August 2022 – Page 12 – Michmutters
Categories
Sports

A-League: Joe Lolley joins Sydney FC

Sydney FC has added further English Premier League experience to its squad with the signing of attacker Joe Lolley.

Lolley, 29, made six appearances for Huddersfield Town in the 2017-18 Premier League season.

Since then he has spent the past five seasons in the second-tier English Championship with Nottingham Forest, helping then gain promotion the Premier League for the 2022-23 campaign which started this month.

However, having been deemed surplus to requirements at Forest, he grabbed the chance to move to Sydney FC, where he will team with another ex-Premier League player in former Everton, Manchester City and Sunderland midfielder Jack Rodwell, who joined the Sky Blues last week after a season with Western Sydney Wanderers.

“I’m extremely excited to be joining Sydney FC,” said Lolley, who has signed a two-year deal with his new club.

“I know there’s a lot of expectation to win every season, which is a great challenge,

and they’ve got a fantastic plan in place to do that, which really attracted me to

make the move.

“I really appreciate the intent shown by the club in bringing me to Sydney.

“The club expects to win and I’m looking forward to getting on the pitch with the lads

ahead of the season starting in around eight weeks.”

Sydney FC coach Steve Corica said Lolly had “proven quality at a high level in England”.

“He is the type of player we were targeting and we had to be patient to secure him,” Corica said.

“He brings a goal threat with his ability to cut inside and can also pick a pass.

“He’s got great energy, an amazing ability to carry the ball and works hard for the

team.

“Fans love him because he gives his all and I know he was hugely popular at

Nottingham Forest, so I’m sure he will be here.”

Read related topics:sydney

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Categories
Australia

Woman faces court charged with child abduction as Darwin girl Grace Hughes, 5, and mother remain missing

A woman charged with child abduction in relation to the disappearance of five-year-old Grace Hughes has faced court, as police continue to search for the Darwin girl.

Juliet Oldroyd, 50, was charged yesterday with one count of abducting a child under 16 and one count of attempting to abduct a child under 16.

She was interviewed at a property in Anula last week, with police saying she was later arrested for allegedly refusing to provide information about Grace and her mother’s whereabouts.

Police allege Grace was taken without permission by her mother Laura Hinks, also known as Laura Bolt, during a supervised parental visit on the afternoon of August 7.

During her first court appearance today, Ms Oldroyd told Judge Thomasin Opie she would not be seeking legal aid, but had no current representation other than her husband, Craig Oldroyd.

A woman and a young girl smile into the camera.  The photo is in black and white.
Laura Hinks and her daughter Grace Hughes remain missing. (Supplied: NT Police)

Mr Oldroyd told the court he did not have any legal qualifications, but later told media outside court that he had contacted an “international human rights lawyer”.

The accused was supported in court by a group of people who stood and applauded after she was escorted back to the cells when the case was adjourned.

Judge Opie had to instruct members of the public in the courtroom to sit down and “show courtesy to allow the court to proceed uninterrupted.”

A man with a beard and wearing a tie holds a bundle of papers and speaks into two microphones.
Juliet Oldroyd’s husband Craig Oldroyd said he will act on behalf of his wife in court. (ABC News: Melissa Mackay)

Search for Grace continues

A young girl of age five smiles into the camera.
Police are appealing for public information to find Grace. (Supplied: NT Police)

Police said in a statement yesterday they were using “all resources necessary” to find Grace, who has now been missing for more than a week.

They also said Grace and her mother may have traveled interstate.

Anyone with information on the pair’s whereabouts are being urged to contact police.

Ms Oldroyd’s matter will return to court on August 22.

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Categories
Business

Foxtel boss unloads on outdated regulation

Anti-siphoning laws do not apply to Stan or Paramount. Foxtel claims this allows free-to-air television owners to get ahead of the Murdoch controlled pay TV company and acquire all the rights to a sport. This gives them exclusivity – which is valuable to advertisers and subscribers – and allows them to choose which way to split the rights across their platforms.

“What the regime protects is not true anymore,” he said. “Free companies are winning rights of free sports events, but they’re pushing consumers to their paid outlets.”

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Delany’s comments come as Foxtel fights Nine, Seven and Paramount to keep the broadcast rights to the AFL. Foxtel is a long-standing partner of the AFL and wants more exclusivity on key matches, a point of major tension with the AFL’s incumbent free-to-air network partner, Seven West Media.

