humour, quirky characters and plenty of woolly detective work.
GOMA
Possession
29 May 2026
One of cult cinema’s most feverish psychological horror films arrives at GOMA for a rare big-screen screening. Intensely emotional and deeply unsettling, it remains an unforgettable viewing experience.
Persona
30 May 2026
Ingmar Bergman’s landmark psychological masterpiece explores identity, silence and fractured human connection with hypnotic precision. A rare opportunity to experience one of cinema’s most influential films theatrically.
Mulholland Drive
30 May 2026
David Lynch’s enigmatic Hollywood dreamscape continues to captivate audiences with its mystery, beauty and haunting atmosphere. Widely regarded as one of the defining films of the 21st century.
Whether you’re chasing blockbuster spectacle, intimate drama or daring arthouse cinema, Brisbane’s big screens are packed with options this week. From cult classics at GOMA to major franchise favourites, there is no shortage of reasons to head to the movies.
If you are looking for art exhibitions, theatre performances, classical music, film screenings and live cultural experiences this weekend, there are immersive installations, stage productions, orchestral works, jazz performances and curated showcases taking place across galleries, theatres and performance venues. The program includes contemporary theatre, live music collaborations, film festivals and visual arts presentations.
Artist in Residence: Martin Edge
27 April – 12 July 2026 | Museum of Brisbane, Brisbane City Find out more
A long-running residency presenting an evolving exhibition of works developed on-site, exploring contemporary artistic practice and visual storytelling.
Eat Slay Zombie
14 – 30 May 2026 | La Boite Theatre, Kelvin Grove Get Tickets
A theatrical production blending dark comedy and contemporary stage performance across a limited seasonal run.
Six Characters in Search of an Author
14 May – 6 June 2026 | Ad Astra – Galaxy, Petrie Terrace Get Tickets
A stage adaptation exploring metafictional themes through a modern theatrical interpretation of a classic dramatic work.
Strings A Triple Bill
22 – 30 May 2026 | Playhouse, Queensland Performing Arts Centre (QPAC), South Brisbane Get Tickets
A curated triple-bill performance featuring string-based works presented in a contemporary classical format.
GRIMM
22 May – 13 June 2026 | Cremorne Theatre, Queensland Performing Arts Centre (QPAC), South Brisbane Get Tickets
A contemporary theatre production drawing on dark fairytale influences in a stylised stage performance.
Banff Mountain Film Festival 2026
26 – 30 May 2026 | Brisbane Powerhouse, New Farm Get Tickets
A curated film festival showcasing adventure, outdoor and documentary films from international filmmakers.
K Mak
29 May 2026 | Sir Thomas Brisbane Planetarium, Mt Coot–tha Get Tickets
A live audio-visual performance presented in a planetarium setting combining music and immersive projection.
Revolution Remixed
29 May 2026 | Concert Hall, Queensland Performing Arts Centre (QPAC), South Brisbane Get Tickets
A contemporary orchestral performance reinterpreting modern and classical themes through a live ensemble.
Wood & Craft Showcase 2026
29 – 31 May 2026 | Belmont Shooting Complex, Belmont Get Tickets
A multi-day showcase featuring woodworking, craft displays and artisan demonstrations across a curated exhibition space.
The Mojo Webb Quartet
30 May 2026 | Brisbane Jazz Club, Kangaroo Point Get Tickets
A live jazz performance featuring a quartet-led set of contemporary and traditional jazz compositions.
2026 Orchestral Visions: Rituals of the Street
31 May 2026 | GHD Auditorium – Advanced Engineering Building (49), St Lucia Get Tickets
An orchestral performance presenting contemporary classical works performed in a concert hall setting.
Joan Sutherland Spectacular – Grand Finale – 4MBS Festival of Classics 2026
31 May 2026 | Brisbane City Hall, Brisbane City Get Tickets
A classical music finale concert featuring orchestral and vocal performances as part of a curated festival program.
