A Macca’s customer has been left less than impressed after she ordered six chicken nuggets – only to open the box and find something very different inside.
The Canberra woman took to Facebook to share a photo of what was supposed to be a box of nuggets after going through a McDonald’s drive-through.
Instead, the container was filled with raw sliced onion, Yahoo News Australia reported.
When contacted for comment, Macca’s said that if any customer ever had an issue, their meal could be replaced.
“At McDonald’s, we are committed to giving our customers a great experience every time they visit one of our restaurants,” a spokesperson told news.com.au.
“Of course, if a customer receives an incorrect order, we will happily replace this for them.
“We apologize for the inconvenience and encourage the customer to contact our Customer Service team so we can look into it in more detail.”
It comes after another Macca’s customer claims she found an unexpected item in her McChicken Sandwich.
The Irish woman was recorded by her boyfriend expressing her shock after she took a bite of her burger and pulled out what appeared to resemble a dandelion.
“There’s a flower in my McChicken Sandwich,” she said in the video, holding the mayo-covered piece of greenery.
“Is this actually for real?”
She then placed the green item on the top of the burger box, showing it was an entire stem complete with yellowing buds.
The video of the unimpressed woman – captioned, “Flowers in chicken legend meal looks lovely so it does” – has clocked up over two million views since it was shared on TikTok on Sunday.
But while many people sympathized with the woman’s plight – others were suspicious.
“I work at McDonald’s. No you didn’t,” one commenter wrote.
“Yeah nah Maccies worker here, that’s not possible,” another agreed.
While another said: “I work in McDonald’s and I can assure you that everything is checked, so I feel like this has been planted in.”
WhatsApp now allows you to delete a message for up to two days and 12 hours (60 hours in total), so you can remove an accidentally sent chat even after hours. Previously, this limit was 1 hour, 8 minutes and 16 seconds — yep, there were seconds involved.
The company’s tweet about this feature just mentioned “little over two days” but didn’t specify the 12-hour part.
WhatsApp first introduced the unsend feature back in 2017 with a time limit of just seven minutes but later increased it to one hour and eight minutes. Last year, WABetaInfo noted that the company might consider introducing a seven-day limit, but with this new update, it has chosen a rather odd time frame of two and a half days.
In comparison, rival chat app Telegram has no limit on deleting a message, so you can remove a chat years after sending it. Apple is moving in the other direction; after introducing the unsend feature for iOS 16 at its Worldwide Developer Conference (WWDC) in June, the company reduced the limit from 15 minutes to two minutes in the fourth version of the iOS 16 developer beta last month.
WhatsApp is also introducing new privacy features to its app including blocking screenshots for “view-once messages” and the ability to leave a group silently.
Legends of the music industry and lifelong friends have shared their memories of Olivia Newton-John and the many years she lived in the New South Wales Northern Rivers.
Key points:
Olivia Newton-John passed away this week at her ranch in southern California at the age of 73
Jillian McGrath says her lifelong friend regarded northern NSW as her “happy place”
The family of the Australian icon is still in talks with the Victorian government about how the state will honor her
The screen and music star first bought a property in the Ballina hinterland in 1980, two years after the film Grease was released.
Her friend Jillian McGrath, who was by her side for the purchase, said Newton-John referred to the Northern Rivers as her “happy place.”
“She said, ‘I just need to have something where I can put my foot on the ground and call it home,'” Ms McGrath said.
“[The real estate agent] had no idea who she was because she was incognito with a scarf and sunglasses.”
The childhood friends drove past a property adjacent to a nature reserve on Victoria Park Road, Dalwood and knew it was the one.
“She stood under the avocado tree and just said, ‘This is it, this is where it has to be,'” Ms McGrath said.
In 2005, Newton-John and three of her friends bought a rundown tourist property near Bangalow and renovated it to create the exclusive Gaia Retreat, which sold last year for $30 million.
