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Business

lessons in the financial institution’s 30-year evolution

These days, AMP is a small cap trying to sell a turnaround story with a business model abandoned by every other local financial institution except Macquarie Group. Only AMP and Macquarie have financial advice and banking under the one roof.

Chanticleer has picked five key topics for the purposes of this discussion about the profound changes in Australian business and in AMP over the past three decades.

outflows

The all male, 12-member board of AMP in 1992, which was led by chairman Ian Burgess and managing director Ian Salmon, had every reason to believe AMP would dominate the financial landscape for decades to come.

AMP had $12 billion in total income, $60 billion in policyholders’ funds, provided $176 billion in life insurance protection, and paid out $7 billion to policyholders and beneficiaries.

But scratches below the surface and cracks were appearing in its business model.

George’s employer, BT, which in 1992 had added $12 billion in funds under management since the 1987 stockmarket crash, was stealing AMP’s big superannuation clients.

In the two years to December 1993, AMP’s premium revenue slumped by about $800 million to $7.3 billion, and management said it was seeking to “restore investor confidence and arrest the trend”.

Today, George is dealing with far more severe outflows than in the 1990s.

A catastrophic loss of confidence in AMP caused by the Hayne royal commission has led to $23.7 billion of cumulative cash outflows from AMP’s wealth management arm since 2018.

In the six months to June this year, AMP’s wealth management outflows were a relatively modest $1.9 billion, an improvement on the $3.6 billion in outflows in the first half of last year. George tells Chanticleer she is hoping to have positive flows by “the back end of 2023”.

Like most large businesses in the 1990s, AMP was a male-dominated workplace with no women in senior executive positions and none on the board.

Diversity and culture

AMP’s workplace culture was out of step with progressive workplaces such as BT, where George was at the vanguard of a deliberate policy to employ women, according to Gideon Haigh’s book on BT – One of a Kind, The Story of Bankers Trust Australia, 1969-1999.

Haigh pointed out that senior male executives at BT recognized it had a “locker room atmosphere” and it had to change.

BT’s leading female executive, Jillian Broadbent, was quoted in the book as saying BT was initially slow to confront the testosterone-fueled behavior in the dealing room.

It is staggering that 30 years after others recognized the importance of inclusion and diversity, AMP fell into the trap of turning a blind eye to unacceptable male behaviour. This weakness came through in the controversy over the appointment of Boe Pahari to head AMP Capital in 2020.

George is leading AMP’s cultural transformation, which she defines as “improving inclusion, diversity and strengthening accountability and performance”.

With the assistance of chairwoman Debra Hazelton, they have pushed through the 40:40:20 target for gender diversity for the board, executive management, middle management and the workforce generally. This move would have made the directors of the AMP board in 1992 blank.

advice

George is confident that AMP’s financial advice model is suited to providing affordable advice to Australians and will work well for shareholders of AMP.

She says wealth management and banking are suited to being under one roof, although AMP operates the businesses separately. She says superannuation and the family home are the two biggest assets of Australian households, and AMP can bring its advice expertise to that equation.

The AMP of the 1990s was basically built on the sale of life insurance policies through a network of 8000 life insurance agents, many of whom were paid more than the CEO.

AMP’s accounts showed the extent to which its business model was unsustainable. It was paying out almost $600 million a year in commissions to life insurance agents.

But these commissions had not earned the loyalty of customers, judging from the fact that policy surrender rates were rising at an alarming rate in the early 1990s because of poor investment performance and the lure of fund managers such as BT.

George says the only commissions paid by AMP today are to mortgage brokers, who distribute about 90 per cent of the home loans sold by AMP Bank.

Regulatory structures

AMP’s business is heavily regulated to the point where it may not be able to offer advice to people who need it.

But George says its success does not rely on regulatory change by the Albanese government.

She welcomes the comments made by Assistant Treasurer and Minister for Financial Services Stephen Jones about law reform to make advice more accessible.

“I think regulatory change would be good for advice, particularly, but our strategy certainly doesn’t depend on it, and I’m not going to make it depend on it,” she says.

“I do, however, think that the new government has leaned into this problem of affordable and accessible advice. I think it was probably coming to a head anyway because clearly the traditional advice businesses that have existed in Australia have moved up into the high net wealth space.

