FOXTEL

FOXTEL Outage Report in Glen Iris, Stonnington, State of Victoria

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Foxtel is an Australian pay television company, operating a duopoly in cable television, a monopoly in direct broadcast satellite television, and IPTV catch-up services.

Problems in the last 24 hours in Glen Iris, State of Victoria

The chart below shows the number of FOXTEL reports we have received in the last 24 hours from users in Glen Iris and surrounding areas. An outage is declared when the number of reports exceeds the baseline, represented by the red line.

FOXTEL Outage Chart in Glen Iris, Stonnington, State of Victoria 03/01/2026 08:10

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Most Reported Problems

The following are the most recent problems reported by FOXTEL users through our website.

  1. TV (45%)

    TV (45%)

  2. Internet (29%)

    Internet (29%)

  3. Total Blackout (17%)

    Total Blackout (17%)

  4. Wi-fi (7%)

    Wi-fi (7%)

  5. Phone (2%)

    Phone (2%)

  6. E-mail (1%)

    E-mail (1%)

Live Outage Map Near Glen Iris, Stonnington, State of Victoria

The most recent FOXTEL outage reports came from the following cities: Melbourne.

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City Problem Type Report Time
AustraliaMelbourne TV
AustraliaMelbourne Internet
AustraliaMelbourne Internet
AustraliaMelbourne Internet
AustraliaMelbourne Total Blackout
AustraliaMelbourne Total Blackout

Community Discussion

Tips? Frustrations? Share them here. Useful comments include a description of the problem, city and postal code.

Beware of "support numbers" or "recovery" accounts that might be posted below. Make sure to report and downvote those comments. Avoid posting your personal information.

FOXTEL Issues Reports Near Glen Iris, State of Victoria

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in Glen Iris and nearby locations:

  • taki_n_thepis_s Senator Papahatzhiharalambrous (@taki_n_thepis_s) reported from Melbourne, State of Victoria

    Another ratings winner. What a waste of tax payer money. Don't forget to have biased callers on the show, you won't have any problems finding those, probably the only thing the ABC knows how to do. FFA rejected by SBS and Foxtel. Sounds like a good call ABC 🙄😂😂

  • urbaer urbaer (@urbaer) reported from Melbourne, State of Victoria

    Ergh... Was going to cancel Foxtel Now but realised we haven't finished Runaways. And that there's a new season of Legion and... gods the app is hard to find what you want

  • dxbooth Monte Cristo 🔥 (@dxbooth) reported from Melbourne, State of Victoria

    @janet_rice @mrbenjaminlaw Damn. Can’t unsubscribe from that rag. Have just unsubscribed from the Age for milder reasons and from FOXTEL over five years ago because .. Murdoch ! All strength to your cause @janet_rice @mrbenjaminlaw

  • leighchookoo Leigh T (@leighchookoo) reported from Melbourne, State of Victoria

    @Telstra @Foxtel is there an issue with service in the Blackburn South area in Victoria again. Second time this week.. pay 400 a month for bad service .. again

  • HoltfreterJessy Jessy (@HoltfreterJessy) reported from Melbourne, State of Victoria

    Foxtel buying into Netflix is the type of shit I don’t need to see happen to entertainment **** off foxtel

  • SugarYak Jake Smith (@SugarYak) reported from Melbourne, State of Victoria

    @MJV511 @benkrahe 31/7 sky 1 SD channel for pubs/clubs is being shut down for HD. Unsure about Foxtel but can find out

  • aubreyhughes Aubrey (@aubreyhughes) reported from Melbourne, State of Victoria

    @FOXTEL_Help can you help me with cancellation of Foxtel . I can’t seem to cancel the account

  • laura_charlotte Laura Day (@laura_charlotte) reported from Melbourne, State of Victoria

    @FOXTEL_Help I’ve got the foxtel now app, but it keeps freezing for a few seconds at a times. It’s really annoying when trying to watch the rugby, or any other program. No issue when steaming from other apps. Help.

  • mrjamesmoore James Moore (@mrjamesmoore) reported from Melbourne, State of Victoria

    @KamSimsek I believe it is. But for example there was no replay of the Socceroos game on Foxtel. As Kayo is a streaming service you could watch the replay at anytime. Kayo showed all FFA Cup games, not just one.

  • NanaStorm09 cherie bowen (@NanaStorm09) reported from Melbourne, State of Victoria

    @FOXNRL the money we now save after dropping our @Foxtel subscription will now be put toward travelling to all @storm away games so I never have to listen to your crap again #FOXTWATS #LIFTYOURGAME

  • feastofdan Dan Smith (@feastofdan) reported from Melbourne, State of Victoria

    @tim_blackwell @BenFordham @Foxtel @Channel9 Sounds like you’re getting too old for this shit

  • Victory_05 Victory 05 (@Victory_05) reported from Melbourne, State of Victoria

    @ghana3032 @FOXTEL_Help @ALeague @FFA Don’t entirely disagree. As I’ve said in another post. The whole thing is piss poor.

