David Tiley

David Tiley was the Editor of Screenhub from 2005 until he became Content Lead for Film in 2021 with a special interest in policy. He is a writer in screen media with a long career in educational programs, documentary, and government funding, with a side order in script editing. He values curiosity, humour and objectivity in support of Australian visions and the art of storytelling.

David Tiley's Latest Articles

Features

Inside the Canada-Australia Interactive Digital Media Incentive

Interactive digital media is a shape-shifter which has now even found a way to conjure co-pros to feed its endless…

Features

Canada's magic potion for culture

Canada provides much better support to their arts and screen sectors than Australia. What are we doing wrong?

Features

MIFF goes for sparkler-startler to open 2016 festival

Time may never be the same for A-list Melburnians after the premiere of the Death and Life of Otto Bloom.

Features

Sydney 2016 - Austrashorts and Austradocs

Who gets the chance to grow their careers and reputations at the Sydney Film Festival 2016?

Features

High drama and low key glamour at 2016 ADG Awards

Fascinating results for key awards as the judges resolutely cut their own path to directorial excellence.

Features

Australian features surface at SFF 2016

Here's where we start to talk and wonder - a bunch of local features which will define the year emerge…

Features

Senate Estimates grills Screen Australia, enjoys fire of feminism

Senate Estimates covers Screen Australia cuts, Gender Matters, and the statistical defence of the sector.

Features

ABC Head Michelle Guthrie's first taste of gunpowder

New ABC head Michelle Guthrie commits to an ABC free of either commercials or subscription services, and stays out of…

Features

National Ratings week beginning Sunday 8 May 2016 - the whole batch

Janet King - watch the tuff lady slowly claim her territory. Pity it was the final ep.

Features

In 2016, Logies step into history

Mother's Day. An election called. At the Logies, Waleed Aly makes history, while Noni Hazlehurst breaks a sexist hoodoo.

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