At various points in his fantastically varied and storied career he wrote position papers on the need of support for a moribund Australian film industry, wrote and directed
numerous episodes of such seminal TV shows as Homicide and Division 4 for Crawford Productions, was central in establishing film courses and departments in places such as Canberra and Brisbane (Griffith University), wrote plays and performed poems at Melbourne University and La Mama in the 1960s, directed feature films in the early 1980s (most memorably Ginger Meggs in 1982), made
documentaries for the ABC and SBS (The Myth Makers, Images of Australia, The Legend of Fred Paterson, and
numerous others), wrote and edited such books as Screenwriting: A Manual and Queensland Images in Film and
Television, helmed commercials for a vast array of companies and government bodies, contributed film reviews to ABC radio (and more occasionally TV) across various states (for almost 40 years), wrote for
numerous publications including Overland, The Canberra Times, Metro, The Concise Encyclopedia of
Documentary Film, The Hobart Mercury, and so much more.
America's Great Migration, which saw over six million black Americans relocate from the South to either the North, Midwest or West over the period from 1915 - 1970, has certainly been the subject of
numerous articles, essays, books and even
television documentaries over the years.
Since 1998 Bori has written and recorded music for
numerous projects, including 28 full ‑ length theatre performances (ranging from contemporary dance to traditional theatre), two seasons of a TV show screened on the Slovenian national
television, several short films,
documentaries, and other audiovisual works and public events.
He has produced
numerous documentary films, created animations of political cartoons for broadcast
television, written screenplays and is the author of the novel «Two to Tango» (Simon & Schuster).