This weekend’s line-up includes art exhibitions, theatre productions, film festivals, orchestral performances and contemporary cultural showcases, spanning immersive installations through to live stage and music events across multiple artistic disciplines.
If you are looking for family events, community open days, children’s activities and educational experiences this weekend, there are immersive exhibitions, library programs, playgroups, outdoor community days and hands-on learning experiences taking place across multiple suburbs. The line-up includes early learning sessions, interactive museum programs and family-friendly community events.
Billy’s Buddies
24 April – 5 June 2026 | Carindale Recreation Reserve, Carindale / Whites Hill Reserve, Camp Hill Find out more
A recurring outdoor children’s activity program across multiple reserve locations focused on nature-based play and guided group activities.
Mini Museum Explorers
5 May – 9 June 2026 | Queensland Museum Kurilpa, South Brisbane Find out more
A multi-week interactive museum program for families featuring self-guided exploration and hands-on learning activities.
Kurilpa Community Childcare Playgroup
29 May 2026 | Kurilpa Community Child Care Centre, West End Find out more
A structured early childhood playgroup session designed for young children and caregivers, focused on social interaction and play-based learning activities.
A library-based early literacy program delivered across multiple locations, featuring songs, rhymes and shared reading activities for babies and caregivers.
First 5 Forever Toddler Time
29 May 2026 | West End Library, West End / Nundah Library, Nundah / Wynnum Library, Wynnum / Sandgate Library, Sandgate Find out more
An early learning program for toddlers and caregivers, including interactive storytelling, music and play-based learning activities.
Dinos Alive: An Immersive Experience
29 – 31 May 2026 | Fever Skygate – Exhibition and Immersive Experience Centre, Brisbane Airport Get Tickets
A multi-day immersive exhibition featuring large-scale dinosaur displays and interactive installations with timed entry sessions.
A community event showcasing cars and bikes in a family-friendly outdoor setting with vehicle displays and casual activities.
STEAM Sundays
31 May 2026 | Indooroopilly Library, Indooroopilly Find out more
A library-based science and learning program for children focused on science, technology, engineering, arts and mathematics activities.
Bub and Me Aqua
31 May 2026 | Mt Gravatt East Swimming Pool, Mt Gravatt East Get Tickets
A parent-and-baby water activity session focused on early water familiarisation and bonding in a pool environment.
This weekend’s line-up includes family events, community open days, early learning programs and interactive children’s activities, ranging from library sessions and park-based activities to immersive exhibitions and educational experiences.
If you are looking for live music, tribute shows, touring acts and indie performances this weekend, there are concerts, electronic performances, country music shows and alternative gigs taking place across multiple venues. The line-up includes international touring musicians, tribute performances and contemporary live music experiences.
Qld AI Festival 2026
28 – 29 May 2026 | Ovolo Brisbane, Fortitude Valley & Capri By Fraser, Brisbane City Find out more
Qld AI Festival 2026 is a multi-day event focused on artificial intelligence, with programming hosted across two venues. The festival spans talks, discussions and industry-focused sessions over two days.
Fonika the Latin American Rock Experience AU / NZ Tour 2026
Fonika brings its Latin American rock tour to Brisbane as part of its 2026 Australia and New Zealand run. The performance features live rock music influenced by Latin American styles.
Rochelle Jordan
29 May 2026 | Crowbar Brisbane, Fortitude Valley Get Tickets
Canadian artist Rochelle Jordan performs a Brisbane show as part of her Australian appearances. The event features contemporary R&B and electronic-influenced live music.
The Ultimate Chris Stapleton Tribute Show
29 May 2026 | Lefty’s Music Hall, Petrie Terrace Get Tickets
This tribute performance celebrates the music of Chris Stapleton through a live country music set. Audiences can expect a concert focused on Stapleton’s catalogue and style.
