Wednesday 24 August 2011

Australia- A nation of beer drinkers?


Drinking beer is an Australian tradition as old as cirrhosis itself. The whole world knows that Aussies love nothing more than sipping a cold fosters on a hot day.

It is weird that Autralia’s about the only place in the world where Fosters isn’t readily available. Imagine going to Mexico and finding out no-one’s ever heard of a taco. Or that Egypts Pyramids are photo-shopped in. Or in Rwanda, that Genocide’s actually a genre of music. And Child soldiers are just Rawanda’s answer to The Tin-Lids.

But drinking beer is as Australian as it gets; smashing tins, getting slabbed. Sucking stubbies. And it’s important. It’s a rite of passage in this country.  

Although, people say getting pissed is an empty, meaningless, rite of passage. Thing is, I’ve got a mate he’s Aboriginal, and in his tribe they become men once they’ve been circumcised with a rock. Fuck that. I don’t care how empty my ritual is. Pump my stomach call me a man. Cos that sounds freakin heavy!

Mind you, i guess the thing about having your knob smashed with a rock,  at least that’s a pretty clear line in the sand. Instead of a series of stupid drunken actions over a number of years that go on and on, til one day you’re sitting in a police cell dressed like Donald duck (nude from the waist down) and you realise it’s time to grow up. , they just go Flop. Whack! What am I doing with my life?

But drinking beer as youngsters, or passion pop for the girls, it’s an important training for later in life.
Cos have you tried getting drunk in Australia recently? It’s a mission.

If you go to a licensed establishment in Australia, you can drink, but you can’t get drunk. If you get drunk, you can be fined. If they give you a drink when you’re drunk, they get fined.  If you don’t leave when you’re drunk, you get fined. If they don’t make you leave when you’re drunk, they get fined. If you drink in public you get fined. If you’re drunk in public you get fined, and if you just get drunk at home, help is what you need to find.

So when people say, “have a drink and everything’ll be fine”, they’re nearly right.

It’s almost like they don’t want us to drink. Almost.

Do you know the parable about the donkey and the two piles of straw. The donkey is exactly half way between each pile. And each one looks so perfectly delicious, that the donkey can’t make up its mind about which one to eat. I think the alcohol issue is like that for the government. On one side they’ve got the perfectly delicious prospect of banning alcohol, and getting rid of so much domestic violence, car crashes, vandalism, fighting, noise pollution and a stack of other social issues. Mmm, yum. But on the other side lies the tasty tasty prospect of limitless revenue raised by licences, alcohol tax, fines and infringements. Mmmmmm. Now in the parable, the ass dies of starvation cos he can’t make up his mind, the moral being indecision will get you nowhere in life. But in our version, as the donkey waits, he gets fatter and fatter and fatter, until one day simply by wobbling its bloated torso form one side to the other in can gorge itself on both piles of straw whenever it pleases. So i guess the moral there is drink up Australia, cos Julia’s hungry.

But we’re doing our part We drink alot. There's always a reason. It’s a  hot country, we’re thirsty people. I’ve earned it, I need to relax. I need to forget. I’m stressed, I’m relaxing, It complements the food, it makes the girls prettier. It’s my birthday, it your birthday, it’s a weekday it’s the weekend. He’s born. He’s Dead. He’s risen again. It’ll cure the hangover. It’ll bring back the memories. I love you. He’s gone. Happy Christmas, Easter, new years, anniversary, hanaka, holidays, hindu festival of light. We just knocked off, we just clocked on, we’ve got ages to go. I’m leaving, You’re coming. Why not?

We’ll drink anything too. I was younger, I used to drink cream sherry of an evening. I don’t regret it. Without that and a front verge I may still be a virgin. People pretend that they have standards, they’ll only drink dutch pale ales, or I can’t enjoy this Semillon unless it’s in a reidel. but anyone who’s ever been to a good houseparty knows, at the end of a night you could put a bottle of vodka and some tinned fruit in the toilet bowl, and the only issue would be ‘Are there any more cups?

