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  • A little ABC/ Australia Network/ AFL conspiracy theory

    A little ABC/ Australia Network/ AFL conspiracy theory

     

    Australia Network was supposed to close down 18 September 2014. SMH back in June.

    I started seeing ads on Australia Network saying they’re going to cover every part of the AFL finals series.

    But wait, the Grand Final is 27 September 2014.

    Turns out magically that the Australia Network will now close September 29.

    In late August this turned up on Mumbrella:

    Mumbrella understands that the Australia Network will continue its broadcast into Asia until around mid September. It will also fulfil its commitment to the AFL to offer a transitional schedule that will see it broadcast the Grand Final in Asia and the Pacific on September 29.

    This despite a lack of funding following the withdrawal of the money from DFAT.

    Now for those who have never seen Australia Network, it shows both the AFL Channel 7 coverage AND the Fox Sports coverage. Usually 6 games a week…for free, across the Asia-Pacific.

    I don’t for one minute seriously believe that Australia Network was paying for the right to show AFL. It doesn’t show NRL, although there is a weekly Asia soccer show they show which is shown back in Australia anyway on the ABC.

    My theory: the AFL was paying Australia Network to show the games as part of their expansion plans, and the extension of the channel for roughly an extra 2 weeks was due to the AFL making a payment to keep the channel on air.

    There’s no other logical explanation. Given the funding had well and truly stopped it’s a miracle Australia Network is still on air…let alone towards the end of September.

    I’ll also make another tip: in the new “Australia Plus” deal the ABC is pumping out to Asia/ Pacific networks (allegedly 6 hours a day…and they’ve got a pile of broadcasters on board) the Friday to Sunday coverage will be primarily AFL…because the AFL wants the coverage across their key expansion area.

    Food for thought.

  • XXXIX

    600

     

    “The countenance is the portrait of the soul, and the eyes mark its intentions.”

    Sage advice I should have followed in years gone by.

    Marcus Tullius Cicero.

  • The Unbearable Likeness of Thai Living

    As I walked down the street from one of my 3 local 7-Elevens tonight I was nearly hit by a car.

    This car came probably in under 1m away from me.

    I never flinched once nor cared. I’m in Thailand. It was way close, but it was never going to hit me.thai bike

    And if one thing Thailand has taught me is that caring less is freedom.

    For those interested in the car story: it’s just usual here. Bikes often get closer as you’re walking up and down a street.

    In Australia, I’d go completely and utterly spare. Every. Single. Time.

    But somehow this wonderful country called Thailand has taught me not to care. To not get stressed. To not unduly worry.

    Yes, Thailand has a horrible track record with road deaths, but likewise no one is going to run into you as you walk up the street.

    I’ll walk up my street again tonight, and I won’t give a shit about being hit because I know that an average Thai on a bike, or in a car, doesn’t want to hit me.

    And this conquers a lot of anxiety I ever had.

  • RIP Rick Mayall 1958-2014

    rik myallA man who inspired a generation of kids with your comedy.

     

  • Thoughts on Chiang Mai and being accused of “Running Away”

    Thoughts on Chiang Mai and being accused of “Running Away”

    I’ve been accused by quite a few people of running away from my problems.

    I’m not, as opposed to saying fuck it all and lets live somewhere where I can be happy and content.

    I would never have thought about moving to Chiang Mai accept this bloke I know, who’s maybe a bit crazier than I am, but none the less a good bloke (and he worked out the sale of The Blog Herald for me) David Krug suggested Chiang Mai as a destination.

    I’m happy he did.

    I love this town. I really do. I’m content here. I’m comfortable. And the only bad thing is it’s near on impossible to get a permanent stay here visa.

    And yet some people suggest that I’ve run away.

    I’ve not run away from anything. You can’t runaway from nothing after all 🙂

    My relationship with Kellie came to an end and so be it: still love the girl, and will always be there for her, but let me say this (please don’t be upset Kel that I’m saying this publicly) I encouraged her to get back with her husband, which she has and is still doing. She’s quite possibly my sole mate, and the only person I’ve ever met in my life who is kinda like me.

    It’s a relationship I actually regret losing…unlike the nut cases prior.

    I’ve had a seriously colourful relationship past (before Kellie I would note…I have ZERO negative to say about her,) including a full blown psycho who thought that sending out IVO’s daily was fun. That relationship cost me soooo many friends it wasn’t funny. For the record my name was on them: it wasn’t my idea, I was just supporting my partner.

    But I need to accept the blame.

    My ex-wife left me after telling me one day that she’d like to donate to the IVF programme then several months later running off with the husband of the woman she was donating her eggs to.

    Shit I can’t make up: I’m seriously not that creative.

    But so it is.

    The next time you, and anyone thinks that I’m in Thailand running away please don’t: I’m here because I gave up the pursuit of wealth in an attempt to be content and happy, and this place makes me happy.

