Categories
Sports

NRL icon Paul Green’s death highlights Australia’s tragic suicide rates

The shock death of Paul Green has highlighted a tragic reality for so many Australians, as the country continues to reel from the loss of the NRL icon.

The former footy star turned premiership-winning coach passed away at his home in Brisbane on Thursday morning aged 49. It has been confirmed he took his own life.

Green’s wife, Amanda, found him unresponsive at their home after returning home from doing pilates at the gym, according to the Courier Mail.

His death shines a light on a heartbreaking reality so many Australian families face every single year.

On average, male suicides make up about 75 per cent of all suicides across the country each year.

In 2019 men accounted for 2,502 out of a total 3,318 registered suicide deaths in Australia.

Awareness around mental health, particularly in men, has increased substantially over the years, but these figures show we still have a very long way to go.

Mental fitness advocate and founder of the Gotcha4Life foundation, Gus Worland, said Green’s death draws a “line in the sand” for Australians.

“Unfortunately, we lose seven blokes a day every day, two women a day every day, we have people attempting suicide at a rapid rate in Australia. So when someone famous, takes their own life, all of a sudden that shines a light on it,” he told news.com.au.

“But it also should make us realize it’s not just about this moment, but how many other families and communities that have that ripple effect that’s ripping through them right now.

“So at some point, we need to put that line in the sand and say ‘You know what? No more’. We have to really start looking after ourselves better.”

World highlighted the importance of everyone understanding who their “village” is, meaning the people around them who they love and cherish.

It is incredibly important for people to identify their support network and make sure they are investing in these relationships.

Worland said this is all part of working on your “mental fitness” so that you feel comfortable reaching out when things get difficult.

“It doesn’t mean you burst into tears every five minutes or you have a deep and meaningful conversation every time you talk. It means you’ve got that in your locker to be able to have enough emotional muscle to ask for help,” he said.

In Green’s case, Worland pointed out that there were thousands of people who would have stopped everything they were doing and done anything to help him.

“That’s the point we need to get to, where people are asking for help and not making this ultimately very, very permanent decision based on a temporary situation.”

Green had arguably endured the toughest year of his life in the lead up to his tragic death, which came 11 months after he was sacked as head coach of the Maroons following Queensland’s loss in last year’s State of Origin series.

Last February he sold his family home in Townsville for $1.85 million, and admitted it was difficult to let go of the place where his two kids, Jed and Emerson, had grown up.

“It is pretty tough to move and tough on the family,” he said at the time.

On average, one in eight men will experience depression and one in five men will experience anxiety at some stage of their lives, according to Beyond Blue.

Reaching out for help is often easier said than done. For someone who is struggling, admitting that you need help can be incredibly difficult.

For men, this struggle can be the result of societal expectations to be tough and not show emotions.

“It is a difficult conversation because we’ve told all our lives to man up and shut up or take a teaspoon of cement and harden the f**k up,” Worland said.

“Even in primary school you scratch your knee and someone says ‘Come on, up you get. You’ll be right. So it is really instilled in us from a young age.”

It can be incredibly difficult to unlearn these things, but doing so is an important step in changing the shocking statistics we see every year.

One of the key things the Gotcha4Life foundation does is encouraging people to exercise their “emotional muscles” and be “mentally fit” so they cannot only reach out when they need help, but can recognize when others need it too.

Unfortunately, because many people are so used to masking their true emotions, knowing when someone is struggling can be difficult.

“Of course we all look out for our friends and if they’re changing their behaviour, their personality changes, they’ve gone quiet, or they’re just looked like they’re not well, that’s easy. But we don’t we don’t get to that stage very often,” the Gotcha4Life founder said.

“Paul Green last weekend was at the Cronulla reunion and he was the life of the party. He was playing golf the day before and he was the life of the party.

“My friend that started this whole journey for me. He had the most fantastic day on a Friday. His third and final child of him had just finished the HSC. He was buoyant. And then half an hour later he went and did what he did.”

Green looked delighted as he chatting with journalists during the meeting last weekend.

Former Cowboys chairman Laurence Lancini told News Corp that Green seemed fine three days ago when he spoke to him to say they should catch up for a beer soon.

