ORLANDO, Fla. – The National Hurricane Center is watching a tropical wave for possible development after weeks of silence in the Atlantic.
The wave is located off the west coast of Africa and is producing disorganized showers and thunderstorms over the far eastern tropical Atlantic, according to the NHC.
“Environmental conditions appear generally conducive for gradual development of this system while it moves westward to west-northwestward at 15 to 20 mph across the eastern and central tropical Atlantic, and a tropical depression could form around the middle part of this week.”
The area has a 40% chance of development over the next five days and could potentially become a tropical depression by mid-week.
“If it were to become anything, this would be Danielle,” FOX 35 Storm Team Meteorologist Ian Cassette said.
There has been no major hurricane to form this season, just three tropical storms: Alex, Bonnie, and Colin, and even though this is less active than past seasons, it is on schedule for an average season.
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We are now moving closer to the peak of hurricane season, which is Sept. 10, and roughly 90% of tropical activity occurs after Aug. 1. Therefore, both NOAA and Colorado State remain confident in their predictions.
The experts at Colorado State University and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration released their updated 2022 Atlantic hurricane season outlooks Thursday. Both organizations decreased the forecast number of named storms from what they initially predicted in earlier outlooks, but they say you should still prepare for an active season.
CSU is still expecting an above-average season with 18 named storms, eight of which could become hurricanes with winds of at least 74 mph. Experts say out of the hurricanes, four of them could be major (Category 3 or higher) with winds of at least 115 mph.
NOAA expects a similar outcome to the Atlantic hurricane season, predicting 14 to 20 named storms, six to 10 hurricanes and three to five major hurricanes, which is a slight decrease from its initial outlook in May.
Make sure you have the FOX 35 Storm Team App downloaded and ready to receive daily forecasts and to be the first to know when severe weather is coming to your area.
If you’re not in Europe escaping the chill, you could instead bask in the glow of a good bargain when dining out. Melbourne restaurants and pubs are tackling the notoriously quiet winter months with all kinds of specials on food and drinks.
Monday might be pasta night, Tuesday brings deals on schnitzels and the bargains continue right through until Sunday, if you know where to look.
On Wednesdays at Superchido, people are ordering these $10 plates of tacos and $10 desserts. Photo: Jason South
Seddon restaurant Superchido serves a Mexican menu that’s broader in reach than many others around town. But on Wednesdays, people eat for tacos. Two tortillas loaded with pork, beer-battered barramundi or grilled veg are available for $10; desserts are the same price.
While it was initially a night targeted to locals, the restaurant now gets people traveling from all over Melbourne for the deal.
“It’s equivalent to the foot traffic we get on a Friday,” says chief marketing officer Beatrice Pineda.
Welcome to Brunswick does half-price barbecue on Saturday afternoons, with smoked meats, vegan options and plenty of sides. Photo: Chip Mooney
Pineda says that business is steady throughout the week, but the Wednesday special provides a mid-week boost. “That alleviates the pressure on Friday and Saturday night trades.”
While Wednesday diners will mostly stick to the discounted items on the menu, they will often spend more on drinks.
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Superchido, like other venues, has been offering these deals since the start of the year and say they haven’t noticed any change in their popularity in recent months, despite four consecutive interest rate rises and surging costs of essentials like fuel.
Specials like these could be helping to fuel continued growth in transactions on dining out and takeaway, which grew by 8.6 per cent in the June quarter according to latest ABS data.
Ripponlea Food and Wine has noticed that Friday and Saturday trade continues to be strong, with people ordering lots of cocktails. But on Wednesday and Thursday, diner spend per head is half what it is on weekends.
A long-running pasta and wine night for $40 each Wednesday helps keep tables full.
CBD restaurant Robata does a special deal on chicken katsu sandwich and a beer at lunchtime. Photo: Jake Roden
“Mid-week, you need to tap into value for money. Diners are not necessarily looking to spend $100 a head,” says director Lisa Slaughter.
Dining deals often become more common in winter, as venues compete against the pull of staying indoors.
Throughout August, restaurant booking platform The Fork has set up deals where venues offer set menus at $99, $79 or $49. In Victoria, 49 restaurants are participating, including big names like Turkish restaurant Tulum and Federation Square’s Taxi Kitchen.
People travel from all over Melbourne to get a cheap taco deal on Wednesdays, according to Superchido. Photo: Jason South
“It’s a good way for venues to acquire new customers,” says head of marketing James Walmsley. “We know it’s expensive for venues to do their own marketing… but the most expensive thing for a restaurant is an empty table.”
