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Is Sydney ready to host the biggest LGBTQ+ event?

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Therein lies the wrath: these aren’t just businesses. They’re (supposedly) community organisations. Mardi Gras is a charity. The dominant voice complaining online (mainly because party tickets sold out so quickly) is cis, gay, male, gym-toned and cashed up.

From this, an uncomfortable narrative of privilege emerges about an event putting Sydney on the global stage. “Diversity” filters down to a narrow cohort.

Rearing its head is an age-old debate about what Mardi Gras actually is. The ’78ers will tell you that it began as a protest. Others say the celebration aspect is equally important: just as gay bars are more than just pubs, pride parties are more than just festivities; both places are sanctuaries that create rare safe spaces where LGBTQ people can truly be themselves for a few hours.

The group Pride in Protest say: “WorldPride has clearly demonstrated who they want by attending the conference: cashed-up, pink-washing corporates” in it “for the PR”.

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WorldPride counters that concessions such as pensioners and Indigenous Australians can attend for $49 a day and 100 scholarships are available for low-income people to attend free.

In the commercialization versus community debate, it’s worth noting that Mardi Gras went bankrupt in 2002, and you don’t get to host one of the world’s biggest free night-time parades on a shoestring.

The other thing to note is that just 11 events have so far been on sale. WorldPride’s full program, to be revealed in November, will have 300.

Organizers insist the Mardi Gras party venue/dance floor capacities – increased since renovations during COVID – are in line with the number of tickets available for attendees, and that the 2020 party was a “big learning experience”.

It’s also possible to attend Sydney WorldPride for free – including major events such as the Oxford Street parade, fair day and the “Pride March” over the Harbor Bridge.

Sydney’s gay community – and the city more broadly – ​​has tried to shake off its reputation as a vacuous, shiny and shallow place in recent years.

An event of this scale has the opportunity to broadcast recent progressive wins to the world – yet those astronomical prices set it off to a shaky start.

Perspective and humor will help our city weather these woes and host something world-class. With the parties, heed the words of my favorite meme: “Whoever said ‘hell hath no fury like a woman scorned’ has clearly never met a homosexual slightly inconvenienced.”

Gary Nunn is a finalist at the upcoming ACON Honor Awards for his journalism on LGBTQ issues.

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Beyonce fans react to Diane Warren seemingly shading the singer for using 24 songwriters

While Beyonce’s legions of fans have been enjoying her new album Renaissance – her first album since 2016’s Lemonade – some have been defending her from some supposed shade thrown her way by Oscar-nominated songwriter Diane Warren.

The 65-year-old Warren took to Twitter on Monday, asking, ‘How can there be 24 writers on a song?’ with a rolling eyes emoji.

The tweet – seemingly in reference to Beyonce’s song Alien Superstar – was not met well by the BeyHive, with fans bashing her for everything from her age to not knowing how samples work.

Defending: While Beyonce's legions of fans have been enjoying her new album Renaissance - her first album since 2016's Lemonade - some have been defending her from some supposed shade thrown her way by Oscar-nominated songwriter Diane Warren

Defending: While Beyonce’s legions of fans have been enjoying her new album Renaissance – her first album since 2016’s Lemonade – some have been defending her from some supposed shade thrown her way by Oscar-nominated songwriter Diane Warren

How: The 65-year-old Warren took to Twitter on Monday, asking, 'How can there be 24 writers on a song?'  with a rolling eyes emoji

How: The 65-year-old Warren took to Twitter on Monday, asking, ‘How can there be 24 writers on a song?’ with a rolling eyes emoji

Her tweet – sent early Monday morning – seemingly blew up instantly, angering fans who thought she was sending some shade Beyonce’s way.

Warren tried to alleviate that notion by tweeting out 15 minutes later, ‘This isn’t meant as shade, I’m just curious.’

Another 20 minutes or so later she seemed to have figured it out, tweeting out, ‘Ok, it’s prob samples that add up the ammount of writers.’