But Lancini did say that “the last few years had been tough on” the coach.

“The last few years have been a bit tough on him because he hasn’t been coaching in the NRL,” he said.

“I said to Greeny, just take your time and the right opportunity will come along.”

Yes, speaking about these emotions can be uncomfortable, but Worland said if more people focus on getting mentally fit, then they are more likely to start having these awkward conversations and possibly save lives.

World said the simplest message he can give people is “don’t worry alone”.

“That’s a really simple key message to get away from this. So if you don’t worry alone, it means you’ve told someone whether it’s a friend or a family member, or it’s a professional,” he said.

“If you don’t worry alone, you’re more likely to get the help that you need to get through the type of stuff that life throws at you.”

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Categories
Australia

Blind Date: EA Emily and teacher Luke bond over their cultural backgrounds and being the middle child

Emily, 27, says:

I met Luke on a Friday night at Cecchi’s in Inglewood. My first impression was that he’s a really good looking guy with a massive smile. The man bun got me — in a good way! I’d describe him as friendly, confident and someone I felt comfortable around instantly.

I was nervous because I just didn’t know what to expect or what my date was going to be like but I tried to go in with an open mind. I was a little worried I would feel uncomfortable on this date, but thankfully it wasn’t like that at all.

We sat down and started chatting. Luke was really easy to talk to. We spoke about general interests and he mentioned he played soccer and does crossfit and that the people at his gym were like a second family. He is super close with his parents and is family oriented. I am as well so that was nice.

The server sold me on an appetizer that ended up being amazing. The food overall was incredible, I wouldn’t mind going back and trying more from the menu. We had one drink each as we both drove. Luke mentioned he wasn’t a big drinker, which I actually quite liked. I recently went on a date and the guy ordered a shot with dinner.

Luke ticked a lot of boxes for me. He is the age I am looking for, he seems like he’s got his life from him together but I just felt like the spark was missing. I’m not sure if it was because usually you know who you’re meeting on a date and can build up a bit of excitement beforehand? It is hard to say.

I’m not currently using any dating apps, although my friends tell me I should. Right now, I’m just trying to meet people organically through friends/out etc.

We ended the date at the restaurant and added each other on socials. I don’t see there being a second date. Interestingly, when I looked at his social media from him, it was full of him playing guitar and singing — something he did n’t even mention. I was like, “wow, OK, this guy can sing!” All in all, Luke is a total catch but I think he felt the lack of spark as well.

Rating 8/10

Luke, 29, says:

I’m trying to say “yes” to more experiences and I went into this with a “why not” attitude.

My first impression of Emily was really good. I was sort of surprised because I considered myself a bit fussy, but this was a good choice. When we arrived it was a little awkward, just because it was the first time either of us had done anything like this before and you never really know what to expect. But I think we both recognized we were in the same boat and once we started talking, we both relaxed and it was comfortable.

Emily and I started chatting about food. She had already scoped out the menu and knew exactly what she wanted so that was cool. We spoke about our families, she she’s Macedonian so we bonded over all the similarities between Macedonians and Italians. We are also both one of three children and we are both in the middle. Our discussions mainly revolved around food, culture and family.

I found out there was a spy at the restaurant. One of my sister’s friends of her happened to be there and then was messaging her saying I was there on a date and asking if she knew.

Emily strikes me as someone who is content within herself. She is a really positive person who had nothing negative to say about anyone or any experiences.

I didn’t feel a spark between us. We could have talked for another three hours, the conversation was great but it was just missing that spark.

We ended up staying and chatting for a few hours then as we finished, we added each other on Instagram. I think we were both happy to be doing our own thing and comfortable being by ourselves. We both said yes to this opportunity, had a good time and left it at that. The date overall was great—I think we both had a good time.

8.5/10

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Categories
Business

Here are the top 10 ASX 200 shares today

Top ten gold trophy.

Image source: Getty Images

the S&P/ASX 200 Index (ASX: XJO) traded in the red on Friday despite an exuberant performance from energy shares. The index closed today’s session 0.54% lower at 7,032.5 points.

That left the benchmark index just 0.2% higher than where it ended last week after reaching its highest closing price in two months on Thursday.

the S&P/ASX 200 Energy Index (ASX: XEJ) was alone in the green today, gaining 2.3%.