Sparks
30 May 2026 | Glasshouse Theatre – Queensland Performing Arts Centre (QPAC), South Brisbane Get Tickets
Sparks performs in Brisbane as part of its touring schedule. The show features the long-running art pop group’s live performance.
Morgan Evans – Steel Town Tour
30 May 2026 | The Fortitude Music Hall, Fortitude Valley Get Tickets
Morgan Evans brings the Steel Town Tour to Brisbane. The concert features live performances from the Australian country singer-songwriter’s catalogue.
Hermitude – The Eight Tour
30 May 2026 | The Tivoli, Fortitude Valley Get Tickets
Electronic duo Hermitude performs in Brisbane as part of The Eight Tour. The event features live electronic music and DJ-driven production.
Black Flag Australian Tour
30 May 2026 | Crowbar Brisbane, Fortitude Valley Get Tickets
Punk rock band Black Flag performs a Brisbane date on its Australian tour. The show features live punk and hardcore music.
Oren Ambarchi
30 May 2026 | Underground Theatre, Brisbane Powerhouse, New Farm Get Tickets
Experimental musician Oren Ambarchi performs a Brisbane show featuring avant-garde and instrumental sounds. The performance takes place at the Underground Theatre.
Divorced Dad Rock Night Brisbane
30 May 2026 | The Brightside, Fortitude Valley Get Tickets
Divorced Dad Rock Night Brisbane presents a themed live music event celebrating rock favourites. The night centres on well-known tracks associated with classic rock and alternative eras.
Matt Berninger
31 May 2026 | The Princess Theatre, Woolloongabba Get Tickets
Matt Berninger performs a Brisbane show as part of his touring schedule. The performance features music from the vocalist known for his work with alternative rock.
The Beta Band
31 May 2026 | The Tivoli, Fortitude Valley Get Tickets
The Beta Band performs in Brisbane on its Australian tour. The concert features indie and experimental rock performances.
Khamari performs a Brisbane show featuring contemporary R&B and alternative sounds. The event forms part of the artist’s touring appearances.
Tortoise
31 May 2026 | Crowbar Brisbane, Fortitude Valley Get Tickets
Tortoise performs a Brisbane date showcasing instrumental and post-rock music. The live show features the group’s experimental sound.
Forever Nu Across Australia 2026 Tour
31 May 2026 | The Paddo Tavern, Paddington Get Tickets
Forever Nu brings its Australian tour to Brisbane with a live music event centred on nu metal and alternative rock sounds.
This weekend’s line-up includes live music, tribute shows, touring acts and indie performances, ranging from country and electronic music to punk, rock and experimental live shows.
Gliders, leeches, opera in Winton and the stories that stitched Australia together
Macca began the morning with a confession.
He had walked out of a movie.
Not just any movie, but The Devil Wears Prada 2, lured in by a glowing review in The Australian by Nikki Gemmell. He should have known better, he reckoned. American films, he said, just did not do it for him the way French or Italian cinema could. Macca reckoned Anne Hathaway had overplayed it, Meryl Streep was there, and somewhere before the end, he found himself sitting in the foyer on his phone while everyone else stayed put.
It was, he said, the first movie he had ever walked out on.
A very Macca way to begin a Sunday.
Then the calls started, and Australia opened up.
Two schoolboys take to the sky
Mark rang from Mount Beauty, where he lives on the airfield and has been flying gliders for nearly 50 years.
His reason for calling was simple and unexpectedly heartening: two 16-year-old boys from the local school had just completed their first solo glider flights.
For Mark, that mattered.
When he learned to fly, young people were everywhere in the sport. Now, he said, gliding clubs are increasingly filled with older people. Seeing teenagers come through again felt like something worth celebrating.
Macca wanted to know whether gliding was really as safe as people claimed, or whether it was basically “a wing and a prayer”.
Mark laughed that off. The aircraft are properly controlled, three-axis machines like any other plane. At Mount Beauty they launch by winch rather than tow plane, making it cheaper and more accessible for younger learners. Students generally need somewhere between 20 and 40 flights before their first solo.
