One suspects a comedic musical about errant ex-footballer Wayne Carey would be a very black look at the psyche of a certain kind of male (not sure what song from Hairspray the cast might break into when Carey hits his girlfriend with a glass).Â
A less difficult subject for funny songs is the blokey but unthreatening Shane Warne, the former spin bowler with a beer gut, and a, errr, big thing for blondes.
Eddie Perfect, who more than entertained at last year’s Melbourne International Comedy Festival (MICF) with his turn as a kinky Alexander Downer, has returned to MICF in 2008 with a sneak peek at his upcoming ShaneWarne:TheMusical.
I’m impressed that the shoulder-charge was textbook in execution for a man who only trains recreationally with the League. The streaker is most unlikely to have any permanent injury to anything more than his pride. Still, was Symonds’ response appropriate to the trespassing nuisance, or was it indefensible thuggery?
Some of you may have noticed that cricket has dominated the news for the past few days. The aftermath of the Sydney test has released a wave of recriminations, hyperbole and effigy burning not seen for many a year.
First off, cricket will survive this brouhaha as it survived Bodyline, Ray Illingworth taking his players off the field, regular attempts by Pakistan to take their bat and go home, Sunil Gavaskar not liking an Aussie umpire’s decision back in 1981 (which was a little cheeky given the standard of umpiring that faced any team touring the sub-continent around that time) and Dennis the menace’s infamous aluminum bat.
The state of play at the moment in this sorry saga is that India seem happy that their umpiring scourge, Steve Bucknor, has been dropped from the Third Test in Perth. And this was the correct decision by the ICC (International Cricket Council). Bucknor had a shocker and is at the end of the long career as an umpire. It would be better for him to bow out gracefully and take an administrative role. Continue reading ‘So who benefits from the Australia v India cricket stoush?’
Yes of course I should be working. Paperwork piled beside me like a poorly executed Andy Goldsworthy piece, a floor that could do with a vacuum, sink full of dishes, presents to wrap. Thankfully there’s always tomorrow. Such ill-discipline.
So I shall instead indulge myself with a waspish look at a piece printed in the MSM today. Back page of the front section of the SMH - SiT as it’s wittingly known - Stay in Touch. Quite what it is staying in touch with is unclear, though a peevish middle class whine springs to mind. I gather it is meant to be lightly informing & mildly distracting. And in keeping with its usual tone of annoying self satisfaction, it has today a piece by Paul Sheehan.
Entitled In roles not always best suited or served, it serves up another example of Sheehan’s ability to cherry pick the irrelevant from a moment of popular culture & draw conclusions baffling in their less than paper thin connection with the original incident. While at the same time, lecturing us as to the appropriate conclusion & therefore the moral we should have drawn ourselves. Continue reading ‘Restless natives & all that’
On Larvatus Prodeo last year, and crossposted at Hoyden, I posted a short few lines on how I don’t bother to turn the telly on the watch the Melbourne Cup. If I was still working in an office, I’d enjoy the long lunch and conviviality (who doesn’t enjoy a bit of mucking around on the job that the boss doesn’t dare yell about?), but I’d probably find something else to do while the gee-gees were actually running, and I wouldn’t make any bets other than the ritual gold coin in the office sweepstake.
This apparently is an elitist attitude, but a few people who do enjoy the excitement of a flutter tipped the winner in that thread, leading to this special request:
“Hmm, evidently I should have just read this thread and not bothered looking at the form guide!�
I reckon tigtog should run another thread next year about her total disinterest in the Cup, get Amanda and Shaun to tip early in the thread and we’ll all clean up.
So, request honoured. Have at it over at Hoyden About Town while LP’s comments are disabled, those of you searching for a tip.
Fresh from wedging African refugees, the government moved on to its next wedge target yesterday…the AFL and its drugs policy.
The AFL, in its infinite wisdom (or that of its sponsors) began testing its players all year round for illegal (recreational) drugs - marijuana, ecstasy, cocaine, and so on - drugs that might be enjoyable to take but don’t actually help the player perform. This is separate and additional to the in-competition tests in the same manner as the Olympic sports, where any drug offence leads to a two-year ban. However, the intervention of the AFL Player’s Association, who were reluctant to agree to any out-of-competition testing for recreational drugs, saw a reasonably enlightened policy on what to do with that information. Players who return a positive out-of-competition test for recreational drugs aren’t automatically disciplined. A player’s first two positive tests aren’t disclosed to anyone - including the player’s club, much to many coaches’ annoyance - and result in counselling. Only after three positive tests are players disciplined. The federal government, smelling an opportunity to get “tough on drugs”, has repeatedly attempted to get the AFL to impose a more punitive regime, and their latest attempt goes after the AFL’s hip pocket.
