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Business

Australian house prices fall at ‘fastest rate’ since 2008 financial crisis

House prices in Australia are dropping at their fastest pace since the global financial crisis — and market conditions are “likely to worsen” as interest rates continue to rise, according to property analytics firm CoreLogic.

The latest data shows that the nation’s median property value has dropped by 2 per cent since the beginning of May, to $747,182 (a figure which includes houses and apartments).

“Although the housing market is only three months into a decline … the rate of decline is comparable with the onset of the global financial crisis (GFC) in 2008, and the sharp downswing of the early 1980s,” said CoreLogic’s research director Tim Lawless.

But he noted that, on average, prices had jumped 28.6 per cent from mid-2020 (the low point of the housing market during the COVID-19 pandemic) to April 2022 (when national prices hit their peak).

Regional Australia had an even bigger surge, with prices up 41.1 per cent in two years — as smaller towns outside the capital cities experienced a huge influx of city-dwellers seeking better lifestyles (as working remotely became the new normal).

“In Sydney, where the downturn has been particularly accelerated, we are seeing the sharpest value falls in almost 40 years.”

A table showing that Australia's median property price dropped 1.3 per cent in July 2022 to $747,812.
Property prices in Sydney, Melbourne and Hobart fell sharply in July.(CoreLogic)

The median price in Australia’s most expensive city fell by 2.2 per cent in July (taking its quarterly loss to 4.7 per cent). Despite that, an average house in Sydney still costs around $1.35 million, while an average unit may fetch about $806,000.

Melbourne and Hobart also recorded steep falls, with prices in both cities down 1.5 per cent last month, while Canberra prices dropped 1.1 per cent.

Prices in Brisbane and regional Australia fell 0.8 per cent (their first monthly decline since August 2020).

At the other end of the spectrum, Darwin, Adelaide and Perth were the only capitals where prices actually went up in July (by between 0.2 and 0.4 per cent). However, it has been a sharp slowdown since May, when the Reserve Bank began to aggressively lift the cash rate from its record low levels.

short and sharp

“I think this downturn will be similar to the global financial crisis in that it will be quite short and sharp,” Mr Lawless told ABC News.

Australia’s median property price fell by around 8.5 per cent over an 11-month period during the GFC, according to CoreLogic.

Line graph showing Adelaide property prices jumped 3.6 per cent in the past three months, while Sydney prices fell 4.7 per cent.
Adelaide property prices jumped 3.6pc in the past three months.(CoreLogic)

Mr Lawless said the property downturn is “accelerating”, and that he would not be surprised if “the current decline gets worse than what we saw during the GFC”.

He noted the main difference is that governments and central banks are currently determined to withdraw trillions of dollars worth of stimulus, in a desperate bid to lower inflation (instead of pumping it into the global economy, liked they did after the 2008 crisis).

Many analysts are predicting Australian property prices, on average, will fall between 10 and 20 per cent (from peak to trough) — with the two most expensive cities Sydney and Melbourne likely to suffer the biggest declines.

But even if the worse case scenario eventuates, it will not drastically improve housing affordability.

“If we saw say, a 15 per cent drop in national housing values, it would take prices back to where they were in about April 2021.”

How quickly (and by how much) prices fall will depend on how aggressively the RBA decides to lift its cash rate target in the next few months.

Graph showing that house rents have risen sharply in every capital city, with Brisbane jumping 13.6 per cent in the past year.
Brisbane and Adelaide tenants are experiencing the sharpest rent increases.(CoreLogic)

Since May, the RBA has lifted its cash rate target from 0.1 to 1.35 per cent.

If the central bank delivers another double-sized rate hike on Tuesday (0.5 percentage points), as widely expected, that would bring the new cash rate up to 1.85 per cent.

Buyers’ market and surging rents

“The market has moved to being very much more in favor of buyers over sellers now, especially in markets like Sydney and Melbourne,” Mr Lawless said.

“Buyers are getting back in the driver’s seat. They have more choice, and there’s less urgency.

“But for sellers, it means they need to be much more realistic about their pricing expectations, and they should expect there’s going to be more negotiation.”

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Categories
Technology

Could this new programming language replace C++?