Ms McGrath said Newton-John knew straight away that she had found her “happy place.”(Supplied: Jillian McGrath)
Always an Aussie
Australian entertainer Normie Rowe, who worked closely with Newton-John, said she was part of the “gumnut mafia” in the United States.
“There was always this wonderful connection she had with her home country and she was highly, incredibly representative of us — she never let us down,” he said.
“Physical was the biggest selling record in the world until Michael Jackson released Thriller.
“Like Peter Allen, she still called Australia home too.”
Newton-John and Ms McGrath were firm friends since childhood.(Supplied: Jillian McGrath)
Byron Shire resident and former Mi-Sex keyboardist Murray Burns met Olivia Newton-John by chance in the area in the early 1990s.
He said a few months she called and asked him to record her album.
“It was a magical time for her as she had never been able to record songs — she always had been coerced into doing other people’s songs,” he said.
“She didn’t play an instrument, but she had perfect pitch — she could sing melodies beautifully.
“She taught me a lot about humility.
“She would cook food for us and when we stayed with her in Los Angeles she treated us like family.”
Newton-John and Ms McGrath in London in the late 1960s, when the singer was 19 years old.(Supplied: Jillian McGrath)
Many Northern Rivers locals recall meeting Newton-John and being touched by her warmth, generosity and humility.
Rous resident Eoin Johnston said Newton-John in her daughter Chloe’s school community.
“She got involved with the school quite a bit, came to the school concert,” he said.
“She was just very down to earth and easy to get along with.”
Visit ABC iview for our Remembering Olivia Newton-John collection.
The #45 Garry Rogers Motorsport entry. Picture: 44 Photography
Turtle Wax Trans Am Series Category Management is investigating the controversial droop in the rear windscreens of the Garry Rogers Motorsport cars.
A furore has broken out in the series over the droop in the rear windscreen and roof line which the three GRM cars, all Ford Mustangs, exhibit.
Notably, Mustang-bodied cars of different generations entered by rival competitors do not feature the droop.
It is thought that the deformity in the GRM cars leads to a greater volume of air flowing over the rear wing, and hence an increase in rear downforce, all other things being equal.
A statement from the category in response to the controversy reads, in full, “Category Management has been made aware of the issue and are investigating with our technical partners and Motorsport Australia on why this may be occurring and if any changes to the Technical Regulations are required.”
Two of the GRM vehicles in question are driven by Nathan Herne and Owen Kelly, who are positioned first and second in the series standings, respectively.
They locked out the front row for Race 1 of last weekend’s Queensland Raceway round, with Wall Racing’s Tim Brook a further six tenths of a second off the pace in third position, although photographs show the droop in at least Herne’s car at previous rounds of the current season.
It is particularly pronounced in the #45 GRM entry of Lochie Dalton, but absent from Car #03 of Ben Grice and Car #69 of Jon McCorkindale, for example.
Worth noting is that Grice’s car is of latest spec, being a late-2021 build, whereas McCorkindale’s is a 2018 build.
Those facts are pertinent given one theory that the GRM issue is in fact a broader one related to a particular generation of car/bodyshape.
While it should be stressed that there is no confirmation that GRM is in breach of National Trans Am Series regulations, NASCAR Cup Series teams have failed afoul of officialdom for failure to maintain rigid rear glass in recent years.
In 2018, Kevin Harvick’s win at Las Vegas was excluded from Playoff consideration, with he and the #4 Stewart-Haas Racing entry stripped of 20 series points, for what was deemed a Level 1 breach.
Crew chief Rodney Childers claimed that the bend in the roofline and rear windscreen which occurred at speed was inadvertent, and had been caused by a failure of a rear window brace.
That explanation squares with a theory from a Speedcafe.com source, who explained that the rear windscreen bend could be caused by a failure or looseness in the brackets behind it.
The sixth and final round of the 2022 National Trans Am Series takes place at Sandown on September 16-18, before the Trans Am 100 at the Supercheap Auto Bathurst International in November.
