If we took a holiday
Took some time to celebrate
Just one day out of life
It would be, it would be so nice
It’s school holiday time (which doesn’t - obviously - mean parent holiday time!)… I’m due to submit the first draft of my PhD thesis on Friday some time (possibly late-ish). The marking’s all done. The conference is over. But that wonderful thing called semester starts up again on the 21st. And I don’t have either the time or the money to take my preferred break - which was going to be an intertubes-less week in a cabin by a beach somewhere reading books, followed by a week of partay-ing in Sydney or Melbourne, followed by a week back in Brisneyland under the doonah. So give me some vicarious holiday goodness! Do we get enough holidays? What do we do when we take them? Are we ever away in a wired world?
I have to defend the town I lived in from 1996 to 2002 from the all too flippant calumny in this comment. (And incidentally Nancy Pelosi, one of whose Congressional campaigns I worked on, as well as heaps of local ones for both the Democrats and the Greens… - she’s so right in this comment about the Clinton campaign.) As I’ve said about a thousand times before, pro-Americanism or anti-Americanism is the dumb. It’s far too complex a country to condemn or praise in toto, and - incidentally - one I’m proud to be a citizen of. But I will say, as someone largely brought up in Brisneyland, that San Francisco is one part of the world where there’s enough cultural similarities that we can feel, not at home, but able to negotiate our way into feeling like this is Heimat, as it were. Or, at least, I felt that way. Continue reading ‘I left my heart in San Francisco…’
Some of the tensions in Rudd’s governance and indeed in his Cabinet over climate change issues are discussed by Brian in this post. Brian’s thoughts could usefully be read together with Shaun Carney’s column in yesterday’s Age [via Gary Sauer-Thompson at Public Opinion]:
The central tension for contemporary Labor is the need to weave together its disparate supporting tribes and Rudd’s car plan, which co-opts concern about climate change to underpin the ALP’s more traditional working class base, tells us how he wants to do it. When Labor was last in power, under Paul Keating, it managed to hold on to most of its white-collar support base but lost office when parts of its blue-collar base, pummelled by the effects of economic deregulation, concluded it had lost touch. Since then, the white-collar left has coalesced more solidly around the Greens - an effect that has been turbo-charged by the death of the more moderate Democrats. This has two consequences, both of which make it harder for Labor to hold on to power.
When some terribly serious coot makes a history of 90’s Australian pop, I doubt they’ll deign to mention TISM.
But for a kid from the country who, in those pre-Internet days, was blown away when the diet of Hits and Memories radio was turned on its head by the introduction of JJJ to Albury in 1994, TISM are special. This is Serious Mum and their p*sstake dance-pop will remain a touchstone. So I was saddened to read that Jock Paull, aka Token Blackman of TISM, got a tumour that may not have started in his brain, but crept into his lungs, and ended his life prematurely at 50.
So, in honour of a man whose name I didn’t know until now, but whose music made me laugh every time I heard it, let’s all demand a vodka rider from our nearest student union, and dance like a d******d to one of TISM’s finest moments, He’ll Never Be an Old Man River. Guitarists may pass, riffs live forever…
If you want to see glorious and evolving represenations of the Australian landscape and Australian icons, the Sidney Nolan exhibition is highly recommended. If you want to see graffiti art, take a walk around the little lanes in Melbourne’s CBD. Here’s some examples of that graffiti.
There will be more photos and videos to follow, but I just want to say thanks to the people who came to the forum last night. Your interest in the topic was fabulous and thanks so much for sharing your thoughts. It was lovely to get the chance to meet all of you. You deserve a round of applause.
A photo of the forum’s speakers (Professor Chris Nash is wearing a red shirt, Matthew Ricketson from The Age is standing behind Jane Nethercote from Crikey. Jane’s attired in the striped dress). Also featured are some of the people who attended.
See you tomorrow night. Make sure to climb the stairs next to the bar and buy your booze downstairs. There will be students in the area (the University of Melbourne is just across the road), so be alert but not alarmed. Rockin’ dude (sorry, just practicing in case I run into any students).
Media Under Rudd
Wednesday, April 16, 2008
Time: 7:00pm - 8:30pm
Location: Prince Alfred Hotel
Street: 191 Grattan Street, Carlton
City/Town: Melbourne, Australia
There’s a sad moment in Helen Garner’s exquisite TheSpareRoom when the cancer-ridden but ever-smiling Nicola admits that what she regards as her life’s failures (e.g. childlessness, being a singleton, and lack of persistence) is compelling her to fight her illness in any way she can.
Unfortunately for her friend Helen, a writer who lets the ailing woman reside with her for three weeks out of what appears to be a mixture of altruism, love, and ego, this fight takes the form of daily visits to a dodgy clinic located in the CBD.
After finding Garner an intrusive and maddening presence in journalistic efforts such as JoeCinque’sConsolation, it’s a relief to discover that “fictional” Helen, with all her flaws, fury and brutal honesty, is on the side of the good guys.
As a follow-up to my post on Melbourne’s transport issues, the Eddington Report has now been released.