But in the last ten years, there’s been something of a revolution. You’re more likely to see a cardboard cup in someone’s hand than a tinnie. The perfect roast is no longer a meat. We don’t thirst for ales, we long for lattes. The staple of our rough and ready nation comes with a special lid so we don’t burn our lip. And the fact that no-one bats an eyelid when you order a soy-chai latte is a testament to how much this country has changed.

So beer drinkers? We are not.

Wednesday 29 June 2011

Real estate scam

The original email...



Mercy Bruno to rich
show details Jun 28 (3 days ago) 
Hi Rich,
Thanks for your email and interest. I just arrived in Essex, England to start my new job, i wont be back any time soon but i still intend renting my place out because i want my home to be kept alive in my absence.

About the place, it is a three bedroom pet friendly house plus a study room with furnished but you can rent it furnished or unfurnished depending on what you what you want living areas, in-door laundry and a nice back yard area. It is located at 16 Tamarama Street
Bondi NSW 2026, not far from public transport,Shopping complex and train station.
About me, I am an Australian professional statistician working for a reputable organization. I don't smoke or take alcohols but i don't mind people taking that around me. I really need someone to rent the place asap because my job doesn't really give me time to stay around that much. I am not in the country currently but i can ask for a one week leave from work if i get a serious tenant interested in my home as i am with the keys here in the U.K and handing over the keys to you on your move in will be the only reason i will be returning home just for a few days.I couldn't afford to leave the keys to my place behind knowing that i will be away on duty for a while.

I attached pictures of both outside and indoors because the place is locked for now and you can go view the place from outside to see if the place will suit your taste.I wanted to sell the house before since i will be away for a while but later changed my mind renting it out just to keep the place alive. The rental fee is $450 for the whole place depending on how long you want to stay because i will not be coming home for some time if you will promise keeping my place clean, all bills are included in the rental fee and down payment for a month is also acceptable and a bond which is refundable as fee for damages.The way i want to rent out my place is more like a house sitting rental process, hope this is understood. Feel free to call on me and my husband in the U.K +447024029855 for more details.Hope to hear from you soon, have a wonderful day.
Thanks,
Mercy&Richard


My response...

Wow Mercy, that is fantastic news. 

My Grandmother and I are very excited to see the place. It makes me very happy that you allow for pets as my Grandma has many, many cats. I feel as though this is a limited opportunity, perhaps I can pay the bond now and if I decide the house is not entirely satisfactory, you will refund it to me. Does this sound like a good deal? I would not like to miss out on such a woeful, i mean wonderful, opportunity.

Please write back soon as my Granny is not too well and we are keen to get her off the streets and into a warm house.

Most fine regards


Rich

The Reply...


Hi Rich,
Thanks for your email and interest. I want to let you know that i wont be staying at the house, you will have the place to yourself as long as it is kept nice and neat. I have also resolved to rent the whole place to you and you can move in as soon asap so i will like to know your expected length of stay because i will not be coming home to settle down any time soon. I promise to bring the keys with me to welcome you in on the day of your move in, my word is my bond.To hold the place, you will have to fill and complete an attached agreement form with the required two weeks rental deposit of $900 and a bond of $1800 is also required along with the two weeks rent to be paid, the completed agreement form and rental deposit will be sent to my cousin currently in Darwin on her email address ann.alexiou@rocketmail.com .I will be glad if all move in procedures are done in Australia so your documents and payment can have insurance once payment is made into my cousin's account. This will enable me hold the place for you as there are a lot of people interested in my place. I also need to be sure you are really interested and ready to move in. Kindly note that the bond payment requested is refundable when leaving the place, it is just a fee normally required for damages but if nothing is damaged when leaving my house then the bond money will be refunded to you. I will be home to welcome you on arrival to your new home and am sure you will love the warm reception.

You can reach me and my husband on our phone number in the U.K on+447024029855. I hope hearing from you soon with your intentions about you arrival and move in. I attached my picture and i will appreciate your picture or any references from you if you have one. Do have a wonderful day, cant wait to meet you to welcome you to your new home.
Best Regards,
Mercy&Richard




My Reply...

