Moreton Bay’s Weekend of Live Gigs and Epic Events 10–12 October 2025

A weekend of powerhouse performances, comedy, and live entertainment is coming to Moreton Bay. From tribute acts honouring Roy Orbison and Guns N’ Roses to big-name comedy and motor sports, there’s something for every fan. Here’s what’s happening across the region.


Redcliffe

GUNNERS – The Guns N’ Roses Show

October 10, 2025

Legends Lounge – Redcliffe Leagues Club
Tribute Show
Experience all the hits from Guns N’ Roses in this high-energy live tribute featuring the raw sound and stage power of the original band.
Get Tickets


The Roy Orbison Story

October 10, 2025

Redcliffe Entertainment Centre
Live Music
A heartfelt tribute to the timeless voice of Roy Orbison, performed with stunning vocals and authentic arrangements.
Get Tickets


Boost Mobile Australia AUSX – Moreton Bay – Double Header

October 11–12, 2025

Kayo Stadium, Redcliffe
Motorsport
Watch Australia’s best motocross riders compete in back-to-back rounds of high-speed, adrenaline-fuelled action.
Get Tickets


Maleny

8 Ball Aitken Band

October 10, 2025

Maleny Hotel
Live Music
Groove to blues-rock tunes from the 8 Ball Aitken Band in a lively pub atmosphere.
Get Tickets


Caloundra

A Young Person’s Guide To King Parrot – Album Tour

October 10, 2025

Norton Music Factory, Caloundra West
Live Music
King Parrot brings their electrifying album tour to Caloundra with hard-hitting metal energy.
Get Tickets


Chris Stapleton – The Ultimate Tribute Show

October 11, 2025

Norton Music Factory, Caloundra West
Tribute Show
Celebrate the soulful sound of Chris Stapleton in this powerful live tribute performance.
Get Tickets


Carl Barron | Just Wondering Why

October 11–12, 14–16, 2025

The Kings Theatre, The Events Centre, Caloundra
Comedy
Australia’s beloved comedian Carl Barron returns to the stage with a brand-new show full of relatable humour and charm.
Get Tickets


Eatons Hill

Nightclub ft. Mashd ‘N’ Kutcher

October 10, 2025

Eatons Hill Hotel
DJ / Nightlife
Dance into the weekend with chart-topping duo Mashd ‘N’ Kutcher spinning the best party anthems live.
Get Tickets


Bray Park

Beyond Reality – Jaden Boon’s Comedy Hypnosis Show (18+)

October 10, 2025

Club Pine Rivers
Comedy / Variety
A hilarious night of mind tricks and audience fun in Jaden Boon’s crowd-favourite comedy hypnosis act.
Get Tickets


Bellara

Creedence – The John Fogerty Show

October 11, 2025

Bribie Island Hotel
Tribute Show
A rocking live tribute to Creedence Clearwater Revival, featuring all-time classics that defined a generation.
Get Tickets


Woodford

2025 Moreton Bay Spartan Trifecta Weekend

October 11–12, 2025

Woodfordia
Sport / Fitness
Push your limits with the ultimate endurance challenge across rugged terrain in the Spartan Trifecta Weekend.
Get Tickets


From powerhouse rock tributes and laugh-out-loud comedy to high-speed motocross and late-night DJ sets, Moreton Bay’s entertainment lineup this weekend is nothing short of electric. Explore, enjoy, and support the region’s incredible venues and local performers who keep the live scene thriving.

The Best of Streaming – 9 to 15 October 2025

Mid-October heats up with brand-new dramas, documentaries, and returning favourites across Australia’s biggest streaming platforms. From gripping thrillers and culinary journeys to animated adventures and true-crime tales, here’s everything hitting your screens this week.


Apple TV+

10 October 2025

  • The Last Frontier: Season 1
    An intense survival drama set in the Alaskan wilderness, following a man confronting both nature and his past.
    Watch

11 October 2025

  • Knife Edge: Chasing Michelin Stars – Season 1
    A high-stakes culinary docuseries that dives into the ambition, artistry, and obsession behind Michelin-starred kitchens.
    Watch

Disney+

9 October 2025

  • Wandance: Season 1
    A heartfelt coming-of-age drama about self-expression, movement, and the power of dance.