Mintor showing C++.—Unsplash
Mintor showing C++.—Unsplash
  • New programming language known as Carbon could succeed C++.
  • Carbon is expected to be interoperable with C++ code,
  • Carbon has simpler grammar and optimized API imports.

Google believes that a new programming language known as Carbon can succeed C++, reported TechRadar.

New programming languages ​​that are easier to use keep replacing old ones. For example, Apple’s Swift language replaced its predecessor, Objective-C.

Some have called Rust a C++ successor but Google’s Principal Software Engineer Chandler Carruth said that it does not have “bi-directional interoperability” introducing a language barrier. This makes translation between different programming languages ​​difficult.

Carbon is expected to be interoperable with C++ code and users should find it easy to make the full switch.

According to Carruth, Carbon has simpler grammar and optimized API imports.

The project also has ethical motives like inclusivity making it even more beneficial for users.

Carbon’s source code can be downloaded as the programming language is currently just an experiment. Users can experiment on their own browsers with the Compiler Explorer web app.

Categories
Sports

Dragons v Cowboys, hair pull, video, score, result, Jaydn Su’A, Luciano Leilua

Dragons back-rower Jaydn Su’A reeled in Luciano Leilua with a hair pull on Sunday, but his side couldn’t rein in the Cowboys, who raced away to secure a 34-8 victory in Kogarah.

The final game of round 20 tossed up a bizarre talking point when Leilua hit a gap in the 54th minute, prompting Su’A to throw out an arm and deny the second-rower with a hair pull.

Leilua was brought to ground and coughed up the ball, but the referee awarded a penalty and the Cowboys opted for a fresh set of six.

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“I think if the hair’s not there he’s gone,” said Storm legend Billy Slater on Nine’s coverage.

“There’s a plus for going bald,” Mat Thompson added, sparking laughter in the commentary box.

In a clash between the Bulldogs and Sea Eagles last season, Joe Stimson was penalized for a hair pull on Marty Taupau, leaving then Canterbury coach Trent Barrett raging.

In the Cowboys’ win over the Dragons on Sunday, crafty fullback Scott Drinkwater and rising second-rower Jeremiah Nanai bagged doubles as North Queensland broke a 19-year drought, winning its first game in Kogarah since 2003.

The Cowboys had lost three games at Kogarah Oval since 2003, but Todd Payten’s men thumped the Dragons to consolidate second on the ladder.

NRL Highlights: Dragons v Cowboys – Round 20

Stream the NRL premiership 2022 live and free on 9Now.

St George Illawarra lost a crucial game in its bid to snare a finals berth, leaving itself sitting precariously in 11th.

The Cowboys will face the Bulldogs, Roosters, Warriors, Rabbitohs and Panthers on the road to the finals, and the Dragons await clashes with the Sharks, Raiders, Titans, Wests Tigers and Broncos.

The Dragons are sitting one win outside the top eight and have a worse for and against than every team above them on the ladder.

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Categories
Australia

The mystery surrounding Australia’s ancient wild and endangered macadamia trees

Ian McConachie is eager to find the answer to an ancient mystery — just how many hundreds of years do Australia’s wild macadamias live?

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander readers are advised that this article contains images and names of people who have died.

After decades of visiting a precious remnant of the threatened species’ habitat in Queensland’s Amamoor State Forest, the founder of the Macadamia Conservation Trust has already discovered that looks can be deceiving.

“So many people are familiar with the macadamia but to see it in the rainforests is just quite mind-boggling,” Mr McConachie AM said.

“It’s nothing like you would expect, they hide amongst all the other trees.”

Living time capsules

An older man in a cardigan looks down at the serrated leaves of a wild macadamia tree that doesn't even reach his chest.
Ian McConachie AM says this macadamia tree hasn’t grown in over 40 years.(Rural ABC: Jennifer Nichols)

A self-described “macadamia dinosaur”, retired food scientist, field researcher, grower and passionate historian, Mr McConachie singled out a spindly chest-high tree, as a perfect example of how even a small plant could potentially be hundreds of years old.

“It’s only got about 18 leaves. I first saw it 1979 and between 1979 and now, it has not grown at all. It’s sitting in the rainforest in dense shade, just waiting until it receives light,” he said.