“The statistics would show that there’s a real need in middle Australia for advice. I think this government has continued to lead into that.”

George said she was pleased that Jones reaffirmed the first phase of the quality of advice review would continue.

“But you also saw the minister’s comments over the last weeks, about areas where he wants to improve things.”

The AMP of the 1990s had relatively benign regulatory oversight of its business. But its business was threatened by the government’s encouragement of compulsory superannuation.

The default payment of superannuation into industry funds changed the flow of money away from commission-driven salespeople, and preferential treatment was given to direct debiting of money into funds.

That has fundamentally changed the power across the financial system. It has shifted from shareholder-owned organizations to mutually owned organisations.

Ironically, the mistake made by the board of the AMP Society in the late 1990s was to trade its position as the world’s fifth-largest mutual life office with more than 5 million policyholders to become a shareholder-owned entity beholden to fickle capital markets.

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Entertainment

The Block 2022: How to listen to The Official Block Podcast

If you can believe the biggest ever series of The Block you have gotten even bigger. The Official Block Podcast is now the ultimate companion show to Australia’s favorite renewing program.

Hosted by Shelley Craft and produced by 9Podcasts, The Official Block Podcast is releasing episodes every Monday.

Stream The Block Podcast on 9Now.

Each Monday after The Block‘s Room Reveals, Shelley will be joined by judges, including Shaynna Blaze, Neale Whitaker and Darren Palmer, The Block contestants, and even Scotty Cam to answer viewer questions, and lift the veil on decisions made and verdicts rendered.

It’s the perfect opportunity for Blockheads to interact directly with stars of the show, to learn why creative choices were made whilst hearing detailed explanations and advice on why some designs were huge hits and others were major flops.

The Official Block Podcast is available for listening across all leading podcast platforms and on 9Now, in addition to the leading podcast platforms, making it easier for Blockheads to discover more exclusives from the show.

The Block 2022
Co-Host of The Block and host of The Block Podcast Shelley Craft. (Nine)

“The new block podcast provides much more behind-the-scenes [of the show],” Shelley told 9Entertainment.

The Block does so well across all its platforms, but this will just be the next level. And now that I’m some kind of podcasting guru, I’m looking forward to using it in my real job too,” she explained.

In addition to hosting The Official Block PodcastShelley also hosts a new podcast called The Aging Project.

The Aging Project is a podcast featuring candid, no-holds-barred interviews with twelve of the world’s leading and most inspiring minds in the field of aging well.

The first episode of The Block Podcast features an in-depth discussion on this week’s block walkout, which saw Joel and Elle leave the show.

long-time block host Scott Cam joins Shelley to discuss the walkout and how the show’s producers and crew had to quickly adjust to such a dramatic change in their plans.

The Block 2022
Scott & Shelley as seen on The Block Tree Change. (Nine)

Listen to The Block podcast on your favorite Podcast app or stream (for free) on 9Now.

In Pictures

Tom and Sarah-Jane The Block 2022

Tom and Sarah-Jane’s House Decider Challenge Bedroom

Judges wowed by couple’s color palette and style.

ViewGallery

The Block airs Sunday at 7.00pm and Monday to Wednesday at 7.30pm on Nine. Catch up on all the latest episodes on 9Now.

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Business

Australian tech billionaire planning electric supercar

An Australian billionaire who just unveiled a $3 million track car with Formula One speed says he is already planning an electric ‘hypercar’ that promises to put Australia and New Zealand at the top of the high-performance car world.


An Australian tech billionaire who this week unveiled a 360km/h track car – with twin-turbo V10 hybrid power – says his next project is to create one of the world’s fastest electric vehicles.

Australian-born David Dicker – who built his fortune in IT distribution with his company Dicker Data and splits his time between Australia, New Zealand and Dubai – has announced production of his new Rodin FZero ‘hypercar’ is now underway at his factory in the South Island of New Zealand.

The first examples of his new track-ready sports car – each with a $3 million price tag and with styling like the latest Batmobile – are due to be delivered to well-heeled customers with a need for speed in the first half of 2023.



His plan is to build up to 37 examples of the Rodin FZero for wealthy owners who will use them on private track days (as they are not homologated for racing and cannot be registered for the road), before switching focus to an upcoming electric car.

While Rodin cars have to date been designed only for track use, the future electric ‘hypercar’ will be the first road-going model for the specialist firm.