The price of thermal coal lifted 0.6% to US$401 per tonne overnight. Meanwhile, the Brent crude oil price rose 2.3% to US$99.60 per barrel and the US Nymex crude price increased 2.6% to $94.34 a barrel.

On the other end of the market, the S&P/ASX 200 Real Estate Index (ASX: XRE) and the S&P/ASX 200 Information Technology Index (ASX: XIJ) fell 2% and 1.8% respectively.

the S&P/ASX 200 Materials Index (ASX: XMJ) also slumped 0.7%, weighed down by the Lake Resources NL (ASX: LKE) share price’s about-face.

It came after gold futures fell 0.4% to US$1,807.20 an ounce while iron ore futures lifted 1.6% to $111.01 overnight

All in all, only one of the ASX 200’s 11 sectors was in the green at the end of Friday’s trade. But which share outperformed all others to end the week with a bang? Keep reading to find out.

Top 10 ASX 200 shares countdown

Today’s best performing ASX 200 share was gold explorer and developer De Gray Mining Limited (ASX: SDR). The stock continued a recent green streak to gain 3.7% on Friday.

Find out what De Gray has been up to lately here.

Today’s biggest gains were made by these ASX shares:

Our top 10 ASX 200 shares countdown is a recurring end-of-day summary to let you know which companies were making big moves on the day. Check in at Fool.com.au after the weekday market closes to see which stocks make the countdown.

Categories
Technology

Cult of the Lamb lets you pet followers, but only if they’re dogs

It’s a beautiful day in the cult. My benevolence of followers is worshiping at my shrine, their hearts full of faith after witnessing my beautiful marriage to a pig named Pano, just days after my first marriage to a donkey, also named Pano. They smile as they toil away, chopping wood and consecration it into wooden boards. It is time for me to make the rounds, blessing my followers and extorting them for tithes.

In Cult of the Lamb, I play as an adorable lamb given a second lease on life. A dark god rescued me from the clutches of death. In exchange, I will build a cult in their honor of him. I set to work dungeon crawling to gather resources and recruit cult members — all of whom are humanoid animals, just like me. I build facilities, hold sermons and rituals, and grow their loyalty through individual interactions. I approach Thormermer the fox as he prays, and select “extort tithes.” But when I talk to hug the dog, I notice I have the option to “pet dog,” so of course I do.

It’s a cute little Easter egg that’s popular in video games. There’s an entire twitter-account dedicated to the pressing question of whether you can pet dogs in various titles. But Cult of the Lamb‘s version is a little different, as all of your followers are animals of similar shape and attitude, and you can’t pet any of those. Sucks for them, I guess.

It also fits into the game’s weird, devilish sense of humor that often pairs incredibly fucked-up things — like ritual sacrifice and cannibalism — with intensely adorable features like frog acolytes, cute chats, and a dedicated “baa” button. (Yes, you can hit a button and baa anytime, just like stray‘s meow button.) I’ll be sure to pet the dog in between making my spouse shit sandwiches.

Pano the illustrated donkey asks to eat poop.

Image: Massive Monster/Devolver Digital via Polygon

Categories
Entertainment

‘Lost a bright light’: Anne Heche declared ‘legally dead’ after car crash

Actor Anne Heche is brain dead, her spokesperson said Friday, a week after she crashed her car into a home in Los Angeles.

“While Anne is legally dead according to California law, her heart is still beating, and she has not been taken off life support so that One Legacy can see if she is a match for organ donation,” Heche’s spokesperson said in a statement to NBC News.

“We have lost a bright light, a kind and most joyful soul, a loving mother, and a loyal friend,” a statement on behalf of Heche’s family and friends said Friday.

Watch Sunrise on Channel 7 and stream it for free on 7plus >>

“Anne will be deeply missed but she lives on through her beautiful sons, her iconic body of work, and her passionate advocacy. Her bravery of her for always standing in her truth of her, spreading her message of love and acceptance, will continue to have a lasting impact.

On Monday, Heche, 53, was in a coma and in “extreme” condition after suffering an anoxic brain injury, her representative said.