Oh Mercy!

Thank you for your speedy reply.

So you may know, your absence is not an issue. How ever it is a shame you sahll not be there as you are a healthy-looking woman in your photo. You remind me very much of my dear Aunty Scamula, she fell sick and passed away last year when her mojo got infected. Have you lost any family to infected mojos?

My concern for the house is paying the first two weeks rent before I see the house. You see, I have enough saved for the bond, but I am holding on to some other money for my Granny, as she is deeply ill now, and the weather on the streets in Sydney is becoming uncomfortable for her. She says she has not felt this bad in all her 92 years.

Would it be possible to pay simply the bond first, then the rent if I decide I like the house?

Also, could you send me a photo of your cousin in Darwin so that I know I can trust her as I trust you?

How is the work as a statistician at the reputable company going?

Stay close
Rich

My Photo (I'm the one in the spectacles.)



The Response

Hi Rich,
Thanks for getting back to me with your interest. I have informed my cousin Ann Alexiou about your intentions of renting my home and also resolve you can pay the refundable bond of $1800 due to your explanation and sincerity so kindly contact her on her email address
ann.alexiou@rocketmail.com
and you will need to forward your completed agreement form to her once it is completed so she can start preparation of your lease document for your move in and also provide you with her pics. I am currently planning for my departure from here so once payment is confirmed by my cousin, i will be on my way to come welcome you into your new home. I have confirmed renting out the place to you and i am sure you will enjoy the living conditions. Your interest seems sincere and genuine so we have approved your move in.So i hope this is fine with you. Have a nice day and i hope to hear from you as soon as you contact my cousin, cant wait to see you.
Best Regards,
Mercy& Richard.

My Reply

Mercy ,

Jesus Phenomenon Guru. I appreciate your speedy reply again. It fills me with one thousand smiles. I thank you unjustly for understanding my situation, but I feel that you haven't taken the time to throughly read my emails. If I am living in your house, I would like to know you well. As I will answer any questions you have of me, so to do i desire you to answer mine before we can move forward. The questions I've asked so far are...

Does this sound like a good deal?

Have you lost any family to infected mojos?

How is the work as a statistician at the reputable company going?

Please answer me these questions so I can feel I know you, then I will send the agreement to your cousin in Darwin at once.

Also, I have made a picture of me in your house and we are having a party and we are both smiling and we are listening to the music and we are getting ready to dance and everything is great. Do you like it?

Yours in greatest hope,

Rich

Fingers crossed for more to come...

Saturday 18 June 2011

Grandad Brophy comes to town!

My Grandad was in town last week. All eighty-six years of him. And to quote a massive cliche, he's still got it. Sharp jokes, flirtatious behaviour with waitresses, and a part in his hair that'd put Moses to shame.

I hadn't spent a lot of time with him for a few years, since leaving Oz in 2004. He and my Nanna did make a brief sojourn to Ireland where I drove them around the country side. It was essentially a nap on wheels though, with the pair of them occasionally waking for a coffee and cake stop (as is the wont of old people), as I twisted and turned through southern Ireland trying not to crash into their "quaint stone walls". My favourite memory of the trip was my Grandads wanderings, where we'd track through the streets only to find him chatting so some distant relative of a Christian Brother that my Grandad once met. This happened repeatedly.*

I spent some time with Grandad as my Nan got towards the end earlier this year. His spirit was irrepressible. In what was probably his finest quotable hour, he rocked up to the hospital ward to announce that outside it was "cold as a Christian charity". He told us Nanna had instructed him that if he was going to drive to the hospital after the function at the village, that he'd better not drink. "So I walked." And when he called up for test results from an unhelpful nurse he said down the line "Give it to me straight, Sister!"

