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Entertainment

Comedian Blake Pavey pokes fun at his terminal illness during his stand-up comedy shows

A young Australian stand-up comedian has shared a series of videos online poking fun at his terminal respiratory illness while performing in front of live audiences.

Blake Pavey, who has more than 870,000 followers on TikTok, was diagnosed with cystic fibrosis (CF) when he was just six weeks old.

The 20-year-old, from Melbourne, needs to self-manage himself by taking between 30 to 50 tablets a day, often feels out of breath after exercising and is unable to have children.

Cystic fibrosis is a terminal condition that causes severe damage to the respiratory and digestive system, resulting in thick mucus sticking to the lungs – and patients typically live into their 30s or mid-40s.

Blake told FEMAIL he copes with his condition through humor during his live shows while also raising awareness.

Melbourne comedian Blake Pavey (pictured) was diagnosed with cystic fibrosis (CF) when he was just six weeks old.  Cystic fibrosis is a terminal condition that causes severe damage to the respiratory and digestive systems, resulting in thick mucus sticking to the lungs

Melbourne comedian Blake Pavey (pictured) was diagnosed with cystic fibrosis (CF) when he was just six weeks old. Cystic fibrosis is a terminal condition that causes severe damage to the respiratory and digestive systems, resulting in thick mucus sticking to the lungs

The 20-year-old (pictured left on stage) turns to humor and pokes fun at himself during his comedy shows

The 20-year-old (pictured left on stage) turns to humor and pokes fun at himself during his comedy shows

In one video shared on Instagram, Blake asks the audience: ‘Are there any other dying people in the room?’ and woman puts her hand up explaining how she has a ‘hereditary family disease’.

The pair banter back and forth before Blake jokingly calls the woman a ‘loser’ because she didn’t receive a ‘Make A Wish’ despite having a terminal disease.

In another clip at a separate show, Blake explains what CF is and the life expectancy is – but then someone can be heard cheering.

Blake laughs and seems shocked, then makes fun of the woman.

‘He’s going to die, let’s go! That was the most positive way to tell me to kill myself,’ he joked.

In one video shared on Instagram, Blake asks the audience: 'Are there any other dying people in the room?'  and woman puts her hand up explaining how she has a 'hereditary family disease'

In one video shared on Instagram, Blake asks the audience: ‘Are there any other dying people in the room?’ and woman puts her hand up explaining how she has a ‘hereditary family disease’

Blake told FEMAIL he copes with his condition through humor during his live shows while also raising awareness

Blake told FEMAIL he copes with his condition through humor during his live shows while also raising awareness

Blake said living with CF feels like 'breathing through a straw on a daily basis' because the mucus in the lungs is thicker and becomes 'trapped'

Blake said living with CF feels like ‘breathing through a straw on a daily basis’ because the mucus in the lungs is thicker and becomes ‘trapped’

Blake said living with CF feels like ‘breathing through a straw on a daily basis’ because the mucus in the lungs is thicker and becomes ‘trapped’.

This build-up increases the risk of bacteria and infection in the body, which requires close maintenance and medication.

Blake doesn’t recall the first time he was told he had CF but remembers the ‘toughest moment’ when his parents had to discuss the life expectancy with him.

‘It’s always been something I’ve just had to deal with throughout my life,’ he said.

‘The life expectancy is always in the back of my mind but I try not to focus on it too much. I don’t want to let it control me.’

Blake doesn't recall the first time he was told he had CF but remembers the 'toughest moment' when his parents had to discuss the life expectancy with him.  'It's always been something I've just had to deal with throughout my life,' he said

Blake doesn’t recall the first time he was told he had CF but remembers the ‘toughest moment’ when his parents had to discuss the life expectancy with him. ‘It’s always been something I’ve just had to deal with throughout my life,’ he said

'My mum and dad weren't aware they both had the CF gene which was passed on to me.  It would've been pretty scary for them because they weren't sure what was wrong with me at first,' he said

But he doesn't let the condition stop him from enjoying life

‘My mum and dad weren’t aware they both had the CF gene which was passed on to me. It would’ve been pretty scary for them because they weren’t sure what was wrong with me at first,’ he said

‘My mum and dad weren’t aware they both had the CF gene which was passed on to me. It would’ve been pretty scary for them because they weren’t sure what was wrong with me at first,’ he said.

‘The first six or seven weeks when I was struggling to get to sleep and was in a lot of pain would’ve been the toughest.’