The real picture emerged when Mark described where all this happens: in the foothills of Mount Bogong, Victoria’s highest mountain, with spring flights over snow country.
By the end of the conversation, Macca — still suspicious of aircraft without engines — had half-promised to go up one day.
Thomas pedals the continent
Then came Thomas, calling from Ingham, in the middle of cycling around Australia.
Not an e-bike, he was quick to stress. No batteries.
A pushbike.
He had started in Perth in February and already covered about 7,300 kilometres. Ahead lay Cairns, Darwin, Broome and eventually the long road back.
Thomas is German, retired, and formerly worked for Volkswagen — not on the factory floor, as Macca first guessed, but as a development engineer who eventually became an executive.
Now he had swapped the automotive world for a bicycle and endless Australian roads.
Why Australia?
Because it was huge, varied and safe.
But what he loved most was not the scenery.
It was Australians.
People stopping to talk. The openness. The ease with which strangers became conversations.
For a man who had spent a career building cars, slowing down had become the real adventure.
Tony and Avril’s tropical horror story
Tony and Avril Ayling called from Hideaway Bay, where the south-east trades had finally eased after weeks of wind.
The original topic was underwater conditions, but the conversation took a sharp turn toward blood loss.
Unable to dive because of the weather, the pair had been walking instead.
The first trip took them through Conway National Park behind Airlie Beach, a rainforest hike complete with rudimentary camps, old forestry trails — and leeches.
Tony, in what he would later admit was a poor decision, wore sandals.
He ended up with about a dozen bites. By bedtime, his feet were still bleeding, so he put plastic bags over them to protect his sleeping bag.
Unfortunately, one leech had attached itself just before the bags went on.
By morning, the bag was full of blood and the leech, as Tony cheerfully described it, was “very fat and happy”.
Macca tried to shut the story down there.
Tony kept going.
There were also feral pigs around the campsite, grunting near the tent overnight and wallowing in yellow clay “beauty spas”.
That prompted Macca into one of his broader reflections about Australia’s pig problem — plague proportions, environmental destruction, agricultural risk, and the looming nightmare scenario if something like foot-and-mouth ever arrived.
Tony’s second walk was considerably less grotesque.
The newly opened Ngaro Track on Whitsunday Island took them around Whitehaven Beach and Hill Inlet over three days, with good camps, extraordinary views and — mercifully — no pigs.
Avril helped orient Macca geographically through the Whitsunday islands, and by the end of the call he was audibly making mental holiday plans.
Alice Springs and the last beanie hurrah
Phil rang from Alice Springs with an invitation.
The Beanie Festival, one of Central Australia’s more delightfully eccentric institutions, was coming up in June at the Araluen Arts Centre.
And it would be the last one.
Not because people had stopped loving it.
Quite the opposite.
The festival, founded by Jo Nixon and family decades ago, had grown from a small workshop into a wildly successful event selling thousands of beanies, tea cosies and assorted woollen creations each year.
But after 30 years, the organisers were understandably tired.
Phil hoped Macca might bring the show to Alice Springs for one last celebration.
Macca was immediately tempted.
He admitted he owned a couple of excellent beanies himself and described some creations as less wearable winter gear than actual works of art.
Alice in winter, beanies everywhere, perhaps an outside broadcast.
The seed was planted.
Winton turns on a weekend
Anita Salisbury rang from the veranda of the North Gregory Hotel in Winton, looking out over one of those glorious outback mornings that instantly make city listeners envious.
She had come from Monto with a group of about 50 people to support friend and artist Bradley Short, whose exhibition Under the Shade had opened at the Outback Regional Gallery at the Waltzing Matilda Centre.
The paintings focused on hats.
Not neat showroom hats.
Proper hats.
Sweated-through hats, cattle-yard hats, hats with stories and dents and years in them.
Anita explained that Bradley had asked her years earlier to help source hats with character, after being inspired by one worn by her husband.