The oldest European-planted macadamia tree has been growing in Brisbane’s Botanic gardens since 1858 and still bears a healthy crop of nuts.

Craig Hardner dwarfed by the oldest known cultivated macadamia tree.
Craig Hardner says this is the oldest-known European-cultivated macadamia tree in the world.(Supplied: UQ)

“One of the initiatives we’re taking is we’re starting to do radiocarbon dating of trees in the rainforest so we can see just what their longevity is and how old they might be,” Mr McConachie said.

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Categories
US

Kushner Stopped Trump Twitter Attack on Murdoch: ‘Breaking History’ Memoir

  • Jared Kushner said he stopped Donald Trump from attacking Rupert Murdoch after he criticized him in 2015.
  • Kushner claims he then convinced a skeptical Murdoch to support Trump, according to his upcoming memoir.
  • Murdoch-owned Fox News went on to play a crucial role in boosting Trump’s political rise.

Jared Kushner said that he intervened to stop Donald Trump from attacking media mogul Rupert Murdoch in 2015, according to his forthcoming memoir.

In “Breaking History,” a copy of which was obtained by The Guardian, Kusher said his father-in-law was enraged by Murdoch’s criticisms of him while he was running for the Republican primary.

“Trump called me. He’d clearly had enough. ‘This guy’s no good. And I’m going to tweet it,'” Kushner writes in the book, per the paper.

“‘Please, you’re in a Republican primary,’ I said, hoping he wasn’t about to post a negative tweet aimed at the most powerful man in conservative media. ‘You don’t need to get on the wrong side of Rupert. Give me a couple of hours to fix it.'”

In his book, Kushner claims that he convinced a skeptical Murdoch to support his father-in-law, The Guardian reports, which ultimately became a pivotal relationship.

Murdoch-owned Fox News went on to play a significant role in boosting Trump’s ascension from businessman and reality TV star to president.

When Trump first entered politics in 2015, Murdoch was openly critical of him, once tweeting: “When is Donald Trump going to stop embarrassing his friends, let alone the whole country?”

Kushner writes that he visited the media mogul in July 2015 after Trump became enraged by a New York Times story about Murdoch’s dim view of him.

“‘Rupert, I think he could win,’ I said as we sat in his office. ‘You guys agree on a lot of the issues. You want smaller government. You want lower taxes. You want stronger borders,'” Kushner writes .

Kushner said Murdoch appeared to be surprised that Trump was serious about running and the next day called to tell Kushner he might have been “misjudging” the situation.

“I’ve looked at this, and maybe I was misjudging it. He actually does have a real following. It does seem like he’s very popular like he can really be a kingmaker in the Republican primary with the way he is playing it,” Murdoch told Kushner, according to the book.

After convincing Murdoch that Trump wanted to be president, Kushner says they came to “a truth, for the time being.”

Screenshot of Tucker Carlson speaking next to a blown up photo of Ted Cruz.

Fox News host Tucker Carlson.

foxnews


Despite ongoing reports about tension between the two men over the years, Fox News continued to be supportive of Trump during his term.

However, the relationship became fraught when Fox News became the first major news outlet to call Arizona for Joe Biden in the 2020 election.

It has previously been reported that Kushner called Murdoch on election night to question the move and that the media mogul told him the numbers were “ironclad.”

Since his 2020 election loss, which Trump continues to deny, Fox News began distancing itself from him, often bypassing his coverage in favor of other Republicans.

Kushner’s memoir, which recounts his time as a senior adviser to Trump during his presidency, is set to be published on August 23.

Categories
Business

Prices at fast-food giants Hungry Jack’s, McDonald’s and KFC surge as inflation and production costs rise

If you thought your last fast-food order was a little more expensive than usual, you’re right.

A large chunk of the menu at fast food giants including Hungry Jack’s, McDonald’s and KFC have surged over the past year as inflation and production costs rise.

Even the cost of the humble soft-serve cone has increased as franchise owners admit they’re grappling with how to adjust prices.

There’s been uproar this week in the UK after McDonald’s, citing inflation, ended its 99p cheeseburger deal and lifted the price to £1.19.