  • leighchookoo Leigh T (@leighchookoo) reported from Melbourne, State of Victoria

    @Telstra We have been without service for 3 days now, no internet,phone and no foxtel. How can a provider such as yourselves be down for 3 days.embarrassing..we pay over 300 dollars per month as a package we will be expecting quite a substantial discount on our next bill

  • AndrewWirski Andrew Wirski (@AndrewWirski) reported from Melbourne, State of Victoria

    Perhaps she is concerned that Foxtel will subvert the ABC by osmosis. Ida is being an idiot.

  • TheOnlyLongy Long Neck (@TheOnlyLongy) reported from Melbourne, State of Victoria

    Why won't your FoxtelGo app work, won't even start up, just crashes. Wanting to watch the Wallabies on a service I pay for. @Foxtel @FOXTEL_Help

  • tmmisson tmmisson (@tmmisson) reported from Melbourne, State of Victoria

    Same match on @Channel7 and @Foxtel and they're not showing Osaka Puutintseva. Stupid stupid stupid stupid.

  • BennyDTD Haasta La Vista (@BennyDTD) reported from Melbourne, State of Victoria

    @JackNapier84 @trentslatts I don’t even use Foxtel Go, just basic apps like Words with Friends or my interval timer for being at the gym. It’s annoying as ****.

  • liamvayres Liam Ayres (@liamvayres) reported from Melbourne, State of Victoria

    Hey @FOXTEL_Help, says we lost entitlement to free to air, upgrade required, picture all jumpy. Help please!

  • mfoale73 matthew foale (@mfoale73) reported from Melbourne, State of Victoria

    @Foxtel great upgrade, no communication and now nothing works properly, no internet connection anymore, poor customer experience

  • ayelbee1 Ayelbee (@ayelbee1) reported from Melbourne, State of Victoria

    That man is embarrassing full stop. Only redeeming fact is very few would watch him. I have sky news on Foxtel. Never watch it. B grade journos like this hack.

FOXTEL Issues Reports

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:

  • Nizibizizbig Truth Desk (@Nizibizizbig) reported

    Australia's Next Top Model, the Murdoch Family, and Ties to Epstein and Maxwell The intersection of Australia's Next Top Model (ANTM)—a glamorous reality series airing on Foxtel (Murdoch-owned) from 2005–2016—with Sarah Murdoch (host from 2009–2012, married to Lachlan Murdoch, Rupert's son) evokes the glossy facade of elite media and fashion worlds. Sarah's high-profile role, punctuated by her 2010 live finale blunder (announcing the wrong winner, leading to a production shakeup), spotlighted the Murdochs' Australian media clout. Yet, viewed through the lens of Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell's trafficking scandal, this narrative darkens: ANTM's modeling competition mirrors the "talent scouting" pretext Epstein and Maxwell allegedly used to lure young women, while the Murdochs' decades-long entanglements with the Maxwells underscore how media empires navigated (and profited from) scandals involving power, predation, and impunity. No direct evidence implicates ANTM contestants, production, or Sarah in Epstein/Maxwell's crimes—searches yield zero links to the show's participants being recruited or trafficked. However, the broader context reveals systemic overlaps: Fashion's allure as a grooming vector, Murdoch-Maxwell rivalries echoing in Epstein coverage, and 2025 revelations amplifying questions of complicity. Epstein's "black book" listed Rupert's private numbers, and Ghislaine's elite access (honed in Murdoch-adjacent circles) facilitated her role in Epstein's network. Below, we unpack these layers, drawing on unsealed files, congressional probes, and media analyses.

