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The day prior to the concert, organisers announced a partnership with YouTube for the entire concert to be streamed live on their platform. [4] Hosted by radio presenter Bridget Hustwaite, the concert featured performances from Angus & Julia Stone, Briggs, Gang of Youths, Jack River, Ruby Fields, Tash Sultana, and Thelma Plum. [4]
The debate on "African gangs" in Melbourne was a key part in the Victorian Liberal Party's campaign for the 2018 state election under then-Opposition Leader Matthew Guy. [ 47 ] [ 48 ] [ 49 ] Criminologists and the police commissioners of Melbourne say that episodes of youth criminality occurring in Melbourne do not amount to "gang activity" or ...
Gang Postcode(s) Notes and references 21 District 2161 21 District is a drill rap group and postcode gang that has a major rivalry with Onefour, both the drill group Onefour and the gang NF14. The gang is an alliance of the three subgangs: the IWB, the KVT and Proper 60. The alliance was formed due to a mutual rivalry with Onefour. [74]
At least seven people were hurt Saturday when a loud noise sparked a mass panic at a Central Park concert. Global panic! Concert goers injured as scores run from phantom gunshot: police
The Rocks Push was a notorious larrikin gang which dominated the area from the 1800s to the end of the 1900s. The gang was engaged in running warfare with other larrikin gangs of the time such as the Straw Hat Push, the Glebe Push, the Argyle Cut Push, the Forty Thieves from Surry Hills, and the Gibb Street Mob.
Oz for Africa was an Australian concert held on 13 July 1985 at the Sydney Entertainment Centre. It was organised by Bill Gordon who also organised the EAT Concert held at the Myer Music Bowl in Melbourne at the end of January 1985. That event was televised nationally on Channel Nine. Over $1million was raised in the accompanying telethon.
[31] [32] The debate around so-called "African gangs" was highly racialised and resulted in many examples of racist discourse on social media, leading Anthony Kelly, executive officer of Melbourne's Flemington and Kensington Community Legal Centre, to describe it as a "racialised moral panic". [31]
The film was directed by Jeffrey Levy-Hinte, who served as the editor on the 1996 documentary When We Were Kings, which also contains selections of concert footage from the festival. [ 1 ] In 2017 a compilation album called Zaïre 74: The African Artists was released, which collected performances by Zairian artists and Miriam Makeba.