11 October 2025

  • Grey’s Anatomy: Season 22
    The long-running medical drama continues with fresh cases, new faces, and emotional twists.
    Watch

15 October 2025

  • Murdaugh: Death in the Family
    A chilling true-crime documentary exploring the downfall of the once-powerful Murdaugh dynasty.
    Watch
  • Vampirina: Teenage Vampire
    The animated family favourite returns with a fun, teen-focused twist on growing up supernatural.
    Watch

Max

13 October 2025

  • The Chair Company: Season 1
    A workplace comedy that follows the chaos and absurdity inside a small-town furniture company.
    Watch

Netflix

9 October 2025

  • Victoria Beckham: Season 1
    An intimate docuseries chronicling the pop icon’s transformation from Spice Girl to fashion powerhouse.
    Watch
  • Boots: Season 1
    A dark comedy following a washed-up musician making an unlikely comeback.
    Watch

10 October 2025

  • My Father, the BTK Killer
    A haunting documentary told through the eyes of the daughter of one of America’s most notorious serial killers.
    Watch
  • Swim to Me
    A moving drama about love, loss, and the determination to rise above tragedy.
    Watch
  • The Woman in Cabin 10
    A suspenseful mystery adapted from Ruth Ware’s bestselling novel about a journalist who witnesses something chilling on a luxury cruise.
    Watch

14 October 2025

  • Splinter Cell: Deathwatch – Season 1
    Based on the hit video game, this action-packed series follows covert agent Sam Fisher as he faces his deadliest mission yet.
    Watch

Prime Video

10 October 2025

  • John Candy: I Like Me
    A heartwarming documentary celebrating the life and legacy of the beloved comedic actor John Candy.
    Watch

Stan

12 October 2025

  • One More Shot
    An action thriller filled with tense standoffs and explosive sequences.
    Watch

13 October 2025

  • Generation Z: Season 1
    A bold new drama exploring identity, ambition, and rebellion in the digital age.
    Watch

From Splinter Cell’s covert missions and The Last Frontier’s survival struggles to John Candy’s heartfelt documentary, mid-October 2025 offers something for every mood. Whether you’re craving action, laughter, or emotional storytelling, Australia’s streaming platforms have you covered.

The Oct 5 Show

Disclaimer: ‘Australia All Over’ is a program produced and broadcast by the ABC Local Radio Network and hosted by Ian McNamara. Brisbane Suburbs Online News has no affiliation with Ian McNamara, the ABC, or the ‘Australia All Over’ program. This weekly review is an independent summary based on publicly available podcast transcripts and episodes. All original content and recordings remain the property of the ABC. Our summaries are written in our own words and are intended for commentary and review purposes only. Readers can listen to the full episodes via the official ABC platforms.

From Perth to Hobart, the Oct 5 edition of Macca’s program unfolded like a road map of Australia — conversations stitched together by travel, music, work and memory. It was a Sunday morning soundtrack of real voices: people doing what they do best, keeping the country quietly alive.

Queensland Divers Take the Leap in Perth


At East Perth, Gary and Anne from Mount Ommaney stood proudly by the pool, watching their grandson William compete in the national elite diving championships. Twenty young Queenslanders had made the trip, each dreaming of a place on the Olympic stage.

“He’s calm, easy to get along with,” Anne said. “He plans, works hard and never gives up.”

They’d come a week early to wander up to Monkey Mia, taking in the Western sun before the competition began. “Wherever our children are, we go,” Gary added. “We trip as far as we can, as much as we can.”

William, barely in his teens, may well be one of those who rise with the 2032 Brisbane Games. For now, it was enough that three generations had crossed the continent together — the kind of quiet, hopeful journey that feels unmistakably Australian.

Stoney on the Nullarbor


Out on the edge of the continent, Stoney keeps watch. Twenty years after Macca first met him at Eucla, he’s still out there, running starling traps that stretch from the Nullarbor Roadhouse to the Eyre Bird Observatory.

“We’ve shot them, netted them, poisoned them,” he said, matter-of-fact. “Most are pushed back to the border now.”

He lives among weather-station workers and fishermen, where the wind whistles off the Great Australian Bight and cliffs rise 100 metres straight from the sea. He fishes from those heights, lowering lines into the swell below. “By the time you get one up the top,” he said with a laugh, “you don’t feel like throwing it back.”

It’s a hard, beautiful life — the sort of self-contained existence only possible in places where the horizon is everything.

The Spell of Lake Eyre


From Stoney’s cliffs, the program turned inland to the shimmering emptiness of Lake Eyre. Macca read from Roma Dulhunty’s The Spell of Lake Eyre, describing mesas and salt plains so stark they seemed carved from another planet.

A small mob of wild camels moved through the mirage, their silhouettes black against gold light. Dulhunty called the place “Little Camel Canyon”, a valley of stillness and sculpted stone. It was a reminder that even the loneliest parts of the map can feel alive when someone takes the time to look and write them down.

Potatoes and the Price of Living


Not far from Mount Gambier, truck driver John was loading 42 tonnes of stored potatoes for Melbourne. The B-double hummed as he called from the road.