The actual chances of anything being implemented before the election are minimal, of course, so it’s a pure political stunt. But what genius at the government’s media unit decided to pull such a stunt the week after the Grand Final(s), where most of the footballing communities have disappeared on holiday, and the punters are more interested in mourning Australia’s early exit from the Rugby World Cup?
The Rugby World Cup kicks off on Friday and I’m super-excited. For the first time in quite a while it looks like there are a whole bunch of teams in the mix to win this year’s cup.
It’s no secret that the New Zealanders are the favourites to walk away with the cup this year and France, being the hosts, also have good odds. After the top two, by my reckoning at least, there are a host of teams that could win the title given slightly more luck. These teams include (in no particular order): Australia, South Africa, England, Wales, Argentina, and Ireland. All of these teams either have shown good form this year, are known to step up in big games (like England, those bastards!) or have almost pulled off big upsets in the last year or so (like Argentina).
While down here in marvellous Melbourne our Premier might have left at the top of his game, an even more important figure was eased out. For every column inch devoted to Steve Bracks going, there has been two devoted to Kevin Sheedy, the innovative, slightly eccentric coach of the Essendon Football Club, who led the club to four premierships over 26 years in the job. Unlike Bracks, however, there might be an ulterior motive behind the timing of the announcement that Kevin Sheedy’s contract won’t be renewed. Like several other AFL clubs who have recently sacked their coaches, Essendon apparently wanted to make sure that they had the chance to sign Michael Voss for the job.
Voss, for those who don’t follow Aussie Rules, was the captain of the team that won three consecutive premierships in 2001, 2002, and 2003, and were losing grand finallists in 2004. While certainly not lacking in skill, he was probably most reknowned for his toughness, and was regarded as the most inspirational on-field leader of the era. Since retiring from playing in 2006, he’s spent the year doing “expert comments” for the Channel 10 footy TV coverage. However, his coaching career consists of taking the Australian Institute of Sport under-17’s side to victory over the South African national team on a tour there.
Depending on your point of view, it’s either a great time or a terrible time to be a sports nut. It’s the peak of the northern hemisphere’s sporting season. In the UK, Venus Williams overcame a nervous start and a sore thigh to blast Marion Bertoli off the court. With any luck, however, the men’s final, featuring the two best players in men’s tennis in Roger Federal and Rafael Nadal, will match or better last year’s effort. Continue reading ‘Sleepless nights for the sports-inclined’
(Is that muh-roon or meh-roan? I understand the latter pronunciation is only found in Australia.)
Everything is hotly contested in State of Origin matches, so there is no such thing as a dead rubber. Tonight in SOO3 the Maroons will want to inflict a series whitewash on the Blues, not achieved since 1995. They will also want to drive home the psychological ascendancy going into 2008.
Series whitewashes have been achieved six times. The record to date is three each. In addition, Queensland won the first two ‘series’ in 1980 and 1981 when there was only one match each year.
State of Origin Game 2 is on tonight and the series is on the line for NSW.
NSW half Brett Kimmorley has a rare chance at Origin redemption. Exiled in 2005 for throwing a pass that cost NSW the match in game 1, he can play a part in leveling the series for NSW. Memo to Coach Murray, if you pull off Buderus and Hindmarsh you will lose the game.
QLD have never won at Telstra Stadium so they have a hoodoo to overcome. NSW start slight favourites because of this but that means nothing.
Origin II will be liveblogged, with my customary objectivity and fairness for both teams, over at Sidelined.
Yes it’s time again for mate against mate,state against state, the cockroaches against the cane toads, the maroons against the blues as Queensland and New South Wales line up again for the first of Rugby League’s annual State of Origin stoushes tonight.
They say the Suncorp Stadium is no longer “the cauldron� that once was Lang park and visiting teams love playing here.
We Quincelanders do need to win, because the second match is at Telstra Australia in Sydney and the record shows we’ve never won there. (Well we did win a couple of times, it’s just that the ref didn’t score it that way.)
After such an insipid and tragic tournament, there is some appropriateness that the tournament ended in farce.
Australia were so far in front of the field this time around it wasn’t funny; despite not having arguably their best one-day paceman in the team, they utterly crushed every team they faced, including Sri Lanka, clearly the second-best team in the competition. There were very few close matches throughout, even in matches not involving Australia. The cricket was formulaic.
There have been a number of suggestions about problems with the number of teams playing, not to mention the drawn-out format. But are there deeper problems with the one-day game itself?
Russell Degnan argues that part of the problem is what he sees is the overly restrictive rules of the current one-day format; particularly, the requirement to bowl five bowlers, forcing fielding captains to go on the defensive for those ten overs while some part-timer trundles in.
Any other suggestions as to what could be done to rescue one-day cricket from itself?
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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