エピソード

  • When Bosses Control Borders: The Hidden Power Shift in Immigration
    2026/04/08

    This episode uncovers a quiet but massive shift inside Australia’s immigration system—where power is moving away from governments and into the hands of employers. Once based on objective “hard skills,” migration is now increasingly driven by subjective traits like personality, attitude, and “cultural fit.”

    We explore how employer-sponsored visas reshape who gets into the country, why “soft skills” can act as proxies for compliance, and how temporary visa rules create extreme dependency on bosses.

    At its core, this episode asks a confronting question:
    Are modern immigration systems selecting the most skilled workers—or the most controllable ones?

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    21 分
  • The Obedience Economy: Why ‘Good Attitude’ Might Matter More Than Talent
    2026/04/08

    What if the most valuable skill in today’s global economy isn’t intelligence, creativity, or technical expertise—but obedience?

    This episode dives into the hidden mechanics of modern immigration systems and reveals how “soft skills” like attitude, loyalty, and cultural fit are reshaping who gets opportunities. Drawing on legal research and political commentary, we explore how employer-sponsored visas can reward compliance over capability.

    From visa rules that tie workers to a single employer, to hiring practices that prioritize personality over qualifications, we examine how power operates beneath the surface—and what it means for fairness, innovation, and the future of work.

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    50 分
  • Built by Policy: The Hidden Force Behind Australia’s Cities & How Visas Shape Australia’s Cities
    2026/04/08

    Look around any major city — the skyline, the density, the energy. It feels like the result of architecture and planning.

    But what if the real blueprint isn’t drawn by architects… but by visa policies?

    In this episode, we uncover how population systems quietly shape everything from where people live to how cities grow. From the legacy of the White Australia policy to today’s points-based system and temporary visa economy, we trace how government decisions have engineered the population — and in turn, the cities themselves.

    You’ll discover why Australia is one of the most urbanised nations on Earth, how incoming populations become the backbone of its economy, and the surprising role temporary visas play in keeping everything running.

    This isn’t just about the population coming in — it’s about the invisible system designing the world around you.

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    51 分
  • “Infinite Growth at Any Cost vs Finite Land: Australia’s Hidden Crisis & Why Australia’s Cities Can’t Keep Up”
    2026/04/08

    What happens when an economy built on endless growth collides with the physical limits of the real world?

    In this deep dive, we unpack the hidden mechanics powering Australia’s population-driven economy — and the cracks starting to show beneath the surface. From housing pressure and infrastructure strain to water shortages and environmental limits, this episode reveals how rapid population growth is pushing cities beyond what they can sustainably handle.

    We explore the economic dependence on skilled populations, the reality of aging populations, and the surprising truth: even massive efficiency improvements can’t keep up with sheer population growth.

    This is the story of an economic engine that can’t slow down — even as the system around it begins to buckle.

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    23 分
  • Safe Mode, Strategic Rebellion, and the New Assertive Generation: The Architecture of Asian Australian Identity
    2026/04/08

    This companion episode dives deeper into the generational architecture of migration: the first generation builds the house, the second decorates it strategically to fit in, and the third walks in with the blueprints and zoning laws.

    Through vivid stories — from humiliating immigration interrogations to Saturday morning language school battles — the episode shows how structural assumptions around race, language, and class shape every generation differently. The first generation keeps their head down, the second gamifies the system to survive, and the third refuses to ask permission for space that should have always been theirs.

    Embedded in each story is a thread of status anxiety: the fear of being seen as too foreign, not foreign enough, too Western, not Western enough. These pressures collide with class expectations, family obligations, and the relentless quest to assert a stable identity in a country that promises egalitarianism but often delivers hierarchy.

    A powerful, multi-layered look at how Asian Australians move from invisibility to unapologetic presence.

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    35 分
  • The Upside-Down Arrival: How Asian Australians Navigate Identity Across Generations
    2026/04/08

    This episode explores what happens when identity isn’t something you choose — it’s something assigned to you the moment someone looks at your face. Beginning with the disorientation of first-generation migrants arriving in an “upside-down” world, the story follows the painful and often hilarious clash between expectation and reality.

    We trace the evolution from the silent endurance of the first arrivals, to the strategic rebellion of the 1.5 and second generation, who learn to code-switch, assimilate, and survive the racialised hierarchy of Australian schools and workplaces. Through personal accounts — from survival-mode parents to children caught in the crossfire between collectivist duty and Western individualism — this episode unpacks how class, status anxiety, and the pressure to prove belonging shape the Asian Australian experience.

    Ultimately, it shows how identity becomes a lifelong negotiation between two cultural systems that never fully recognise you — even as you learn to navigate both.

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    21 分
  • New Paint, Same Foundation: The Illusion of Media Diversity & Diversity as just a Facade
    2026/04/06

    Media looks more diverse than ever—but is anything really changing underneath?


    This episode explores the gap between appearance and reality in film and television, revealing how structural power, industry policy, and economic pressure shape who gets to tell stories—and who doesn’t.


    From the outside, the media industry looks transformed—more diverse faces, more inclusive stories, more representation than ever before.

    But step inside, and a different picture begins to emerge.

    In this episode, we use a simple metaphor—a beautifully renovated house—to explore a complex truth: sometimes, change is only cosmetic.

    Drawing on computational research, Australian media policy, and firsthand accounts from creators, we unpack:

    • Why diversity often exists at the surface level
    • How industry structures resist meaningful change
    • The role of public broadcasters in carrying the burden of representation
    • And the hidden pressures shaping what gets made

    Because in a high-stakes, competitive media landscape, playing it safe often matters more than changing the system.

    So the question is:
    Has media truly evolved—or just learned how to look like it has?

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    20 分
  • The Flipped House: Inside Media’s Diversity Illusion
    2026/04/06

    Is Hollywood & Australian media really becoming more diverse—or just better at looking like it is?

    This deep-dive unpacks groundbreaking research, industry policy, and lived experiences to reveal the hidden structures shaping what we see on screen. From AI analysis of 40 years of film to behind-the-scenes accounts from marginalized creators, we explore a difficult truth: representation isn’t just about who appears—it’s about who holds power.

    Because sometimes, diversity isn’t transformation… it’s just a fresh coat of paint.


    For years, it was nearly impossible to measure representation in film at scale. But with new AI-driven research analyzing thousands of movies, we finally have the data—and the results are surprising.

    On the surface, Hollywood looks more diverse than ever. But dig deeper, and a different story emerges.

    In this episode, we break down:

    • The hidden legal barriers that once blocked media research
    • What “face time” data actually reveals about diversity
    • Why lead roles remain overwhelmingly unchanged
    • How industry structures—not just audiences—shape representation
    • And the psychological toll on creators brought in to “fix” diversity without real power

    Blending data, policy analysis, and storytelling, this episode challenges a simple question:
    Is media diversity real change—or just a convincing illusion?

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    44 分