Yes and No..... Australia uses PAL system, USA uses NTSC, most new TV's will operate both, if you have a new TV then it should work, however, the other issue is the power, USA needs 110 volt power, Australia uses 240 volt, meaning that an American set would have too much power and not work, you would need to reduce the power supply which needs extra plug devices. I wouldn't bother, just but a new one here.
I believe they would but Australia uses different electric plug.
TV advertising prices range wildly depending on the viewership of the program. The prices on Australia TV will be lower than a more populated nation like the US.
No. Australia's electricity supply is 230 volts at 50Hz... america's is 120 volts at 60Hz.
In the US, you can watch it on HBO. Check your local listings. In Australia you have to have pay tv.
You use the stamps from the country of origin. So if you are mailing a letter from the US to Australia, you use US postage.
May actors from Australian TV have been introduced to US viewers. Phoebe Tonkin and Claire Holt both now star on US TV shows and Liam and Chris Hemsworth are both now movie stars in the US.
You could only hear a Laughing Kookaburra in its natural habitat in Australia.
UK PS2s use PAL format, US TVs use NTSC, which both have different frame rates. If you try to use the UK PS2 on a US TV, the image will flicker and jump around due to this disparity. While many UK TVs can switch to an NTSC mode, the opposite is rare in the US. But you can get a converter box which both devices plug into, you'd have to buy it online.
52 billion
use a proxy server
Fuel TV Australia was created in 2004.
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