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Sunday Night: Nov 3

On Sunday Night the host becomes part of the story when Chris Bath talks about how her father suffered a stroke in 2009.

bthsnOn Sunday Night the host becomes part of the story when Chris Bath talks about how her father suffered a stroke in 2009.

Derryn Hinch interviews the “feisty” Yoko Ono, which presumably is the story he filmed in Japan when he was ordered back to court in Melbourne.

A Man Named Don
This Sunday, host Chris Bath presents a very special report on a man named Don. Devoted husband of almost 50 years to his wife Maureen, Don loves his daughters and his grandkids. But Don’s life changed forever on April 9, 2009 when he suffered a stroke. Don is Chris Bath’s father. Every 10 minutes in Australia, someone has stroke. It’s the second biggest killer in the country, but 80 per cent of strokes are preventable. This story is deeply personal for Chris, who is going public about her family’s private struggle because she’s fed up with the lack of support offered to stroke victims and their families. She also highlights the work being done on the other side of the world by two pioneering Australian doctors transforming stroke rehabilitation and offering hope to thousands of survivors. Chris delivers her wake-up call to the government about the real effect of strokes in this emotional and brutally honest report.

Imagine
Once the most hated woman in the world, blamed for the break-up of The Beatles, Derryn Hinch meets the feisty and very opinionated Yoko Ono. In a rare and very revealing interview, Yoko opens up about rock ‘n’ roll’s most famous love story. Her colourful and very public affair with John Lennon was mocked by Beatles fans around the world. Now, more than 30 years after his assassination, Yoko tells all about their extraordinary secret bond, the couple’s alienation from music’s most successful band, and the night John Lennon was shot dead.

Mark Donaldson
At 15, Mark Donaldson’s father – a Vietnam veteran who’d returned from war with PTSD – passed away. Four years later his mother was murdered. The case has never been solved. Not surprisingly, grief-stricken Donaldson went off the rails, becoming a punk and a drunk on the streets of Sydney, even disrupting an ANZAC dawn service. In 2002, to get his life back on track, Donaldson joined the army. Two years later he was accepted into the SAS, and around the same time, he met the love of his life. The remarkable turnaround was completed in 2008 in Afghanistan, when this former delinquent repeatedly put his life on the line to save his mates in a bloody battle with Taliban fighters. The incredible bravery he showed was rewarded with the Victoria Cross, and Mark Donaldson was the first Australian in 40 years to receive this honour. On Sunday Night, reporter Ross Coulthart meets this proud soldier and devoted father.

8.30pm Sunday on Seven.

8 Responses

  1. Really loved the Bath story last night. Some might say it was a bit indulgent, especially when interviewer (bath), and interviewees (wife & stroke victim husband) are all in tears, but this was an important story that needed to be told. Chris has a great voice for news and voice overs but I think she slipped back into her Western Sydney roots when it got emotional – something that made the emotion all the more raw. Congrats to all involved.-

  2. Good to see Ross Coulthart getting a story on something other than a celebrity. Is it just me or has he been totally unutilised this year. What has happened to his investigative reports.

  3. I would love for Sunday Night to do a story on how Chris Bath never seems to age, in the preview of ‘ A Man Named Don’ where Chris is pictured with her father who seems to look like his age, so it may not be a photo taken years earlier, but she is looking younger than ever, you mentioned how he loves his daughters and could it be that Chris’s siblings are all younger than her, and as years pass by, one of the younger ones swaps places with Chris, its either that or could Chris be drinking from the fountain of youth?
    I only ask with no malice intended, because as I have worked and lived/aged and raised my own family around this country over many years, Chris has read us many a news bulletin and like I say she seems to always look virtually as young as when we first watched her and without the frozen in time look, many other faces portray.

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