Shade: Her tweet - sent early Monday morning - seemingly blew up instantly, angering fans who thought she was sending some shade Beyonce's way

Shade: Her tweet – sent early Monday morning – seemingly blew up instantly, angering fans who thought she was sending some shade Beyonce’s way

No shade: Warren tried to alleviate that notion by tweeting out 15 minutes later, 'This isn't meant as shade, I'm just curious'

No shade: Warren tried to alleviate that notion by tweeting out 15 minutes later, ‘This isn’t meant as shade, I’m just curious’

Samples: Another 20 minutes or so later she seemed to have figured it out, tweeting out, 'Ok, it's prob samples that add up the ammount of writerrs'

Samples: Another 20 minutes or so later she seemed to have figured it out, tweeting out, ‘Ok, it’s prob samples that add up the ammount of writerrs’

That still didn’t stop a number of fans from chiming in, including Twitter user Lisa McGuire, who said, ‘samples and multiple interpolations! I’m a music supervisor and have the clear them sometimes.’

Another Twitter user named Dylan asked, ‘How you’ve been in the game for 80 years and don’t know how samples work?’ Warren responded, ‘Coz I don’t use them.’

Twitter user TaylorBold added, ‘Same way you have 13 nominations and no wins,’ along with a photo of her 13 Oscar nominations.

Samples: That still didn't stop a number of fans from chiming in, including Twitter user Lisa McGuire, who said, 'samples and multiple interpolations!  I'm a music supervisor and have the clear them sometimes'

Samples: That still didn’t stop a number of fans from chiming in, including Twitter user Lisa McGuire, who said, ‘samples and multiple interpolations! I’m a music supervisor and have the clear them sometimes’

Don't: Another Twitter user named Dylan asked, 'How you've been in the game for 80 years and don't know how samples work?'  Warren responded, 'Coz I don't use them'

Don’t: Another Twitter user named Dylan asked, ‘How you’ve been in the game for 80 years and don’t know how samples work?’ Warren responded, ‘Coz I don’t use them’

Same: Twitter user TaylorBold added, 'Same way you have 13 nominations and no wins,' along with a photo of her 13 Oscar nominations

Same: Twitter user TaylorBold added, ‘Same way you have 13 nominations and no wins,’ along with a photo of her 13 Oscar nominations

That started a brief exchange, where Warren joked, ‘But I have 13 more nominations than U’ while another fan, J, added, ‘Exactly, nominations. Always the bridesmaid, never the bride.’

Warren asked, ‘How many U got?’ as J responded, ‘Same wins as you, xoxo.’

Another recording artist, The-Dream, explained, ‘You mean how’s does our (Black) culture have so many writers, well it started because we couldn’t afford certain things starting out, So we started sampling and it became an Artform, a major part of the Black Culture (hip-hop) in America. Had that was not happen who knows. u good?’

Nominations: That started a brief exchange, where Warren joked, 'But I have 13 more nominations than U' while another fan, J, added, 'Exactly, nominations.  Always the bridesmaid, never the bride'

Nominations: That started a brief exchange, where Warren joked, ‘But I have 13 more nominations than U’ while another fan, J, added, ‘Exactly, nominations. Always the bridesmaid, never the bride’

Wins: Warren asked, 'How many U got?'  as J responded, 'Same wins as you, xoxo'

Wins: Warren asked, ‘How many U got?’ as J responded, ‘Same wins as you, xoxo’

Explain: Another recording artist, The-Dream, explained, 'You mean how's does our (Black) culture have so many writers, well it started because we couldn't afford certain things starting out, So we started sampling and it became an Artform , a major part of the Black Culture (hip hop) in America.  Had that was not happen who knows.  u good?'

Explain: Another recording artist, The-Dream, explained, ‘You mean how’s does our (Black) culture have so many writers, well it started because we couldn’t afford certain things starting out, So we started sampling and it became an Artform , a major part of the Black Culture (hip hop) in America. Had that was not happen who knows. u good?’

Warren responded, ‘I didn’t mean that as an attack or as disrespect. I didn’t know this, thank you for making me aware of it. I don’t need to be mean about it.’

She also sent out a number of other tweets including one where she called a Twitter user ac**t for calling her a ‘grandma’ and another where she sent a middle finger emoji to someone who said she’s 65, adding, ‘Cool U can count. How many fingers am I holding up’

Warren seemingly conceded her argument hours later, tweeting out, ‘Ok, I meant no disrespect to @beyonce, who I’ve worked with and admire. I’m sorry for the misunderstanding.’

