LISTEN: Vale Derryn Hinch, The ISIS Bride Coming Home & The $20 Part That Paralysed Australia | Jeremy Cordeaux's Court of Public Opinion cover art

LISTEN: Vale Derryn Hinch, The ISIS Bride Coming Home & The $20 Part That Paralysed Australia | Jeremy Cordeaux's Court of Public Opinion

LISTEN: Vale Derryn Hinch, The ISIS Bride Coming Home & The $20 Part That Paralysed Australia | Jeremy Cordeaux's Court of Public Opinion

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Jeremy Cordeaux is back in the garage — nursing a cold and minus his radio voice — for a Court of Public Opinion that swings from the deeply personal to the deeply uncomfortable. At its heart is a warm, unguarded eulogy for Derryn Hinch, dead at 82. Jeremy knew him for decades: from La Bicyclette in Sydney when Hinch was the youngest editor of a major Australian newspaper, to hiring him for breakfast in Adelaide (where he famously couldn't get out of bed, even living next door to the station). The Human Headline, five marriages, more sackings than the Southern Aurora, jailed for naming paedophiles, a liver transplant that bought him fifteen more years — Jeremy remembers a charismatic, eccentric, deeply ambitious character, and signs off with a Sinatra line.

Elsewhere: the coordinated Shiite demonstrations across Australian capital cities and why news directors chose not to cover them; the return of alleged ISIS bride Hoden Abbey despite a lifted exclusion order and allegations she acted as a Sharia enforcer; Australians priced out of homes as rents climb and Hutt Street sees a 43% surge in demand; Australia sitting second-from-bottom of the OECD on productivity; and the Telstra outage that knocked out EFTPOS, transport and triple zero — proof, Jeremy argues, that a single $20 component can paralyse a country that's abolished cash and gone all-in on digital. Plus Bastille Day and this day in history.

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