The #69 Jon McCorkindale entry. Picture: 44 Photography
An internal review into John Barilaro’s controversial appointment to a lucrative trade role in New York has cost taxpayers $73,000 and is overdue.
Key points:
An internal review into Mr Barilaro’s appointment has cost taxpayers $73,500
The Premier has received part of a draft section of the report
Mr Barilaro will reappear before a parliamentary inquiry on Friday
The former NSW Public Service Commissioner Graeme Head was asked to conduct the review after it was ordered by Premier Dominic Perrottet last month.
New documents have been released publicly through a parliamentary order revealing that the fee set for the review was $73,500.
The documents suggest that when Mr Head was first engaged in late June the completion date was set at July 15, which gave the former Commissioner three weeks to undertake it.
But another document reveals it was extended to August 5.
The review is understood to be funded by the Department of Premier and Cabinet.
In the new tranche of documents, there is also the official letter from the Secretary of the Department Michael Coutts-Trotter to Mr Head which sets out the terms of reference.
It includes inquiring into “details and outcomes of all recruitment and selection processes that were commenced in relation to the role of Senior Trade and Investment Commissioner to the Americas”.
Mr Coutts-Trotter added “including arrangements for managing actual and perceived conflicts of interest” in the letter.
The Premier has received part of a draft section of the report which prompted him to force trade minister Stuart Ayres to resign last week.
At the time, Mr Perrottet said the draft section raised concerns that Mr Ayres had breached the Ministerial Code of Conduct but it wasn’t in the remit of Mr Head’s review to investigate if such a breach had occurred.
Yesterday the Premier asked for Bruce McClintock, SC, to conduct a legal review into whether there was a breach of the code.
Mr Perrottet has promised to make both the reviews public once he receives them.
Mr Barilaro has withdrawn from taking the New York job.
The former deputy premier told a parliamentary inquiry on Monday that he had been interviewed as part of the Head review.
Mr Barilaro will reappear before the parliamentary inquiry investigating his appointment on Friday.
If former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani can’t fly to Atlanta for court-ordered testimony before a grand jury investigating Donald Trump, he’d better find another way to get there, a judge suggested Tuesday.
Giuliani had been ordered to appear to testify Tuesday before Fulton County’s special grand jury investigating Trump’s efforts to overturn the election, but on Monday filed an emergency application to postpone his appearance. His lawyers cited a doctor who said Giuliani is unfit for air travel following a heart stent operation earlier this summer.
Fulton County Judge Robert McBurney, who is overseeing the special grand jury, held a hearing on the request Tuesday and ordered Giuliani to appear for grand jury testimony on Aug. 17.
“The very limited information I have from a doctor, from a very fancy hospital, is that air travel is not compatible with Mr. Giuliani’s condition right now. And so that’s why I’m saying is don’t do it by air. That’s plenty of time to make the trip — 13 hour drive,” McBurney said during the hearing.
Giuliani was among Trump’s closest advisers as he attempted to fight his loss in 2020’s presidential election. His work by him for Trump included a December 2020 appearance before the Georgia State Senate in which he made unfounded claims of fraud and misconduct among state officials.
Prior to Tuesday’s hearing, attorneys for Giuliani and District Attorney Fani Willis had sparred over claims he could not travel due to his health. But McBurney made it clear from the start of Tuesday’s hearing that he intended to get Giuliani to appear in Atlanta.
“John Madden drove all over the country in his big bus from stadium to stadium,” McBurney said, referring to the football legend who famously avoided air travel. “So one thing we need to explore is whether Mr. Giuliani could get here without jeopardizing his recovery and his health from him, on train or a bus or Uber, whatever it would be.”
The special grand jury was paneled in January at Willis’s request. The investigation stems from a Jan. 2, 2021 phone call between Trump and Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger in which Trump said, “All I want to do is this. I just want to find 11,780 votes, which is one more than we have. Because we won the state.”
Raffensperger is among dozens of state officials and Trump associates who have been subpoenaed sinceMay.
