Eurydice Aroney
Eurydice Aroney is an independent radio documentary producer for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation where she hosted and produced a range of radio shows.
These days her documentary work is a mix of the personal and political both in form and content, and she writes and talks about radio in her day job as a journalism academic for the University of Technology in Sydney. Aroney is a founding member of the Australian Radio Audio Researchers Association and international recognition for her work includes the Third Coast Directors' Choice Award in 2003.
producer
Five alarmingly self-aware people meet on the phone for an hour each week to talk about their lives and their goals.
Domestic duet for mother and six year old.
In 1942, Edna Lavilla Haynes died from a backyard abortion. After her death Edna was never mentioned again.
Blending satire, drama, and interviews, this Australian documentary portrays a not-so-distant future where robots care for children and parents agree to live apart from their families during the work week.
Man's appetite for money may mean the end of three courses for horses.
This hour: families, in all their messy, dysfunctional glory.
This hour: a closely guarded family secret and the hidden history of long-deceased grandmother.
This hour: stories that bend, stretch, and downright fabricate the truth.
This hour: 99 Ways to Tell a Radio Story, an audio experiment orchestrated by the Third Coast Festival in collaboration with cartoonist Matt Madden.
This hour: stories told over the phone.
judge
This year we honored the best audio work in the following categories: Best Documentary (Gold, Silver, Bronze, Honorable Mention), Directors Choice, Best New Artist, Best News Feature, Radio Impact and Audio Luminary.