But it is also facing competition from Paramount and Nine, both of which have made offers to acquire the free-to-air and streaming rights to AFL games.

“At the moment – under the law – it would be very easy for a foreign owned free-to-air that has a streamer to buy any sport, and then do whatever they want with it,” he said.

“We’re the only pay TV company in the world at 20 per cent penetration. That’s partly our own fault – paying too much for sport and so you have to have a very high retail price. But if the laws about being able to get it for free, then why should it be limited to a free-to-air license? Why can’t it just be that you’re willing to offer it for free? The internet actually reaches more homes than terrestrial does.”

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Free TV Australia, the lobby group for commercial broadcasters Seven West Media, Network Ten and Nine has long advocated for the laws to include global services to allow the public free access to major events.

Seven and Nine have publicly urged the Albanese government to review the laws to avoid the public paying for their favorite sports. The government has made a review of the scheme a priority.

Delany shares the concerns about global services, but has not publicly advocated for increased regulation.

“Australians have really reinvented the way in which they watch TV and the anti-siphoning regime is stuck in a time warp of that 1993-94 period,” he said.

“Why shouldn’t a company like ours have the right to bid for sports in an open process against those other companies who are paid TV companies, and we would commit to make those events that are truly iconic and available for free.”

Kayo Sports already offers an ad-supported product called Kayo Freebies, but there are no rules on how long Foxtel is required to keep something available for free on the service.

“It’s a fact that [the TV networks] don’t acquire free rights alone, they acquire free and paid rights, and they exploit them, and they push customers over to the paid side.”

Delany’s comments were made following the release of Foxtel’s annual results, which showed a 2 per cent fall in subscription video revenue due to a $US61 ($AU85.7) million impact from foreign currency fluctuations.

He said the company was on track to generate $3 billion in revenue by 2025, and to get to five million customers. But Foxtel still has billions of dollars in debt, which is owed to shareholders News Corp and Telstra. “We’re producing lots of cash, which the shareholders can use to invest or pay down debt. How the shareholders choose to spend the cash is obviously up to a decision for them,” he said.

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Categories
Technology

Product Review: cycling shoe + pedal + cleat comparison of several options

With a few new pairs of cycling shoes to sample, as well as the (relatively) new Wahoo Powrlink pedals/power meter for review, here is a quick overview of three different systems and a comparison of the weights…


Part of a review series + video by Rob Arnold


Before setting off for my first ride after fitting new Wahoo/Speedplay cleats to a pair of Giant Surge Pro shoes, I thought it was worth comparing the weights of three different shoe / pedal / cleat options that are part of the road cycling scene in 2022 .

Click the link below and you can see a quick overview of three systems:

  • Bontrager (2017) XXX shoe + Shimano (yellow) cleat + Shimano Ultegra pedal (circa 2015)
  • Nimbl Ultimate shoe + Time iClic cleat + Time XPro 12 pedal
  • Giant Surge Pro shoe + Wahoo Powrlink / Speedplay cleat + Wahoo Powrlink pedal

There is more to the story than what each combination weighs, and you can find plenty of commentary about the shoes and pedals and cleats on the RIDE Media site and/or YouTube channel. It’s part of a growing series of video reviews of cycling products, and a way of showcasing some great recent innovations – while occasionally also comparing new with old.

For over five years, I have ridden with Bontrager’s XXX shoes (a pair from 2017 and the updated iteration from around 2020). And Shimano pedals had been my go-to for a long time.

The Shimano SPD-SL option is the predominant system in modern road cycling; it has been slightly refined over the years but the vast majority of riders have sampled this style of pedal and cleat.

Earlier this year, I made the switch from Shimano to Time pedals after being sent the lightweight XPro 12 pedals for review. With the iClic ‘Free’ cleats (ie. with 5 degrees of float) fitted to both Bontrager and Nimbl shoes, this is a pedal system that I have come to like. In my appraisal, the cleat is welcomed by the pedal making it the easiest engagement option I have used.

The Time pedals also have a much larger platform than the other options… and they are much lighter too.

Time cleats on Nimbl shoes.

Last week, however, it was finally time to sample the Wahoo Powerlink pedal and power meter. Unboxed months ago, I never got around to fitting the cleats before the set of pedals I had for review were sent back to the local agent, FE Sports, so sales reps could show them off when visiting shops.

