Frontline: Season 1

1994
Poster for Frontline: Season 1

Classic Australian satire of television current affairs programmes and reporting.

Where to watch Frontline: Season 1

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Frontline: Season 1 episodes

Episode 1.1

The Soufflé Rises

Frontline presenter Mike Moore wants to shed his image as... More the nice guy of current affairs, and tries to raise his status by interviewing people perceived to be soft targets, such as Dr. John Hewson, (not long after the infamous Birthday Cake Interview). Meanwhile, reporters Brooke Vandenberg and Martin DiStasio attempt to deal with more important matters.

Episode 1.2

The Desert Angel

This is an episode of series one of Frontline, which... More first aired in 1994.When a beautiful young aid worker is found alive after a month missing in the desert, Brian (Bruno Lawrence) and the Frontline team get into a bidding war with Channel Nine for the interview. Elsewhere, Brooke's interview with Pat Cash has the team gossiping about their relationship.

Episode 1.3

City of Fear

Frontline are accused of being sensationalist after they link two... More unrelated murders to a mythical serial killer. Meanwhile, Mike is confused over his fan mail

Episode 1.4

She's Got the Look

When Brian hires an attractive sports star because he likes... More her, the team (especially Emma)'s moral values come into play.

EPISODE 1.5

The Siege

A gunman holding his children hostage is the source of... More Frontline's latest story. When Mike succeeds in negotiating with the gunman, he becomes a hero. Until, a few weeks later, the consequences of the action arrive...

EPISODE 1.6

Playing the Ego Card

Mike is looking to gain credibilty, so he travels to... More Bougainville to do a study on civil war. Back home, the group enjoy his absence and Brooke becomes host.

EPISODE 1.7

We Ain't Got Dames

This is an episode of series one of Frontline, which... More first aired in 1994.With the show losing female viewers, Brian and Emma attempt to tailor the show to a stereotypical women's market. Mike, meanwhile, attempts to get a serious story on migrant textile workers on the air, while also trying to have 'Friday Night Funnyman' Elliot Rhodes fired, and film a new promo for the network.

EPISODE 1.8

The Art of Gentle Persuasion

Mike is planning a story but the others convince him... More to do a so-called expose on table-top dancing. When a crocodile victim's husband won't give a story, Marty goes to extreme lengths to get one.

EPISODE 1.9

The Invisible Man

A hidden camera story for Brooke backfires while Mike... More tries to fix up his low profile and the cameramen get an eyeful of Brooke.

EPISODE 1.10

Add Sex and Stir

This is an episode of series one of Frontline, which... More first aired in 1994.When a woman is dropped from an (unnamed) Australian sport team, she thinks it is because she's not a lesbian. Brooke takes the story, and attempts to transform it into a hit, but in the process ignites hatred from the sporting community. Meanwhile, Emma attempts to get Marty to take his holiday time.

EPISODE 1.11

Smaller Fish to Fry

Mike does an exclusive case that could ""get"" some of... More the country's top businessmen, and puts his job on the line at the same time.

EPISODE 1.12

Judge and Jury

Brooke does a series on a priest accused of rape... More and Mike goes up against cross-network promotion. During a story, Marty unwittingly wipes out an entire genus of butterfly.

EPISODE 1.13

This Night of Nights

This is an episode of series one of Frontline, which... More first aired in 1994.When a charity loses thousands of dollars, they ask the media to keep it quiet for the sake of their reputation. Brian and Marty, however, decide to go ahead with the story. Elsewhere, Mike and Brooke prepare for the Logie Awards, but Mike finds himself the only one without a date. This is Bruno Lawrence's last episode. He died before season 2 began filming. In the story it was explained at the start of season 2 that his character, Brian, had been fired off-screen.

Frontline: Season 1 | Details

Genre
Comedy
Country of origin
Australia