I've got alot of respect for the old boy, as I reckon we all should, given their vast life wisdom (even if it is occasionally mixed in with chat about 'the darkies'.). But as we sat enjoying meals and coffees together over the last week, I was a bit torn. Do I let him just chat away, regaling tale after tale as it comes to him? Or do I interject with my opinions? Cos the thing is, I don't want him to think I'm some baggage relative that brings nothing to the table, so he then has to carry the conversation for the both of us. But at the same time, nothing I have to say has any gravity considering my relative life experience. Isn't his story about chasing an emu for CSIRO in the outback for miles only to catch it, tag it, and it fall down dead: Isn't that way more important than my discovery that you can make cheese on toast by turning the toaster on its side? Surely his story about a great uncle who helped map a pass through the Blue Mountains holds more weight than my tale of getting off at Museum station, only to discover the museum is actually closer to a totally different station? I know for a fact that his friends passing away means way more than my mates passing out ever will.

I guess the presence of those who have amassed huge amounts of life experience should be humbling. In the same breath, it should also be entertaining and frustrating. Cos that's how life is. Humbling. Entertaining. Frustrating. And old people are full of life. And we might as well enjoy that of them before their cup runeth over.

*The only other time I've been faced with this predicament (besides trying to leave a festival with a pilled up mate who insists of having deep conversations with every one they walk past. We've all been there. In both roles.) was when I travelled around northern Spain with my Dad. Despite me insisting the only language I spoke was conversational Portuguese, my old man decided I spoke fluent Spanish, as he subsequently told all manner of old Spaniard as he dragged em back towards me to answer his trivial question about the kind of stone in the arches of the church. What a mission. Oh, and in case you're wondering, es piedra arenisca.

Thursday 9 June 2011

Plastic Monkeys


I’ve got a bit chubby of late. It’s not cos I’m depressed or I’m lazy or cos of some obscure medical condition. It’s because I go to the fridge or the cupboard, pull something out, and my mind goes “We really don’t need this.” And I go “(chew-chew-chew) I agree. (chew-chew)”

This is the reason I’ve put on a few kilo’s. Greed in the face of rational thought. Indulgence in the face of reason. Doing worse when I know better. It’s pretty pathetic.

Of course I’m not the only one on this wide and beaten path. It’s becoming a quintessentially human characteristic, nay, ability. To do the wrong thing when we know exactly what the right thing is, and how to do it. Who needs better judgement when you’ve got immediate action?

As the planet tilts and threatens to let us all slide into oblivion, we stay strong; Pursuing our worldly dreams and occupations in the face of evidence that doing so will relegate our species (or a vast majority of it) to the scrap heap.

Why?

In a small industrial town in Lebanon, Yariv runs a factory. The factory produces plastic monkeys. Not big ones. Tiny little ones, with one arm up and one arm down. They are hung off the side of cocktail glasses in cheesy holiday resorts, to add a bit of fun and flair to the drink. They’re used once, maybe treasured briefly by kids, then discarded. The plastic is cheap and brittle. They wouldn’t last for long, even if you did use them again.

Every now and again, Yariv sits in his office, on his beaten leather swivel chair, staring into the middle distance. The world is dying, he thinks. Should I try and help save it? Do people really need that added trinket on their drinks? That fleeting moment of novelty before they suck back yet another Mai Tai? Maybe I should stop. The plastic is toxic once it starts breaking down, and I’m pretty sure they don’t dispose of them properly. I could make the whole world that tiny bit healthier. Safer. Cleaner. If I just do my bit...

Then the phone rings. It’s another order. Time to go back to work.

We do what we do because it’s easier than changing. But if nothing changes, and no-one changes, the world turns into the Friends box-set. An increasingly predictable and repetitive series of situations that numb the mind and soul til you just wish it was all over. I guess what I’m getting at is that the end of the world and David Schwimmer really aren’t that different. So unless you want to see Ross from friends rise to prominence once again, YOU NEED TO CHANGE YOUR WAYS BEFORE IT’S TOO LATE!!!

You have been warned

Monday 30 May 2011

The Racist of Oz.


“All Australians are racist.”

Really?

“Yep.”

All of us?

“Yep.”

Even the black ones?

“Ye-Na-Ohh.”

I think it’s a funny statement to begin with. All Australians are racist. Cos when you think about it, stereotyping an entire nation of people like that seems, I dunno, a bit racist?