Anne Heche has been declared legally dead after the crash. Credit: AP

Anoxic injuries occur when the brain is cut off from oxygen, causing cell death. Heche was in the Grossman Burn Center at West Hills Hospital.

He careened into a home in the Mar Vista community of Los Angeles last Friday. The home sustained damage from the “heavy fire” sparked by the collision, said Brian Humphrey, a spokesman for the Los Angeles Fire Department.

Footage of smoke rising from the house after Anne Heche’s car crashed into it. Credit: NBC Los Angeles

She had drugs in her system, and she was being investigated for possibly driving under the influence, police said Thursday.

“In preliminary testing, the blood draw revealed the presence of drugs,” Los Angeles police said in a statement.

Police could not “comment right now on the presence of cocaine, fentanyl or alcohol at this time,” they said Thursday. “That will be determined by the second test.”

“The case is being investigated as a felony DUI traffic collision,” the statement said.

Anne Heche’s car after the ‘horrific’ crash. Credit: NBC Los Angeles

She landed her first notable role on the soap opera “Another World,” portraying Vicky Hudson and Marley Love into the early 1990s.

Later that decade, films such as Donnie Brasco, Volcano and I Know What You Did Last Summer helped propel her fame inside Hollywood and beyond.

Her television credits included Chicago PD and Men in Trees.

She met talk show host Ellen DeGeneres in 1997, when Vince Vaughn, her co-star in Return to Paradise, introduced them at a Los Angeles-area restaurant.

Ellen DeGeneres and Anne Heche in 1997. Credit: Brian K Diggs/AP

Heche and DeGeneres became romantically involved in a relationship that Heche said was groundbreaking for the time because of the global attention they received as Hollywood stars in a same-sex romance.

“My story is a story that created change in the world, moved the needle for equal rights forward, when I fell in love with Ellen DeGeneres,” she said in a taped segment that year for the show Dancing With the Stars.

Actress Anne Heche is legally dead after a traffic accident in Los Angeles. Credit: AP

When their three-year relationship ended in 2000, Heche was hospitalized after she was found wandering in a rural area of ​​Fresno County, California, acting disoriented and confused, authorities said.

He described her struggles with her mental health in her 2001 memoir, Call Me Crazy.

“I wanted to beat everybody else to the punch,” she said about the book in an interview that year with Larry King. “I certainly know what’s been written about me in the press. I, although I was never diagnosed as being crazy, I went crazy.”

Heche also wrote about her relationship with DeGeneres. She said it was groundbreaking as a high-profile, same-sex romance but that it cost her career dearly.

Heche said she could not get hired for a role by a major studio for nearly a decade.

Later, she married Coley Laffoon, and the couple had a son before they divorced. She had another son in 2009 with actor James Tupper, her co-star in Men in Trees; they separated.

In a family statement earlier in the week, Heche was described as having a “huge heart” and as someone who “touched everyone she met with her generous spirit.”

“More than her extraordinary talent, she saw spreading kindness and joy as her life’s work ⁠— especially moving the needle for acceptance of who you love,” the statement said. “She will be remembered for her courageous honesty from her and dearly missed for her light from her.”

– With Tim Stelloh and Dennis Romero NBC

Watch: Vanessa Amorosi learns about the death of Olivia Newton-John

Watch: Vanessa Amorosi learns about the death of Olivia Newton-John

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Categories
Australia

Private schools to be forced to shed light on salaries for top staff

Private schools will be forced to be more transparent about the salaries of their top staff and principals, some of whom earn triple their public school counterparts with pay packets exceeding $600,000.

Under a shake-up to Australian Charities and Not-for-profits Commission (ACNC) rules, all large charities – which include most private schools – will be forced to disclose the total sum paid annually to their biggest earners.

Most private schools will be forced to disclose the remuneration packages of their biggest earners.

Most private schools will be forced to disclose the remuneration packages of their biggest earners.Credit:louis douvis

Private schools will need to report the aggregate amount paid to their most senior staff – likely to include principals, deputies, bursars and financial officers – in their 2022 annual information statements, but it will remain voluntary to disclose individual salaries.