Giuliani is described in court documents as a material witness to investigationbut his attorney said Tuesday that the district attorney has not responded to questions about whether Giuliani is also a target.
“That inquiry that I have not yet received a response to will dictate certainly how counsel addresses this matter with my client. It will dictate how things go here,” said William Thomas, Giuiliani’s attorney.
Graham Kates
Graham Kates is an investigative reporter covering criminal justice, privacy issues and information security for CBS News Digital. Contact Graham at [email protected] or [email protected]
Rupert Murdoch’s News Corporation has almost doubled its profits in 2021-22 to a record $US760 million ($1.1 billion).
The US-listed company owns News Corp Australia, as well as numerous mastheads in the US and Britain, alongside book publisher HarperCollins and a majority stake in real estate advertising company REA Group.
Net income increased 95 per cent on the previous year, while revenue for the year ended June 2022 reached another record at $US10.4 billion, an increase of 11 per cent.
The unprecedented result was driven by the company’s news media division, where profits more than tripled to $US217 million through digital advertising revenue expansion and record digital subscriber numbers.
“The overuse of superlatives really is unbecoming,” chief executive Robert Thomson said on a call to investors.
“But the past quarter and the full year have created so many unprecedented records that reflect well on all of News Corp and we believe have created a platform for future performance and enduring returns.”
In an ebullient presentation, the company said it had enjoyed seven years of uninterrupted double-digit growth, the result of acquisitions and digital transformation.
In the most recent quarter, overall revenues were up 7 per cent to $US2.67 billion, while net income was back in the black at $US127 million, compared to a net loss in the fourth quarter the previous year.
Dow Jones, publisher of the Wall Street Journalhad the highest revenue since its acquisition by News Corp in 2007, driven by record advertising and growing digital-only subscriptions.
Fourth-quarter profitability at Dow Jones soared 54 per cent to $US106 million, leading to a 30 per cent increase for the year to $US433 million.
The New York Post also turned a profit for possibly the first time since Alexander Hamilton founded the paper in 1801, Mr Thomson said.
The company’s US media assets were the single largest contributor to its improved profits, he told investors, with the company overall becoming more dependent on recurring and circulation-based revenue and less reliant on advertising dollars.
Mr Thomson flagged further increases in top-line revenue growth in 2022-23 despite predicted modest growth in capital expenditure, macro economic uncertainty and foreign exchange volatility.
He predicted persistent supply chain and inflationary pressures, notably in freight and manufacturing at HarperCollins, as well as news printing costs and wage inflation, but said he was confident News Corp could continue to cut costs.
In the book publishing division, the acquisition of HMH books and media was one factor behind revenues climbing 10 per cent, with consumer spending above pre-pandemic levels.
Mr Thomson predicted the HMH backlist, which includes JRR Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings, should pay dividends with the upcoming release of the Rings of Power series on Amazon Prime.
But the popular pandemic series Bridgerton was a blemish on its results sheet, with lower sales of the bodice-ripper resulting in a $US16 million hit.
At Foxtel, declines in broadcast viewing were offset by streaming revenues from Kayo and Binge, with more than 2.8 million streaming subscribers in total.
Digital real estate division revenues, including results for REA Group and Move, grew by a quarter.
Grand Theft Auto publisher Take-Two has talked about how it wants Grand Theft Auto 6 (GTA 6) to be an industry-wide benchmark upon release.
Take-Two reiterated the development status of Rockstar Games’ next major title in an earnings call from yesterday (August 8), with CEO Strauss Zelnick outlining the precedent the company wants the game to set.
“With development of the next entry in the GTA series well underway, the Rockstar Games team is determined to once again set creative benchmarks for the series, our industry, and for all entertainment, just as the label has done with every one of their frontline releases,” said Zelnick (via pc gamer).
Whilst there’s no release date for Grand Theft Auto 6 as of yet, Rockstar did say back in February that the title was in “active development”, with around 200 new jobs suggesting a pivot towards the project as well.
Grand Theft Auto 5. Credit: Rockstar.