Of course some of us are definitely racist. Some people can’t stand anything different to themselves. I understand that psychology. But if they don’t like anything that’s different to them, how come so many racists own dogs?

“Yeah, but dogs are different.”

No shit they’re different, they’re dogs.

You reckon after all the time they spend together the racists would have learnt, don’t judge someone ‘til you’ve at least sniffed their bum.

Australian racism has been highlighted in the world media in the last few years. 

Once, because of a massive error in judgement from Hey! Hey! It’s Saturday! producers  . I couldn’t help but think that maybe that was a bit of a test. After seeing that people actually tuned in to watch Darrell Sommers and Red Symons heave the corpse of their careers back on to prime time, the producers went “I wonder what else they’d sit through?...” Granted, it was a mistake, but at least Darrell and Red have gone back to dipping fries.

The other event(s) that brought racism in Australia to the attention of the world media was attacks on Indian students. I was actually warned by an Indian guy in the UK to be careful when I returned to Australia because of the rampant violence. The reality was that it was a few thugs that beat up a few Indian students because they didn’t want them in this country. But he tragedy of the situation was that following the attacks, enrolments by Indian students in Australian uni’s halved. I think it’s a real shame that it doesn’t work the same way with thugs. You beat one up in the street and 50% of them disappear. It’s a shame because you randomly beat up a thug in the street, and all that happens is that you yourself become a thug. I just wish it’d worked that way with Indian students. A thug punches one in the street, and the thug becomes a diligent student with a strong work ethic and solid family ties. The characteristics, ironically, whose absence drives people to a life of thuggery in the first place.

But I do think there’s a real innocence to Australians racism. I think that because we’ve never had a war in this country, that there’s never been too much political turmoil or good reason to hate other people in Australia, our racism really is the froth on the top of a hate-latte. Soft, fluffy, and of no real weight.*

Here’s a perfect example of it to close.

A few years ago, I came home for a visit. I was watching the cricket one day, it was Australia versus South Africa, and none other than PM Kevin Rudd was in the commentary box. (This is where our priorities lay at the time. Bugger the war, bugger the poor, what we need to discuss is the seagull at silly mid-on). The game was rolling along, when a decision was referred to the third umpire, who was Indian. The third umpire ruled against the Australians, and our Prime Minister just goes…


 “Well, we’ll be reviewing his Visa.”

*I think racism in Australia arises from our lack of national identity. We’re not just straight-talking pie-eating tradies and glamours living carefree by the beach, which is how we are portrayed in the media. The reality is that Australia’s much more complex, much more multi-cultural, much more interesting than that. But because we haven’t yet defined exactly what it means to be Australian in the 21st century, we define ourselves by what we’re not, rather than what we are. It’s much easier that way. Unless of course you happen to be ‘different’.

PS By the way. I appreciate I’m a white, middle-class male; What would I know about racism?

Wednesday 25 May 2011

The Tide

There are a number of issues in Oz that are dealt with like a tide. Boat people, aged care, the plight of Aboriginals in the outback. Stuff like this. Passion, care and outrage come up and down, up and down.
“It’s inhumane! ... Oh, there’s a sale at Myer”
“Something needs to be done! ... as soon as I get back from the beach”
“Let’s march on parliament... via that nice little cafe on Crown Street.”
But as long as this tide’s going in and out, nothing will ever get done. These issues will never get resolved. That’s why, if we want to solve the boat people debacle, look after the oldies, close the quality of life gap, we need to stop the tide of apathy and empathy. And there’s only one way to stop the tide.
We need to GET RID OF THE MOON!
What does the moon do? Fuck all. Sure it’s a Mecca for weight loss and flag storage, but you know it’s also the number one cause of Warewolfery? Plus, it only ever works nights. Sometimes, it barely bothers to show up at all, and when it does it just parades around.
“Look at me, aren’t I bright?”
Have you seen the sun?
I’m just saying, if we wanna solve our problems, we’ve gotta think big. And once we manage this moon-redundancy, I’ll let you in on my plan of action to wipe out sunburn once and for all.