Not only has Blake been hit with the reality that he will likely die young, he may also require a lung transplant in the future to survive.

‘A lot of people with CF tend to need a lung transplant at some point depending on how severe it gets, which is something that is always on the cards,’ he said.

Not only has Blake been hit with the reality that he will likely die young, he may also require a lung transplant in the future to survive

Not only has Blake been hit with the reality that he will likely die young, he may also require a lung transplant in the future to survive

What is cystic fibrosis (CF)?

Cystic fibrosis (CF) is a serious genetic condition that causes severe damage to the respiratory and digestive systems

This damage often results from a buildup of thick, sticky mucus in the organs

The most commonly affected organs include the lungs pancreas liver intestines

If you have CF, a genetic mutation increases the thickness of mucus and other body fluids.

When this happens, the thicker fluids can interrupt the function of organs – like the movement of air through your lungs. This can trap bacteria and lead to infections

Source: Healthline

Blake has been able to self-manage the degenerate condition and says it can worsen over time.

He is diligent with health checks and usually visits the doctor every three months.

Blake moved to Melbourne last year to pursue comedy and is now planning a national tour.

On TikTok he’s known for sharing comedic skits and relatable videos – including mimicking what ‘every’ host on different radio stations sounds like and hilarious takes on real-life events.

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Categories
Sports

Hawthorn Football Club accused of mental health hypocrisy

In documents lodged on Sunday with the human rights division of the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal, Salmon-Abbott says she was first approached by Hawthorn shortly after Christmas 2020 about working for the club.

She began work in March 2021 as a full-time member of its partnership accounts team. About two weeks before she started work, Salmon-Abbott was diagnosed with depression and anxiety. She believes that, like many young people in Melbourne, her mental health deteriorated during the city’s first protracted lockdown the previous year.

Sophia Salmon-Abbott is seeking an apology, compensation and a declaration that Hawthorn broke the law.

Sophia Salmon-Abbott is seeking an apology, compensation and a declaration that Hawthorn broke the law.Credit:Chris Hopkins

In her statement of claim, Salmon-Abbott says she discussed her mental illness with her bosses at the club and explained to them that feeling excluded was one of the significant triggers for her condition. She told this masthead that they seemed supportive of her situation, but in her statement, she says that this changed after she had a series of panic attacks at work and was hospitalized for a month.

Salmon-Abbott says that after she was given from hospital, she requested a gradual return to work, starting discharge with one day a week. Her dispute with Hawthorn, which is already the subject of failed mediation, centers on whether the club genuinely tried to accommodate this.

“I tried for months and months and months… to get back to the club,” she said. “I was just trying everything possible and it just seemed like I was stuck in mud.”

A key piece of evidence cited by Salmon-Abbott’s statement of claim is an email in which a Hawthorn executive made it clear that Salmon-Abbott would not be welcomed back to her old job until she was able to work full-time. The email was circulated among Hawthorn staff but not shared with Salmon-Abbott.

This is the basis of the claim of misleading and deceptive conduct against Hawthorn.

In August 2021, Hawthorn chief executive Justin Reeves sought to reduce Salmon-Abbott’s employment contract from five to one day a week, shift her from corporate partnerships to reception and extend her probationary period, the court documents claim.

According to Salmon-Abbott’s statement of claim, this was detrimental conduct in breach of Victoria’s Equal Opportunity Act.

Her case is being run by Harmers Workplace Lawyers, a specialist employment law firm.

Salmon-Abbott claims that from July 5, 2021, through to the end of the year, she was on unpaid leave and not permitted to return to work. She has now quit the club and taken a new job with a large consultancy firm.

Hawthorn chief executive Justin Reeves congratulates club coach Sam Mitchell.

Hawthorn chief executive Justin Reeves congratulates club coach Sam Mitchell.Credit:michael wilson

Salmon-Abbott says she feels supported in her new job and is still managing her anxiety and depression, which have prompted thoughts of suicide at her worst points.

“It is not something that just goes away overnight,” she says. “To this day, I can’t attend an AFL football match because I get triggered. I’ll have a panic attack.”

Asked why she is pursuing the case against Hawthorn – the club she grew up barracking for – Salmon Abbott says she was disappointed to leave the sports industry and more disappointed in Hawthorn, which every year plays an AFL match for the Beyond Blue Cup, an event intended to “shine a light on mental health” and reduce the stigma associated with mental illness.

