Completely Unnecessary

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Archive for the ‘oz’


It Finally Happened

I’ve been living in Australia for a little over a year and a half now, and some parts of my accent have gotten a little strange. I say - by American standards - weird words, like ‘heaps’ and ‘down the back’, etc. I notice strong American accents now, and can pick Midwesterners in a way that I never could before.

Occasionally, I’ve watched Australian movies that have American elements without noticing the switch for a little while.

But just now, watching the swimming, I’ve realized that a Commonwealth Bank commerical that I’ve seen maybe five times today has a combination of American and Australian actors. (It’s one of the ones where an American ad company makes an ad for Commonwealth and it doesn’t go well…)

I finally watched it from the beginning and realized from the “American Advertising Company” across the bottom that the people were speaking with different accents. I totally hadn’t heard it any of the other times.

Weird.

Yay! TodayTonight is broadcasting “Live from Beijing” this week. Yet they have an amazing story on Australian gym contracts. Good to know that they’re still chaining old ladies to heaters even whilst getting caught up in Olympic fever.

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The Olympics are Pretty!

Remember how for the last several months everyone, everywhere has been like, “Boo China! Boo! Torch, human rights abuses, Beijing is a smoggy nightmare, military crackdown, boo!’

The Age has been running at least a story a day about how horrible everything is in China.

Until today. Today’s age.com.au is more or less: ‘Shiny, happy, pretty! Oi, oi, oi! OMG, can you wait for the swimming?!?!’

And no, I can’t wait, because the US is going to kick some overachieving antipodean ass. And Michael Phelps shaved off his mustache, so that’ll probably skim another 87 million seconds off his times. We will crush you. (Sorry guys, swimming is about the only thing I get patriotic about.)

And the swimming’s also about the only Americans I’m likely to see on the TV. (Seriously Channel 7, the Australia v Belarus women’s basketball game? The only thing interesting about that match up was how many air balls there were. Apparently the women’s shooting was really cool - the Czech Republic upset China - but no…)

Women’s gymnastics doesn’t even seem to be on the schedule, which has to be a mistake. (I also get vaguely patriotic about gymnastics.)

Anyway, given the chance for Aussie gold in the men’s cycling, we’ll be showing that all afternoon. It’s kind of nice, actually. They let one of the Chinese riders lead the pack through most of downtown Beijing. And all the cyclists are taking it easy through the first section, chatting and smiling with people from other countries.

It’s what the Olympics are all about!

SBS is running women’s beach volleyball, which is so only an Olympic sport because there are women in bikinis. Norway versus Belarus (again!). How do you get into that sport in either of those countries? It’s the middle of summer, and it’s freezing in Norway. Belarus is landlocked (though they appear to have some nice lakes…)

Bikinis!

Which, as I mentioned above, is more or less what China’s doing. But, you know, with fireworks.

Oh, I also learned this morning that equestrian dressage commentary is what hell is like. They had nothing. During the two and a half minutes I watched it, the two commentators completely ran out of things to talk about. Actual quotes: “Oh, and I hear he’s quite the singer. Yes, yes, he definitely enjoys singing.”

Mix that with watching a horse trot and you’ve got the best reason for putting dressage on in the morning when no one is watching.

Except people who are avoiding work!

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Andrews’ ‘Africans’ Comments Against Departmental Advice

Turns out that last October’s comments by then-Immigration Minister Kevin Andrews about Africans not ’settling and adjusting’ were contrary to departmental advice.

He was told that socio-economic problems (unsurprisingly) played more of a role than ethnicity in criminal behaviour.

Yet after the beating death of Liep Gony, an Australian citizen of Sudanese birth, Andrews saw fit to say:

I have been concerned that some groups don’t seem to be settling and adjusting into the Australian way of life as quickly as we would hope and therefore it makes sense to put the extra money in to provide extra resources, but also to slow down the rate of intake from countries such as Sudan. (Age, 2 Oct.: 2)

Ironically, Andrew’s comments came on the same day that it ‘emerged that Mr Gony’s alleged attackers were not African’ - as the Age persists in phrasing it. His alleged murderers were, in fact, white and Australian-born.

In a paper I just wrote on the Gony affair, I argued that media framing set the stage for Andrews’ comments by portraying Gony’s death as part of a continuing ‘refugee crisis’ in Australia.

The reporting was strikingly similar to that of other ‘crises’, such as the Tampa and ‘Children Overboard‘. In 2001, the Howard Government used these incidents to encourage ethnic and immigration tensions for political purposes and was reelected.

In the paper, I said:

While this paper does not imply that Andrews had cynical motivations for his comments, if the Minister had been looking for a Tampa-esque moment, he could be excused for believing the time was ripe.

Now that we know that Andrews specifically acted against departmental advice, it seems less likely that his comments were innocent in nature.