Back home, a McDonald’s Double Quarter Pounder has increased 95¢ since last year from $7.65 to $8.60, while small and large soft drinks are up 40¢ each.

Hungry families or uni students looking to fill the fridge for the week are going to have to stretch a bit further at KFC this year for a bucket of 21 pieces of chicken — up $3.50 to $38.45, while a pack of six wicked wings is up $1 .

And at Hungry Jack’s, a Whopper is up to a whopping 60¢ and cheeseburger meals are up between $1 and $1.30.

Soft serve cones are now 70¢ at Hungry Jack’s, up from 60¢, and 75¢ at McDonald’s, up from 70¢.

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Categories
Technology

Sydney beaches at risk of being washed away

Australian beaches could struggle to recover if a third La Nina weather event occurs this year after many of the most popular sandy stretches suffered back-to-back weather events that stripped away their sand.

As more extreme and intense weather events occur, once protected areas of beaches will become more exposed, threatening coastal communities, experts warn.

Dr Mitchell Harley, a senior lecturer at the University of NSW Water Research Laboratory, said Australian beaches are very dynamic and tend to fluctuate depending on the season. During storms, beaches lose more of their sand, while in warmer months beaches usually grow.

Beaches can take months to recover after an erosion event.

Beaches can take months to recover after an erosion event.Credit:Brook Mitchell

“We’ve been measuring Collaroy and Narrabeen beach for 46 years and, with those measurements, there have been fluctuations over a huge amount of space – up to 100 meters back and forth. The coastline is breathing in and out but when we look at long-term records they have generally been recently stable,” he said.

“During big storm events, like what we have seen over the past couple of years, what we see is that the waves strip the beaches of sand. It doesn’t disappear, it just moves into deeper water. The sand slowly returns to the beach during calming conditions.”

In normal summer months, waves move from a south or south-east direction. This typically means the northern end of the beach gets narrower and the southern ends get larger.

But during La Nina events, they shift slightly anti-clockwise and are more easterly, which leads to a higher risk of more erosion on the beach, particularly over the summer, and also “beach rotation” – where the beach realigns itself to the prevailing wind direction.

As a rule of thumb, it takes between five and ten days for every meter of sand from the shoreline to return to the beach, Harley said, and recovery can sometimes take months if beaches lose up to 40 meters of sand. But if there are back-to-back storm events, such as what has occurred over the past two years with La Nina, beaches may struggle to recover and begin to threaten infrastructure.

“If we do see more frequent events we are going to see continual pressure on beachfront properties,” he said. “Everyone wants to live next to the coast and there is always pressure to build more and more properties along the coast – but it creates legacy issues that generations in the future will have to address – particularly around climate change and the tremendous threats that can cause to the shoreline.”

For example, wave sizes and sea levels will increase as oceans continue to warm, which will cause greater damage to beaches.

The coastline around Sydney is expected to experience between 20 centimeters and just over a meter of sea level rise in the next seven decades. This means that the state’s coastline can be expected to change significantly as climate change intensifies.

Meanwhile, tropical cyclones are likely to damage once protected areas of the coastline as they move further down the NSW coastline.

“We haven’t seen that type of erosion in the past and this could create new erosion hotspots and so that is a big concern,” Harley said.

Harley is part of a team of researchers involved in a citizen science project which monitors beaches to gain a deeper understanding of how coastlines change over time.

Mark “Dippy” DePena, 67, has surfed the shores of Cronulla Beach since high school and said the coastline has changed dramatically in the past 55 years.

“The sea doesn’t forgive. Honestly, it’s very powerful,” he said. “We’ve had some weird weather but this is the worst I’ve seen Cronulla since 1974 and we are really starting to get concerned,” he said. “They had to move the lifeguard tower – physically dismantle it – because it was starting to go under.”

DePena is unsure if his beloved Cronulla Beach can withstand much more without mitigation action, but he is determined to do all he can to preserve the beach – or what’s left of it. Twelve years ago, I have teamed up with fellow surfer and friend, Andrew Pitt, to develop the Bate Bay Sand Placement Committee with the intention to improve the dedicated surf reserve and safeguard the shoreline.