A report from last month also indicates what setting and protagonist the game will have: players will reportedly explore a fictionalized version of Miami with two main characters, one of which will be the series’ first female lead. The two leads are allegedly going to be influenced by famous bank-robbing couple Bonnie and Clyde.
Rockstar’s own efforts to tackle the crunch culture in its studio have also apparently impacted GTA 6‘s development. To make sure it releases earlier, the studio will apparently update the game with new missions and cities regularly post-launch. The title is also “at least” two years from release.
The developer has already removed transphobic content from grand theft auto 5 and GTA Onlinewhich reflects an apparent effort in the next game to not “punch down” on marginalized groups.
In other news, less than one per cent of Netflix’s 221million subscriber base is playing the games that come with the service.
HEndrika van Genderen first came to the internet’s attention during the early days of the pandemic, after videos of her shopping at a pretend Coles went viral. Her son de ella Jason and his wife de ella, Megan, along with their four children de ella, built the cardboard supermarket so that their mother and grandmother – who they all called Oma – could do her regular food shop at home. Having been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s and vascular dementia, it was crucial that her routine was not disrupted.
Oma’s shopping trip was featured on The Late Late Show with James Corden and Good Morning America, and received more than 100m views worldwide. Oma’s various social media pages (run by Jason) received hundreds of thousands of new followers, all eager to hear her story and follow her progress. But it wouldn’t always be a heartwarming ride.
Jason van Genderen, a film-maker on New South Wales’s Central Coast, didn’t realize when he started filming his mother’s life that the resulting footage would be so exposing and heartwrenching. Initially, he says, “it was a way of capturing moments that we could share with Oma, so she could remember things”.
But the footage morphed from being a memory aid to a documentation of his mother’s increasing struggle and the toll it took on his family life. In his new documentary, Everybody’s Oma, we see Jason and Megan fight over whether Oma should keep her cat de ella, Oma becoming increasingly frail and having falls, and the 24/7 reality of being a carer.
“What we were wanting to achieve with this film was not always pretty. But what we wanted was for the audience to feel that they were living in our house. We were diarising the evolution of the family at that time,” says Jason. “We didn’t know what was going to happen to Oma and what was going to happen with our marriage.”
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Oma moved in with Jason and his family in 2017, nine years after her husband died of cancer. Living independently in the family home, she began falling over and forgetting appointments. “Dementia starts very subtly. We realized she was very isolated,” says Jason. “She couldn’t drive. Her reliance on others was increasing. We thought, ‘It can’t hurt to have her with us’ – and she was really keen. We underestimated how lonely she had been.”
The family moved out of their rental and found a place to buy with a granny flat out the back. At first “it was fun,” Jason says. “Oma was independent enough to be on her own during the day. She made her own meals and joined us several times a week to eat. It felt like a nirvana at the start, living in a multi-generational household.”
‘It felt like a nirvana at the start, living in a multi-generational household’ … Oma, Levi and Jason van Genderen. Photograph: PR
In the beginning, both Megan and Jason could still leave the house and go to work, but in 2020, Megan says, “Routine went out the window. We couldn’t use carriers. Her independence from her decreased, and as we were at home all the time, she relied on us more.
Gradually Oma’s care became overwhelming. Jason closed down his production company so he could assist Megan and care for his mother de ella full-time. The pair were sandwiched between generations, with a toddler and three older children who also needed them.
“Oma became our central priority in the home – we couldn’t leave the home. We knew one of us leaving the house would cause her such anxiety,” Jason says. He still can’t get the picture out of his mind of Oma at the window, looking distressed as his car pulled out of the driveway.
Over the years, all these small moments of joy, caring, distress and stress were being filmed, with editor Gavin Banks sifting through more than 300 hours of iPhone footage to make a feature-length film. Footage was shot by Jason, Megan, their son Levi and later Banks, who moved into the family home to capture footage when Oma’s need for round-the-clock care was becoming acute.