As interest rate decisions catch up with consumers, some say they’re starting to pull back their discretionary spending, or plan to in future. A third of those surveyed in July by restaurant booking platform SevenRooms said dining out would be the first budget item they’d cut.
That could mean more bargains are on the table for savvy diners in coming months, even as warmer weather arrives.
Epocha’s Sunday roast is more than that, with three courses for $65. Photo: Jacqueline Moussa
Where to find dining deals every day of the week in Melbourne
MONDAY
Cheap drinks and snacks or $40 dinner, Henry Sugar
Monday night is legendary here for the inventive snacks (starting at $7), $10 negronis and $50 carafes of wine that can get your week off to a naughty start. Otherwise, do the two-course dinner for $40. 296-298 Rathdowne Street, Carlton North, henrysugar.com.au
The “beggars banquet” at Bar Margaux is a more affordable way to kickstart (or end) your night. Photo: Gareth Sobey
TUESDAY
$80 beggars banquet, Bar Margaux
That’s what they call this spread of oysters, steak tartare, fries and two glasses of Taittinger champagne. Head to this basement bar early (5pm-7pm) or late (10am-midnight), Wednesday to Saturday, to slump it in style. Basement, 111 Lonsdale Street, Melbourne, barmargaux.com.au
Turkish restaurant Tulum in Balaclava is participating in a month of dining specials by The Fork to boost business in winter. Photo: Jake Roden
WEDNESDAY
$10 tacos and desserts, Superchido
Get two tacos for $10, with three different fillings on offer: al pastor (pork), fish (battered fish) or rajas (scorched pepper). Back it up with a $10 dessert: churros or chocolate cake with layers of sponge and custard. There’s also a happy hour before the food specials kick off. 82 Charles Street, Seddon, superchido.com.au
Kids’ pastas are free at Brunetti Classico in Carlton Monday to Thursday. Photo: Supplied
THURSDAY
$12 burgers at Burger Shurger
Normally costing between $19 and $13.50, the fillings on these loaded burgers are Indian in flavour: think butter chicken, fried chilli paneer and potato tikka. It’s a fun mash-up that gets even better with a discount (also available on Wednesdays). Locations in Elsternwick and Williamstown, burgershurger.com.au
Burger Shurger’s hefty fillings include butter chicken, aloo tikka and more, with most burgers $12 mid-week. Photo: Supplied
FRIDAY
Two-for-one drinks at Ripponlea Food and Wine
Relocate the home office to this bayside spot to make the most of its 3pm-5pm happy hour. Pay half for a couple of Asahis or Matilda Bay Original Ales or try a tap wine, including King Valley pinot grigio. 15 Glen Eira Road, Ripponlea, ripponleafoodandwine.com.au
SATURDAY
Half-price barbecue at Welcome To Brunswick
What’s normally a $19 plate of smoked meat (or veg, if that’s your preference) is all yours for less than a tenner on Saturday afternoons (noon-4pm). Choose your hero, add sides like mac and cheese and bring it home with fluffy bread, pickles or some croquettes. 1 Frith Street, Brunswick, welcometobrunswick.com.au
SUNDAY
$65 for three courses at Epocha
They call it a Sunday roast, but lunch here on Sunday is so much more. Kick off with shared entrees, perhaps whipped ricotta with bread, before moving on to swordfish with mandarin and sorrel. Then it’s the roast of the week with sides to match and duck-fat potatoes. Dessert is also included, so you’ll be rolling all the way home. 49 Rathdowne Street, Carlton, epocha.com.au
THROUGHOUT THE WEEK
$20 specials at Paradise Valley Hotel
There are four ways to get dinner for $20, starting with steak on Monday. Fans of burgers, parmas and curry are also catered for throughout the week, then on Sunday there’s a roast special at market price. 249 Belgrave-Gembrook Road, Clematis, paradisevalleyhotel.com
Kids eat free at Brunetti Classico
From Monday to Thursday, margherita pizza, gnocchi and more kids’ pizza and pasta are free, as long as one adult orders a main meal. Does getting dinner on the house mean the kids will want even more gelato after? You bet. 380 Lygon Street, Carlton, brunetticlassico.com.au
$25 katsu sando and beer at Robata
Squishy white bread, crisp panko-crumbed chicken and lashings of Kewpie: this is how you do a sanga. With edamame for snacking and a refreshing Asahi, this is a lunchtime special that could have you skipping dinner. Talk about budget friendly. 2 Exhibition Street, Melbourne, robata.com.au
$60 prix-fixe lunch and wine at Philippe
Those in the know sniff out the lunch deal at this French CBD favourite. From Tuesday to Friday, two courses – onion soup and confit duck, perhaps – plus a carafe of wine, are all yours for nearly half the normal bill. Basement, 115-117 Collins Street, Melbourne, philipperestaurant.com.au
Kids eat free at The Orrong Hotel
Make dinnertime easy (and cheap!) at this renovated south-side pub, where kids aged 12 years and under eat on the house. Options include chicken schnitzel, spaghetti with napoli sauce and more. The deal’s available Monday to Wednesday, 4pm to 6pm. 709 High Street, Armadale, orronghotel.com
Liam and Luke Hemsworth go incognito on the streets of Byron Bay as the famous brothers run errands
By Ali Daher For Daily Mail Australia
Published: | Updated:
Despite being Hollywood stars, the Hemsworth brothers are still proud to call Australia home.