“They load you in thirty-five minutes — all bulk now,” he said. Asked about varieties, he chuckled. “Spuds are spuds to me.”

He’s been carting them since February’s harvest, the crop kept fresh in temperature-controlled sheds. But talk soon shifted from logistics to life. “Eggs have doubled in two years,” he said. “Food’s never been this dear.”

Both men remembered the backyard patches of earlier generations — the Pontiacs and Sebagos that came up in every second yard. Those gardens, they agreed, had a kind of quiet wealth no supermarket could replace.

Songs from Newcastle: Bob Corbett


Musician Bob Corbett called from Newcastle, his voice bright with gratitude. “Thanks for playing Long Weekend, Macca. You’ve sent a lot of good people my way.”

He’s a working musician in the Hunter Valley, playing three gigs a week while raising kids. “Spending time together, creating — that’s the joy of it,” he said.

The two reminisced about the old studio days — Slim Dusty recording at EMI, the Beatles in two-day sessions. “You don’t book time in a big studio anymore,” Bob said. “We all have our own now.”

In his backyard studio, surrounded by guitars and the easy noise of family life, Corbett keeps writing songs that feel like travel postcards from an ordinary weekend in Australia.

Bathurst’s Cortina Nationals


In Bathurst, the main street gleamed with vintage paintwork. Paul Geeran had trailered his classic Cortina all the way from Alice Springs for the Cortina Nationals, marking sixty years since the GT500’s famous Mount Panorama win.

“Everyone was on the track yesterday — nose to tail all the way round,” he said, still sounding amazed. Cars from every state, and even Tasmania, had filled the paddock.

Paul’s been in the Alice since 1983. “People think it’s all trouble,” he said. “But we love living there.” The festival of engines and memory, under a crisp Bathurst sky, carried that same sentiment — a love of place that runs on petrol, polish and pride.

All Over News: Roads, Wheat and Bread


The All Over News segment crossed from red dirt to grain fields. There’s a plan to bitumenise the road from Laverton (WA) through Alice Springs to Winton (Qld) — the Outback Way. Advocates say it’ll open a diagonal freight link across the nation; locals fear it could change their remote rhythm forever.

Macca then turned to the story of Gabo wheat, bred from Gaza and Bobbin strains. “To see my father in a field of wheat was to see a man at prayer,” poet Max Fetchin once wrote — and that line hung in the air like dust at harvest.

At the Perth Royal Show, baker Lachie Bisse of Big Loaf Bakery in O’Connor explained the secrets of good bread. “Aged flour absorbs more moisture,” he said. “You get a softer loaf and a better rise.” For Bisse, the dawn starts and warm ovens are a kind of calling: feeding the city one loaf at a time.

Outback Airwaves: Martin Corbin


At the airport, Macca ran into Martin Corbin, a former ABC producer now working with NG Media across the Ngaanyatjarra Lands.

“Community radio is hearing your culture brought back to you,” Corbin said. From Wingellina to Warburton, he helps remote broadcasters produce local music and health messages in language.

He spoke too of the Outback Way. “It’ll make travel safer,” he said, “but it’ll also change things — more tourists, more traffic. We’ve got to keep the balance right.”

His own commute — Uluru to Wingellina, four hours on a desert track — shows what connection really means out there.

Deniliquin Ute Muster: Country Pride


Paul from Deniliquin was still buzzing from the Deni Ute Muster, two days of country music and engines under a Riverina sun.

“It’s great for the town,” he said. “They do it tough, but this brings everyone together.” Families and farmers filled the grounds to see The Wiggles, Zac Brown Band, John Williamson and Troy Cassar-Daley.

Visitors had come from across Australia — and even from Wales — proving how far small-town festivals can reach when music and mateship do the marketing.

Ian McDougall and the Music of Snow


From Goulburn, songwriter Ian McDougall phoned in. He’s fronted Canberra’s Acme Jigs and Reels Company for decades and still skis whenever he can.

“The snow here’s heavier,” he said, comparing Australia’s drifts with the fine powder of Colorado and Niseko. His stories of Kiandra and the Snowy Scheme mixed history and affection — the sound of someone who’s spent a lifetime listening closely to both weather and song.

Strings and Feathers: Ian Simpson in Perth


In Perth, banjo master Ian Simpson picked through the difference between Merle Travis’s thumb-picking and Chet Atkins’s alternating bass. Then came the tune that started it all — The Wreck of the Old 97.

He remembered the 1970s, playing three pub shows a Saturday. “You just kept going,” he said. “Now it’s quieter — but the rhythm’s still the glue.”

