Q&A panellist Sally Rugg summed up one of her many frustrating moments on Monday night’s show as"judging in lesbian".
There was not a politician to be seen on Monday night’s science edition of Q&A,and after the heavy political period just ended how wonderful that was.
From rich miners to poor weather,Monday night's Q&A was a rollicking adventure.
It fell to to academic Marcia Langton to save the night,bringing her careful thoughts to questions of Indigenous recognition.
If you were wondering what the newly-elected Morrison government has in store for the next three years,Q&A was the place for you to leave with absolutely no idea.
It was the issue of climate change - and some scepticism about the Coalition’s commitment to dealing with it - that helped deliver the line of the night.
The Labor leader couldn't hide his emotion as he spoke about his mother after a newspaper article he said hit a"new low".
There are rare campaign moments that hit a particular,genuine spot. Did Bill Shorten - summoning the life story of his mother - have one of them on Monday night?
Has Australian political rhetoric gone over the top? Monday night’s Q&A asked us to ponder that question.
Let's just say Coalition senator James McGrath ARRIVED WITH THE CAPS LOCK ON.
In a solo Q&A appearance on Monday night,Treasurer Josh Frydenberg faced 16 challenging questions and only one vaguely friendly one.