And on Wednesday, Liam, 32, and Luke, 41, were spotted chatting on the street in Byron Bay’s CBD.
Both casually dressed for the outing, Liam wore a plain white T-shirt and beige cargo pants.
Despite being Hollywood stars, the Hemsworth brothers are still proud to call Australia home. And on Wednesday, Liam, 32, and Luke, 41, were spotted chatting on the streets of Byron Bay
Meanwhile, Luke opted for a black long-sleeved top and black shorts which he teamed with a pair of colorful sneakers.
They both attempted to go incognito wearing tinted sunglasses and caps.
It comes after Chris revealed that his younger brother Liam was almost cast as Thor.
Liam wore a plain white T-shirt and beige cargo pants and black shoes
Meanwhile, Luke opted for a black long sleeve top and black shorts which he teamed with a pair of colorful sneakers.
‘My little brother almost got cast as Thor,’ the 38-year-old told website Mensxp this week.
‘He was one of the first people who got right down to the wire on getting the part so I could cross paths with him. That will be fun.’
Chris previously revealed that he blew his original audition for Thor, before Liam, 32, came in to test for the same part, and got much further in the process.
Last month Chris Hemsworth revealed that he wants Liam to appear in a Thor film as an alternative version of the iconic Marvel character. Pictured: Liam, Chris and Luke Hemsworth
That motivated Chris to ask for his manager to get him a callback to have another go, with the role ultimately going to him, not Liam, as a result.
‘I came in kind of with a little, I guess, motivation and maybe frustration that my little brother had gotten further than me,’ he told W Magazine.
‘It’s a little family, sibling rivalry sort of kicked up in me. Then it moved pretty quickly from there. It was cool.’
‘My little brother almost got cast as Thor,’ the 38-year-old told website Mensxp this week (pictured)
Thor is already a family affair, with Chris’ older brother Luke Hemsworth, 41, winning a role in 2017’s Thor: Ragnarok.
Luke played an actor depicting Thor on stage.
The play-within-a-film storyline repapers in Thor: Love and Thunder, which is out now.
Luke again plays act actor taking on his brother’s role, dressed in full Thor regalia, including a wig and fake beard.
Chris has previously revealed that he blew his original audition for Thor, before Liam came in to test for the same part, and got much further in the process. Chris is pictured in Thor: Love and Thunder with co-star Natalie Portman
Chris has previously revealed that he blew his original audition for Thor, before Liam came in to test for the same part, and got much further in the process. That motivated Chris to ask for his manager from him to get him a callback to have another go
After a series of loan spells away from the club, centre-back William Saliba made an impressive first Arsenal start
Arsenal’s high-profile summer arrivals have claimed the headlines in a pre-season bubbling over with goals and optimism – but it was an “old” new face who made the biggest impression when the serious business started.
Gabriel Jesus and Oleksandr Zinchenko have brought their winning mentality from Premier League champions Manchester City as they reunited with Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta as he tries to push the Gunners forward this season.
And while both showed quality and pedigree as Arsenal opened the season with a 2-0 win at Crystal Palace, it was the defensive performance of 21-year-old William Saliba that outshone everyone else to create a real stir of excitement among the visiting fans .
Saliba took the scenic route to his first Premier League start after joining Arsenal from St Etienne for £27m in July 2019, taking in loan spells back at his parent club then at Nice and Marseille, impressing so much there that he won full France honours.
He was Ligue 1 Young Player Of The Season last year and his spell away from Emirates Stadium raised questions about where he fitted into Arteta’s plans, with Marseille keen to make his loan deal permanent.