The resulting cast of characters included cane farmers, bull riders, butchers, mango growers, backpackers and even a long-unsold relic from Searle’s Outback Store in Winton.
And because this was Winton, Graham Connors had casually appeared with a guitar and performed during the exhibition opening.
Anita had also driven in from Longreach and was still awestruck by the country.
Forage sorghum between Longreach and Winton. Vast plains. Late afternoon light. That unmistakable western Queensland sunset.
“It was an absolute pleasure to be an Australian,” she said.
And for once, that did not sound remotely sentimental.
Krista’s unforgettable gardening lesson
Krista from Inverell rang because Tony’s leech saga had stirred a memory.
Her story was worse.
A lifelong gardener, she described herself as someone incapable of seeing an interesting plant without wanting to bring a piece of it home.
After lunch one day, she spotted a tree covered in striking white flowers, snapped off a few cuttings, and carried them in her lap.
Hours later, she started itching.
Then she noticed tiny black dots all over her body.
At emergency, a visiting doctor initially suspected bed bugs.
Krista, firmly unimpressed by that theory, insisted they were baby ticks.
She was right.
Seventeen of them.
One lodged in her groin. Others across her chest. One embedded so awkwardly her GP later had to cut it out.
Macca sounded genuinely horrified.
Krista, on the other hand, told the story with the practical resilience of someone who has accepted that life occasionally becomes ridiculous.
And then, almost as an afterthought, she casually added another cautionary tale about taking a cutting in Port Macquarie, walking into unseen latticework, being knocked backwards, and breaking her right leg in two places.
Gardening, it seems, has become unexpectedly hazardous.
Teenie’s African tick expertise
Krista’s story prompted Teenie from South Gippsland to call.
She knew exactly what Krista was talking about.
In South Africa, where she travels regularly for conservation work through Wildlife ACT, the tiny ones are known as pepper ticks.
The larger ticks are easy enough to spot and remove.
The pepper ticks are another matter.
Tiny, stubborn, miserable little things.
Teenie spends weeks at a time in KwaZulu-Natal helping count endangered animals and contribute to field conservation work, preferring projects where the money directly supports wildlife rather than commercial tourism.
The accommodation is basic. The bush is remote. The wildlife extraordinary.
And yes, ticks are simply part of the deal.
Macca seemed equal parts fascinated and horrified.
Teenie, meanwhile, sounded like someone already planning her next trip.
Judy’s soy campaign gathers steam
Judy Plath from Bundaberg had become one of those recurring callers whose conversations reliably end with Macca either inspired or mildly depressed.
This time, both.
After their earlier discussion about Australian-grown soy milk, Judy reported some tangible results.
A café owner in Bundaberg had heard the segment and switched to Australian-made Vitasoy. Another café manager from the Gold Coast got in touch asking how to source it.
Judy could sense momentum.
A quiet little campaign was underway.
Then came the darker turn.
Macca had recently looked at a tin of baked beans claiming to be 47 per cent Australian made, and found himself baffled by what exactly that meant.
Judy, a navy bean agronomist, explained.
The beans themselves, she said, are imported.
Australia once had a thriving navy bean industry, especially around Kingaroy, dating back to the Second World War, when American troops stationed in Queensland helped drive demand for baked beans.
According to Judy, that industry is now gone.
Cheaper imports, she argued, won.
Even seed stock, she said, has effectively disappeared.
Macca groaned that every time Judy rang, she managed to depress him.
But Judy’s bigger point was serious.
Kingaroy has already lost peanuts and navy beans. The conversation about food security and domestic production is no longer abstract for communities that have watched industries quietly vanish.
A timely vaccination reminder
The program also revisited a conversation with Professor Michael Woodward from Melbourne, who had been speaking about vaccinations for older Australians.
Woodward, from Austin Hospital and the University of Melbourne, said vaccination remains one of the most effective public-health tools available, second only to clean drinking water in its overall impact.