At home in Armadale, Simpson tends fruit trees and a flock of chooks — recently joined by a stray guinea fowl that simply moved in. “Looks like it’s staying,” he laughed. Music, like birds, finds its own roost.

Speed Cubing in Brisbane


At Eight Mile Plains, Glenn from Bunbury watched his 14-year-old son Declan compete in the National Speed Cubing Championships — a world of flashing hands and memorised moves.

“He’s in the blindfold finals,” Glenn said proudly. “I can’t do it myself.” The two planned a week in a campervan afterwards, exploring Queensland’s hinterland — father and son solving life’s puzzles one stop at a time.

Inline Hockey in Hobart


Down south, Graham from Hobart reported from the National Inline Hockey Championships at MyState Arena. “It’s ice hockey on rollerblades,” he explained. With the city’s rink long gone, players turned to synthetic courts. Twelve age divisions, a thousand competitors — proof that Tasmania’s sporting heartbeat still thumps loud.

The Road Rolls On


When Macca signed off — “If you see me on the road, stop and say g’day” — listeners had already been there: at the diving pool, the bakery, the desert airstrip and the ute paddock. The Oct 5 Show was Australia in real time — voices, distances and dreams stitched together by a signal strong enough to cross them all.

Listen to the podcast episode here.

Disclaimer: ‘Australia All Over’ is a program produced and broadcast by the ABC Local Radio Network and hosted by Ian McNamara. Brisbane Suburbs Online News has no affiliation with Ian McNamara, the ABC, or the ‘Australia All Over’ program. This weekly review is an independent summary based on publicly available podcast transcripts and episodes. All original content and recordings remain the property of the ABC. Our summaries are written in our own words and are intended for commentary and review purposes only. Readers can listen to the full episodes via the official ABC platforms.

Your Streaming Watchlist: 2–8 October 2025

The first week of October kicks off with a strong line-up across Apple TV+, BINGE, Disney+, Max, Netflix, Paramount+, Prime Video, and Stan. From chilling documentaries and returning fan favourites to bold new dramas and quirky comedies, here’s everything arriving in Australia this week.


Apple TV+

2 October 2025

  • Fight or Flight
    A gripping drama exploring survival and human instinct in the most perilous circumstances.
    Watch

3 October 2025

  • The Lost Bus
    Based on true events, this emotional drama tells the story of a group of schoolchildren stranded during a tragic accident.
    Watch
  • The Sisters Grimm: Season 1
    A fantasy series reimagining classic fairy tales in a dark, modern setting.
    Watch

BINGE

2 October 2025

  • HEART EYES
    A romantic comedy full of charm, awkward encounters, and unexpected sparks.
    Watch

3 October 2025

  • Grantchester: Season 9
    The much-loved mystery drama continues with the vicar and detective duo solving new cases.
    Watch

4 October 2025

  • BLACK BAG
    A suspenseful thriller blending espionage, politics, and high-stakes danger.
    Watch

Disney+

3 October 2025

  • The Balloonist
    A sweeping historical adventure about one man’s daring voyage into the skies.
    Watch

8 October 2025

  • Wizards Beyond Waverly Place: Season 2
    The beloved magical family is back for another season of spells, humour, and heartfelt moments.
    Watch

HBO Max

4 October 2025

  • How Are You? It’s Alan (Partridge): I’m Still Alan Partridge
    The satirical comedy returns with Alan Partridge navigating new absurdities in his unmistakable style.
    Watch

Netflix

3 October 2025

  • Monster: The Ed Gein Story
    A chilling true-crime documentary diving into the infamous murderer who inspired horror legends.
    Watch
  • Steve
    An inspiring biographical feature tracing the highs and lows of a man determined to change the world.
    Watch

7 October 2025

  • True Haunting: Season 1
    Based on a true story, this series explores the terrifying ordeal of America’s first televised exorcism.
    Watch

8 October 2025

  • Néro the Assassin: Season 1
    A gritty crime thriller following a contract killer torn between his work and his conscience.
    Watch

Paramount+

7 October 2025

  • Ozzy: No Escape from Now
    A feature-length documentary capturing the legendary Ozzy Osbourne’s life, struggles, and enduring legacy.
    Watch

Prime Video

8 October 2025

  • Maintenance Required
    A heartfelt dramedy about relationships, reinvention, and finding balance in the chaos of everyday life.
    Watch

Stan

5 October 2025

  • Revealed: Surviving Malka Leifer
    A confronting documentary examining one of Australia’s most notorious legal and abuse cases.
    Watch

From magical adventures and historical dramas to hard-hitting documentaries and true-crime tales, the week of 2 to 8 October 2025 has something for everyone. Whether you’re after thrillers, comedies, or real-life stories, the big streaming platforms have packed this week with must-watch releases.