Arteta insisted he was simply handling Saliba with care until his development reached a stage when his time had come – and judging by a truly outstanding display at Selhurst Park, it has now arrived.
Jesus, who will offer Arsenal pace, movement and goals, shone as they took the lead through Gabriel Martinelli but as the game went on and Palace raised a gallop at last, Saliba delivered such calm command and controlled power that he emerged as the game’s outstanding performer.
Saliba’s central defensive partnership with Gabriel is in his infancy and there were anxious moments when Arsenal keeper Aaron Ramsdale was called into action to save from Odsonne Edouard and Eberechi Eze.
Throughout, however, Saliba was unruffled and virtually faultless to delight his manager.
It is one game, an early call, and no-one at Arsenal will be getting carried away with their result or the performance.
Saliba, however, looked such an exciting, composed talent, confirming all the background noise that this was a top class defender ready for the Premier League, that a little excitement should be allowed.
Arsenal simply carried their thrilling pre-season form into this first game of the season, dominating possession and running Palace ragged in a fashion that suggested Arteta has used his time well, bolting young and established talent from last season onto his new acquisitions.
They had to survive pressure of sorts from Palace and it took a late Bukayo Saka shot deflected in by the head of Palace’s England defender Marc Guehi to seal the deal, but this was fully deserved win.
It was all so different from the opening Friday night of last season when a Covid-hit Arsenal were handed the unwanted assignment at newly promoted Brentford, sinking meekly without trace in an awful start to the season, £50m new boy Ben White enduring a nightmare debut, although he was not alone.
Here, Arsenal showed no nerves in the sort of atmosphere Selhurst Park specializes in and could have been ahead even before Martinelli opened the scoring, all Palace’s early enthusiasm given its only outlet by chasing the ball to all parts of the pitch.
Arteta has strongly hinted that there will be more new arrivals before the end of the transfer window, with Leicester City’s Youri Tielemans constantly linked, and while Manchester City and Liverpool are hotly tipped to conduct another two-horse title race, Chelsea are in a state of flux and Arsenal could easily mount a top four challenge.
Arsenal’s manager has received some lampooning for his style in the latest “All Or Nothing” access all areas documentary, but the opening evidence suggests he has done some smart work this summer.
Fabio Vieira, the £34m midfield signing from Porto, will be an asset when fit, while there was the welcome sight of Kieran Tierney restored to full health and coming on as a substitute, ready to restore his influence.
Arsenal’s fans will be wary of reaching conclusions too quickly but the imperious manner in which Saliba strode through a game that always presents a test, even with Palace short of their best, will have only added to the feelgood factor engendered by the addition of proven, winning quality in the shape of Jesus and Zinchenko.
The joyous Gunners fans chanted “top of the league” in the closing moments – tongue in cheek of course but a loud affirmation that this was a much more pleasurable experience than their last opening Friday night of Premier League action.
As the US Senate kicked off its budget reconciliation Vote-a-rama Saturday night, one senator used a few moments to highlight Rep. Jackie Walorski and members of her staff, who died in a car accident this week.
“Mr. President, I rise today to honor the lives of four Hoosiers were tragically lost in a car accident this week,” said Sen. Todd Young, R-IN, before the Senate chamber.
He then named Walorski, 58, communications director Emma Thomson, 28, and district director Zachary Potts, 27, who were killed in a head-on collision Wednesday in Elkhart County, Indiana. Edith Schmucker, 56, the sole occupant of the other vehicle, was also killed in the collision.
“We grieved them all and we prayed for their family and friends,” Young said. “Like everyone here and back home in Indiana, I’m absolutely heartbroken.”
FUNERAL FOR REP. JACKIE WALORSKI SET FOR THURSDAY
“This is, of course, a profoundly difficult time for those of us who knew one or more of these Hoosiers, it’s such a difficult time for their families and their friends and all of us,” he added.
“I think one thing that hit everyone particularly hard was the loss of two young congressional staff members, whether you knew Zach or Emma personally or not, you certainly know their type. If you’re watching these proceedings from Capitol Hill, you know the type of hardworking, smart, committed young person who comes to work on a congressional staff. They dedicate so much of their time, their talents, and other opportunities are given up in order to serve their country.”
INDIANA GOP CONGRESSWOMAN JACKIE WALORSKI KILLED IN CAR CRASH
“We should celebrate their accomplishments while we grieve their losses. It’s a reminder, I think, for all of us to thank the many congressional staff members who do much more than the public will ever know,” Young continued.