Mark “Dippy” DePena, 67, has surfed the shores of Cronulla Beach since high school and said he has never seen the beach so badly eroded.

Mark “Dippy” DePena, 67, has surfed the shores of Cronulla Beach since high school and said he has never seen the beach so badly eroded.Credit:Brook Mitchell

“People want to live on the ocean, right? But these seas have actually stolen some of these front yards.”

Without proper mitigation and adaptation efforts from government, councils and community, ANU associate professor at Fenner School for Environment and Society Dr Liz Hanna said there would be impacts on people’s health. This includes displacement and loss of connection to the community.

“People will have to pay for their own coastal protection – some can afford it and some cannot,” she said. “Adaptation is tricky, holding back the sea is awfully hard.”

She suggested that, among other efforts, planned retreats need to be considered before people are forced to be displaced. “We don’t really know how much time we have but we can all agree that twiddling thumbs is not the right answer,” she said.

The NSW government is working with local councils to plan for and respond to erosion, including monitoring what new developments are allowed to go ahead, ensuring the environmental and community benefits remain and providing funding for mitigation works.

The Department of Environment and Heritage also provides seven long-term offshore wave buoys and several ocean level recorders to measure the changes.

Over the next 50 years, the Insurance Council of Australia has estimated governments will need to invest at least $30 billion in coastal protection and adaptation projects.

loading

“As these events increase in frequency and intensity, a growing number of exposed properties in Australia will become uninhabitable,” a council spokesperson said. “Insurance coverage is limited in these areas due to the high and growing risks, creating a protection gap.”

The council found in a report released last year that governments across all levels would need to invest at least $30 billion in large-scale coastal protection and adaptation projects over the next 50 years. The CSIRO’s decadal megatrends report, published last week, found that 150 million people worldwide live on land that could be vulnerable to future sea-level rise by 2050.

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Categories
Entertainment

Singer Michael Bublé chokes up as son Noah accompanies him on piano to hit song I’ll Never Not Love You

As the saying goes, the apple doesn’t fall far from the tree, and that certainly seems to be the case when it comes to Michael Bublé’s eldest son, Noah.

The childhood cancer-survivor is somewhat of a piano-playing prodigy, if a video his proud dad posted yesterday to his Instagram account is anything to go by.

And it seems even his dad couldn’t help but be overcome by emotion as he sang along to his hit, I’ll Never Not Love You. (Watch above).

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Michael Bublé has been overcome by emotion after his son Noah surprised him by learning to play his hit song. (instagram)

Canadian-born crooner Bublé has kept his children mostly out of the spotlight but it seems he was bursting with pride over his eight-year-old son’s accomplishment and couldn’t wait to share it with the world.

The video starts with young Noah sitting at a piano. As he plays the first notes of the hit song, Bublé points at his son from him and gestures to someone off camera, already blown away by his son’s playing from him.

Bublé can hardly believe his ears as his son starts to play his hit song. (instagram)

Written across the scene is, “Noah surprised me after I was away on tour. He worked so hard to learn this song. So proud of my guy.”

Bublé begins to sing before turning to his son and uttering “Dude!”. He then continues to sing but is clearly getting overcome with emotion. Across the screen is written “I’m getting choked up,” as his voice breaks and he grabs at his chest, before placing a hand on his son’s shoulder.

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Bublé is overcome with emotion as his son plays. (instagram)

As he reaches the chorus, the camera zooms in on Noah, who is playing like a seasoned pro as his famous dad keeps the beat by tapping his leg before the video ends.

Bublé uploaded the video with the comment, “More talent in his little fingers than I have in my whole body!!” and the hashtags, #proud, #illnevernotloveyou and #chickenlegs, a reference to his own skinny legs.

Bublé places a hand on his son’s shoulder as he plays his song (Instagram)

Commenters were quick to praise the performance. “My baby!” wrote Noah’s proud mum Luisana Lopilato, while musical genius David Foster gave a glowing review, “That is soooo great!!”

Foster’s wife Katharine simply wrote “Woowwwwwwww” while dancer/singer/choreographer Derek Hough also praised the performance, writing, “Bro!!!! I love this so much.”

