The Ripple EffectAfter repeated visits to the Falls Festival to supervise his various children, Mike Radburn says he is worried about drugs at the event.
The Ripple EffectEighteen young Australians, all in the prime of their lives, all went to Australian music festivals to have a great time. All didn’t come home. The ripples of anguish of these young lives lost will be felt forever by those who loved them.
The Ripple EffectNSW Health has ditched their hard-hitting campaign on MDMA and other party pills in favour of a “non-judgmental” one called StayOK after festivalgoers told researchers “fear campaigns” did not work.
The Ripple EffectIt’s a drug lauded by users as inducing feelings of love and euphoria. But behind every MDMA pill is an ugly ‘shadow world’ of crime and exploitation that users unwittingly support.
The Ripple EffectYoung Australians who take illicit drugs — or those defending their use — are seemingly oblivious to the damage the drugs cooks are doing to the environment. See the damage for yourself.
The Ripple EffectAfter headlines, funerals and coronial inquests fade, the devastated loved ones of those claimed by MDMA overdoses at music festivals are left trying to make sense of their loss. Four mothers bound by grief share their stories ahead of another long, hot summer of music festivals.
The Ripple EffectPeace, love and LSD. When music festivals began taking shape in the 1970s, Australia was a different place — hair was long, times were radical. Fast forward 50 years and the festival landscape couldn’t be more different. Nor could the drugs.
The Ripple EffectSophie Horne thought about her mother as she lay on the concrete outside a music festival, convinced she was going to die. The 27-year-old had just collapsed and while friends resisted her pleas to “call a f***ing ambulance” she was suffering the effects of taking three party pills. This is her story.