“I think it comes down to the fact that I know I wouldn’t be the only person out there who’s experiencing this issue. This is bigger than me.”

Kennett founded Beyond Blue in 2000, shortly after leaving office as Victorian premier. He chaired the organization for 17 years before handing it over to former Prime Minister Julia Gillard. He retires as Hawthorn president at the end of this year.

Salmon-Abbott is seeking a declaration that Hawthorn breached Victoria’s equal opportunity laws, an apology from the club, compensation and costs. Reeves said the club would make no further comment while the matter was before VCAT.

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Categories
Australia

NSW man charged with firearm offenses over shooting at Canberra Airport

A 63-year-old man from New South Wales has been charged with firearm offenses after allegedly firing multiple rounds inside Canberra Airport yesterday.

About 1:30pm on Sunday, shots were fired inside the airport, and a man was arrested.

No one was injured.

Police allege that the man arrived at the airport about 1:20pm and sat on some seats near the check-in desks on the first floor.

About 1:25pm, they said he drew a firearm and deployed a number of shots into the windows of the building.

Australian Federal Police officers who were stationed within the airport terminal apprehended the man.

The glass has some small holes in it and is clearly damaged, but the panes remain in place.
Bullets damaged the glass windows of Canberra Airport after the man allegedly opened fire.(ABC News: Harry Frost)

The airport was evacuated and plans were grounded for about three hours as ACT Policing and AFP Airport Police worked in partnership to secure the area and confirmed the man was acting alone.

Canberra Airport returned to normal operations about 5:00pm, with flights resuming shortly afterwards.

Three bullet holes in large glass windows.
At least three bullet holes are visible in the glass windows of Canberra Airport.(ABC News: Harry Frost)

The man is set to appear in the ACT Magistrates Court this morning where police said they would oppose bail.

The man is facing charges of discharging a firearm at a building, unlawful possession of a firearm and discharging a firearm near a person causing alarm.

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Categories
Business

Top brokers name 3 ASX shares to buy next week 14 August 2022

A white and black clock face is shown with three hands saying Time to Buy reflecting Citi's view that it's time to buy ASX 200 banks

Image source: Getty Images

Last week saw a number of broker notes hitting the wires once again. Three buy ratings that investors might want to be aware of are summarized below.

Here’s why brokers think investors ought to buy them next week:

According to a note out of Goldman Sachs, its analysts have reiterated their buy rating on this fund manager’s shares with a slightly trimmed price target of $1.92. Goldman was pleased with GQG’s results and remains positive on its outlook. This is due to its strong operating momentum and low fees. It also highlights the company’s co-founders have the majority of their wealth invested in GQG and its investment strategies. The GQG share price ended the week at $1.66.

Pilbara Minerals Ltd (ASX:PLS)

A note out of Citi reveals that its analysts have retained their buy rating and lifted their price target on this lithium miner’s shares materially to $3.60. The broker made the move after increasing its earnings estimates for FY 2023 and FY 2024 significantly on the back of higher spodumene price assumptions. It is expecting this to underpin high levels of free cash flow. The Pilbara Minerals share price was fetching $3.12 at Friday’s close.

Analysts at Morgans have retained their add rating on this property listings company’s shares with a slightly trimmed price target of $143.00. This follows the release of a full year result that beat on the top line and narrowly missed on the bottom line. REA was particularly pleased with the performance of REA’s local operations, which delivered very strong growth over the prior corresponding period. Looking ahead, the broker believes management has levers to potentially pull to boost its growth. The REA share price ended the week at $133.85.

Categories
Technology

Review: Eufy Floodlight Cam 2 Pro Wired features 3000 lumens brightness and 360 degree 2K video camera

I’ve been testing the Eufy Floodlight Cam 2 Pro for several months. On paper it offers a unique feature set of 360 degree pan and tilt camera, tunable 3000 lumens LED array, AI-powered human detection and auto-tracking, no subscription fees and 8GB onboard storage.

Read on to find out how well it worked in real life.

unboxing

Inside the box, you’ll find the Floodlight Cam 2 Pro, install hook and string, charging cable, junction box, plate screws, central screw cap, central screw, various security stickers and a quick start guide.

You can unbox yourself, but once you’ve connected it to the internet (2.4ghz Wi-Fi only), it has to be hard-wired by an electrician; ignore the American sites that say you can wire it up to your home switchboard yourself.