Sunday 22 May 2011

GILLARD’S CASTLE ™

"Welcome to the show! Are we excited? Then let’s put our helmets on, cos it’s time to play Australian politics!"
Am I the only one that feels Australian politics has turned into a crazy Japanese gameshow? Hapless contestants try unsuccessfully to jump through hoops as political commentators say everything they can to embarrass them and throw them off their challenge.
In the first round, we put half the poli’s on a seesaw and see if they can keep both ends off the ground. Sounds easy, except there’s also gonna be a crazy sumo-wrestler in red bungers trying to knock them off, starting with the contestants with the weakest principles. This one’s called “Balance of Power”
In the second round, whoever’s leading digs a giant hole in the ground and sells the dirt. Then, they have to buy back the stuff made from the dirt, and after a while, chuck it back in the hole and hope there’s enough to fill the hole back up. It’s called “Hole in the System!”
In the third round a union leader will put you in a choke-hold, and it’s up to you to see if you can do what he says, or else the grip gets tighter. It’s called “From Behind”
And in the final round, contestants will try and drive around an obstacle course in a hilarious tiny car as the opposition sit in the passengers seat and points out, not how you should go around the obstacle, but rather the problems with the way you did in fact get around each the obstacle as you pass it. It’s called “Back Seat Griping”
And for the winner today, is a huge prize! Not only will you take home a great big dose of voter dissatisfaction, but also a feeling of helplessness to go with some old, old rope tied exclusively around your wrists by country Independents. Here on AUSTRALIAN POLITICS!!!

Tuesday 17 May 2011

Smokin!

Smokers! Enjoy it while it lasts people.

A few of my mates are smokers.

“Mate, just cos they change the packaging, it won’t stop me from smoking.”
Ha ha ha! Have you seen the new packs? Holy fuckamoley. They look like they could give you eye cancer just looking at them. They are truuuly, truly horrific.

Imagine being in the focus group for that...

“Well that one makes me feel physically ill, but that one makes me want to tear out my own eyeballs. Ohh, I just can’t make up my mind!”

One mate said that if the pack’s too gross to look at, he’ll just buy a cover to put them in. But with the hardline the government is taking on em, it’s probably only a matter of time before the covers have to be adorned with warnings. Inevitably, there’ll be a subsequent cover, then another warning, followed by another cover then another warning, and it’ll go on and on and on until every time you want to smoke, you ‘ll have to play and increasingly morbid game of pass the parcel.

“Oh! Oh my! Yuk! Gross! Oh my god! Jesus that’s horrible! WHAT IS THAT!!! Oh yeah, it’s Malborough time.”

Personally, I don’t think it’s gone far enough. Sure the packets are covered in open wounds, but is that really enough? I wanna see tombstones on the paper. How about green smoke? A little stock in the filter that makes a death rattle whenever you inhale? These are all good ideas, and I reckon it’s only a matter of time before we see em.

Cos it’s a hard line they’re taking on smokes. And I’m pretty sure the only reason they’ll stop short of getting a thug to whack you over the head every time you light up, is because they know the pain would remind you you’re still alive. And that’s the last thing they want.

Sunday 15 May 2011

Smokin!


Smokers! Enjoy it while it lasts people.
A few of my mates are smokers.
“Mate, just cos they change the packaging, it won’t stop me from smoking.”
Ha ha ha! Have you seen the new packs? Holy fuckamoley. They look like they could give you eye cancer just looking at them. They are truuuly, truly horrific.
Imagine being in the focus group for that.
“Well that one makes me feel physically ill, but that one makes me want to tear out my own eyeballs. Ohh, I just can’t make up my mind!”
One mate said that if the pack’s too gross to look at, he’ll just buy a cover to put them in. But with the hardline the government is taking on em, it’s probably only a matter of time before the covers have to be adorned with warnings. Inevitably, there’ll be a subsequent cover, then another warning, followed by another cover then another warning, and it’ll go on and on and on until every time you want to smoke, you ‘ll have to play and increasingly morbid game of pass the parcel.
“Oh! Oh my! Yuk! Gross! Oh my god! Jesus that’s horrible! WHAT IS THAT!!! Oh yeah, it’s Malborough time.”
Personally, I don’t think it’s gone far enough. Sure the packets are covered in open wounds, but is that really enough? I wanna see tombstones on the paper. How about green smoke? A little stock in the filter that makes a death rattle whenever you inhale? These are all good ideas, and I reckon it’s only a matter of time before we see em.
Cos it’s a hard line they’re taking on smokes. And I’m pretty sure the only reason they’ll stop short of getting a thug to whack you over the head every time you light up, is because they know the pain would remind you you’re still alive. And that’s the last thing they want.