As speculated on earlier, there will indeed be a road tunnel, but one with no CBD exits. Furthermore, there’s a massive rail tunnel project as well, linking Footscray in the west to Caulfield in the south-east, providing an alternative to the overcrowded City Loop in the CBD. There’s also a rail link joining Sunshine and Werribee. Total cost - in the order of $18 billion. Oh, and Eddington describes congestion charging for Melbourne as inevitable.
As my friend and urban planner Russ notes, there’s something in there to annoy just about everyone. For instance, Eddington’s view is that land use change, and public transport, is unlikely to make much of a dint in CO2 emissions from vehicles. Anyway, there’s a hell of a lot to chew on in here, both for Melbourne residents like myself and those interested in urban planning issues more generally.
I’m reviewing all the Melbourne International Comedy Festival shows that I’ve seen at my own blog, to avoid turning LP into all comedy reviews, all the time.
But the short version: the best show I’ve seen so far is Bill Hicks: Slight Return. Hicks, for those of you not aware, was a political, edgy, crude, and sometimes brilliant American standup comic who died from pancreatic cancer at age 32 in 1994. Like, say, Joy Division, he probably has more fans now than he ever had when alive. In this show, actor/comedian Chas Early portrays Hicks’ return to Earth for one last show. Early is unnervingly accurate in his characterisation of Hicks (my girlfriend, a Hicks devotee, agreed); it’s quite easy to suspend disbelief for a while. The material is all-new but utterly characteristic of Hicks, passionate, angry, pointed and, importantly, bloody funny. See it before it sells out.
Anybody else got some recommendations for the festival? Any friends doing shows?
Just a message to Melburnians: On Wednesday 16 April 2008 from 7.00pm, Larvatus Prodeo will be holding a forum about “Media Under Rudd” at the Prince Alfred Hotel, 191 Grattan Street Carlton. Speakers to be confirmed, but please mark it down in your diary.
The inner north of Melbourne is not a bad place to be a pedestrian or cyclist. There’s any number of shopping and restaurant strips festooned with bicycle hoops, most gradually gentrifying but retaining that slight streak of rebelliousness that distinguishes them from the blue-rinse heartland off to the south-east. Lots of people ride to work along the widely distributed cycle lanes, with artfully placed barriers allowing cycle commuters, but not cars, down wide, flat boulevards like North Carlton’s Canning Street. And there’s a couple of train lines, a profusion of trams, and even a gradually improving bus schedule to get oneself around.
But in amongst this car-haters idyll, there’s one dramatic exception - Alexandra Parade. Despite its pretentious name, it’s a massive traffic sewer that links what used to be the Tullamarine Freeway from the airport, to the Eastern Freeway to the outer-eastern wastelands of Ringwood. And, every weekday morning and evening, the eight lanes of this ugly piece of road are jammed to capacity with cars and trucks; the only people making any progress through it tend to be lane-splitting nutcases on bikes and scooters. Despite the desultory attempts at bicycle lanes, no sane cyclist would go near the smelly particulate-laden air that diffuses from the thousands of commuters, truckies, and courier vans. My own daily commute takes me, briefly, onto the Parade; and while my travelling time hasn’t changed much, the proportion of that time spent weaving through stationary cars and trucks has increased markedly. And, at peak times, the queue of vehicles backed up on the Eastern Freeway trying to enter the inner city can be kilometers long. On occasion, I also take the train to work, from Brunswick into the city, and then out to Hawthorn. As an academic, it doesn’t matter terribly much if I’m in after the 9 o’clock rush, so in the past this usually meant an uncrowded carriage in which I could find out what nonsense Tracee Hutchinson was inflicting on the opinion pages that day. But the squeeze is increasingly on in Melbourne’s rail carriages too; even lunchtime trains into the city are becoming standing room only.
There’s an article in the latest edition of TheWeekendAustralian Magazine about people who are called beggars, bums, hobos, vagrants, tramps and no doubt other labels too offensive to mention.
One of the beggars discussed in the item is a man many Melburnians would’ve seen sitting in various locations in the CBD.
Readers are told that his name is Wayne and that he has found begging to be a wretched experience, which would be unsurprising to anyone who has glimpsed his despondent face.
Just witnessed the Victoria Police Showband doing a rather nice performance of “What’s Going On”, which was made famous by the late Marvin Gaye. Thought this event was rather amusing, but also wondered whether the choice of song might confirm to some of Christine Nixon’s opponents that coppers these days are a bunch of flaccid appendages:
Picket lines and picket signs
Don’t punish me with brutality
Talk to me, so you can see
Oh, what’s going on
What’s going on
Ya, what’s going on
Ah, what’s going on
Of course, Nixon’s opponents are mostly individuals whose willies get bigger when a burly uniformed bloke hits an offender on the noggin with a telephone book. Ahhh, for the good old days of policing when there was no women, gays, disables, accountability and models of policing that depend on the brain rather than brawn.
Larvatus Prodeo is an Australian group blog which discusses politics, sociology, culture, life, religion and science from a left of centre perspective. more»
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