Installation

Apart from that warning by me, the Quick Start guide and installation video provided by Eufy is very easy to follow. The Floodlight Cam 2 pro can be mounted on a wall or on a ceiling up to 3m off the ground max.

What’s good at

As soon as it connected to my Wi-Fi, Alexa automatically recognized the camera and floodlight and allowed me to interact with it by voice, the Eufy Security app and Alexa app/smart displays. It is also compatible with Google Home but not with Apple Homekit.

Weather protection is IP65, and so far it has survived dusty winds, blown rain and accidentally being jet sprayed by my hose as I cleaned my back wall.

The Floodlight Cam 2 Pro records motion-activated events using three motion detectors that spotted humans up to 11 meters away on my fence line (which is closed to the claimed 12.19m range). This is not a 24/7 continuous recording solution.

The color temperature tuneable floodlight emits up to 3000 lumens (across three individually panels adjustable via the eufy Security app) is even better as it brightly lights my whole back yard from edge to edge, making dragging the bins and other evening or early morning tasks super easy.

eufy Security
eufy Security

The lights are clever enough to detect the time and level of light outside so they reliably only turn on triggered by sensors between sunset and sunrise or when I tell Alexa to turn them on.

The 360 ​​degree 2K resolution security camera and its three sensors are super customizable via the Eufy app. You can control the camera up, down, left, right, and center with the arrow keys on the live view app page.

Once the camera detects a person, it moves to record them and follows them walking around your yard until they leave. Thanks to 3 sensors even if the camera is pointing elsewhere it will be triggered and pan around to capture what is happening.

You can add preset locations to jump to view them quickly, and you can adjust left, center and right to have separate sensitivity depending on how far you need them to be able to detect.

Mentioning these the 3 independent PIRs on the left front and right of the device has three types of sensitivity settings: standard, advanced and automatic.

  • Standard: three PIR sensitivity set together.
  • Advanced: three PIR sensitivity set separately.
  • Automatic: the sensitivity of the three PIRs is automatically adjusted according to the accuracy of each trigger.

You can set activity zones to exclude unnecessary video event alerts or recording of unnecessary footage eg: and exclude above the top of your fence line if the camera can partially see into your neighbour’s land.

what could be better

The first issue for some people is looks. The Floodlight Cam 2 Pro is only available in white and is not the prettiest device with multiple light panels and the 360 ​​pan and tilt camera. In my case my walls are white, and the device is white so it fits in well.

The second issue is that video is only stored in 8GB non-expandable onboard. It’s puzzling that Eufy doesn’t allow users to pair it to a Eufy Homebase 2 storage unit if you have one already, as I do for storing Eufy doorbell video clips. Optional paid cloud storage is available, and you can send videos to NAS storage if you have it.

For some people, the cost may be too high once electrician install fees are paid on top of the purchase price but bear in mind this is an all in one very powerful 3 direction floodlight as well as 360 degree security camera. If a similar spec security camera and floodlight were purchased and wired in separately the cost would likely be much higher.

Should you buy it

The Floodlight Cam 2 Pro is the brightest floodlight with 2K video camera available in Australia (to the best of my knowledge) and comes with the bonus of not requiring a paid subscription forever to enable all it’s features and store video.

These features and allowing lots of software customization result in it being highly recommended by me.

The Floodlight Cam 2 Pro is available for $449.95 from it’s Australian distributor, as well as from JB Hi-Fi etc.

Disclosure Statement

Eufy has allowed Ausdroid to retain the product as hard wiring it to the house electricity supply was done at a significant expense

Categories
Entertainment

RuPaul’s Drag Race Down Under 2022 Exclusive: Eliminated star Pomara Fifth breaks silence on secret ‘feud’ after Minnie Cooper’s claims on launch night | Season 2

During the third installation of Ru Paul’s Drag Race Down Underwe had to say goodbye to iconic queen Pomara Fifth.

While Pomara’s epic runway style was without a doubt a showstopper in Episode 3, her on-stage brunch roast alongside fellow queen Beverly Kills didn’t impress the judges as much as she had hoped.

Following a fierce Lip Sync For Your Life against each other, Pomara was sadly sent packing while Beverly was told to join the other queens.

All seasons of the RuPaul’s Drag Race franchise are available to stream now on Stan.