Noah is a piano prodigy in the making. (instagram)

Bublé and his Argentine-born model and actress wife are parents to Noah, Elias, 6, and Vida, 4, and announced earlier this year they were expecting a fourth child.

Bublé said at the time they felt blessed and grateful to be welcoming another baby.

He also touched on the previous battles the family faced following son Noah’s cancer diagnosis.

Noah, then three, became ill in November 2016 while in his mother’s native Buenos Aires. Doctors initially thought he had mumps, but after finding “something in her stomach de ella” and unable to reach her husband, who was on tour, she flew back to the US to seek further medical attention.

He was eventually diagnosed with liver cancer and Bublé canceled the rest of his tour to be by his son’s side while he underwent treatment. He is now in remission.

He told Nine’s TODAY show in 2018 it was the “worst possible thing” you could go through as a parent and said through tears there were times he and his wife didn’t want to wake up and face reality.

The couple rarely share photos of their children. (instagram)

In an emotional instagram-post to mark his son’s eighth birthday last August, Bublé wrote, “Today my hero turns eight! I’ve never met anyone as brave…”

Bublé said his new album, higher, which features the song, I’ll Never Not Love You, is a “celebration of life.”

“You know, we’ve been through a lot as a family and I think it gave me a great deal of perspective and in that perspective I realized how lucky I am,” he said. “This is a real celebration of life, it really is.

“And the songs that I wrote were inspired by my family, by my wife and kids. If I can’t be inspired by that beautiful family that I have, I don’t know what would ever inspire me. I’m a lucky man.”

The family even used a music video for I’ll Never Not Love You to reveal they were expecting again. His children and wife appeared at the end of the video, with her baby bump on display.

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Adam Goodes and Ellie Laing, illustrated by David Hardy - Somebody's Land: Welcome to Our Country

Adam Goodes celebrates big win for his debut children’s book

Categories
Sports

Amanda Nunes beats Julianna Pena to regain UFC women’s bantamweight belt

Amanda Nunes won a unanimous five-round decision over Julianna Pena in the main event of UFC 277 on Saturday night to regain the women’s bantamweight championship that she lost last December.

Nunes (22-5), nicknamed “The Lioness,” also holds the featherweight belt. The judges’ scoring was 50-45, 50-44 and 50-43.

“Double champ again, baby!” Nunes yelled at the crowd after the fight. “This is the best day ever.”

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Pena beat Nunes last December at Las Vegas to claim the title in one of the biggest upsets in UFC history.

Saturday’s fight was the first title defense for Pena (12-5) in the 135-pound division.

Brandon Moreno won the co-main event with a third-round TKO over Kai Kara-France in a scheduled five-round bout to take possession of the interim men’s flyweight championship belt.

Nunes dropped Grief three times in the second round, twice on right hooks and then with a left to the forehead.

Nunes took down Pena midway through the third round and kept her on the mat, punching to the head to open cuts along Pena’s hairline that left blood splattered on the mat.

Nunes had Pena on her back again for much of the fourth and fifth rounds. Her face was streaked with blood that stained much of the mat.

“I could have finished her, but I wanted to go five rounds with her tonight to prove I was better than her,” said Nunes, her right eye swollen nearly shut, using crutches to reach the interview session. “I could have gone six, seven rounds.”

Nunes came out and added a left-handed stance to her normal right-handed stance. She believes that she confused Pena.

UFC champion Volkanovski sits down with WWOS

UFC president Dana White said Pena was taken from the arena after the fight to see a plastic surgeon about damage to her forehead.

“Julianna has a big chunk missing from her forehead,” he said.

“She’s going to see a plastic surgeon right now. … She got pretty banged up tonight.

“Julianna’s tough as nails,” he added.

“Her will to win is second to none.”

Nunes owned the bantamweight belt for more than five years before the December defeat, which snapped a 12-match winning streak that included nine consecutive title fights.

Referee Herb Dean stopped the fight between Moreno and Kara-France at 4:34 after Moreno, sporting a deep cut under his right eye with blood streaming down his face and onto his chest, landed a liver kick that dropped Kara-France. Moreno then finished him off.

