Katie Doherty
17 February 2016Authors
Are you sick of corporate ice-breakers? Frustrated by the increasing casualisation of the workforce? Being crushed by the nightmare that is late-stage capitalism? Then The Conference, from HomeBrand Comedy, might be just the show for you!
2019 Victorian Biodiversity Conference Liveblog
In 2008, humans became a majority urban species for the first time. Today, up to 54 per cent of people live in cities, and that number is only set to rise. Climate change will impact the cities and towns we live in—many urban areas will have to change significantly, and rapidly, in order to withstand the pressures of increasing dangerous weather events, heat waves, and other climatic dangers.
Why The Planet Needs You To Get Rowdy
Katie Doherty on our political obligation to be rude
Overpopulation: Other People’s Problem
Katie Doherty looks at overpopulation
Jason Reitman’s new film Tully is an extraordinary and sensitive portrayal of the difficulties of motherhood in the modern age.
Breaking: Climate Change Still A Thing
Katie Doherty on the 24-hour news cycle
Can an Individual’s Choice Make a Difference in the Face of Global Warming?
Katie Doherty on an individual’s choice in the face of global warming
Katie Doherty explains the issues with the potential solution to climate change
AntigoneX is an odd beast. Probably we should have anticipated this—the Midsumma Festival isn’t generally the place for traditional theatre. But queering a classic Greek play, through the lens of modern Australian politics, made for something deeply entertaining but also utterly baffling.
This is not an article criticising the media young people choose to consume.
“And Lord, you’ve given her this assignment. Father, I’d just ask that you would touch her heart as she’s writing it, Lord, that she would hear from you, that she would say what you want her to say, Lord.”
Review – Laura Davis: Cake in the Rain
How to be a responsible tourist.
Night Vale turns the everyday into a horror story, which doesn’t seem like something that would make an already-anxious person feel better about the world they live in. So why are they drawn to it?
Words are important. They can even be lifesaving. So please, stop trying to take them away.
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