In an exclusive interview with 9Entertainment, Pomara discussed her exit and how it felt to be one of 10 queens flying the flag Down Under – before offering a cryptic response when asked about the rumored rift that’s been whispered about since launch night…

RuPaul's Drag Race Down Under Pomara Fifth
Pomara Fifth was eliminated from the show during Episode 3. (Stan)

How does it feel to have been eliminated?

Not great, but at the same time I went into the show with two my goals; to get on the show, and to not go home first. I completed all my goals. I said to the girls when I was in there that I’m just going along and doing my thing and taking in the experience, rather than worrying about the competition and stressing about that.

READMORE: Here’s everything you need to know about the fierce and fabulous queens on RuPaul’s Drag Race Down Under Season 2

When week three came along, I was starting to get a bit homeick. I had never really seen drag racing before, I had only seen, like, two seasons of it. So I think I was feeling a little bit behind… there was that moment, but at the same time I’m eternally grateful that I was one out of 10 picked out of all of Australia and New Zealand.

It doesn’t matter where you get, I got on the bloody show!

Do you think being partnered with Beverly Kills in the challenge hindered your chance in the competition?

Umm…yeah! I have a very unique comedic style, and I think being partnered with someone who I could really, truly bounce off would have obviously been great. Beverly was not really known for her comedy style, and she’s not really a comedy queen so I think there were those issues. At the same time, it is what it is. It’s not going to be a competition if it’s not hard. We just worked together as best we could, but safe to say… she’s not funny!

RuPaul's Drag Race Down Under Pomara Fifth
Pomara was partnered with Beverly Kills in the challenge. (stan)

What do you think let you down in the end?

You could not tell me s–t on that runway! I felt so good, I felt so f–king pretty and if I’m going to go out, I’m going to go out in one of my favorite outfits and still look like a million bucks on that runway. It was definitely the roast that let me down, and I think I got too much in my head about it. I was just trying to enjoy my experience, to be honest.

I’ve said previously, if this was my brunch, an actual brunch in Australia, this is probably not how it would go.

Is there anything you would do differently?

I’d probably go back and reword my skit. I know there was this whole [thing of] Beverly blaming me for trying to take over the whole skit. Which, I mean…yeah! I definitely would try and take over a little bit more.

I know that sounds bad, but I gave up I think, and just said, “We’ll keep your bits in.” I think rather than doing that, I would have really gone in hard and stuck to my strengths and been like, “This is what I know will work.” At the end of the day, no hard feelings. I love all my girls, I love Beverly. I went as far as what RuPaul would allow me.

Is there a queen group chat?

And it is! It’s definitely salacious. We talk about anything and everything every week. If we encounter problems through the day, whatever ticks us off, if someone needs help. Everything we see on the internet about us, we just send a picture to the whole group and have a giggle about it. It’s really fun. We all keep each other really grounded, and really try to enjoy this experience together.

Is there anyone you think this week that should have gone home instead of you?

That is a shady question! Shady. Look… yes. I think by saying, I have more to give… my aim to get on the show was to get a positive message out. I really was like, how do I share my experience and what I’ve been through in my life with other people and let them know it’s going to be OK, and that life is worth living. What better show than drag racing?

I hope I got as much of a positive message out there that I possibly could. I don’t think I should have gone home, but you just deal with the cards you’re dealing with, I guess. I’ll leave it up to the fans to decide who should have gone home!

On launch night, Minnie Cooper said live on-stage that there was a rift between some of the queens. Are you part of that?

[After a brief silence] …Let’s just say, that all nine of us get along like a house on fire.

READMORE: Faúx Fúr claims she was ‘sabotaged’ by her fellow queens amid ‘black panty gate

RuPaul's Drag Race Down Under Minnie Cooper
Minnie Cooper hinted there was a rift between some of the queens during the launch party. (stan)

What was it like to meet Drag Race royalty, Michelle Visage, RuPaul and Rhys Nicholson?

I almost wet my pants. You get to meet RuPaul, and that was like holy f–k. My first thought was, holy c–p you are that tall! Just stunning up close, beautiful. Then as you do your runway, and you don’t get to see anyone until the moment you step out on that runway and walk towards them. Or as I did, gallop towards them. Even watching myself I was like, “Slow down! Why are you walking so fast!” You get so excited, and the music is playing so loud that you’re just like – charge.

You just see the beautiful people sitting in front of you… and I can confirm, that there are no filters. I was thinking, surely not – surely not, that they’re not that pretty! But I was right up close to them, right up front and they’re beautiful. All of them.