Wednesday 11 May 2011

I DIDN'T VOTE FOR POKIE LICENSES!!!

I didn’t vote for Pokie Licences. Although to be fair, I don’t remember seeing his name on the ballot.

It’s become the catch cry of democratic Australia.

“I didn’t vote for this, that, OR the other!”

People seem to have forgotten that a vote is a show of faith in a political party to make decisions on your behalf. What follows when they take power is incidental. That’s how life works. You don’t date Matt Newton to learn how to box, sometimes that’s just the natural order of things.

I’ve accepted the pokie license thing. Even though I didn’t vote for it. Because I also didn’t vote for flood relief. I didn’t vote for a compassionate trip to Japan following a nuclear accident. I didn’t vote for a tax to stop global warming. You might say, ‘Well Rich, isn’t that because you didn’t vote?’ I’d have to say yes, but only so I could keep my “I didn’t vote for…” options open.

Another great one is the classic “Our Anzacs didn’t give their lives for …” You know, gay marriage, Islamic Australia, cooking shows around the clock. Of course they didn’t. Had they been fighting for that, it would of shown INCREDIBLE forsight. Although, I reckon if they’d had that kind of foresight, they might not have ended up on a Turkish beach in the first place.

But the thing is, maybe they did die for this. For a gay, Muslim, Nisoise salad.
If you’ve been to Gallipoli, you’ll know the trenches snake up from the beach all the way to the top of the hill. Maybe what happened, is all the soldiers were lined up in the trenches, An at the very top of the hill was a guy with a little table and a deck of tarot cards, and one by one the soldiers looked into the future and saw that it was worth dying for.

“Two blokes kissing in a church? Yep? Over you go.

“A choice of religions? Yep? Go forth my boy.

“Fat guy in a cravat? Yep? Give your life and it shall be.”

Monday 9 May 2011

The Mark of Emotion.

I recently witnessed the pinnacle of human achievement.

It wasn't a scientific breakthrough. It wasn't a moment of incomparable selflessness. It wasn't an emotionally inspiring piece of art.

It was a mark in the forward pocket by an Essendon player at the MCG. There was 87 000 people there, all screaming for their team. And in that one moment as he rose above the pack and took hold of the ball firmly against his chest, it was the greatest accomplishment ever achieved by man kind.

Now as I sit at my desk three weeks later, I appreciate I might have got a bit carried away. I know it wasn't the best thing mankind has ever done. That was Weekend at Bernie's 2. But in that moment, nothing else seemed like it had ever been as important as that one mark.

I think it's a pretty special experience to feel like that. I guess that's why just watching sport is so richly rewarding. But every activity has that. Watching a play. Eating a meal. Making love. There's a magical moment where nothing else can compare. Although I don't think it's always a moment of inspiration.

It might be a mercy killing. It could be lying to a court. It surely has been at times a cruel and inhumane act. But in that one moment it seems so right to whoever is involved. There is clarity and there is justification. And we can never truly appreciate what has gone on in a persons mind in that moment. We are animals, blinded to everything surrounding us by our emotions. Unfortunately, we are not so empathetic that we can feel what it was like for that person in that moment.

That's why people's travel stories are boring unless we've been there. It's why we can't know what it's like to be a parent til we become one ourselves. It's the reason why someone says "She's gone." and as we hold them, we think 'Here we go...'