Young also recognized his colleague, who said he had “infectious” confidence and “could light up a room.”
“Jackie knew that she belonged here. Jackie understood that this was her calling,” he said. “She did n’t need people to tell her that she belonged but she got right to work because she she had some things to accomplish.”
REPUBLICANS, DEMOCRATS REACT TO REP. WALORSKI’S TRAGIC CAR CRASH DEATH: ‘JUST THE WORST NEWS’
“Her confidence was infectious. Everyone saw it. Everyone was impressed by it. People love being around her and including me,” Young added. “Jackie had so many other amazing qualities.”
US Sen. Todd Young, R-IN, speaks on the economy during a news conference at the US Capitol on May 04, 2022 in Washington, DC. (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)
He continued: “She was always so full of energy. She was a lightning bolt. She could light up a room like no other. She was high-spirited and full of fire. And Jackie also had a really big heart.”
Young also described Walorski as a “larger-than-life figure” who “inspired motivated and people.”
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“It’s not too much to say that Jackie’s last breath was spent in service, in service to her constituents, to her God, to the great state of Indiana and to her country,” he concluded.
Walorski’s funeral will be held on Aug. 11 at 11 am ET at Granger Community Church in Granger, Indiana.
“Buyers are being cautious as they are concerned about the outlook,” Mr White said.
He said the high proportion of unsuccessful auctions was driven by the growing gap between vendor expectations and what the market was prepared to pay.
Despite this, Ray White managed to sell $4.6 billion of residential real estate last year, not far off the $4.76 billion it sold last year when house prices were booming.
Quietest since Easter
“Just because auction clearance rates have dropped does not mean it is a worse method of sale than private treaty. Clearance rates are a lot lower in private sales treaty,” he said, a point highlighted by the growing number of unsold, older listings.
Sydney, where house prices are falling at their fastest rate in 30 years, had its quietest auction week since the Easter long weekend with 476 homes offered under the hammer, according to CoreLogic.
Of these, 61 per cent sold under the hammer based on preliminary figures, up from 56 per cent last week. Domain reported a 57 per cent preliminary clearance rate, up from 56 per cent last week.
In Melbourne, auction clearance rates rose fractionally to 62 per cent despite volumes falling 23 per cent to 620, according to CoreLogic. Domain recorded a 59 per cent preliminary clearance rate, up from 58 per cent a week ago.
AMP Capital chief economist Shane Oliver said he expected a final clearance rate of 53 per cent in Sydney compared with an “August norm” of 68 per cent, and 55 per cent in Melbourne compared with 69 per cent.
sales still falling
“Clearance [rates] were up a bit again, but sales are depressed and still falling, and the trend is likely to remain down as rising mortgage rates continue to impact,” Dr Oliver said.
Nationally, the preliminary clearance rate rose by 0.7 of a percentage point to 59.5 per cent compared with a week ago – implying a final figure of about 55 per cent. This time last year, 74 per cent of auctions held were successful.
Each of the smaller capital cities had a decrease in auction activity this week, as Adelaide, Brisbane and Canberra recorded declines in the preliminary clearance rates.
Adelaide recorded the strongest preliminary clearance rate, with 66 per cent of auctions reporting a successful result, followed by Canberra (49 per cent) and Brisbane (46 per cent).
The latest auction figures follow dwelling values falling by 1.3 per cent in July, marking the third consecutive monthly fall, according to CoreLogic’s national Home Value Index.
Five of the eight capital cities recorded a month-on-month decline in July, led by Sydney and Melbourne where values fell 2.2 per cent and 1.5 per cent respectively.
Brisbane also edged into negative growth territory for the first time since August 2020, with values down 0.8 per cent.
Dr Oliver said he expected Sydney’s house price falls to accelerate each month until the end of the year as rates rise.
“The pace of decline is gathering speed, so it’s conceivable we could be seeing monthly declines of 4 per cent in a few months which would surpass the peak monthly increase of 3.7 per cent in March last year,” Dr Oliver said.
Mr White said the outlook depended on where interest rates ended up.
“For every negative there are positives. Unemployment is low and immigration is coming back. If you look back in history, in Sydney there has been a dip and then things flatten out,”
The question for buyers, he said, was how long to wait.
After a two-year hiatus – and a judging reshuffle – My Kitchen Rules finally made its way back to screens on Sunday night.
The 12th season premiere of the Channel 7 cooking show saw the return of foundation judge French chef Manu Feildel, who was joined by British home cooking queen Nigella Lawson.
