Tom I just wanted to add though that our situations are very different.
I'm sure Australia has a much different vibe than the us. Especially for younger generations coming into the sport.
The US in engulfed in the big antler mentality. And quick fixes. One of our top tv show hosts is cutie pie Tiffany Lakosky. Her big sales pitch is: "Even I can do it!". In reference to the trophy bucks she takes by hunting with compound bows (they sell) overlooking acres of food plots made of blends (they sell) specifically for deer.
Most of the hunting strategy is to essentially bait them. Put food plots in isolated sections of woods and form the plot where you can guesstimate where the deer will enter. They took most of the hunting out of hunting. Instead of chasing the big buck they'll either bring it to them, or rather wait a few years and literally grow one by managing the habitat and food resources.
Most of the info out there isn't about finding deer trails, what acorns deer prefer, ripening times of different species, etc. It's mostly about bringing deer in- rather than you finding the deer.
I think in Australia (not that I know much about Oz, forgive me if I'm wrong) you guys still do much more spot and stalk and ambush hunting. Though I'm sure waterholes play a large part in hunting many regions over there, which isn't much different. But anyway I got wordy, all I'm trying to say is I think our cultures are probably hunting with different aspects in mind. US is more about getting trophy deer faster and easier to the busy hunter with less time. I couldn't say what Aussie hunters do because I don't really know them... but I'm sure the media infiltrates us harder at ground zero than when it gets across the pond.