“We’ve got an electric road car very close to a finalized design. So we’re going to build that, for sure,” Dicker told Drive from his Rodin Cars headquarters in New Zealand.



Dicker said he was also considering a petrol-powered road car but is waiting to see if his small company can meet future emissions requirements.

“Our only real issue on the petrol road car is the emissions side of it. If we can get through that, we’ll do it,” he said.

“There are such strong headwinds at the moment.”



Development of the FZero has been underway for more than two years at Rodin Cars and Dicker is more confident about sales after the failure of the original FZed — despite establishing a sales base and ‘experience centre’ in the UK — most likely because its Grand Prix -style open-wheeled layout was too extreme.

The FZero is just as extreme on the performance side, with a claimed 853kW and 1026Nm from its bespoke V10 hybrid engine. It also makes four tonnes of aerodynamic downforce despite weighing just 698kg.

Dicker knows that potential buyers will cross-shop the Rodin against ‘hypercars’ from Ferrari, McLaren, Lamborghini and Aston Martin — as well as the upcoming $8.5 million RB15 two-seater track car from Formula One’s Red Bull Racing team — but said he never had a specific target.



“The basic objective for this car was always to build a faster car than a Formula One. It was about building a track car that can lap faster than an F1,” he said.

“To be honest, it’s got nothing to do with Ferrari. I love Ferrari. I own Ferraris.”

He expects the first FZed prototype to be finished by the end of the year, with some carbon-fibre parts already in the mock-up stage, although most of the preview material for the car is computer-generated images.



“We’re really trying hard to get the prototype running before Christmas. I’ll be the first one in it, and obviously I’ll do some of the testing,” Dicker said.

“The basic plan is to get the prototype on the track and pound it around to see what needs to be changed, so we can move to a production car as soon as we can.

“We’ve spent an awful long time working on the design and engineering on this car. I’ll be bitterly disappointed if it’s not 95 per cent right, straight out of the box.”

Paul Gover

Paul Gover has been a motoring journalist for more than 40 years, working on newspapers, magazines, websites, radio and television. A qualified general news journalist and sports reporter, his passion for motoring led him to Wheels, Motor, Car Australia, Which Car and Auto Action magazines. He is a champion racing driver as well as a World Car of the Year judge.

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Entertainment

Anne Heche is ‘not expected to survive,’ family says in statement

Anne Heche, who remains hospitalized after crashing her vehicle into a The Angels residence last week, is “not expected to survive”, according to a statement from her family and friends.

“Unfortunately, due to her accident, Anne Heche suffered a severe anoxic brain injury and remains in a coma, in critical condition. She is not expected to survive,” the statement read.

“It has long been her choice to donate her organs and she is being kept on life support to determine if any are viable.”

Actress Anne Heche poses atop a car as she arrives at the Drive-In to Erase MS gala, Friday, Sept.  4, 2020, in Pasadena, Calif.  (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello)
Actress Anne Heche poses atop a car as she arrives at the Drive-In to Erase MS gala, Friday, Sept. 4, 2020, in Pasadena, Calif. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello) (Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP)

Anoxic brain injury occurs when the brain is deprived of oxygen.

Last Friday, Heche was in a car that was traveling at a high speed when it ran off the road and collided with a residence that became engulfed in flames, Los Angeles Police Public Information Officer Jeff Lee told CNN.

A woman inside the home at the time of the crash suffered minor injuries, but did seek medical attention, according to Lee.

He has remained in critical condition.

This week, a spokesperson for Heche told CNN the actress suffered “significant pulmonary injury requiring mechanical ventilation” and “burns that require surgical intervention.”

“We want to thank everyone for their kind wishes and prayers for Anne’s recovery and thank the dedicated staff and wonderful nurses that cared for Anne at the Grossman Burn Center at West Hills hospital,” the statement continued.

Anne Heche
Anne Heche remains hospitalized after a car crash. (instagram)

In their message, her family and friends also paid tribute to Heche’s “huge heart” and “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 read.

“She will be remembered for her courageous honesty and dearly missed for her light.”

She rose to fame on the soap opera “Another World”, where she played the dual role of twins Vicky Hudson and Marley Love from 1987 to 1991. She earned a Daytime Emmy Award for her performance on the show.