Lawson was announced as a new judge earlier this year after the network parted ways with original judge Pete Evans following a slew of controversies.
Following declining ratings in 2019 and 2020, which saw viewers criticize the format for overdoing it on the dramatics, Seven promised the series would be bouncing back to its core values of “real food and real people” in 2022.
But it appears there’s still a little bit of room for some old-fashioned reality TV fighting, with one new contestant shaping up to be this year’s MKR ‘villain’ after criticizing everyone else’s tasting palates.
Kicking things off for MKR‘s debut episode were father-daughter duo Peter and Alice, who hosted the judges and contestants at their humble home in the small town of Chewton in Victoria.
Their menu charmed in writing, but the pair got off to a rocky start with their ‘Sunday Roast’ croquette entree.
While most of the contestants appeared to enjoy the dish for the most part, Queensland representatives Kate and Mary, who describe themselves as ‘fine diners’, weren’t too satisfied.
“Some of the other contestants really loved the croquettes, and perhaps that’s indicative of their kind of palates,” Kate said in a piece-to-camera.
Mary added, “I think they missed the thought of a good Sunday roast. I think they missed that completely.”
The judges ultimately echoed Mary’s take, telling Peter and Alice that their entree wasn’t entirely faithful to its title given they braised the beef cheek filling, as opposed to roasting it.
Bouncing back from their defeated state, the two then delivered a tasty main course of crumbed lamb chops with minted peas, with Feildel saying their meat was “cooked to perfection.”
But things plummeted from there, with their dessert – Grandma’s lemon delicious pudding – served woefully undercooked.
Lawson said she was “heartbroken” for the pair, adding, “I really wanted to see you with a smile back on your face.”
The group were equally shattered for Peter and Alice, particularly given the recipe was one passed down through generations.
“We really wanted them to do well after the entree,” NSW ‘fashionista friends’ Arrnott and Fuzz said. “On top of that, it was the added pressure of being a relative’s recipe.”
Elsewhere, Kate was a little less empathetic.
“I literally thought the whole time, grandma on the wall over there, she would not have been happy about that lemon delicious,” Kate said, later dubbing the dish “inedible.”
While most of the contestants gave Peter and Alice an overall score of 5s and 6s, Kate and Mary settled on the lowest score of 4. Meanwhile, the judge’s scored the pair an overall tally of 54.
Kate and Mary are slated to cook next on Monday night’s episode, with Kate saying she thinks the cohort will be “impressed.”
“I think we’re a threat,” Mary added.
My Kitchen Rules continues on Channel 7 at 7.30pm Monday
“The swearing is not the issue. Swearing doesn’t bother me. I feel like my reputation has taken a hit. I’ve worked 23 years to build that. Nathan Hindmarsh rang me during the week. I’m mates for life with Nathan Hindmarsh, and we had a spray every other week at Parra.”
Newcastle management instigated an HR investigation into the events that transpired. Knowles admits the issue could have been handled better.
“The word HR has made it worse,” Knowles said.
“Phil (CEO Phil Gardner) wanted a report and wanted to hear from everyone. The behavior was there for all to be seen. Phil as a leader at the club has said ‘I want a report’. Ideally, it wouldn’t have been handled like this. But that’s not my problem.
“I will forever hold my head up high about what a successful culture looks like. I’ve been in successful cultures and I know what it looks like. I know you have to stand by certain values. That’s where we’re trying to take this club. As far as the way it has been handled, it’s not ideal for anyone.”
Knowles maintains that despite Klemmer being overlooked from Origin teams that he has been part of in the past, the pair have shared a close relationship at Newcastle in their first season together.
“Very, very close,” Knowles said.
“On countless times I’ve gone to him with ways to help someone else. He’s become such a team man. He’s helping the younger players.
“The way he has behaved this year only adds value to him as a footballer. He’s been superb. But the way he acted on the weekend takes away value. I hope that one day he would even thank me for that.”
There have been suggestions that the pair exchanged more words after the game. That notion has been strongly denied. Knowles does admit that there was a discussion on the sideline when Klemmer succumbed to the bench.
“You can see that there is something going on down on the sideline,” Knowles said.
loading
“To be honest I very calmly said ‘Dave, I respect you, but I’m not sure if you are respecting me or the team at the moment’. That wasn’t personal.
“There was a lot of heat at the moment. The narrative was spun by certain people during the week with agendas that I had some issue with swearing. I wouldn’t have lasted 23 years in the game if I had an issue with that. The club will now move forward. Klem is fine. I’m fine.”