All seasons of the RuPaul’s Drag Race franchise are available to stream now on Stan.

In Pictures

The stars of RuPaul's Drag Race Down Under Season 2 premiere

Queens hit the blue carpet at the Drag Race Down Under Season 2 premiere

Big hair, bold looks and plenty of glamour.

ViewGallery

Nine Entertainment Co (the publisher of this website) owns and operates the streaming service Stan.

Categories
Sports

transfernews; Cameron Munster future; player signings, Wayne Bennett Dolphins; Latrell Mitchell; Roosters salary cap, Angus Crichton re-signs

Cameron Munster may soon be headed north with Wayne Bennett reportedly closing in on his marquee man.

Meanwhile, the Roosters have reportedly locked in a key forward after months of speculation surrounding his future.

Stream every game of every round of the 2022 NRL Telstra Premiership Season Live & Ad-Break Free During Play on Kayo. New to Kayo? Start your free trial now >

DOLPHINS NEW MARQUEE TARGET

Rugby League reporter Ben Dobbin believes Cameron Munster is set to sign a four-year deal with the Dolphins which would make him the highest paid player in the NRL.

“Munster is a Dolphin, in 2024 I think Munster is a Dolphin,” Dobbin said on Triple M.

“I think it will be a four-year deal,” Dobbin said.

“So that will be roughly around $6 million?” Gorden Tallis then asked.

“Is he worth it? Yes, can he change the fortunates of a club? Yes he can,” Dobbin said.

“Can you put tools around him and will it attract other players? Yes it will.”

While strong in his belief Bennett has his man, Dobbin revealed Bennett could make an audacious bid to lure Latrell Mitchell to Redcliff if the Munster bid fails.

The NRL supercoach mentored Latrell during 2020 and 2021, coming desperately close to a premiership last season.

“If they don’t get Cameron Munster, I’m going to throw you a smokey right now. I believe they will go after Latrell Mitchell… Wayne Bennett’s relationship with Latrell Mitchell runs deep,” Dobbin said on Triple M.

Tallis, however, believed Latrell Mitchell has his roots firmly placed at the South Sydney club, explaining he is the “happiest” he has ever been.

“It is too far away from his farm, I think for Latrell, there is a bigger picture for him,” Tallis said.

“I have never seen a guy more settled and going back to the country and doing what he is doing, that is more important to Latrell now than money.

“I think he is the happiest (he has been).”

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Ciraldo signed to save Dogs! | 01:55

CRICHTON’S FUTURE SECURED

Roosters gun Angus Crichton has revealed his is set to re-sign with the Tricolours, ending speculation surrounding his immediate future.

Initially, the 26-year-old’s two-year contract extension was said to be a handshake deal with no formal contract being registered with the NRL.

Crichton himself acknowledged the speculation has been “tough” but never considered playing for any other club.

“I think we are really close to finalizing something, so hopefully in the next little bit I will sign on for the next two years,” Crichton told 9News.

“It has been tough to have that hanging over my head and to get it sorted will be a massive weight off my shoulders.

“I don’t want to play for any other team.”

Reports linked the Origin backrower to a move to the Tigers with the Roosters’ salary cap facing a big squeeze.

The Daily Telegraph’s Buzz Rothfield revealed the immense cap pressure the Tricolours are under, with seven of the competition’s highest paid players on their books.

“In 2022 they have got Tedesco on $1.1m, Luke Keary on $850,000, Joseph Manu ($720k), Jared Waerea-Hargreaves ($700k), Angus Crichton ($700k), Sio Siua Taukeiaho ($625k) and Victor Radley ( $510k) for a total of $5,205,000,” Rothfield said on NRL360.

With the impending arrival of Brandon Smith and an increase in salary for young gun Joseph Suaalii, Roosters bosses now have to squeeze the remaining 21 players into what is left of their salary cap.

The departure of Ronald Volkman, Freddy Lussick, Daniel Suluka-Fifita and Lachlam Lam has opened cap space.

Sam Verills and Siosiua Taukeiaho are also set to leave at the season’s end, meaning the Roosters could have even more money to re-sign players for 2023 onwards.

Matty nails Buzz impersonation | 00:51

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Categories
Australia

Organized crime strips more than $1b from NDIS; experts call on Plibersek to tighten marine protections; gunman arrested after shots fired inside Canberra Airport; China-Taiwan tensions grow; Labor to bring in tens of thousands of skilled migrants; education ministers pledge to tackle teacher shortages

The immigration minister isn’t the only Labor frontbencher doing the half rounds this morning.