He followed that success with numerous films, including “Donnie Brasco,” “Wag the Dog” and “Six Days Seven Nights” opposite Harrison Ford.

In more recent years, Heche has appeared in television shows like “The Brave,” “Quantico,” and “Chicago PD”

He rose to fame on the soap opera ‘Another World’ and is pictured here in the feature film ‘Six Days Seven Nights’. (Supplied)

Following the crash, there was an outpouring of support for the actress from the Hollywood community.

Her ex and former “Men in Trees” co-star James Tupper, with whom she shares one of her two sons, wrote on Instagram: “Thoughts and prayers for this lovely woman, actress and mother tonight Anne Heche. We love you.”

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Business

NBN to scrap controversial usage charges, but telcos urge caution

“There also continues to be a lack of accountability within the NBN for the significant time, effort and expense wasted across industry over the past 14 months to address the failings of the previous SAU proposal. The fact NBN did not share its new proposal with industry prior to distributing to the media first, highlights its views on so-called collaboration.”

The federal government last month confirmed NBN Co would remain in public hands “for the forseeable future”, a move which forced it back to the drawing board on a regulatory mechanism known as the Special Access Undertaking, which determines the quality of its services and how it charges wholesale customers such as Telstra, Optus and TPG Telecom.

Under a previous proposal, NBN Co planned to lock in price rises until 2040, and double the price of entry-tier plans over the next decade. Australia’s telcos have long argued the pricing structure of the NBN hurts margins and makes it difficult to predict monthly costs. The new proposal suggests removing the connectivity virtual circuit (CVC) charge, which increases with peak internet usage periods, by mid-2026.

But despite the initial drop in pricing, consumers and businesses will have to brace for yearly price increases linked to inflation, which NBN Co claims are needed to hit financial targets.

The proposal also includes larger discounts to wholesale prices for high-speed tiers by mid next year. The reductions are between 8 per cent and 14 per cent across the various speeds when compared with the initial proposal NBN Co put forward in March.

NBN Co also released a set of benchmark services standards on end-use connections, service transfers and performance incidents, and proposed giving new powers to the competition regulator to reset the NBN’s revenue and pricing framework from 2032.

Optus’ vice president of regulatory and public affairs, Andrew Sheridan, said the paper gave the telco reassurance NBN Co was heading in the right direction. If NBN and industry continue to work constructively, Optus is confident we can provide Australian customers with the outcomes they deserve,” Sheridan said.

A Telstra spokesman said there were positive steps but some areas needed attention, including service quality.

“Our ambition through the process will continue to be ensuring the wholesale terms deliver better outcomes for our customers, sustainable industry economics and increased use of an important national asset,” the spokesperson said.

The discussion paper is subject to regulatory and industry consultation later this month.

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Technology

Game dev creates custom Pokemon game to share his lunch order

If you’ve ever worked in an office or collaborative environment, chances are you’ve been involved in some pretty silly things to keep the day-to-day interesting for you and your co-workers. But you probably haven’t built a custom Game Boy Advance-era Pokemon game, recreating your office and the people in it, just so you can tell someone your takeaway lunch order for the day.

That’s exactly what Kirk Winner did for his peers at 5 Lives Studios in Brisbane, Queensland. As shared by 5 Lives graphics programmer Chris Webb on Twitter, Kirk’s actions appear to be the latest in a long-standing Friday lunchtime tradition of what he calls ‘everyone orders Thai (food) in a really weird way’.

Webb shared a series of screenshots in to Twitter threadwhich is just delightful.

If you ask us, this custom Pokemon romhack effort was 100% worth it for the single gag it was built for.

5 Lives Studios is the Queensland studio most recently known for creating the oceanic survival game Windbound. Previous to that, they were responsible for Satellite King, a spiritual successor to the beloved PC sci-fi real-time tactics series, Syndicate. The studio was formed by a number of industry veterans in the wake of the 2008 global financial crisis, which shuttered several major game developers in Australia.

The studio is currently working on an unannounced project.

in current Pokemon game news, The Pokemon Company recently revealed several new details about the upcoming games in the mainline series, Pokémon Scarlet and Violet. It’ll be an open-world adventure set in a region inspired by Spain, the Legendary Pokemon can be ridden like motorcycles for some reason, and a new mechanic sees the adorable little monsters turn into crystal, in a move I can only assume is part of a Swarovski partnership.