The Powrlink system offers two versions of power meter: one-side or both pedals. FE Sports kindly sent another set of pedals for me to use now that product supply is flowing. You can now find the Wahoo system in shops around Australia, with the one-sided power meter retailing for AUD$950, or the double-side for AUD$1,450.

Giant Surge Pro shoes with the Wahoo/Speedplay cleat.

It is early days with the new Giant shoes/Wahoo pedals but I’ve already adapted to the different style of clipping into what is a double-side pedal (unlike Shimano’s road-specific SPD-SL or the Time options).

You can see more of my commentary on the shoes and pedal experiment on the RIDE Media YouTube channel and I’ll add more to ridemedia.com.au in the coming days and weeks.

If you have any questions, don’t hesitate to leave a comment on any of our social media portals and I’ll do my best to get back to you with my answers or opinion.

–By Rob Arnold


Subscribe to RIDE Media’s YouTube channel, click here.


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Categories
Entertainment

Abbie Chatfield trolled by followers of ‘scariest man on the internet’ Andrew Tate

Abbie Chatfield has revealed she’s been trolled by followers of the Youtube star dubbed “the scariest man on the internet”.

The reality-star-turned-TV host has revealed her DMs have been lit up by Andrew Tate acolytes aged in their early teens.

In the past couple of months Tate, 35, has become a viral sensation and lightning rod for disaffected young men, with his vile, misogynistic opinions: including that women are property and should accept blame if they are raped.

The British American former kickboxer says he only dates women half his age so he can leave an imprint and is reportedly under investigation for human trafficking and rape allegations in Romania, where he lives.

It’s understood he is googled more than Donald Trump and Kim Kardashian.

Controversial influencer Andrew Tate
Camera IconControversial influencer Andrew Tate. Credit: Andrew Tate/instagram

Chatfield, who is an outspoken feminist, said she had tried to avoid commenting on Tate so as not to give him “oxygen” in the media.

“I’ve had a really hard time with Andrew Tate because I exist in the realm of feminism and calling out misogyny, my podcast, my radio show I’ve been asked millions of times (to talk about him),” she revealed on The Project.

“But I do feel like I really want to ignore him. I want to try to suffocate him of any oxygen in media because the more I engage with his content, even to research for a radio segment, if I look at his TikToks or if he is tagged in a TikTok and I look at it too long that feeds the algorithm, that spreads out more to my followers and to the followers that are already engaging in that content. . . (but) it is getting a bit too big to ignore now.”

Abbie Chatfield talks about Andrew Tate on The Project
Camera IconAbbie Chatfield says she didn’t want to give Andrew Tate “oxygen” in the media. Credit: The Project/Channel 10

She said she was sure her listeners agreed that “yes, he’s disgusting, he’s awful, let’s move on”.

Chatfield said she had posted one Instagram story to her followers saying she didn’t want to comment on Tate, but that provoked a disturbing response from his fans.

“I’m getting DMs from early teen boys saying ‘I hope Andrew Tate destroys you’ or things along that line,” she said.

“I also get comments calling me Abbie Tate and comments on TikTok especially — that’s where it is really, really rife.”

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Categories
Sports

Change of majority shareholding at DJR

Ralph-Family-Dick-Johnson-Racing

Dick Johnson (left), Brett Ralph (centre), and Ryan Story (right)

Dick Johnson Racing has announced a change of majority shareholding at the team.

The Stapylton-based Repco Supercars Championship organization confirmed that the Ralph family will become majority shareholders from January 2023.

Dick Johnson and Executive Chairman Ryan Story will maintain their positions and hold onto “a significant share” in the business, according to the team.

The Ralph family’s interest will be held through the Melbourne Aces Baseball Club.

Their portfolio also includes shares in Melbourne Storm National Rugby League Club.

Meanwhile, Brett Ralph is a Director of the Sunshine Coast Lightning Super Netball Team, Melbourne United Basketball Club, and the Australian Baseball League, and is the Chairman of the Melbourne Aces Baseball Club.

Story previously stated that any buy-in to the famous Ford squad would not be open to an investor but rather a strategic partner that adds value.

“I am excited to announce today the team’s partnership with the Ralph Family,” said Story.

“Brett and the Ralph Family are strategic investors at DJR, with the current management structure we have in place continuing to run the business day to day as they have been.

