The ABC's 'Old People's Home for Teenagers' is back for another season, bringing together a group of seniors living in a retirement village with a group of local teenagers in the hope they will build much-needed connections and long-lasting bonds
In ABC's five-part series 'Back In Time For The Corner Shop', Annabel Crabb helps Carol and Peter Ferrone and their children Julian, Sienna and Olivia navigate the highs and lows of being shopkeepers through 150 years of Australian history.
In 'Old People’s Home for Teenagers', narrated by Annabel Crabb, audiences get to see if the power of an intergenerational program can also transform the lives of our most vulnerable young Australians – teenagers.
Endemol Shine Australia's Emmy and AACTA award-winning 'Old People’s Home for 4 Year Olds' will return to the ABC for a second season April 6, 8.30pm on ABC TV and iview.
So hefty is the ABC's slate in 2021, director entertainment and specialist Michael Carrington is positive audiences won't even realise that many of the broadcaster's shows faced shutdowns and delays during the pandemic.
"It's a show about shaming, the outrage in the media cycle and the audience's involvement in how that cycle perpetuates itself,"
Ludo Studio's vertical comedy 'Content' and Endemol Shine Australia's documentary 'Old People’s Home for 4 Year Olds', both ABC commissions, will fly the flag for Australia at this year's International Emmy Awards.
What happens when you take an ordinary 2020 family back in time 120 years to immerse themselves in five decades of Australian history? Over five episodes, join Annabel Crabb as she guides the Ferrone family back through history as they cook, eat, and live, from Australia’s Federation to the 1940s.