Pokemon Scarlet and Violet will launch on 18 November 2022.

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Entertainment

Selma Blair opens up about why she ‘stopped looking in the mirror’

selma blair has revealed she “stopped looking in the mirror” after starting her treatment for multiple sclerosis.

The 50-year-old actress has opened up about her approach to beauty, self and style in a new interview with InStyleadmitting that when her grueling treatment started for MS, she didn’t have much care for anything.

“After I had treatment, I’d honestly… stopped looking in the mirror,” she said. “My hair was short, I was bloated, I had alopecia on my lashes and my face.”

READMORE: How to slash hundreds (or even thousands) from your power bill

selma blair
Blair says she stopped looking in the mirror when her MS treatments started. (instagram)

READMORE: Fresh twist in horror crash as actress Anne Heche fights for life

She adds: “It was all so much effort – I sometimes don’t see well – so I just stopped, and I didn’t think I missed it.”

When Blair was diagnosed with the condition in 2018, she experienced every symptom; vision loss is one of the first and most tell-tale signs.

MS sufferers can also experience muscle and joint pain, fatigue and impaired coordination, and these symptoms affect people at varying degrees across their life.

Though she had no interest in fashion or make-up while in the throes of her chemotherapy, the Cruel Intentions actress quickly realized that she was missing it a little bit.

Blair has always had a love for dressing up, regularly fronting red carpets with eye-catching numbers and chic silhouettes.

Actress Selma Blair attends the "2004 CFDA Fashion Awards" at the New York Public Library June 7, 2004 in New York City.
Selma Blair attends the 2004 CFDA Fashion Awards at the New York Public Library. (Getty)
selma blair
Blair at the 2019 Vanity Fair Oscar Party in Beverly Hills. (Getty)

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In her interview with InStyleBlair even outs herself as a “fashion girl”, adding: “I’ve never thought of fashion, makeup, really any of our ways of self-care and presenting ourselves, as frivolous.”

She likened the moment she decided to pick up a make-up brush in the midst of her MS to “waking up again”.

“It was a real turning point for me,” she says. “It was like, ‘OK, let’s start waking up again.'”

Blair’s emotional journey of diagnosis and treatment has been captured in the documentary Introducing Selma Blairdirected by Rachel Fleit.

The documentary follows Blair as she undergoes hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) and as the world shifts due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The star is now in remission, but keeps things candid on her Instagram account, continuing to raise awareness of MS, and provide a safe space for others in the community.

Recently, she has been sharing plenty of photos with her new service dog, Scout.

READMORE: William and Harry ‘kept in the dark’ over new Diana series

“This condition – or any condition of chronic illness or disability – is my story, and if that helps normalize, to open the door for other people to be comfortable telling their stories, that can also be enlightening and informative and helps to build new ways of love and support,” she says in the documentary.

Chris Hemsworth's long-time personal assistant and best friend Aaron Grist shares hilarious and embarrassing throwbacks for star's birthday.

Longtime friend shares Chris Hemsworth’s ‘awkward’ formal photo

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Australia

Banksia Hill boys self harming after transfer to unit at adult Casuarina Prison

Children transferred to an isolated unit at a maximum-security adult prison in Perth have made multiple suicide and self-harm attempts within weeks of the move.

A group of 17 boys, aged as young as 14 and mostly Indigenous, were shifted last month from Banksia Hill detention center to a new unit at nearby Casuarina prison.

Between their arrival on July 20 and August 8, there were three attempted suicides and 13 minor self-harm attempts at the facility known as Unit 18.

The figures were provided by Western Australia’s government in parliament on Thursday in response to a question from Greens upper house MP Brad Pettitt.

Beds in the youth detention facility at Casuarina Prison (file image)
Camera IconThere have been three attempted suicides and 13 self-harm attempts at the facility in recent months. Credit: AAP

Government MP Matthew Swinbourn, representing the corrective services minister in the Legislative Council, confirmed four children had been involved in a self-harm attempt last week which resulted in one boy being hospitalized.

The boy returned from hospital the same day with no further medical intervention required and was provided with mental health support, he said.

Officials have said they were left with no choice but to transfer the boys to Unit 18 because they had been destroying property, escaping from their cells, assaulting staff and harming themselves.