“Brett and the Ralph Family are fantastic people, and we couldn’t imagine partnering with anyone else.

“They are extremely experienced business people with a passion for sport that is undeniable.

“From the moment I first spoke with Brett he and I just clicked, and I knew we would have a fantastic working relationship.”

Johnson added: “Jillie and I are excited to welcome the Ralph Family in to Dick Johnson Racing.

“We are immensely proud of the family culture we have created at DJR and to be working with a family who have the same values ​​and views is extremely exciting and confidence-instilling.”

DJR was founded in 1980, with the Ralph family’s buy-in marking the latest major ownership reshuffle for the organisation.

Roger Penske became a part-owner of the squad in 2014 before selling his stake to Story in late 2020.

During the DJR Team Penske it was the team won three Supercars Championship titles with Scott McLaughlin (2018, 2019, 2020).

DJR, which competes under the Shell V-Power Racing Team banner in Supercars, fields the #11 of Anton De Pasquale and Will Davison in the famed #17.

Categories
Australia

Woman found dead in Bluewater bushland was in relationship with man arrested over her death, Queensland police say

Detectives say a man arrested over the death of a woman in north Queensland had been in a relationship with the victim for several months.

Mother of four Tania Trickey, 44, was killed at Bluewater, near Townsville, some time on Saturday morning.

A group of teenagers riding quad bikes discovered the body on a sandy track in bushland that afternoon.

Police arrested a 38-year-old Deeragun man at a service station in Proserpine around 8:30pm on Sunday after his car was spotted by patrolling officers.

“Police were basically able to take him by surprise,” Detective Inspector Jason Shepherd said.

Police have seized the man’s vehicle, which will be subject to forensic examination.

“We hope to obviously find evidence that will link our person of interest and the vehicle to the crime scene [at Bluewater],” Detective Inspector Shepherd said.

Pair allegedly drove to remote area together

Witches hats line a sandy path at the crime scene
Police believe the woman died on Saturday.(ABC News: Lily Nothling)

Police said the man and Ms Trickey had been in a relationship for a few months.

The pair allegedly drove to the remote area at Bluewater together on Saturday where the woman was later found dead.

Detective Inspector Shepherd said they were able to identify the man after his vehicle was captured on dash-cam footage near the scene.

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Categories
Business

Economist Saul Eslake predicts Australia’s interest rate growth will slow

There is a glimmer of hope for Australians fearing more interest rate pain, with a leading economist predicting the massive hikes could soon start to ease.

On August 2, the Reserve Bank of Australia raised interest rates for a fourth consecutive month, bringing them to a six-year high of 1.85 per cent.

It was also the third month in a row the cash rate rose by 0.5 per cent, the fastest interest rate growth Australia has experienced in almost 30 years.

The RBA has made it clear interest rates will continue to go up as it attempts to bring soaring inflation levels down.

But independent economist Saul Eslake, former Bank of America Merrill Lynch chief economist (Australia and New Zealand), believes interest rates will not rise as high as some are predicting.

“I think the Reserve Bank is of a mind to get it (interest rates) up to about 2.5 per cent by the end of the year. That could be either 2.35 per cent or 2.6 per cent,” he told NCA NewsWire.

“Then they will be able to pause to assess the impact of what they by then will have done.

“In my view, that may well be enough to slow the economy sufficiently.”

Mr Eslake said raising the cash rate to 2.35 or 2.6 per cent should be enough to achieve the RBA’s goal of slowing down the growth of domestic spending to counter inflation.

“As customers do have to start paying for the rate increases that have been announced, you should see spending slow quite a bit,” he said.

“The other part of the answer is that there is now starting to be some evidence to suggest that the global sources of inflationary pressure have peaked.”

Mr Eslake’s projection goes against what the country’s big four banks have previously predicted after they all unanimously forecast more pain for Australians.

NAB expected the cash rate to sit at 2.85 per cent by November, while Westpac forecasted it would rise to 3.35 per cent by February next year.

But Westpac’s forecast was not as dire as ANZ’s, who expected the cash rate to rise above three per cent before the Christmas holidays.

“Our expectation is that the RBA will deliver this via four more successive 50 basis point rate hikes in August, September, October and November,” ANZ’s head of Australian economics, David Plank, wrote in July.

“This 200 basis points of additional tightening sees the cash rate target at 3.35 per cent by November.”