    I’m content, not stressed (every day people nearly run me over and I don’t care, in Melbourne I’d be seriously upset.)

    If it works out I don’t know. And yes the heat earlier this week got to me. But tell me seriously if you’re single: why not give a shot to something that may make you happy?

    PS: Given I’m 15 months away from middle age…. 😉

  • Why the Australian Government Should Keep Funding The Australia Network

    It has been reported in the news today that the Australian Government is going to get rid of The Australian Network in next weeks budget.

    I actually don’t believe that they should… and yes, those who know me may find that surprising.

    The contract under the Gillard Government was a joke; Sky News won it fair and square but Gillard decided to award it to the ABC anyway. Why they even opened it to a submission process I’m not sure, and today the validity of the ABC being awarded a 10 year contract is dubious at best.

    But that’s beyond the point of why The Australia Network should exist.

    I joke…actually regularly, about how the “soft diplomacy” of The Australia Network involves confusing several billion people in Asia with Giggle and Hoot…and worse still Q&A..

    But here’s the thing: Australia Network is so ubiquitous in Asia now that I’ve never stayed anywhere in South East Asia that doesn’t have it on TV.

    And that includes a really shitty hotel in Kuala Lumpur that literally only had 4 channels: one of them was The Australia Network.

    With the exception of Al Jazerra English, which has been in most places I’ve stayed (but not all) Australia Network pretty much now dominates English language programming across Asia…at the least for tourists…but I also believe it comes in the Asian equivalents of a “basic cable package” as well.

    The tl;dr version is that nearly everyone in South East Asia who has some form of pay TV has Australian Network.

    Oh, and if you’ve never left Australia: you can walk around the worst slum in Bangkok and see each house with a pay tv dish.

    I’m not going to pretend to understand the subtleties of “soft diplomacy” but I do have a degree that includes Marketing: The Australia Network must, at some level promote Australia in the region.

    Like Aunty at home it offers a variety of kids programs during the day (around school leave/ home times) which must be received well by Children. Its news (particularly the 2:30pm Thai time report) actually informs about what’s going on in the region.

    And lets not forget that for 8 cents a day (actually given inflation a lot more now) that Australians pay for the ABC and given South East Asia is where most Australian tourists visit (ironically more so than home now) shouldn’t Australian’s also have access to taxpayer funded content away from home?

    $270m roughly over 10 years or $27m a year isn’t a lot of money to broadcast Australian TV shows and culture across Asia.

    It really isn’t.

    I don’t believe for a minute that hundreds of millions of people in Asia are tuning in, but I do believe that there are enough people watching it to make it worth a relatively small investment to take Australia into Asia.

    Just remember Abbott Government: The Australia Network is more dominant in the region than ANY OTHER COUNTRY SPECIFIC CHANNEL in the region and what sort of message does it send to Asia that Australia isn’t strong enough to spend sweet fuck all in the perspective of the budget to continue spreading its mostly good programming to a region that wants to like us…but might not as much if they’re denied a window into who we are as a people and a nation.

  • Anzac Day 2014

    anzac day 2014

    Australia takes her pen in hand,
    To write a line to you,
    To let you fellows understand,
    How proud we are of you.

    From shearing shed and cattle run,
    From Broome to Hobsons Bay,
    Each native-born Australian son,
    Stands straighter up today.

    The man who used to “hump his drum”,
    On far-out Queensland runs,
    Is fighting side by side with some
    Tasmanian farmer’s sons.

    The fisher-boys dropped sail and oar
    To grimly stand the test,
    Along that storm-swept Turkish shore,
    With miners from the west.

    The old state jealousies of yore
    Are dead as Pharaoh’s sow,
    We’re not State children any more
    We’re all Australians now!

    Our six-starred flag that used to fly,
    Half-shyly to the breeze,
    Unknown where older nations ply
    Their trade on foreign seas,

    Flies out to meet the morning blue
    With Vict’ry at the prow;
    For that’s the flag the Sydney flew,
    The wide seas know it now!

    The mettle that a race can show
    Is proved with shot and steel,
    And now we know what nations know
    And feel what nations feel.

    The honoured graves beneath the crest
    Of Gaba Tepe hill,
    May hold our bravest and our best,
    But we have brave men still.

    With all our petty quarrels done,
    Dissensions overthrown,
    We have, through what you boys have done,
    A history of our own.

    Our old world diff’rences are dead,
    Like weeds beneath the plough,
    For English, Scotch, and Irish-bred,
    They’re all Australians now!

    So now we’ll toast the Third Brigade,
    That led Australia’s van,
    For never shall their glory fade
    In minds Australian.

    Fight on, fight on, unflinchingly,
    Till right and justice reign.
    Fight on, fight on, till Victory
    Shall send you home again.

    And with Australia’s flag shall fly
    A spray of wattle bough,
    To symbolise our unity,
    We’re all Australians now.

    Banjo Patterson.

    Lest We Forget.

  • You’re home early

    you’re home early.