His particular concern was older Australians missing out on newer protections.
RSV vaccines. Pneumonia vaccines. COVID boosters still relevant in aged care settings.
His message was straightforward: if older family members are not discussing vaccinations with their GP, they probably should be.
It was one of those practical public-service conversations that sit naturally among the more colourful storytelling.
Tom’s frustration with the budget
Tom called from Brunswick, near Bunbury, on his way to work at the port.
A stevedore by trade, he had switched the radio on, heard Macca, and decided to ring about the federal budget.
His frustration was measured rather than theatrical, which made it more compelling.
Tom’s concern centred on younger Australians trying to build wealth and eventually buy homes.
He argued that changes to capital gains arrangements would disproportionately hurt younger investors, while older Australians with established gains would largely be shielded.
But the broader emotion behind the call was unmistakable.
Inflation. Interest rates. Housing affordability. Raising a family. Watching the numbers become harder to make work.
He was not delivering a political talking point.
He sounded like someone genuinely trying to understand how the arithmetic of modern life had become so unforgiving.
Macca let him talk.
That was the right instinct.
Kelly’s awareness message — and Cole’s relief
Kelly called from Canberra, where Anna’s Walk for BEAT Bladder Cancer Australia was taking place as part of International Bladder Cancer Awareness Month.
A urologist working in research and education at UNSW, Kelly used the call to push a simple but important message.
Blood in the urine?
Get it checked.
Symptoms that keep being dismissed as recurring urinary tract infections?
Push for answers.
Kelly said bladder cancer is increasingly being diagnosed beyond its traditional older-male demographic.
Later, that message became intensely personal.
Cole from Turrella rang in to say the segment resonated with him.
After not feeling quite right, he had been referred through Hurstville Hospital, seen the right specialist quickly, and undergone surgery that week.
He was still awaiting biopsy results, but the immediate improvement in how he felt was dramatic.
The gratitude in his voice was unmistakable.
Then the conversation shifted.
Cole mentioned the earlier gliding call and proudly noted that his own teenage niece — fittingly named Amelia — was already doing solo flights and aiming to become a commercial pilot.
For a few moments, illness gave way entirely to possibility.
Antarctica, seafarers and the people who keep things moving
The sea ran through much of the latter part of the program.
Former Aurora Australis captain Murray Doyle reflected on repeated Antarctic voyages — the savage Southern Ocean crossings, the spectacle of moving through sea ice, and the strange beauty of watching Antarctica emerge while Andrea Bocelli played in the background.
He spoke like someone who had endured plenty but still missed it.
Once you had been to Antarctica, he said, you always wanted to return.
That memory triggered another call from Jeff in Port Pirie, who had gone south aboard the Nella Dan in the early 1970s.
His recollection of sleeping in violently rolling bunks sounded grim enough. But once the ship entered the sea ice, awe took over.
National service had unexpectedly helped take him there, via a role as a cook.
Macca, who often drifts into reflections about what younger Australians miss out on, mused that structured service of some kind could still open unexpected doors.
The maritime thread continued with Stella Maris national director Tony Cox.
Tony spoke about seafarers as the invisible workforce most Australians rarely think about until supply chains fail.
COVID had made their isolation stark.
Some crews remained trapped aboard vessels for many months, unable to step ashore, dependent on care packages, support and people willing to remember they existed.
It was a sobering reminder that modern convenience rests on workers most people never see.
Gary’s weekend rugby detour
Gary rang from country New South Wales after travelling with Eastwood Rugby for their annual away fixture in Cowra.
The real purpose of the call was simple: to tell listeners what a lovely town Cowra is.
That was enough to send Macca into memory mode.
As a younger man, he said, his band used to play Saturday nights at Eastwood Rugby Club.
Those evenings apparently involved post-match dances occasionally interrupted by enthusiastic lower-grade players forming impromptu scrums on the dance floor and flattening everyone.
Macca described it as fairly low-rent.