Minister for Government Services Bill Shorten has taken questions from Patricia Karvelas given this masthead’s reporting on organized crime stripping as much as $1 billion from the NDIS.

NDIS Minister Bull Shorten.

NDIS Minister Bull Shorten. Credit:alex ellinghausen

“I think any dollar which gets ripped off between taxpayers and people on the schemes too high,” Shorten told Radio National.

“I think there is a problem. I said it before the election. And since the election, I’ve started alerting colleagues, pushing the agency, [and] talking to state ministers about the need for government agencies to work together to combat the scourge of fraud.”

The minister said NDIS rotting appears to be occurring in two or three ways.

“Through coercion and other criminal tactics, accessing the accounts and putting in invoices. So that’s one way,” he said.

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“But I also suspect that there’s ghosting where false invoices and false clients might be being made up. I want to find out if that’s true. But then there’s another way… it’s just the padding of bills by people who might be not connected to organized crime, but they’re just robbing the scheme.

“I also worry that the fraud or overpayment is occurring through a lack of scrutiny of the invoices.”

Shorten accused the Morrison government of making it harder for genuine people to get onto the NDIS as an easy fix to “chasing [actual] fraud”.

“I’m meeting the agency today. I want to satisfy myself that the resources [for fraud detection] are what they should be. And if we need more resources, we have to find them because, frankly, it’ll pay for itself if we could stop some of the money being ripped off.”

Categories
Business

$23b fundie hunts beaten-up tech stocks

He acknowledges that the inflation fight is not over, but says a pivot from the Federal Reserve does not have to involve rate cuts; the Fed keeping rates on hold for a period or even reducing the size of the super-sized increases it has delivered recently would represent a change in direction that the markets are likely to embrace.

He has noticed a few signs of a shifting mood in the markets recently, from signals that turbocharged inflation rates in Brazil have peaked – sparking a rally in the country’s small and mid-cap stocks – to a greater number of institutional investors positioning for a potential end to deep risk aversion.

hedging effect

When the Global Select Fund started investing in a beaten-down healthcare stock recently, it jumped about 10 per cent just as Richyal started buying. His market soundings suggested the move was driven by a degree of short covering as well as by hedge funds getting long.

“Because everyone’s so hedged, there might be a fear that the pain trade is up, and then you might get a scramble to actually reposition long.”

That would be good for Richyal’s portfolio, which is dominated by long-duration stocks, which were beaten up in the first half of this year but are now rising off their lows. He says it’s time for investors to start looking at higher-quality stocks in parts of the market that have been heavily sold during the past six to nine months, such as technology.

“Some parts of the market really have already suffered. That doesn’t mean that the index at an aggregate level can’t come down further, and it doesn’t mean that some pockets can’t de-rate further.

“But if we start to gravitate towards those parts of the market that have had the pain, and are stabilizing and where you’re seeing some fundamental improvement, it is the right thing to do right now.”

The market has clearly soured on recently listed tech companies and those that went public in the past few years, either via floats or during the SPAC craze of 2021. But Richyal is looking for nuggets here, too.

“This is the correct time to sharpen your pencil and find an IPO that’s actually a good quality company but the baby has been thrown out with the bathwater,” he says. “Because there’ll be some pretty solid businesses over the next five, 10, 15 years who may just have derated because they happened to IPO at exactly the wrong time, or they happened to de-SPAC at exactly the wrong time.”

Richyal and Lees’ cautious optimism appears to be catching. Legendary hedge fund investor George Soros has also been buying tech stocks, loading up on Amazon, Salesforce and Google’s parent Alphabet such that all three are now among his 10 biggest holdings.

According to Bank of America, their US clients have been net buyers of stocks (that is, more buyers than sellers) for six consecutive weeks, with institutional buyers leading the way in the last two weeks. Tech stocks have been particularly popular – last week had the biggest weekly inflows to the tech sector since 2008.

As BofA says, there is risk in this tilt to tech; Although the June quarter earnings numbers for US tech giants held up reasonably well, there are questions about whether these stocks will prove quite as defensive as investors think, particularly as US economic growth slows further.