Beyonce herself has yet to respond publicly to any of the tweets as of now.

No attack: Warren responded, 'I didn't mean that as an attack or as disrespect.  I didn't know this, thank you for making me aware of it.  I don't need to be mean about it'

No attack: Warren responded, ‘I didn’t mean that as an attack or as disrespect. I didn’t know this, thank you for making me aware of it. I don’t need to be mean about it’

Count: She also sent out a number of other tweets including one where she called a Twitter user ac**t for calling her a 'grandma' and another where she sent a middle finger emoji to someone who said she's 65, adding, 'Cool U can count.  How many fingers am I holding up'

Count: She also sent out a number of other tweets including one where she called a Twitter user ac**t for calling her a ‘grandma’ and another where she sent a middle finger emoji to someone who said she’s 65, adding, ‘Cool U can count. How many fingers am I holding up’

Sorry: Warren seemingly conceded her argument hours later, tweeting out, 'Ok, I meant no disrespect to @beyonce, who I've worked with and admire.  I'm sorry for the misunderstanding'

Sorry: Warren seemingly conceded her argument hours later, tweeting out, ‘Ok, I meant no disrespect to @beyonce, who I’ve worked with and admire. I’m sorry for the misunderstanding’

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Orlando Bloom shows off his bulging biceps as he steps out of the gym in Cairns

Katy’s one lucky girl! Hunky Orlando Bloom shows off his bulging biceps as he steps out of the gym in Cairns while taking a break from filming the Wizards! with Pete Davidson

He has been flaunting his buff body while filming shirtless scenes for his new movie Wizards! in Cairns, Queensland.

And Hollywood hunk Orlando Bloom showed just how he gets into shape on Tuesday.

The 45-year-old revealed his bulging biceps in a tank top as he left the gym with his trainer.

Hunky Orlando Bloom showed off his bulging biceps as he stepped out of the gym in Cairns, Queensland on Tuesday morning

Hunky Orlando Bloom showed off his bulging biceps as he stepped out of the gym in Cairns, Queensland on Tuesday morning

The father-of-two also showcased his toned legs in a pair of workout shorts teamed with a calf-width socks and colorful Nike trainers.

The Pirates Of The Caribbean star tied his long thick locks back in a half-up half-down style and wore a face mask for the car ride home.

The day before Orlando was busy working on his new film on the set in Cairns.

The father-of-two also showcased his toned legs in a pair of workout shorts teamed with a calf-width socks and colorful Nike trainers

The father-of-two also showcased his toned legs in a pair of workout shorts teamed with a calf-width socks and colorful Nike trainers

The British actor showed off his rippling muscles as he shot scenes on a local beach.

Also on set was his co-star Pete Davidson, who donned a pale yellow T-shirt with a graphic print, which had large stains on the front.

The pair were joined by English actress Naomi Scott.

The production of Wizards! will inject an estimated $14.7million into Queensland’s economy.

According to Deadline, it will follow two hapless pothead beach-bar operators, played by Pete and Franz Rogowski, who run into trouble when they stumble across stolen loot they really should have left alone.

Brad Pitt’s production company, Plan B, is behind the upcoming movie.

The Pirates Of The Caribbean star pushed his long thick locks back in a half-up half-down style and wore a face mask for the car ride home

The Pirates Of The Caribbean star pushed his long thick locks back in a half-up half-down style and wore a face mask for the car ride home

Orlando also joins Sean Harris in the new film by Australian writer-director David Michôd.

It comes after Orlando was joined by his fiancée Katy Perry and one-year-old daughter Daisy Dove in Australia ahead of their three month stint Down Under.

The young family seem to be making the most of their time in the country, with Katy spotted at a café in Port Douglas and at the Lennon Bros Circus.

Queensland waitress Indianna Paull went viral on TikTok after revealing she had served the American singer, 37, while working at a café in Port Douglas.

The day before Orlando was busy working on his new film on the set in Cairns alongside co-star Pete Davidson

The day before Orlando was busy working on his new film on the set in Cairns alongside co-star Pete Davidson

Indianna, who did not recognize Katy beneath her hat and sunglasses, told the Roar hitmaker she would have to wait until a table became available.