Stream the NRL Premiership 2022 live and free on 9Now.
After the 2020 election, Americans were clear: they wanted a viable third political party.
In modern US history the country has been dominated by the Republican and Democratic parties almost to the exclusion of all others, effectively creating a near two-party monopoly on power in the White House, Congress and the state level.
Other parties, like the Reform party, the Greens or the Libertarians have never really broken through. In 2021, as the fallout from the 2020 election continued, polling showed widespread support among Americans for a fresh third party that would offer something different from the status quo. Even a majority of self-identified Republicans said they wanted a new party in the mix.
This should be prime ground, then, for the Forward party, founded in July by a group of self-defined centrists including the former Democratic presidential candidate Andrew Yang and former Republican New Jersey governor Christine Todd Whitman.
People wanted a new third party, and they have been given one – one that has boasted of already raising more than $5m. So what are the chances of Yang and co winning office, and holding forth on the floors of the US Capitol?
“Slim to none,” says Marjorie Hershey, professor emeritus of political science at Indiana University Bloomington. “With an emphasis on none.”
Third parties face resource problems, for one thing. Forward’s $5m pales in comparison with the $1bn Joe Biden raised from donors during his 2020 election campaign.
Donald Trump raised $774m from donors, according to Open Secrets, while data from the Federal Election Commission shows that House and Senate candidates raised $4bn between 1 January 2019 and 31 December 2020, spending $3.8bn.
The two dominant parties also have huge structural advantages: mailing lists, email addresses, existing supporters and name recognition, things that have taken decades to build.
A more fundamental issue is that the US election system just isn’t set up to accommodate a third party.
The first-past-the-post system, in which one person is elected in each congressional district, means that a third party could, in theory, win 49% of the vote in a given area, and it would count for nothing if their opponent wins more.
Forward, which launched on 23 July, was formed from three existing political groups: Renew America Movement, made up of dozens of former Republican administration officials; the Forward party, which was founded by Yang after his failed bid to become the Democratic party’s nominee for New York City Mayor; and the Serve America Movement, a centrist group of Democrats, Republicans and independents.
“The rigid, top-down, one-size-fits-all platforms of the outdated political parties are drifting toward the fringes, making solutions impossible,” Forward’s website reads.
“We stand for doing, not dividing. That means rejecting the far Left and far Right and pursuing common ground.”
The party’s mission: “Not left. Not right. FORWARD,” as its slogan lays out, is a noble one. But there are doubts about what a centrist party might actually look like and stand for.
“There are a lot of people who would consider themselves moderate or centrist, who disagree very strongly with other people who consider themselves moderate or centrist. It’s not one group,” Hershey said.
The Forward party is yet to lay out a detailed platform. But once it does set out its positions on divisive issues like abortion, social security and tax cuts, Hershey said, “some of that middle is going to disagree with other parts of that middle, and the so-called huge middle is no longer huge.” .”
In a statement, the Forward party said it “can’t be pegged to the traditional left-right spectrum because we aren’t built like the existing parties.
“The glue that holds us together is not a rotten ideology, it is a shared commitment to actually solving problems. The hunger for that simple but revolutionary kind of politics is immense.”
In terms of how it will compete with Democrats and Republicans, the party said it “isn’t looking to drop a billion dollars in a 2024 presidential race”.
Instead, it will focus on gaining ballot access and recruiting candidates to run in races across the country.
“That takes money,” Forward said. “But more than money it takes people, and we are rich with them.”
Forward is less than two weeks old, but has already attracted a good deal of both cynicism and criticism, not least for the false equivalency it deployed when describing the need for a third party.
In an op-ed in the Washington Post titled “Most third parties have failed. Here’s why ours won’t,” Yang, Whitman and David Jolly, another co-founder who was previously a Republican congressman from Florida and executive chairman of the Serve America Movement, appeared to offer disingenuous arguments for why their efforts were required.
Ross Perot, center, takes part in a 1992 presidential debate as a third-party candidate alongside Bill Clinton, left, and George Bush. Photograph: Mark Cardwell/Reuters
On guns, Forward suggested that most Americans are “rightfully concerned by the far right’s insistence on eliminating gun laws”, but “don’t agree with calls from the far left to confiscate all guns and repeal the Second Amendment”.