Moreno (20-6-2), from Tijuana, Mexico, came in as the division’s top-ranked contender and Kara-France (24-10), from New Zealand, was second. Moreno was backed by a crowd that chanted “Mo-re-no!” and “Me-xi-co!” at times during the match.

Deiveson Figueiredo regained the flyweight belt from Moreno last January with a unanimous decision in a trilogy fight in the 125-pound division. But Figueiredo sustained a hand injury several months ago and could not make a title defense, resulting in the UFC creating an interim title fight.

After Saturday’s bout, Figueiredo entered the octagon carrying his championship belt and met with Moreno. Figueiredo said he’d like to host Moreno in his native Brazil for the undisputed title.

“I don’t care (where),” Moreno said. “Let’s go.”

Moreno said he would have told Figueiredo he didn’t appreciate his coming into the cage but didn’t want to set a bad example for his 8-year-old daughter.

Sergei Pavlovich was awarded a TKO in 55 seconds into a scheduled three-round heavyweight bout against Derrick Lewis, the oldest fighter on the card at 37 years old and a fan favorite from Houston.

Pavlovich landed a series of punches to Lewis’ head and upper body. Lewis finally went down but jumped right back up as referee Dan Miragliotta stopped it, as Lewis and the crowd both expressed their displeasure with the ruling.

White said the fight shouldn’t have been stopped.

“Miragliotta made a mistake,” White said. “It happens.”

Pavlovich (16-1) went in ranked 11th while Lewis (26-10) was fifth.

Alexandre Pantoja quickly finished off Alex Perez on a tap out only 1:31 into their scheduled three-round men’s flyweight matchup. Pantoja (25-5), ranked No. 4, got atop Perez (24-7), No. 6, along the fence and locked his arms across Perez’s jaw to force the submission.

Magomed Ankalaev scored a TKO at 3:09 of the second of three rounds over Anthony Smith in a men’s light heavyweight bout. Ankalaev (18-1), ranked No. 4, took down Smith (36-17), No. 5, in the first round and then pummeled him along the base of the fence early in the second round when referee Jacob Montalvo stopped the fight. Smith injured his left leg and was helped from the cage, but White said there was no fracture.

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Categories
Australia

A place to be your full self: new wave of queer bars revitalizes Australia’s LGBTQI+ scenes | LGBT rights

In the middle of Sydney Road in Brunswick is an unassuming bar. The blinds are drawn across the windows, and scribbled on the door – so faint it would be easy to miss – is the word “queer”.

Inside, a crowd of she/hers and they/thems dressed in flannel, flares and silver chains are popping off. The vibe is pumping.

“I’ve never been to a space like this,” one non-binary reveller says. They have never been in a queer bar that doesn’t center around cis gay men, and which has more seats than strobe lights.

Another person in the bar, a 40-year-old lesbian, tells Guardian Australia that her brother was beaten up for “looking like a fag” just meters down the road in the 90s. She looks around and comments that times have changed.

This is Flippy’s, Melbourne’s newest LGBTAQI+ spot. It’s run by queers, for queers, and the crowd is appreciative.

LGBTAQI+ culture has changed. The acronym has gotten bigger and the word queer has been reclaimed to signify a more fluid, inclusive identity. Within the community gay bars can be controversial, often criticized for being sexist, transphobic and unwelcoming to people who aren’t cis gay men.

Priya Vunaki and friend Diana Kalkoul started Nasty in 2021
Nasty was started by Priya Vunaki and friend Diana Kalkoul in 2021. Photographer: Priya Vunaki

A new wave of queer bars are changing this – offering spaces that welcome trans, non-binary and non-white members of the community.

Flippy’s owners, Amy Parker and Em Lipschitz, say there was a shortage of queer spaces even before Covid, with some venues closing down.

“So for us, even then, we felt there was a need for the queer community to have a space that was, I guess, more fluid,” Parker says. “For a wider queer community, instead of a strictly gay or lesbian space.”

The space isn’t just a bar – they’re in the process of turning the back room into a gallery and have plans for the community to eventually own it.

“We’re starting to look at models for collective ownership and operation, which is our ultimate goal for Flippy’s,” Parker says.