She then revealed Katy left a ‘generous’ tip when she left the café, but refused to specify the exact amount.

Orlando and Katy have been engaged since 2016 and have a one-year-old daughter, Daisy Dove Bloom.

Orlando and pop star Katy Perry have been engaged since 2016 and have a one-year-old daughter, Daisy Dove Bloom

Orlando and pop star Katy Perry have been engaged since 2016 and have a one-year-old daughter, Daisy Dove Bloom

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Shocking Neighbors plot saw Chinese family accused of eating the dog

The Neighbors storyline they desperately want you to forget: Shocking early ’90s plot saw Chinese family on Ramsay Street accused of eating the Robinsons’ DOG

Footage has resurfaced of a problematic Neighbors storyline in which a Chinese family on Ramsay Street was accused of eating a dog.

In the extraordinary clip, which has gained attention on YouTube after the series finale last week, Jim Robinson’s daughter Julie Martin (played by Julie Mullins) accuses the Lim family of eating her missing dog.

‘That sort of thing might be acceptable in your country, Mrs Lim, but in Australia we consider it barbaric,’ Julie says.

Footage has resurfaced of a problematic Neighbors storyline in which a Chinese family on Ramsay Street was accused of eating a dog.  (Pictured: Jenny Lim, played by Diane Bakar-Coleclough)

Footage has resurfaced of a problematic Neighbors storyline in which a Chinese family on Ramsay Street was accused of eating a dog. (Pictured: Jenny Lim, played by Diane Bakar-Coleclough)

A shocked Jenny Lim responds: ‘You think we ate her? This is what you think of us. How dare you suggest such a thing. I’ve never been so insulted.’

The short-lived storyline, which reflected suburban prejudices about Asian Australians in the early ’90s, re-emerged after the Neighbors finale on Thursday night.

The last-ever episode of the long-running series, which first began in 1985, aired Down Under on Thursday and in the UK on Friday.

In the extraordinary clip, which has gained attention on YouTube after the series finale last week, Julie Martin (played by Julie Mullins) accuses the Lim family of eating her missing dog

In the extraordinary clip, which has gained attention on YouTube after the series finale last week, Julie Martin (played by Julie Mullins) accuses the Lim family of eating her missing dog

Now it has been confirmed that the fictional suburb of Erinsborough situated on Ramsay Street in Melbourne, Victoria, will be demolished.

Terry Smit of Go West, the team behind the official Neighbors tour, told the Daily Star: ‘We are advised by Fremantle Media that the sets will be dismantled and that the space will be used for their next project, whatever that may be.’

Mr Smit added: ‘As the sets are being dismantled, there is nothing left for us to tour, so the tour will be discontinued.’

The short-lived storyline, which reflected suburban prejudices about Asian Australians in the early '90s, re-emerged after the Neighbors finale on Thursday night.  (Pictured: Jenny and Raymond Lim, played by Diane Bakar-Coleclough and TS Kong)

The short-lived storyline, which reflected suburban prejudices about Asian Australians in the early ’90s, re-emerged after the Neighbors finale on Thursday night. (Pictured: Jenny and Raymond Lim, played by Diane Bakar-Coleclough and TS Kong)

The finale of Neighbours, which first began in 1985, aired Down Under on Thursday and in the UK on Friday.  (Pictured: Jane Harris and Mike Young, played by Annie Jones and Guy Pearce)

The finale of Neighbours, which first began in 1985, aired Down Under on Thursday and in the UK on Friday. (Pictured: Jane Harris and Mike Young, played by Annie Jones and Guy Pearce)

Although Erinsborough is fictional, the tour’s website notes: ‘Ramsay Street is a real street where ordinary people live!’

The long-running Australian soap came to an end after 37 years last week.

The likes Kylie Minogue, Jason Donovan, Guy Pearce and Margot Robbie returned to bid farewell to the show that launched their journeys to stardom.

The finale focused on Toadie’s (Ryan Moloney) wedding to Melanie (Lucinda Cowden) as he finally got his happily ever after.