Papers at the time noted that Andrews’ explanation above did not match with the rationale his department had previously given for cuts in the intake of African refugees, and this seems like the final nail in the coffin.

Here were are again, six months after an election, finding out damning information about another of these pre-election, race-baiting events.

Andrews was specifically told that ethnicity was not the problem, but he went ahead and made statements that whipped up ethnic tensions in Noble Park - to the tune of a beaten Sudanese refugee on the 10th and a bashed police officer on the 11th.

Thank god it wasn’t to the tune of another term in power.

Race row we didn’t have to have [The Age]

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Other Random News Items - 18/4/08

First off, apparently some people don’t think it’s a good idea for George Stephanopoulos to run debates between Clinton and Obama. I mean, they’re acting like he used to be one of Bill Clinton’s main communications staffers…

Oh.

I mean, they got round to policy after the first hour. So what?

[Actually, the original version of the NYT debate story, which they since replaced with this, was hilarious. The writing practically screamed, 'I SUPPORT OBAMA!' I can't be assed to find it, unfortunately - it's late. The second one seems more pro-HRC.]

Meanwhile, over in Iraq… you must be fucking kidding me.

And lastly - the drought got a shout out in the NYT! (Plus, and one of my students told me today that the SA incest couple made it onto Perez Hilton.)

We’ve arrived, Australia.

Links:
Ourage as ex-Clinton Staffer Runs Debate [the Age]
Iraq Cracksdown on Seatbelt Scofflaws [NYT]
A Drought in Australia, a Global Shortage of Rice [NYT]
Clinton Uses Sharp Attacks in Tense Debate [NYT]

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Bedroom Window Observations

I have no empirical way to test this - or, shall I say, no desire to empirically test this - but I’m pretty sure that the man who lives next door to me walks outside every time he needs to blow his nose.

I just can’t imagine that it’s a coincidence. Aside from his (recently-infrequent) early morning ‘Heeeeeeeys,’ I never hear from him. Other than nose-blowing.

It just seems really odd when utter silence is occasionally punctuated by nasal pyrotechnics. Let me stress to you that these are not just your average hankie moments, but long, honk-filled purges of his sinuses.

It’s the kind of nose-blowing that makes your unfortunate and curious neighbors look up from their reading in the hopes they might see the schnoz in question.

And then press the ‘Post’ button on their blog…

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Nadir

This is what it’s come to at the Age:

wombat

The story, inanely, is about a Kiwi who got drunk and called police saying he’d been raped by a wombat.

Clearly, clearly newsworthy.

Also clearly necessary was the picture of the randy-looking wombat. Originally I thought the story was about a man raping a wombat, which made the picture and the story a whole lot less amusing.

As pathetic as this appearing on the front page of theage.com.au is, the story itself even better:

[Police prosecutor Sergeant Chris] Stringer said alcohol had played a big part in [callmaker] Cradock’s life. However, defence lawyer Michael Vesty said alcohol was not a problem that day.

Well put.

For his part, Cradock called back to withdraw the complaint, noting that his only ill-effect was ’speaking Australian now.’

Sometimes I wish the Internet had less space.

[By the way, theage.com.au linked that through stuff.co.nz who got it from the Nelson Mail. No one took the time to edit that story at all - just slap it on up there with a funny picture...]

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Tales of Terror from Bendigo

To the collective “???” of nearly everyone I know, I went to Bendigo on Tuesday. I felt like getting out of town, and thought a two-hour train ride each way would actually make me get some reading done. I was correct about the reading, managing to plow through Fowler’s Language in the News. Hurrah

I definitely wore the wrong shoes, though. My flip flops are worn almost completely through, and I regretted my decision to wear them almost immediately. And certainly after starting a 7k walk, which yielded two fun, new calluses on the balls of my feet.

That’s not the terror, though.

I walked up to White Hills Cemetery, which dates from the time of the gold fields (1850s). It’s famous for having one of the oldest Chinese cemeteries in Australia, etc, etc.

Now, I’m confusing because I love cemeteries almost as much as I hate dead bodies. Or, should I say, I love well-kept cemeteries.

The first gravesite I approached had a low structure built on top of it. Sort of a curb built around the grave, filled in with gravel. Except that the gravel looked as though someone had been digging it out - or, more horrifically, pushing it out as they escaped from their tomb.

Unsettled, I moved along, being careful not to stop for too long due to the multitudes of incredibly large and (it being Australia and all) probably poisonous ants. They were using one of the mounded graves in the Chinese section as their hill. It was unpleasant.

I’d say one out of every five graves I passed was in a state of serious, vaguely terrifying disrepair.