As Jason uploaded clips of Oma to her social media channel, Oma’s Apple Sauce, the mood also shifted. Having become an internet sensation following her de ella home shopping clip de ella, when Jason posted clips showing the family’s struggles, the backlash was intense. Jason was berated online for how he spoke to his mother de ella, accused of neglecting her and not feeding her properly.
“I get the trolling – I didn’t enjoy it, but I get that people are passionate,” he says.
Oma had returned from a hospital trip, which had had a discombobulating effect on her. “We documented it and shared it to say ‘this is how difficult it is when her routine is disrupted’. But people who only saw that video and not the whole story got upset.”
Megan was less engaged with the commenters, “My lens with social media is that we had a real opportunity to do some good because our story resonated,” she says. “I got very overwhelmed by the amount of people interested in us. ‘You guys are amazing’ – neither of us need to hear that. When we were trolled, it didn’t really affect me because I knew we were looking after Oma with love and care.”
Oma died in February 2022, at the age of 89.
While the intimacy of Everybody’s Oma is one of its greatest strengths, it also raises questions about consent. As Oma was losing her cognitive abilities, was she truly able to consent to being filmed?
“At all times I would be making her aware of the filming, and where we would share it – and always making her aware that storytelling was happening,” Jason says. “She always loved the films I made. And she was always abundantly happy to be filmed. She really enjoyed it. There was a lot of touching base. Consent became increasingly important for us as she declined.”
Jason and Megan developed three criteria they’d use to judge whether they should film something: “Was it made with love? Was it educational? And what would my mum think of that when she was fully cognisant?”
Hypothetically, if he had dementia how would he feel if his children decided to make a film of his final years? Jason pauses for a moment.
“I guess I would be comfortable to be the subject. If my kids wanted to turn it around on me, I would be OK with that,” he says.
Daniel Ricciardo will reportedly seek a $21 million payout from McLaren in order to make way for fellow Australian Oscar Piastri at the Woking-based team.
Ricciardo has what appears to be a watertight contract for 2023, meaning McLaren will need to convince him to step aside in favor of Piastri.
If Ricciardo is able to secure a drive elsewhere for next season, any amount he earns would then be deducted from the McLaren payout.
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McLaren would be expected to reject Ricciardo’s initial demand, with negotiations over a final price likely to take place in the coming weeks.
Australia’s last world champion, Alan Jones, wrote in his Wide World of Sports column on Tuesday that Ricciardo would “certainly” not be at McLaren in 2023.
“There’s no way in the wide world that’s going to happen,” Jones wrote.
It’s also been reported that Piastri never had a contract with the Alpine F1 team, only with its academy, meaning the deal was never lodged with Formula 1’s Contract Recognition Board (CRB).
Daniel Ricciardo in action for McLaren. (Getty)
The CRB therefore accepted Piastri’s McLaren deal as it did not conflict with any other F1 contract. However, that does not mean the deal between the 21-year-old and the Alpine academy is not enforceable in a court of law.
Alpine boss Otmar Szafnauer has already flagged the possibility of legal action if Piastri does not drive for the team next year.
“I expected more loyalty from Oscar than he is showing,” he told Spanish publication El Confidencial.
“I started in 1989 in Formula 1 and I’ve never seen anything like this. And it’s not about Formula 1, it’s about integrity as a human being.”
Oscar Piastri after his F2 win at Monza in 2021. (Getty)
“We have a contract with Piastri, which he signed in November, we have spoken to our lawyers and they have told us that this is a binding contract, so part of that contract allows us to put Oscar in one of our cars in 2023. “
The tug of war between McLaren and Alpine for Piastri’s services shows how highly the Melburnian is rated in F1 circles, despite the fact he’s yet to make his grand prix debut.
“The way it’s unfolded is something completely new, they’re having a major fight over somebody they’re hoping will turn into a great Formula 1 driver,” Jones wrote.
“All the signs point to the fact he will be, but until you’ve actually started a race there’s a little bit of a question mark.”
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