ABC set to explore other projects after ‘biggest ever’ cross platform event
The ABC is set to follow its backing of Mental Health Week by repeating the initiative as it looks to use its position as Australia’s public broadcaster to stimulate debate on key issues.
The network is nearing the end of Mental As, a week-long series of programs dedicated to the issue of mental illness, which culminates with the fundraising Friday Night Crack Up show tomorrow evening.
The ABC said it was the most extensive cross-platform programming and marketing event it has undertaken.

Brilliant idea well executed. I have watched and listened to a few really good conversations about various issues surrounding mental health this week.
Congratulations to everyone at the ABC for doing something so helpful, informative and important.
I hate to think of how Govt cuts to ABC funding will curtail innovations such as this.
Bravo ABC
Great cause, great concept.
Radio component alone was brilliant – compelling and wonderfully informative.
More power to your hand Aunty.
Excellent stuff – great public broadcasting.
Great a year of jingoistic celebration of the war that made us what we are today. Can’t wait.
100 percent leadership behavior. Well done ABC. Doing stuff the commercial networks can’t or won’t.
Congratulations Leisa!!
Well done ABC, mental health touches everyone at some point in their lives and a subject that was taboo for so many years, thank heavens mental health is out of the closet and we are discussing the issues. The more open we are to discuss the issues the more understanding of mental health disease we all gain and the stigma of mental health disease can start to lift from so many peoples lives.
Great work ABC…let’s hope other media outlets use the same social and health focus around these matters in similar initiatives in the future.
Our 7.1c p/day at work on something good!
I’m not usually the most avid TV watcher but that all changed this week. Changing Minds, in particular, was masterful, unmissable, life-changing television. As a journalist I’ve interviewed many people with mental illness but this was the first time I’ve ever been able to put their words into context. The discussions on all radio and TV have been insightful and informative and the fact that the issue was even covered on children’s television was commendable. I hate using the ‘watercooler’ word but it was real watercooler broacasting. As TV audiences decline, it seems that this is the sort of role that our broadcasters should be taking on. But another thing that struck me was that, unlike – say – the UK, we have no serious television media. In the UK, TV magazine the Radio Times under the editorship of the amazing Ben Preston is a serial newsbreaker. If TV is to change, it would be good to see the media around it changing also.
Beg to differ. I’d have said the Anthropogenic Global Warming promotion was ‘the most extensive cross-platform programming and marketing event (ABC) has undertaken’.
Treatment of WWI need not be jingoistic as ABC showed in its two day blockbuster on RN a while ago with Geraldine Doogue. There are plenty of groups (peace groups, Honest History honesthistory.net.au) and individuals (James Brown, Christopher Clark) who can present a range of perspectives.