1"Edible?": Tauranga�s Elly Maynard is on a crusade to have dog meat removed from the human food chain. 60 Minutes reporter Paula Penfold follows Elly and her team of New Zealanders to the Philippines, where, despite there being laws banning the trade in dog meat - the practice continues. While there, Elly meets up with the Animal Kingdom Foundation, the AKF, and travels to the north of the country where we witness a dangerous raid on the people who buy, sell and slaughter dogs for the restaurant table.
2iGENIUS His products changed the way the world thinks about technology. But how should we think about the man behind them, Apple's charismatic founder Steve Jobs? Jobs was already gravely ill with cancer when he asked Walter Isaacson, a former editor of Time magazine, to write his biography. Jobs' wife, Laurene Powell, told Isaacson, �Be honest with his failings as well as his strengths. There are parts of his life and his personality that are extremely messy. You shouldn't whitewash it. I'd like to see that it's all told truthfully." Jobs granted Isaacson more than 40 interviews, many recorded on tape. The result, as 60 Minutes reporter Steve Kroft discovers, is a rich portrait of an extraordinary innovator, whose outsized talents were matched by very human limitations.
3Television Revolution Move over Rupert Murdoch, there's a new Aussie on the broadcast block. His name is Saad Mohseni and he's cornered the television market in, of all places, Afghanistan. In a country where people used to be executed for watching TV, being able to sit in front of the Afghan version of Australian Idol passes as progress. There's news and current affairs too, as well as cop shows and soapies, all of them attracting millions of eager viewers. But as Michael Usher reports, not everyone is enamoured with the new network. The Taliban, especially, don't like what's happening. And they're not the kind of guys who write complaint letters.
4Preview of an upcoming programme.