“Given the scale of public funding provided to private schools this is definitely a step in the right direction,” said Paul Kidson, an education leadership academic at the Australian Catholic University and a former independent school principal.

“Transparency and confidence in expenditure is expected of public institutions. Other government and public companies reveal chief executive salaries, so it’s more than reasonable we expect more accountability from independent schools, particularly when teachers’ salaries are public, as are the salaries of principals, in government schools.”

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A national survey of 275 private school principals by the Association of Heads of Independent Schools of Australia (AHISA) provided to the herald shows the mean base salary for private school principals jumped by more than $10,000 in the past two years, rising from $326,166 in 2020 to $337,183 in 2022.

AHISA chief executive Beth Blackwood said there was a significant spread in principal salaries across independent schools – from just over $100,000 through to $600,000 – which takes in variables such as enrollments, boarding, whether schools are regional or metropolitan and the funding they receive.

NSW public school principals earn a maximum salary of $194,816 and the secretary of the state’s Department of Education, who runs 2,200 schools, has a salary of $600,000.

Categories
Business

Kmart budget dupe for $1900 vintage Italian Murano lamp

Excited shoppers are racing to Kmart to get their hands on a table lamp that looks identical to its $1900 designer dupe.

TikTok was sent into a frenzy after a shopper posted a video of her buying the Amelie table lamp, which costs just $35.

People in the comments were quick to point out the lamp’s likeness to the highly sought-after vintage Murano lamp, which can be sold for upwards of $1900 on collector sites.

These original Italian made lamps were popular in the 1970s and are harder to come by in modern times, hence their hefty price tag.

The originals are made of glass in Venice with a soda-lime metal and are usually elaborately decorated, with various glass-forming techniques, as well as gilding, enamel, or engraving.

“The infamous Kmart light and it lives up to the hype,” TikTok user Shani Dayna captioned her video.

In the short clip, she excitedly unboxes the lamp and decides to put in a colour-changing light globe to create a unique ambience.

“I have one too! It’s such a vibe,” commented one. “It’s a replica of the vintage Murano ones.”

“Oh my god I’m running to Kmart to get this tomorrow,” another commented. “It’s so pretty! I need.”

This is not the first time Kmart has whipped up a frenzy by selling dupes for expensive items.

An influencer excited her followers earlier this year when she discovered a cheap puffer jacket that was a “perfect dupe” of a $400 version.

Melbourne woman Georgia Clay shared the stylish outerwear with her 40.2k followers on the platform, with many remarking the $40 piece was a perfect dupe for the likes of those from the North Face, at just 10 per cent of the cost.

The style – which launched as part of the retailer’s Autumn/Winter collection – “has quickly become a popular choice among customers”, a Kmart spokeswoman told news.com.au.

Cooks across the country were also excited after getting their hands on a budget version of the iconic Le Creuset cast iron pot.

The pot, which is available in different colours, sent Aussies into a frenzy online – as did the $30 price tag, considering similar Le Creuset casserole dishes can set you back up to $450.

Read related topics:KmartTikTok

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Categories
Technology

Now You Can Pop Into Stadia Directly from Google Search

Google is working on making cloud games easier to find on its search page. The company hasn’t officially announced the feature publicly, but Ars Technica and The Verge have confirmed that the new Play Now ability showed up for them in separate instances.

Play Now essentially adds cloud gaming links to the landing page for the game you’re searching for so that you can instantly hop in from the Google Search page. Clicking the Stadia option should just boot the game up, while links for other services will take you to their own webpages. It seems the feature has just started rolling out, so don’t fret if you don’t see it pop up yet. It showed up for Gizmodo’s deputy editor of consumer tech, Michelle Ehrhardt, but only for destiny 2. Sorry to my editor, who now has an active Stadia account.

I reached out to Google for more information on the Play Now ability and to confirm whether it’s live. I will update when I hear back.

What you'll see if you have the Play Now ability available on Google Search.  (Screenshot: Michelle Ehrhardt/Gizmodo)What you’ll see if you have the Play Now ability available on Google Search. (Screenshot: Michelle Ehrhardt/Gizmodo)

If you have the ability, the Play Now tab appears on desktop browser searches for certain video games. I tried the ability twice on two different Google accounts — both times logged into my main Stadia account — and nothing appeared. But Ars Technica has more screenshots that show what it looks like when the Play Now feature is available.

