Tomorrow Tonight 2-4
Living Longer. Annabel, Charlie and Adam are joined by Jean Kittson and Peter Helliar to discuss whether a longer life is a better life and to wrestle with a world where humans could live to the ripe young age of 150.
Read moreLiving Longer. Annabel, Charlie and Adam are joined by Jean Kittson and Peter Helliar to discuss whether a longer life is a better life and to wrestle with a world where humans could live to the ripe young age of 150.
Read moreSuper Dinner Parties – Kim & Suong (VIC). It’s here! For the first time in MKR history, one team is asked to leave the table.
Read moreSplit into four teams across four benches, 12 contestants discover they have 75 minutes on the clock to create a dish using the ingredients from a particular layer of the balanced diet food pyramid.
Read moreBlind Auditions (3). The auditions roll on, with coaches Keith Urban, Rita Ora, Guy Sebastian and Jessica Mauboy keen to spot talent and the next champion.
Read moreCome along for the ride that plays like a real-life romantic comedy, and witness the promise of potential love when it goes well, and the hilariously awkward moments when it crashes and burns.
Read moreBuild that Tune. Teams must create a song title out of LEGO, and make their builds clear enough that a musical mystery guest can guess what song they have built without them saying a word.
Read moreBedrooms Revealed. The battle of the seagrass wallpaper heats up when the second bedrooms are revealed and the judges are divided on one room. Neale loves it, but Shaynna isn’t so keen and things heat up at Scotty’s HQ when Dea and Darren wield the power of the chalk.
Read moreExpert contestants compete to determine which subject will win Tom Gleeson’s Big Brass Mug: crime writer Agatha Christie, Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler, the musical Jesus Christ Superstar or online game Fortnite.
Read moreSuper Dinner Parties – Henry & Anna (TAS). Baton down the hatches for the blow up which leads to one team leaving the competition for good.
Read moreOn the eve of impending regime change, Shaun Micallef’s Mad as Hell returns to take this country by the throat and lead it on a merry dance.
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