‘everyone feels comfortable’

After two years of lockdowns, Australia’s queer venues and nights are finding a new lease on life.

“The queer scene in Naarm [Melbourne] is pumping now,” says Lipschitz. “I think that there’s a really nice point where lots of people are pretty comfortable, excited about their queerness.”

To get the bar off the ground, the pair taught themselves carpentry, got a mate to paint the place and found all the furniture secondhand.

“We definitely acquired a lot of skills along the way,” Lipschitz says. “I also know a strange amount of plumbing now.”

The response from the queer community has been overwhelming.

The owners of Flippy's bar in Brunswick Emma Lipschitz, she/they (L) and Amy Parker she (R)
Queer bars are a safe place to find friends and chosen families, as well as lovers. Photograph: Ellen Smith/The Guardian

“Everyone feels comfortable,” Lipschitz says. “It leads to people expressing a lot of gratitude. I still get taken back when people are like: thank you, thank you.”

For queers, bars are not just places to get drunk; they are historically important spaces that act as the cornerstone of the community, and a safe place to find friends and chosen family, as well as lovers.

DJ Priya Vunaki and friend Diana Kalkoul started Nasty, a roaming queer dance party, in Hobart in 2021. They wanted a party with good music in an atmosphere that was femme and trans-inclusive.

“We aren’t capitalizing on a phenomenon or a queer market, we are making events for ourselves and our community,” Vunaki says. Nasty puts queer First Nations people on the door free and has a structured ticketing system, so the less money you have, the less you pay.

Tasmania’s only full-time gay bar, a venue called Flamingos in Hobart, closed last year.

“Queers just need a place to be their full selves, [to be] around like-minded people and to be seen properly,” Vunaki says.

“It’s sad that Hobart doesn’t have any gay or queer bars currently, and I think the community is suffering because of it.”

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The new events are the spiritual successors to meet-ups held in the 1990s. Among the most revered was Pink Sofa, a monthly meet-and-greet for lesbians who had been chatting online. It began in 1997 and was held upstairs at Dante’s, a hip function space off Gertrude Street in Fitzroy.

It was hosted by publican Maria Frendo, a straight, married, cisgender woman whose queer-friendly events made her the quasi-matriarch of Melbourne’s lesbian scene from the 90s to 2000s.

“They used to have online chats, like the original chat room, and everyone was talking to each other but they couldn’t see each other,” Frendo says.

“So I said let’s have a get-together upstairs so you can finally see the person you’ve been talking to for hours.”

Frendio would fill her pub, The Glasshouse, with 400 lesbians, and employed an all-female crew of bouncers, bookers and promoters.

Revellers party at Nasty
Nasty is a queer party collective based in Nipaluna/Hobart. Photographer: Priya Vunaki

1997 was a crucial time in queer liberation. Tasmania decriminalized homosexuality, the last state in Australia to do so, but the broader culture was not accepting: the then-prime minister, John Howard, refused to offer a message of support to Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras and said he would “be disappointed” if one of his kids was gay.

But by the late 2000s, the venues catering to queer women which had been established in the late 1990s had dropped away. Until the pandemic struck, bars and clubs that cater to cis gay men can still be found in every major capital city.

“It’s a hard market,” says Frendio. “Once the girls find a partner, they stop going out, and they didn’t have the disposable income like guys.”

Now Australia’s queer scene has entered a new era.

Kat Dopper has been running Heaps Gay, a queer party night in Sydney, since 2013, and is about to launch Summer Camp Festival, a one-day party in Melbourne and Sydney, later this year. She says post-lockdown queer events have just gotten bigger and bigger.

Revelers dance at Nasty
Revellers dance at Nasty, a roaming queer dance party, founded in Hobart in 2021. Photographer: Priya Vunaki

“I think the community realized the importance of safe spaces and our chosen families,” Dopper says.

“Nothing beats being on a dance floor with like-minded people you care about and trust. There’s this unspoken vibe – you can’t explain it.”

There’s another key element to the revitalization of the scene, however: mainstream acceptance.

“Queer is cool now,” Dopper says. “With the pink dollar, we’ve seen it with Pride, I’ve noticed it with Heaps Gay – they get more and more popular because queer is cool.”