The screenshots show the main Google page with a popular game typed into the search bar. Ars tried typing in games like destiny 2, Controland Fortnite. If it’s on streaming, the play now column will sprout up on the right-hand side, underneath the main title card. If the game is available to play on competing cloud platforms, like Amazon Luna or Nvidia GeForce Now, you’ll see a Play shortcut for those sites, too.

Even if you don’t have the Play Now tab in your search results, querying Google for a game will usually bring up a streaming link on the first page. Usually, a Stadia link shows up, often mixed in with links of where to buy the game outright.

The new Play Now capability might be the proof some users need that Stadia isn’t going away, despite what the blogs — including my blog — have foretold. I’m of the thought that Stadia is going to end up like Google’s other pet projects, which often get rolled up into something greater. It’s not hard to imagine that this plan to instantly launch games is an offshoot of Google’s other instant play ventures — remember the ability to stream Batman: Arkham Knight

for AT&T customers earlier this year? (Now it’s Control.) Who needs the Stadia branding when it’s the web browser helping to facilitate all that?

The idea of ​​being able to quickly jump into a game hosted up in the cloud has clearly taken off — there are so many more choices than there were a mere two years ago. But for Google, it seems the goal is to hone in on the technology so that it becomes a significant part of its most influential real estate on the web: its search engine.

Categories
Entertainment

Why Play School means so much to so many Australians

If you walk into a playground and start to sing “There’s a bear in there”, chances are someone else at that playground will join you with “and a chair as well”.

For 56 years, Play School has taught Australian children and their families games, stories, songs and craft ideas.

To mark 90 years of broadcasting, the ABC has been asking Australians to share what the organization has meant to them over the years through Your ABC Story.

A common story has emerged of how Play School has made generations of Australians feel safe, happy and educated.

A black and white photo of Benita Collings and John Waters.  John is playing a guitar and Benita is playing with a toy.
Benita Collings and John Waters appear in a Play School episode during the 1960s. (ABC: Archives)

“As a young child, my first television experience was being allowed to watch ABC, Play School being one of the shows I adored,” Jade said in her submission to Your ABC Story.

“When my younger brother was born in 2001, my love for Play School was reignited and I loved watching the show with him. This is when we would bond, watching hosts such as Jay, Rhys and Georgie.

“I now have had a daughter of my own and cannot wait to share with her this incredible show.”

Play School was first broadcast by the ABC on July 18, 1966, as a copy of the BBC’s Play School program, and it is the second-longest-running kids TV show in the world.

Play School stuffed toys Humpty, Big Ted, Little Ted and Jemima celebrate 50 years on TV with party hats, cakes and sandwiches.
The presenters change but the toys are like familiar friends for many children.(abc kids)

While the program has changed over the years to reflect Australian society, key aspects have remained the same.

Liz Giuffre, senior lecturer in communications at the University of Technology Sydney, says this is part of the program’s ongoing appeal.

“There’s something very familiar about Play School. Of course the presenters change… but you do have the old staples of Big Ted and Little Ted,” Dr Giuffre said.

A white arched window displayed on a black background.
The different shaped windows, an early introduction to the show, was an original element that the British version didn’t have.(ABC: Archives)

For many parents, watching Play School with their kids can make them feel more connected, as they are sharing something they loved from their childhood.

“I grew up with the ABC watching Play School and felt a sense of pride when my son was watching it when he was little,” Michael wrote for Your ABC Story.

“I just love that I watched Play School as a child and am reliving all the fun games, songs and characters again with my daughter. So many generations have gained so much from this fabulous show,” Rebecca wrote.

The familiarity of the program format brings “dual comfort”, says Dr Giuffre, as parents know the program is comforting for the kids with familiar faces and activities, and it can also bring back memories of happy times for the parents.

For Tara, Play School was her “safe place.”

“Watching Play School as a child helped me to escape, particularly during story time,” Tara wrote.

“For half an hour a day, I could see what kind and safe adults were like.

“It was an experience of comfort in an otherwise very chaotic childhood.”