The CBA forecasted the cash rate will sit at 2.60 percentage points by November.

Mr Eslake acknowledged and did not dismiss these projections, but expressed concern over what it could mean for the Australian economy.

“My view would be that if the Reserve Bank does end up going straight to 3 per cent or 3.5 per cent… there will be a much greater risk of a sharper slowdown in the Australian economy,” he said.

RBA Governor Philip Lowe has previously said he expects they will take further action on interest rates, but indicated those changes are not “pre-set” and subject to incoming data at the time.

“The Board expects to take further steps in the process of normalizing monetary conditions over the months ahead, but it is not on a pre-set path,” he said in a statement following the August hike.

“The size and timing of future interest rate increases will be guided by the incoming data and the Board’s assessment of the outlook for inflation and the labor market.”

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Categories
Technology

Game publisher Playtonic warns customers about scam regarding upcoming game Lil Gator

Playtonic, the publisher and developer of the popular platforming game Yooka-Laylee, issued a public warning about a new type of scam floating around.

People are sending out fake notices via email and social media looking for players to try a demo of an upcoming game that isn’t ready yet.

The publisher stressed that an open beta for the upcoming game Lil Gator, an adventure game about an alligator, is not planned, let alone ready for the general public.

Taking to Twitter to post an official update regarding the situation, Playtonic announced that while they were aiming to release Lil Gator for the Switch and PC later this year, there is no set-in-stone release date.

“It has come to our attention that someone is offering beta testing for Lil Gator Game,” the company posted.

“We can confirm this is a scam and not from Playtonic or Lil Gator Game. If we were offering this to our communities, we would announce it on our Twitter and not via any other channels.

“Please do NOT click the links provided in the scam message! If you receive any suspicious messages claiming to be from Playtonic please let us know,” Playtonic continued.

Anyone who has received an email from either developer MegaWobble or Playtonic regarding Lil Gator should disregard any links attached.

Lil Gator is an adventure game that follows a little gator, as players direct the gator to gather, craft, and explore an open world.

Taking place on what appears to be a deserted island, players will be able to enjoy an “adorable adventure” where they can “climb, swim, glide, and slide your way into the hearts of the many different characters you meet on your travels! ”

Scams and hacking attempts are nothing new to the world of game development. A hacking company recently subpoenaed Google, PayPal, and Valve to fight a legal battle against popular Destiny 2 developers Bungie.

The developer has started taking individuals to court, recently suing a streamer for ‘cheating’ in the popular space shooter.

Written by Junior Miyai on behalf of GLHF

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Categories
Entertainment

What is like being a kid in the 90s: Aussie dad shares nostalgic summary

Dad’s VERY relatable post about being a kid in the 90s touches millions of nostalgic Aussies: ‘Cheez TV, TV guides, Harry’s Practice and Rage’

  • An Aussie dad has shared a nostalgic summary about growing up in the 90s
  • Brad Kearns reflected on old television shows, toys, books and games
  • He would play a tamagotchi, watch Cheez TV and read Goosebumps books
  • On weekends he would hire new release movies from Video Ezy
  • ‘I’m not saying times are sh*t now. But the 90’s were pretty sick,’ he wrote

A father-of-three has touched the hearts of thousands of nostalgic millennials after posting a relatable summary of growing up in the 90s in Australia.

Brad Kearns shared a nostalgic post on social media which struck a chord with thousands who related to his memories of Cheez TV before school, Goosebumps books, tamagotchis and visits to Video Ezy.

‘I’m not saying times are sh*t now. But the 90s were pretty sick,’ he wrote alongside an image of himself as a child.

Brad Kearns (pictured, left with wife Sarah) shared a nostalgic summary on social media which struck a chord with thousands who related to the detailed childhood reflection

Brad Kearns (pictured, left with wife Sarah) shared a nostalgic summary on social media which struck a chord with thousands who related to the detailed childhood reflection

'I'm not saying times are sh*t now.  But the 90's were pretty sick,' he wrote alongside an image of himself as a child (pictured)

‘I’m not saying times are sh*t now. But the 90’s were pretty sick,’ he wrote alongside an image of himself as a child (pictured)

‘I’d finish my Crispix or pop-tarts and sit back down to Sailor Moon on Agro’s Cartoon Connection. We’d flick it over to Cheez TV for Pokémon and then some Dragon Ball Z before we had to leave,’ Brad wrote, adding how television commercials were all about kids toys.