  • Nizibizizbig Truth Desk (@Nizibizizbig) reported

    Australia's Next Top Model, the Murdoch Family, and Ties to Epstein and Maxwell The intersection of Australia's Next Top Model (ANTM)—a glamorous reality series airing on Foxtel (Murdoch-owned) from 2005–2016—with Sarah Murdoch (host from 2009–2012, married to Lachlan Murdoch, Rupert's son) evokes the glossy facade of elite media and fashion worlds. Sarah's high-profile role, punctuated by her 2010 live finale blunder (announcing the wrong winner, leading to a production shakeup), spotlighted the Murdochs' Australian media clout. Yet, viewed through the lens of Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell's trafficking scandal, this narrative darkens: ANTM's modeling competition mirrors the "talent scouting" pretext Epstein and Maxwell allegedly used to lure young women, while the Murdochs' decades-long entanglements with the Maxwells underscore how media empires navigated (and profited from) scandals involving power, predation, and impunity. No direct evidence implicates ANTM contestants, production, or Sarah in Epstein/Maxwell's crimes—searches yield zero links to the show's participants being recruited or trafficked. However, the broader context reveals systemic overlaps: Fashion's allure as a grooming vector, Murdoch-Maxwell rivalries echoing in Epstein coverage, and 2025 revelations amplifying questions of complicity. Epstein's "black book" listed Rupert's private numbers, and Ghislaine's elite access (honed in Murdoch-adjacent circles) facilitated her role in Epstein's network. Below, we unpack these layers, drawing on unsealed files, congressional probes, and media analyses.

  • Nizibizizbig Truth Desk (@Nizibizizbig) reported

    Australia's Next Top Model, the Murdoch Family, and Ties to Epstein and Maxwell The intersection of Australia's Next Top Model (ANTM)—a glamorous reality series airing on Foxtel (Murdoch-owned) from 2005–2016—with Sarah Murdoch (host from 2009–2012, married to Lachlan Murdoch, Rupert's son) evokes the glossy facade of elite media and fashion worlds. Sarah's high-profile role, punctuated by her 2010 live finale blunder (announcing the wrong winner, leading to a production shakeup), spotlighted the Murdochs' Australian media clout. Yet, viewed through the lens of Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell's trafficking scandal, this narrative darkens: ANTM's modeling competition mirrors the "talent scouting" pretext Epstein and Maxwell allegedly used to lure young women, while the Murdochs' decades-long entanglements with the Maxwells underscore how media empires navigated (and profited from) scandals involving power, predation, and impunity. No direct evidence implicates ANTM contestants, production, or Sarah in Epstein/Maxwell's crimes—searches yield zero links to the show's participants being recruited or trafficked. However, the broader context reveals systemic overlaps: Fashion's allure as a grooming vector, Murdoch-Maxwell rivalries echoing in Epstein coverage, and 2025 revelations amplifying questions of complicity. Epstein's "black book" listed Rupert's private numbers, and Ghislaine's elite access (honed in Murdoch-adjacent circles) facilitated her role in Epstein's network. Below, we unpack these layers, drawing on unsealed files, congressional probes, and media analyses.

  • Nizibizizbig Truth Desk (@Nizibizizbig) reported

    Australia's Next Top Model, the Murdoch Family, and Ties to Epstein and Maxwell The intersection of Australia's Next Top Model (ANTM)—a glamorous reality series airing on Foxtel (Murdoch-owned) from 2005–2016—with Sarah Murdoch (host from 2009–2012, married to Lachlan Murdoch, Rupert's son) evokes the glossy facade of elite media and fashion worlds. Sarah's high-profile role, punctuated by her 2010 live finale blunder (announcing the wrong winner, leading to a production shakeup), spotlighted the Murdochs' Australian media clout. Yet, viewed through the lens of Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell's trafficking scandal, this narrative darkens: ANTM's modeling competition mirrors the "talent scouting" pretext Epstein and Maxwell allegedly used to lure young women, while the Murdochs' decades-long entanglements with the Maxwells underscore how media empires navigated (and profited from) scandals involving power, predation, and impunity. No direct evidence implicates ANTM contestants, production, or Sarah in Epstein/Maxwell's crimes—searches yield zero links to the show's participants being recruited or trafficked. However, the broader context reveals systemic overlaps: Fashion's allure as a grooming vector, Murdoch-Maxwell rivalries echoing in Epstein coverage, and 2025 revelations amplifying questions of complicity. Epstein's "black book" listed Rupert's private numbers, and Ghislaine's elite access (honed in Murdoch-adjacent circles) facilitated her role in Epstein's network. Below, we unpack these layers, drawing on unsealed files, congressional probes, and media analyses.

  • TimeCertainRace TimeCertainClock (@TimeCertainRace) reported

    @loyal_facts @kayosports its foxtel to. looks like its issue at the track.

  • ajbarker111 AB ❤🤍💙 (@ajbarker111) reported from Yass, State of New South Wales

    @RooIrvine Ah Roo, that stinks. I love watching anything antiques on foxtel down in Australia. I just finished watching a roadtrip series with you and Charles (Roo 4 - Charlie 1) when I came across your post. All I can say is that I love you all. Bless xoxo

  • TimeCertainRace TimeCertainClock (@TimeCertainRace) reported

    @loyal_facts @kayosports its foxtel to. looks like its issue at the track.