And I don’t mean the gravestones were bleached - I’m talking about the ground caving in, spider-filled holes looking directly into graves, mounds that have still not settled despite the 150 years since their digging, twisted wrought iron fencing (undoubtedly wrenched apart by the zombie army my overactive imagination increasingly expected to find behind the next headstone).

The sun was shining, the sky was blue, and I was scared out of my tiny mind. But I kept moving, willing the part of me that is still somewhat afraid of Skeletor to bravery.

And then I heard a man’s voice near me say, ‘Heeeelllloooo.’ I turned around 360 degrees and there was no one in this godforsaken cemetery.

I nearly wet myself.

Turns out, it was a motorcycle revving in the distance. But I spent the 20 seconds before it revved again wheeling like a terrified pony.

I can honestly say it’s probably the most scared I’ve been since I talked my aunt into letting me watch Ghostbusters the first time it was shown on TV, maybe 1987. (She learned her lesson when I woke up crying at 2am and had to be retrieved by my mother.) That, or that time I made Jessica sleep over after I watched The Ring.

I hightailed it to the edges of the cemetery, where I found some rather attractive broken headstones. They were, no doubt, shattered as the zombie army marched on its nightly raid, but they were far less terrifying.

And then I got to walk back to town on my painful, forming calluses. I had a glass of wine at the first pub I found and read some Fowler.

My will to sightsee was a bit shot at that point (and hurty), but I dragged myself around Bendigo’s other tourist attractions - Golden Dragon museum (check), lookout tower in the park (check), corner with the four churches (check), Shamrock Hotel (and another glass of wine, check).

All done in time to make the 6:40 train back to Melbourne. I read more Fowler and tried not to watch a man picking his nose for what seemed an audacious length of time.

All in all - a great trip!

Update: I put my Bendigo pics up on Flickr. Waiting for the new Gallery feature on WP 2.5 before I upload them here.

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The Herald Sun: Just a ‘Joke’

The other day, the Herald Sun ran a story about Connex’s idea to take out some of the seats on Melbourne’s trains to cram in more commuters. Luckily, that isn’t the point.

The headline they ran with the story read:

Train plan a ‘third world’ joke

Alright. That’s a terrible headline, for a whole host of reasons. I think we can all be angry at the official that unfavorably labeled a plan to put more Melburnian commuters on our trains as ‘Third World.’ I can think of a myriad of reasons why that’s offensive.

Not the least of which is that no one appears to have said it.

Ted Baillieu, leader of the opposition, is credited with the ‘joke’ comment, but no one in the article is quoted as using the words ‘third’ and ‘world’ at all.

The question then becomes whether the Herald Sun is using an unattributed quote or one they just completely made up.

For bonus points, they use the ‘quote’ in the lede as well.

Largest circulation in Australia…

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Tony Abbott Knows the Lingo

Said Mr Abbott today regarding Deputy Prime Minister Julia Gillard:

I would … suggest that she stop shrieking at us,” Mr Abbott said.

Abbott has every right to be sexist today; Work Choices was given the boot and this blow has obviously upset his delicate nature . (He spent last night talking over people on Insight, but I guess he didn’t get it all out.)

Where else have I heard language like that? Who can guess?

Hillary, her shrill voice much improved and lowered through brutal overstrain, has certainly gained confidence and performance skill on the campaign trail, but I still don’t trust her.

That’s Camilla Paglia on Clinton last week. To be fair, she doesn’t say Clinton shrieks - she leaves that for the National Organization of Women (page 2).

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Modern Living: Water

In Melbourne we live with some pretty stringent water restrictions. But we’re still eventually going to run out of water down here.

Last night we got a taste of those bad days ahead.

I came home around 2:30a to find a huge lake of water down the road from me and crews working frantically (and, undoubtedly, at incredible penalty rates).

The implications of this image didn’t hit me until I tried to brush my teeth. And do about a million other small things you never even think about. (I wound up washing my hands with water I found in the kettle…)

Glancing with new appreciation at the crew in the road, I was really impressed  at first with the gung-ho attitude of Melbourne Water. Way to get the problem solved, team!

This enthusiasm lessened as I settled into bed, and the sounds of the jackhammer continued intermittently. Actually, the sound of the machine was fine when it was going constantly. Instead, every time I started to drift off it would either stop, only to loudly punctuate the silence a minute later. As the time moved towards 5:00a, neither Bryan nor I were happy campers.

It was not a pleasant evening.

Nor a pleasant morning when we were still without water - and, indeed, until about 12:30p. I was at a bbq yesterday, so with the grease from the sausages, the sweating caused by strenuous sessions of Guitar Hero, and the absurd number of hedgehogs I ate (it’s a dessert), I really, really wanted a shower this morning.

Instead I’ve been watching episodes of The Office, the US version. Now I am clean, and will do my reading - after watching just a bit more of The Office.

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