Play School presenters George and Benita sit next to each other.  They are smiling and both hold a child's doll.
George Spartels (holding Hamble) and Benita Collings (with Meeka) on the Play School set in the late 1980s. (ABC: Play School)

Dr Giuffre said this comfort factor was why Play School was so important during lockdowns, as a place to bring familiarity and reassurance to children and their parents.

And while Play School does not usually mention what’s going on in the world at the time, because wars and politics are “problems for the adults”, Dr Giuffre said she was pleased to see them make the Handwashing Song special segment at the start on the COVID-19 pandemic.

“Something like COVID, it did affect those children… it did change what they were able to do, and [Play School presenters] had roles to play,” she said.

“We’ve never had something that has hit us all so immediately and for so long. There was nobody who wasn’t affected.

“I was so grateful that [Play School and the Wiggles] they were there because it felt like we could work together with them.”

Space to play or pause, M to mute, left and right arrows to seek, up and down arrows for volume.

Play Video.  Duration: 3 minutes 24 seconds

Play School’s Wash Your Hands song

Teaching little kids and their parents

Play School is an educational program at its core and many Australians have been helped to learn their numbers, colours, and days of the week by watching Play School.

“Play School gave me hours of entertainment and the clock segment taught me how to tell time on an analogue clock!” Tayla wrote to Your ABC Story.

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The program has also helped many, both young and old, with learning English.

“I was eight years old and didn’t know a word of English,” Steph wrote about moving to Australia as a child.

“I watched Play School for one year to learn the days of the week and much more.

“I came home crying most days because of the language barrier, but Play School was always there to cheer me up.”

“My French husband arrived in Australia in 1990 with barely a word of English,” Meredith wrote.

“He would hurry home from his language classes in time to watch Play School. The simple and repetitive language helped him learn not only English, but Australian.”

While Play School is written by people with expertise in early childhood education, the presenters are actors, musicians and comedians who usually do not have an educator background.

Alanna wrote that she grew up watching Play School when it was in black and white.

When she was studying to become a teacher, Alanna worked on an assignment comparing early childhood TV programs.

“One of the differences being that Play School was shot in one take. Minimal room for error,” she wrote.

“All the presenters brought their own style and personality to the table.”

The joys of being a presenter

Black and white photos of John Hamblin and Noni Hazelhurst.  They are both holding soft toys on the Play School set.
John Hamblin and Noni Hazelhurst with some old favorite toys on Play School.(ABC: Archives)

Many of the Play School presenters have gone on to have successful careers outside of the program, but there are a few favorites from over the years that are mostly known for their Play School roles.

Benita Collings was the longest-running presenter, appearing in 401 episodes over 30 years, with John Hamblin in second place with 357 episodes and 29 years.

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Categories
Sports

David Nofoaluma says he ‘fell in love with the game’ again after arriving at Storm, Wests Tigers news

The Wests Tigers face a tough time getting David Nofoaluma to remain at the club, with the winger admitting his loan stint with the Storm has helped him rediscover his love for the game.

After spending the entirety of his career at the Tigers, Nofoaluma joined the Storm on a loan until the end of the 2022 season after season-ending injuries to a host of Melbourne outside backs.

Having scored his first try for the club in a win over the Panthers, Nofoaluma says he’s been left fighting tears at the prospect of his first trip to the post-season.

READMORE: Wayne Bennett’s offer to Paul Green three weeks before his sudden death aged 49

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“You have to be a part of it to actually know what it feels like. It’s just something I’ve never experienced before and I can see why they’re such a successful team,” he told 9News Sydney of his experience with the Storm so far

“I think I’d actually cry (at the prospect of playing finals). We play this game to be successful and to play finals.

“I’ve waited such a long time, 10 years, and to not be able to play finals, let alone a grand final it can wear you down as a player.”

Nofoaluma has been a mainstay in Tigers line-ups over the last decade, but saw himself fall out of favor this season, even having to endure a stint of reserve grade football.

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It was an experience that resulted in the 28-year-old losing his love for the game, something he says the Storm has helped him rediscover.

“I wasn’t feeling too well,” he said.

“When the opportunity to go down to Melbourne came around, it sparked something and I fell in love with the game as soon as I started playing with Melbourne.”

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