‘We’d get into mums Nissan Bluebird and feed the Tamagotchi on the way to school with Alanis Morriset blaring. Front doors with Safety House signs along every house near school.

‘I’d get out with my Tazos and glow in the dark Odd-Bodds ready for a big day of hustling.’

Brad said on the way to school he would play a tamagotchi (pictured)

At school he would swap Tazos with friends, which were tiny disks featuring a picture of a character

On the way to school Brad would play a tamagotchi (left) and swap Tazos at school (right)

During school reading time he would pick up a Goosebumps book (pictured) then play marbles with friends.

During the 90s others may remember the old large projectors used to project images on walls (pictured)

During school reading time he would pick up a Goosebumps book (left) then play marbles with friends. During the 90s others may remember the old large projectors used to project images on walls (right)

Once at school Brad and his classmates would watch Behind the News and sometimes an episode of Round The Twist if they were lucky.

‘At recess I’d take a dollar to the canteen and f*ck them up by asking for 100 chocolate buddies or 20 Redskins to get us through the day,’ he joked.

During school reading time he would pick up a Goosebumps book then play marbles with friends.

‘After school we’d head down to the drain pipes or fire trail and we knew to be back by dark. We’d always just end up in a cul-de-sac till the adults yelled at us to come home,’ Brad continued.

‘If we stayed in, afternoon TV was the best. They’d have Power Rangers, Totally Wild and then the afternoon cartoons until the adults would make us watch the news at 5:30.

‘We’d watch the Simpsons at 6. Neighbors at 6:30 and Home & Away at 7:00.’

What is like being a kid in the 90s:

Watching Pokémon and Dragon Ball Z on Cheez TV before school

Reading Goosebumps novels in the library

Playing with a Tamagotchi and Tazos

Watching Behind the News and Round The Twist

Buying lollies for 20c at the school tuckshop

Writing a lunch order on a paper bag

Renting out movies and television shows from Blockbuster and Video Ezy

Watching The Simpsons at 6pm weeknights

'Afternoon TV was the best.  They'd have Power Rangers, Totally Wild and then the afternoon cartoons until the adults would make us watch the news at 5:30,' Brad wrote (stock image)

‘Afternoon TV was the best. They’d have Power Rangers, Totally Wild and then the afternoon cartoons until the adults would make us watch the news at 5:30,’ Brad wrote (stock image)

chicken

What is your favorite 90s memory?

  • Playing with a Tamagotchi 5 votes
  • Renting movies from Blockbuster or Video Ezy 58 votes
  • Buying lollies at the tuckshop 3 votes
  • Watching Cheez TV 6 votes
  • Reading goosebumps 2 votes
  • all of the above 37 votes

Brad dubbed 7:30pm as the worst television time slot because only Better Homes & Gardens, Harry’s Practice or Getaway would be on – so instead they’d play.

‘We’d go record songs on the $35 cassette player we got from Parklea Markets with our birthday money. By 8:30pm the good sh*t like Buffy, Sliders or the X-Files would come on,’ he said.

Brad said the weekends would be start with watching Rage then Video Hits, followed by playing sports outside and ‘running amok’ with cousins.

‘There’d be sleepovers or a BBQ and we’d just shove mattresses on the lounge room floor. We’d watch Gladiators, Xena and then Hercules. After that the TV guide would tell us what the Saturday night movie would be. It was always a f*cking pearler,’ he said.

On weekends Brad would hire new release movies from Video Ezy (pictured) or Blockbuster

On weekends Brad would hire new release movies from Video Ezy (pictured) or Blockbuster

The social media post resonated with thousands who agreed the 90s was an ‘amazing’ period before everyone had a mobile phone.

‘Friday night trips to Video Ezy – my kids don’t even believe me when I tell them we had shops to hire videos. Kids now days really are missing out!!’ one woman commented.

‘Omg this seriously sums up my 90s childhood! If I wanted something to read or some cool as posters for my room I’d go down the deli and buy a smash hits or TV hits magazine!!’ another added.

A third said: ‘Those were the best days! Corner delis everywhere with 20c bags of lollies, use an iron to straighten our hair and we all knew where everyone was by the pile of bikes on the front lawn.’

Others also praised old television shows including Hey Hey It’s Saturday, Funniest Home Videos, Beverly Hills 90210 and Passions.

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