And as this column has been banging on about for months, the excesses of the past decade, let alone of the past few years, look a long way from being washed out of this market.

inflation outlook

But even if investors feel the recent market momentum is unwarranted – the S&P is now up 16.7 per cent since its low in mid-June, the Nasdaq Composite is up 22.6 per cent and the ASX 200 is up 9.3 per cent – ​​they need to be at least considering the idea that the market has bottomed and risk- on sentiment can keep running for a while.

How long sentiment remains robust will probably depend on the outlook for inflation. The Fed has made it clear that inflation remains uncomfortably high and interest rate increases will be needed well into next year. It will be worried about rising equity markets too, as this loosens financial conditions.

But investors in bonds and stocks are effectively shrugging their shoulders and betting that the Fed will take its foot off the interest rate accelerator to engineer the sort of soft landing in which the US avoids a recession.

Richyal is watching inflation too, although not for the reasons you might think.

“We still think that even though some of the strongest disinflation trends may be coming to an end in certain cases, the most important trend – demographics – is still going in the same direction. We are still living with aging societies, regardless of whether that’s west or east, global north or global south. And that primary trend is going to overwhelm most other trends.”

Many economists argue that aging populations will be inflationary: the trend of fewer workers pushes wages higher, and consumption of healthcare and similar services explodes. But Richyal has a somewhat contrarian view.

As the population ages, older people will tend to downsize where they live, meaning investment in fixed assets (particularly property) actually falls. The experience of Japan, which Richyal describes as “an ideal petri dish” because it has had a rapidly aging population and has been battling deflation for decades, suggests “that decline in fixed asset investment means you don’t actually need that many people” .

Richyal also borrows from work done by Australian economist Gerard Minack, who was previously Morgan Stanley’s chief global investment strategist and says the data disputes the idea that a reduced workforce pushes up wages.

“The key to the aging-is-inflationary argument is the assumption that falling labor supply leads to increased bargaining power for labour,” Minack wrote last year. “Japan shows the reverse applies: fast labor supply growth went hand-in-hand with fast wage growth, then slowing labor supply growth slowed wage growth.

“Japan is not exceptional. Slowing labor force growth is a cause of, not an antidote to, secular stagnation. It is a false hope to think that aging will end secular stagnation. And neither Japan nor the US is exceptional: the link between demographics and disinflation is obvious elsewhere.”

Richyal does see risks to his argument, particularly around the appetite for borrowing in the economy; if this is considerable, persistent inflation is possible.

But the power of deflation from aging is such that he believes “we could just end up in Goldilocks again, where it’s just not too cold, not too hot, because these forces all just wash each other out”.

If that’s the case, Richyal believes investors will want long-duration stocks such as those he owns – high-quality tech and healthcare companies that investors will reward for delivering growth in what he believes could be a low-growth, deflationary world.

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Entertainment

Actor Luke Hemsworth opens up about life with his younger brothers Liam and Chris: ‘We don’t compete’

Luke Hemsworth doesn’t compete with his younger actor siblings Liam and Chris Hemsworth.

The 41-year-old actor admits he and his brothers like to “one-up” each other in “everyday life” and give out constructive criticism, but he would never pit himself against the pair when it comes to acting.

However, the former ‘Neighbours’ star quipped that the “gorgeous” hunks might think differently when it comes to each other.

Speaking to Men’s Health Australia, Luke said of Liam, 32, and Chris, 38: “I don’t compete with them for anything in acting.

“They might compete together because they’re both 6ft4 and knock down gorgeous.

“But it’s fun to be supportive.

HOLLYWOOD, CA - NOVEMBER 04: Actors Liam Hemsworth (L) and Chris Hemsworth arrive at the premiere of Marvel's "Thor: The Dark World" at the El Capitan Theater on November 4, 2013 in Hollywood, California.  (Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images)
Camera Icon Actors Liam Hemsworth (L) and Chris Hemsworth arrive at the premiere of Marvel’s “Thor: The Dark World” at the El Capitan Theater on November 4, 2013 in Hollywood, California. Credit: Kevin Winter/Getty Images

“It’s fun to learn lines with them. It’s not like we’re not critical of each other, that’s for sure.

“But it’s criticism designed to take a performance to another level.

“In everyday life, we’re normal brothers. We definitely try to one-up each other. We like to have fun. We like to laugh.”

Meanwhile, Luke previously admitted he felt “stung” after being overlooked for a role in the ‘Star Wars’ franchise.

He auditioned for the titular role in 2018’s ‘Solo: A Star Wars Story’, and he was devastated when he was overlooked for the part in favor of Alden Ehrenreich.

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