Now it has been confirmed that the fictional suburb of Erinsborough situated on Ramsay Street in Melbourne, Victoria, will be demolished

Now it has been confirmed that the fictional suburb of Erinsborough situated on Ramsay Street in Melbourne, Victoria, will be demolished

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Naomi Judd left Ashley and Wynonna out of her will

Naomi Judd left her only two daughters, Wynonna Judd and Ashley Judd, out of her will, Page Six can confirm.

The late country singer – who died by suicide on April 30 – appointed her husband of 33 years, Larry Strickland, as the executor of her estate, according to court documents.

Naomi requested in the will that the musician, 76, have “full authority and discretion” over any property that is an asset to her estate “without the approval of any court” or permission from any beneficiary of the estate, Page Six reports.

She also stated, per the documents, that Strickland would be entitled to receive “reasonable compensation” for his services, and that he would be paid or reimbursed for all “reasonable expenses, advances and disbursements, including attorney’s and accountant’s fees, made or incurred. in the administration of my estate”.

The will was prepared on November 20, 2017, nearly five years before Naomi died.

According to the documents, the singer – who suffered a lifelong and public battle with depression – was of “sound mind and disposing memory” when she signed and approved the will.

Melissa Sitzler, a senior account manager at a Tennessee law firm Wiatr & Associates, and another individual named Abigail Muelder signed as witnesses.

According to the will, Naomi also asked that if her husband could not be executor due to death or any other reason, she wanted her brother-in-law, Reginald Strickland, and Daniel Kris Wiatr, the president of Wiatr & Associates, to serve as co-executors.

RadarOnline.com claims a source told them Wynonna, 58, is “upset” that she was excluded because she formed one-half of the duo, The Judds, with Naomi and “believes she was a major force behind her mother’s success”.

However, reps for Wynonna and Ashley, 54, did not immediately return Page Six’s request for comment.

The sisters have not given any indication of tension between them and their mother since her passing – even attending Naomi’s Country Music Hall of Fame induction one day after announcing her death.

Then in May, Wynonna said she felt “helpless” over the loss and vowed to “break the cycle of addiction and family dysfunction, that I must continue to show up for myself [first] and do the personal healing work”.

Meanwhile, Ashley said in a podcast interview in July that she could “understand” that her mother was in pain after years of dealing with an “undiagnosed and untreated mental illness”.

Page Six has also contacted the lawyer who prepared Naomi’s will, but did not hear back in time for publication.

According to CelebrityNetWorth.com, Naomi’s estate is estimated to be worth $35 million.

This story originally appeared on Page Six and is republished here with permission

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Tom Cruise’s daughter Suri makes movie debut in Katie Holmes’ upcoming film, Alone Together

Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes’ daughter has made her on-screen debut.

Holmes, 43, directed and stars in the newly released movie Alone Togetherand her daughter Suri Cruise, 16, joined her on the big screen.

“I always want the highest level of talent,” Holmes said in an interview with Yahoo! Entertainment. “So, I asked her [Suri].

“She’s very, very talented. She said she would do it, and she recorded it, and I let her do her thing about her. That’s the way I direct in general. It’s like, ‘This is what I think we all want – go do your thing.’”

In the movie, Suri sings a cover of bluemoon, which plays during the opening credits of the film. Holmes told the outlet this will not be her daughter’s only on-screen singing gig, Fox News reports.

“She actually did sing in Rare Itemswhich is the film we did last [autumn],” Holmes said. “Other than that, she she’s a 16-year-old kid doing high school.”

Cruise and Holmes were married from 2006 to 2012. Suri is their only child together, and her uber-famous parents opted to keep her out of the public eye for the majority of her childhood.

Holmes directed, wrote and stars in Alone Together – a romantic comedy set during the Covid pandemic. Also appearing opposite her in the film is English actor Jim Sturgess.

The film follows a man and woman fleeing New York City during the first wave of the pandemic in 2020.

They end up booking the same Airbnb and ultimately decide to stay at the upstate property together.

Sturgess praised Holmes’ directing style and shared that she gives actors wide latitude when they are in front of the camera.

“She gives you this incredible space between action and cut,” Sturgess said of his co-star.

“She very rarely shouted, ‘Cut!’ actually. You’d think the scene had ended and she just kind of left it hanging. I love that she was always searching for those little nuggets of authenticity.”