Not funny, or point-y, just something interesting about emotion and the human condition.

Monday 28 March 2011

The "Hide the Ham" Game

Keeping sibling rivalry fresh can be difficult. Once you've left sand in their bed, changed their girlfriends number to your's in their mobile and set their wallet in jelly, it can be hard to come up with new things. A recent trip home for our dad's 60th presented a new opportunity. A rogue piece of ham was left over after a typically indulgent Brophy family lunch, and the only way from stopping myself from eating it was coming up with a more satisfying using of it. And so Hide the Ham came to be. The game is pretty straight forward.

1. Take one piece of ham.

2. Hide it somewhere in your siblings belongings. It should be somewhere that they have a chance to find it before it starts to smell, but not necessarily.

3. Once they find it, they hide it in your belongings, and the game continues.

I'm staying with my brother for a month during the Melbourne comedy festival, so stay tuned for the increasingly hides and seeks of Hide the Ham.


Play it yourself and let me know how it goes!

Wednesday 26 January 2011

If you don't read this, someone you know will.

Everything causes cancer. Red wine. White wine. No wine. Whining. Winning. Losing. Soothing. Moving. Standing still. There's an old saying, the more you know (that causes cancer), the more you know you don't know (that causes cancer). I'm pretty sure that's the saying anyway.

There's more and more cancer being found thanks to advancements in the field of diagnosis. But I'm not sure that's the only reason. Maybe we're just a bit weaker than we used to be. My old man spent his childhood without suncream. He'd get burnt to a crisp day after day of each long Australian summer. He got skin cancer. But only once. I've spent my whole life putting cream on, along with most of my generation, and one of my mates has just been diagnosed with skin cancer.

It makes me think. Does suncream stop skin cancer? No. Does suncream cause skin cancer? Maybe.

That would be weird. Remember the old black and white footage of kids in a pool being sprayed with asbestos to prove it was safe? That went pretty pear-shaped.

But what if suncream does cause cancer? Years of government warnings to Slip, slop, slap.

Apply it liberally. Put it all over your face. Put it on the childern. Lots of it. On their faces. Rub it in. Into their faces.

That'd be pretty hard core. And not particularly amusing. Unless you're twisted. But it's 37 degrees today and I'm about to go to the beach. I think I'll take my chances with suncream.

Monday 17 January 2011

booze news for youse.

Okay Australia, I think you've had enough.

You've been drinking all day and you're a mess. Look at you. You're dehydrated. You're abusive. You're getting in fights and you're spending money you don't have. That's enough.

It's a common claim that alcohol is ruining this country. Crime. Violence. Domestic abuse. Car crashes. The drink's got a hold on us, but we can't hold it. Makes sense. But I don't think we should blame alcohol. Alcohol's done great things in the past. It's social lubricancy has kept the cogs of society running smooth for years. It's responsible for the birth of many of us. And at least once a year we read a great story about an elephant eating old berries and going on a rampage (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21432722/from/ET/). Alcohol's getting a bad wrap.

Alcohol isn't ruining Australia, Australia's ruining alcohol.

Our inability to stop when we're in a decent state makes us a country of messy boozers. It's not enough to get drunk, we need to get DRUUUUU(hic!)UUUUUUNK!

Why?

Is it the last thing we grab on to at night to prove our prowess in the macho arena?

"Six cocksucking cowboy's thanks"

Maybe.

Is it because we're rebelling against measures to slow down our drinking?

"I'm gonna stick it to the man. But first I'm gonna have one more..."

Possibly.

Is it because it's 'part of our culture'?

"Happy 21st. It's a funnel of goon."

Surely.

What ever the reason, it's no good excuse. We egg one another on to get blind, then we do stupid shit and blame alcohol. If alcohol had a choice, he wouldn't be mates with us after all the shit we lay on him.

Who crashed the car? Not me, I blame the alcohol. I didn't cheat on you honey, alcohol did. Nah, alcohol brought that street sign home.

I'm just saying sometimes it's not alcohols fault. It's yours, dickhead.



But only sometimes.



Cheers.