  • Nizibizizbig Truth Desk (@Nizibizizbig) reported

    Australia's Next Top Model, the Murdoch Family, and Ties to Epstein and Maxwell The intersection of Australia's Next Top Model (ANTM)—a glamorous reality series airing on Foxtel (Murdoch-owned) from 2005–2016—with Sarah Murdoch (host from 2009–2012, married to Lachlan Murdoch, Rupert's son) evokes the glossy facade of elite media and fashion worlds. Sarah's high-profile role, punctuated by her 2010 live finale blunder (announcing the wrong winner, leading to a production shakeup), spotlighted the Murdochs' Australian media clout. Yet, viewed through the lens of Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell's trafficking scandal, this narrative darkens: ANTM's modeling competition mirrors the "talent scouting" pretext Epstein and Maxwell allegedly used to lure young women, while the Murdochs' decades-long entanglements with the Maxwells underscore how media empires navigated (and profited from) scandals involving power, predation, and impunity. No direct evidence implicates ANTM contestants, production, or Sarah in Epstein/Maxwell's crimes—searches yield zero links to the show's participants being recruited or trafficked. However, the broader context reveals systemic overlaps: Fashion's allure as a grooming vector, Murdoch-Maxwell rivalries echoing in Epstein coverage, and 2025 revelations amplifying questions of complicity. Epstein's "black book" listed Rupert's private numbers, and Ghislaine's elite access (honed in Murdoch-adjacent circles) facilitated her role in Epstein's network. Below, we unpack these layers, drawing on unsealed files, congressional probes, and media analyses.

  • Nizibizizbig Truth Desk (@Nizibizizbig) reported

    Australia's Next Top Model, the Murdoch Family, and Ties to Epstein and Maxwell The intersection of Australia's Next Top Model (ANTM)—a glamorous reality series airing on Foxtel (Murdoch-owned) from 2005–2016—with Sarah Murdoch (host from 2009–2012, married to Lachlan Murdoch, Rupert's son) evokes the glossy facade of elite media and fashion worlds. Sarah's high-profile role, punctuated by her 2010 live finale blunder (announcing the wrong winner, leading to a production shakeup), spotlighted the Murdochs' Australian media clout. Yet, viewed through the lens of Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell's trafficking scandal, this narrative darkens: ANTM's modeling competition mirrors the "talent scouting" pretext Epstein and Maxwell allegedly used to lure young women, while the Murdochs' decades-long entanglements with the Maxwells underscore how media empires navigated (and profited from) scandals involving power, predation, and impunity. No direct evidence implicates ANTM contestants, production, or Sarah in Epstein/Maxwell's crimes—searches yield zero links to the show's participants being recruited or trafficked. However, the broader context reveals systemic overlaps: Fashion's allure as a grooming vector, Murdoch-Maxwell rivalries echoing in Epstein coverage, and 2025 revelations amplifying questions of complicity. Epstein's "black book" listed Rupert's private numbers, and Ghislaine's elite access (honed in Murdoch-adjacent circles) facilitated her role in Epstein's network. Below, we unpack these layers, drawing on unsealed files, congressional probes, and media analyses.

  • Nizibizizbig Truth Desk (@Nizibizizbig) reported

    Australia's Next Top Model, the Murdoch Family, and Ties to Epstein and Maxwell The intersection of Australia's Next Top Model (ANTM)—a glamorous reality series airing on Foxtel (Murdoch-owned) from 2005–2016—with Sarah Murdoch (host from 2009–2012, married to Lachlan Murdoch, Rupert's son) evokes the glossy facade of elite media and fashion worlds. Sarah's high-profile role, punctuated by her 2010 live finale blunder (announcing the wrong winner, leading to a production shakeup), spotlighted the Murdochs' Australian media clout. Yet, viewed through the lens of Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell's trafficking scandal, this narrative darkens: ANTM's modeling competition mirrors the "talent scouting" pretext Epstein and Maxwell allegedly used to lure young women, while the Murdochs' decades-long entanglements with the Maxwells underscore how media empires navigated (and profited from) scandals involving power, predation, and impunity. No direct evidence implicates ANTM contestants, production, or Sarah in Epstein/Maxwell's crimes—searches yield zero links to the show's participants being recruited or trafficked. However, the broader context reveals systemic overlaps: Fashion's allure as a grooming vector, Murdoch-Maxwell rivalries echoing in Epstein coverage, and 2025 revelations amplifying questions of complicity. Epstein's "black book" listed Rupert's private numbers, and Ghislaine's elite access (honed in Murdoch-adjacent circles) facilitated her role in Epstein's network. Below, we unpack these layers, drawing on unsealed files, congressional probes, and media analyses.