They have promised the detainees will be kept away from adult prisoners in safe and secure units while repair works are completed at Banksia Hill.

The number of self-harm and attempted suicide incidents at Banksia Hill has spiked over the past three years.

Megan Krakouer, from the National Suicide Prevention and Trauma Recovery Project, said there was an “ongoing crisis” in youth detention.

“The self-harms will continue this year, next year and the year after unless we radically reform the system,” she said on Friday.

The Department of Justice have released images of some of the facilities inside Casuarina Prison, being used by teenagers who have been moved there from Banksia Hill
Camera IconSome of the facilities inside Casuarina Prison, being used by teenagers who have been moved there from Banksia Hill. Credit: Supplied/Supplied

Corrective Services Minister Bill Johnston this week said the remaining details at Banksia Hill were now in a “much better” environment.

“It was not functioning to have these young offenders causing violence at Banksia Hill, so that the other kids … were not getting the services they need because the facility was constantly going into lockdown,” he told reporters.

He said the boys at Unit 18 had access to education, cultural, medical and psychological services and secure recreation facilities.

They were being regularly assessed and would be returned to Banksia Hill once it was deemed safe for them to do so, he said.

An independent inspector this year found some boys at Banksia Hill were spending as little as one hour a day outside their cells, in violation of their human rights.

About 600 past and present details have signed up for a planned class action against the state government.

Lifeline 13 11 14

Kids Helpline 1800 55 1800 (for people aged 5 to 25)

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Technology

Final Fantasy XIV Update 6.2 Gets Release Date & Epic New Trailer

News

Square Enix released the trailer and release date of the upcoming update for Final Fantasy XIV numbered 6.2 and titled “Buried Memory.”

Square Enix released the trailer and release date of the upcoming update for Final Fantasy XIV numbered 6.2 and titled “Buried Memory.”

The much-awaited update will be released on August 23.

The trailer showcases the story and features included in the update, and as usual, it could be considered a bit spoiler-y.

We start with a look at the “Island Sanctuary” feature that will be the centerpiece of the update, the new raid, and the continuation of the main story quest. You may also recognize some of the music if you’re a veteran fan of the Final Fantasy series.

We also see some known faces that will return as AI companions for the renewed Heavensward dungeons. It certainly appears that this update will be a strong one for Square Enix’s super-popular MMORPG.

If that does not bother you, you can enjoy it below both in English and Japanese depending on your voiceover language of choice.

Final Fantasy XIV is currently available for PlayStation 4, PS5, and PC. The Endwalker expansion has been released a few months ago and you can read our recent review.

You can also read more about the changes planned for the longer term, including a refresh of the graphics, and more information about the upcoming update 6.2 “Buried Memory,” which will introduce the “Island Sanctuary” feature and much more.

Incidentally, the traditional seasonal event Moonfire Faire is currently going on in the game to celebrate the summer.

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Entertainment

Melbourne TikToker reveals her dad set her up with boyfriend

A television publicist who swore off dating apps has revealed the unusual way she met her current boyfriend.

Alice James took to TikTok in June while she was getting ready for a blind date when she revealed her father had set her up.

“Three weeks ago I made the decision to get off all the dating apps – I just wasn’t having fun, I was feeling like crap and it was taking it’s toll,” she said.

“Fast forward, last week I was with my dad at the local pub, having a drink and talking sh*t and Dad was like ‘I don’t know if you notice but there is a real hottie sitting at the bar,’” she said.

Ms James, from Melbourne, revealed she had noticed the man as soon as she and her dad had walked into the pub.

“Dad said, ‘Leave it with me’ and he just started chatting about footy with the guy,” she said.

“Then Dad asked, ‘Are you was single’, and the dude was like yeah I am, and Dad was like “My daughter is single, she’s right over there.’”

She said the trio began to chat but when the man went to leave, Ms James’ father insisted the younger duo swap numbers.

She said following exchanging numbers the duo continued to speak and set a plan to meet.

A month later, Ms James broke the news to her dad the pair were officially a couple, calling the man she met at the pub her “boyfriend”.

Followers of Ms James’ account were over the moon, congratulating her on the status of her relationship.

“So good! I bet your dad will love to brag about this,” one person commented.

Another said: “I need your dad as my wingman!”

One person said their own father needed to step up his game and help her out.

Read related topics:melbourne

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