As Andrew Gawthorpe, a historian of the United States at Leiden University and host of the America Explained podcast, wrote in the Guardian:
“These two things are not the same: the first is what is actually happening in America right now, whereas the second is a view that was attributed to Kamala Harris as part of a fabricated smear on Facebook and enjoys approximately zero support in the Democratic party .”
Third parties can have an impact, said Bernard Tamas, associate professor of political science at Valdosta state university and author of The Demise and Rebirth of American Third Parties: Poised for Political Revival?. But there’s usually a pretty specific formula.
“It’s always built on outrage,” Tamas said. “It has to be where the public is galvanized.”
Tamas pointed to the Progressive party, founded in 1912. That party, led by former president Theodore Roosevelt, advocated for child labor laws and the establishment of improved working conditions, including and eight-hour working day and “one day’s rest in seven” for workers.
Roosevelt, who was shot during his campaign, won 27.4% of the vote, besting William Howard Taft, the incumbent Republican, but losing to the Democrat Woodrow Wilson. But progressive reforms were eventually introduced.
“What they have historically done successfully could be described with an analogy of ‘sting like a bee’,” Tamas said.
“They emerge, really often quite suddenly, and they attack the two parties [and] they effectively pull voters away from them.
“And the two parties then respond, and in critical moments, they respond by trying to take away these issue bases, whatever is making the third party successful. They take those away, the major party changes, and then effectively the third party dies.”
Forward, which has pledged that it will reflect “the moderate, common-sense majority”, has plenty of people skeptical as to whether it can sting like a bee – let alone do more and actually elect candidates.
“The way that they’re presenting themselves, it may not have the galvanizing message,” Tamas said.
“Simply saying: ‘Hey, you know, let’s all get together and work together’ is barely something that gets people running on the streets protesting.”
Grandmother claims McDonald’s staff mocked her and refused to serve her after ‘cold fries complaint’ in front of her granddaughter – who is now too scared to return
Grandmother bullied and refused to be served by staff at Gold Coast McDonald’s
Tracey Lantern claims she attended Ormeau chain last month and complained
She returned last Saturday where staff laughed at her and granddaughter
Special needs child cried and is too scared to go back to the restaurant
By Sam McPhee For Daily Mail Australia
Published: | Updated:
A grandmother claims workers at a McDonald’s bullied and refused to serve her – with her granddaughter now too scared to return.
Tracey Lintern said she visited the Ormeau fast food outlet on the Gold Coast more than a month ago, asking staff to keep her fries warm while she ordered other food.
She then attended the same restaurant last Saturday, and claimed staff mocked and belittled her, before refusing to serve her food.
A grandmother says the treatment of workers at a Gold Coast McDonald’s bullied and refused to serve her – with her special needs granddaughter now too scared to return
Ms Lantern was with her granddaughter at the time, who has anxiety and PTSD, who started to cry after the alleged treatment.
‘She’s crying saying “Grandma what’s going on”,’ the grandmother told the Gold Coast Bulletin.
‘No one served me, so I just walked out.’
Ms Linter picked up an order of a single hot fries for a friend the first time she visited the McDonald’s.
She had recently moved into the area and was ‘so excited’ there was a McDonald’s nearby.
After arriving she decided to order more food, asking servers to keep the food warm.
When the chips were given to her, Ms Linter said they were cold and asked for a new order, which staff did.
The grandmother then turned up last Saturday, where she claims staff immediately treated her poorly.
‘I was buying dinner for all the family so I decided to go inside with such a large order,’ she said.
‘The same [worker] was on. As soon as she saw me she started to talk about me to other staff members.
‘I wasn’t even at the counter yet, then they all turned around at me to see who she was talking about.’
Ms Linter said the staff mocked her before refusing to take her order – humiliating her and her granddaughter (stock image)
Ms Lantern said a worker alerted other staff, who turned and laughed at the grandmother.
After walking to the counter to complain about the treatment, a female employee said she wouldn’t serve her because ‘last time you came in you were rude’.
The employee then allegedly threatened to call security, prompting Ms Linter’s granddaughter to burst into tears.
‘I was so excited when I moved here that McDonald’s was so close, as I would normally go twice a day, but now I can’t bring myself to go,’ Ms Linter said.
‘Why would you want to go back for that treatment, all over wanting hot chips?’
McDonald’s said it was investigating Ms Linter’s complaint.
‘We do not tolerate anti-social behavior and won’t accept abuse, intimidation, threats or violence towards our employees,’ it said.
‘Our employees have the right to be treated with respect and feel safe in their workplace.
‘We have received the customer’s complaint and it is being reviewed by our team.’