He also sounded delighted remembering it.
Gary’s point remained uncomplicated and sincere.
Cowra was worth the trip.
Sometimes that is enough for a call.
Karratha is booming — and Seedy is still de-cluttering
Seedy checked in from Karratha, where he said things were absolutely jumping.
A major fertiliser plant on the Burrup Peninsula. Solar developments. Construction camps full. Traffic building.
For someone who had watched the town evolve over decades, the pace was remarkable.
Seedy himself is retired after 44 years working up there, though retirement seems to involve plenty of tinkering.
He described himself as trying to “de-tinker” his shed so he could eventually move on.
That launched one of those charmingly sideways Macca conversations about clutter, junk, sheds, old habits, and the national inability to throw things away.
Macca described a place near home overflowing with old appliances, trailers and assorted rubbish.
Seedy, to his credit, defended the instinct a little.
People bring him things to fix.
Not everything should be thrown out.
Then the conversation swung back to truckies.
Without truck drivers, Seedy said plainly, the north would stop.
Macca agreed immediately.
It was one of those calls that wandered all over the place and somehow still made perfect sense.
KJ comes home from India
KJ from Blackburn South had just returned from five weeks in India.
His description was vivid.
Heat. Crowds. Extraordinary youth. Deep forests. Elephants. Chai at dawn. Huge social contrasts.
But what stayed with him most was what returning home clarified.
People overseas often ask what is special about Australia.
KJ’s answer was not scenery.
It was balance.
The chance to build a life with room in it.
And compassion.
The everyday kindness of nurses, health workers, ordinary Australians looking after one another.
Then came the line that stopped Macca in his tracks.
Dirty streams, KJ said, may flow into the sea, but they do not change the character of the sea.
Australia, in his eyes, was like that.
It could have sounded overcooked.
Instead, it landed beautifully.
Sharon walks the Cape to Cape
Sharon rang from Margaret River, standing outdoors somewhere along day four of the Cape to Cape Track.
She and her husband had recently retired early, specifically so they could tackle great walks.
The Overland Track in Tasmania was already behind them.
Now they were walking the 132-kilometre stretch from Cape Naturaliste to Cape Leeuwin.
Twenty kilometres or so a day, ocean beside them, snakes, kangaroos and sweeping coastal country.
The phone line was poor.
The picture was excellent.
Macca immediately slipped into that familiar mode where listeners’ adventures become his own imagined itineraries.
You could hear the longing.
Clyde ends the morning exactly right
Then came Clyde.
Seven years old. Nearly eight.
Calling from the car heading from Coonamble to Walgett for an under-eights rugby union match.
He played in the backs for the Coonamble Rams.
His horse was called Bronte.
Next week there were horse sports in Warren.
Life appeared to be arranged exactly as childhood should be.
Macca spoke to him with complete ease — asking about positions, match times, horses, the chance of rain.
No fuss.
No patronising.
Just a warm conversation with a boy on the way to footy.
And somehow that felt like the perfect ending.
Because after a morning that had included gliders, leeches, tropical pigs, art exhibitions, vaccination reminders, budget anxiety, bladder cancer awareness, Antarctic crossings, seafarers, Indian reflections and booming mining towns, the final emotional note belonged to a child heading off to play sport.
Which is exactly what Australia All Over does so well.
It reminds you that for all the scale, complexity and absurdity of the country, most people are simply getting on with life — one conversation at a time.
isclaimer: ‘Australia All Over’ is a program produced and broadcast by the ABC Local Radio Network and hosted by Ian McNamara. Brisbane Suburbs Online News has no affiliation with Ian McNamara, the ABC, or the ‘Australia All Over’ program. This weekly review is an independent summary based on publicly available episodes. All original content and recordings remain the property of the ABC. Our summaries are written in our own words and are intended for commentary and review purposes only. Readers can listen to the full episodes via the official ABC platforms.
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The Boroughs: Season 1
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