Kate Moss says she doesn't have 'good memories' from infamous Calvin Klein shoot with Mark Wahlberg
Kate Moss says she doesn't have 'good memories' from infamous Calvin Klein shoot with Mark Wahlberg
Video transcript
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Having sustainability front of mind may be part of the new normal many Australians are living following the onset of the pandemic, research shows.The lockdowns that confined millions of people to their homes and close communities caused many to make more considered day-to-day choices, the University of Queensland research suggests.
Aldi shoppers have been warned about a new scam currently circulating on Facebook. Here's what you need to know.
A Melburnian accused of creating intrusive spyware as a 15-year-old and then selling it to domestic violence perpetrators and other criminals has faced court.Police allege the now 24-year-old man created the remote access trojan (RAT) named Imminent Monitor which let perpetrators control victims' computers, steal personal information, and turn on their webcams and microphones.
Jacinda Ardern has been accused of a cover-up by suspended Labour MP Gaurav Sharma in an explosive interview likely to cause more pain for the first-term parliamentarian.Dr Sharma now faces party expulsion next week, with the prime minister's office confirming the caucus would re-visit his partyroom membership at its next meeting.
An urgent warning has been issued to Aussie parents trying to heat their homes after an incident that could have had a tragic outcome. Find out what happened here.
A single moment of inattention meant a much loved Victorian man lost his life and his newborn daughter lost the chance to know her father.Another much loved man, a father with a daughter the same age, will spend the rest of his life in grief and remorse knowing he caused that.
Ousted Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi has testified in a prison courtroom in the capital for the first time in her official secrets case, a legal official said.Suu Kyi, who has been detained since the military ousted her government last year, is being tried in Naypyitaw with Australian economist Sean Turnell and three former Cabinet members on the same charge, which is punishable by up to 14 years in prison.
Wildfires raging in the forests of eastern Algeria have killed at least 37 people and wounded 161 others, the civil protection department of the North African country said Thursday.Most of the victims were reported in the wilaya, or region, of El Tarf, near the northern Algeria-Tunisian border, where 34 people were found dead.
Photo by David NewheiserCycling once made me feel free unlike anything else. I loved the sensation of slicing through the air, flying past pedestrians and cars stalled in traffic. Where I live (in Melbourne’s inner north), the best way to get around is by bike. One sunny Sunday in March last year, my partner and I set off to explore the city. As I approached an intersection near our home, I felt some fear, as I always did with cars nearby. Out of the corner of my eye I watched an SUV driving alo
Former Seven Network sports journalist Josh Massoud has lost a defamation appeal over reports he was fired after threatening to slit a junior colleague's throat.Massoud sued over publications on his suspension and later dismissal after phoning reporter Jack Warren saying: "If you weren't so young, I'd come up there and rip your head off and s*** down your throat.
The woman stole the rifle from the back of the car before shooting at officers and a civilian.
Australians will have greater choice of electric vehicles as the federal government encourages more into the low-emitting cars.The government will also take action on dirty car emissions by introducing national fuel standards for manufacturers after a consultation period.
The Western Australian government admits it failed to meaningfully implement school attendance plans recommended following child suicides in the state's north.Education Minister Sue Ellery has apologised after an inquiry found serious deficiencies in the planning, implementation and oversight of the plans for students in Halls Creek who were identified as being at severe attendance risk.
Infrastructure and technology improvements and more driver training and education will be considered in a meeting of key stakeholders to improve safety on Adelaide's South Eastern Freeway.Next week's meeting comes after a shocking incident last month when an out-of-control truck smashed into multiple cars at an intersection at the base of the roadway, injuring nine people.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is being urged to make two key changes to how ministers are appointed in the wake of the fallout from Scott Morrison's secret appointments.Mr Morrison took on the health, finance, treasury, home affairs, industry, science, energy and resources portfolios between March 2020 and May 2021.
From merchandise placement to music, there are several tricks used in supermarkets to ensure you spend more time and money in store.
Land has been donated at the request of Clive Palmer's children to the family of Gold Coast mother-of-three Kelly Wilkinson who died allegedly at the hands of her ex-partner.Brian Earl Johnston has been charged with murdering the 27-year-old whose burnt body was found in the backyard of her home in April 2021.
NSW Chief Health Officer Kerry Chant will join a team of delegates visiting Israel for a high-level information exchange on managing the COVID-19 pandemic.Fifteen Australian public health experts and clinicians will meet next month with counterparts from Israel's health and foreign affairs ministries along with leading academics to discuss ongoing handling of the viral disease.
Former prime minister Scott Morrison informed parliament after the 2019 election that ministers may be sworn to administer other portfolios without it being noted on the official list.Mr Morrison is facing questions over his secret swearing-in to five portfolios - finance, treasury, health, home affairs and resources - between March 2020 and May 2021.
UnsplashAs the cut-off for the government’s consultation on a National Cultural Policy (NCP) approaches, thousands in the sector are putting the finishing touches to their three-page submissions. These are directed around “five pillars” drawn from Creative Australia, the national cultural policy announced in the last months of the Gillard regime, but ignored by the Abbott, Turnbull and Morrison governments thereafter. Coalition arts ministers showed little interest in cultural policy. Over the l