This story originally appeared on Fox News and was reproduced with permission

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Karl and Jasmine Stefanovic set sail on James Packer’s $250m superyacht

James Packer invited some of his famous friends to board his $250million superyacht in the South of France last Tuesday.

The Australian billionaire, 54, was joined on the luxury vessel by long-time pal Karl Stefanovic, his wife Jasmine and their two-year-old daughter Harper.

It was a family affair with Jasmine’s sister Jade Yarbrough also on board with her new boyfriend, the former Australian cricket captain Michael Clarke.

James Packer (left) invited some famous friends to board his $250million superyacht in the South of France last Tuesday.  He is seen here with Karl Stefanovic's wife Jasmine (second from left), her sister de ella Jade Yarbrough (right, carrying her niece Harper) and another friend (centre)

James Packer (left) invited some famous friends to board his $250million superyacht in the South of France last Tuesday. He is seen here with Karl Stefanovic’s wife Jasmine (second from left), her sister de ella Jade Yarbrough (right, carrying her niece Harper) and another friend (centre)

Jasmine, 38, a former model-turned-shoe designer, looked breezy in a white shirt and designer sunglasses as she chatted to James on deck.

A bikini-clad Jade, 30, stood nearby carrying her Niece Harper on her hip.

Michael, 41, was also spotted enjoying a day on the water with the cashed-up crowd, clad in a black T-shirt and shades.

The retired batsman, nicknamed ‘Pup’, has been dating interior designer Jade for several months now.

Former Australian cricket captain Michael Clarke (seated, bottom right) was also spotted enjoying a day on the water with the cashed-up crowd, clad in a black T-shirt and shades

Former Australian cricket captain Michael Clarke (seated, bottom right) was also spotted enjoying a day on the water with the cashed-up crowd, clad in a black T-shirt and shades

Today host Karl, 47, kept it casual in a black shirt left partially unbuttoned, and completed his look with a matching cap.

Meanwhile, James, who recently sold his stake in Crown Resorts for $3.3billion, looked slimmer than he has been in years in a loose black T-shirt and sweatpants.

The troubled businessman appears to have put a series of health issues behind him.

Like her big sister, Jade moved to Los Angeles to work for a marketing company in 2015, giving her the chance to rub shoulders with Jasmine's famous pals

The Daily Telegraph reports Michael (pictured) has become 'quite fond' of Jade in recent weeks

Michael (right) has been dating interior designer Jade (left) for several months now

In the last few months, he has lost 33kg (72lbs or 5.2st) and has also ditched the psychiatric medication that for so long altered his mood.

Packer told The Weekend Australian in June he was ready to start the ‘third act’ of his life, including a planned return to his home city of Sydney

‘I’m roughly 130kg now and want to be back to 100kg by the end of 2022. I want to swim with my kids at Bondi when we’re all in Sydney together next year and be 100kg,’ he said from his home in Mexico.

Today show host Karl Stefanovic (left) kept it casual in a black shirt left partially unbuttoned, and completed his look with a matching cap

Today show host Karl Stefanovic (left) kept it casual in a black shirt left partially unbuttoned, and completed his look with a matching cap

Packer revealed he’d quit the antidepressants and antipsychotic drugs he was taking, and was now looking to ‘rehabilitate’ his reputation in Australia.

‘I am very much looking forward to seeing Crown Sydney… it hasn’t been appropriate for me to be in Australia for the last few years,’ he said.

In a subsequent interview with The Sydney Morning Herald, Packer said he had lost a total of 33kg and counting by quitting alcohol, following a strict diet and exercise regimen, and limiting his daily calorie intake.

James Packer (pictured in October 2017) said in a recent interview he was excited to begin his 'third act' and plans to ease back into public life in Australia

James Packer (pictured in October 2017) said in a recent interview he was excited to begin his ‘third act’ and plans to ease back into public life in Australia

He told the newspaper his life was ‘pretty good right now’, adding: ‘My mental health is the best it’s ever been.’

Packer sold Crown to private investment company Blackstone for $8.9billion in a deal that was finalized in June, pocketing $3.3billion in the process.

The sale marked the end of a major chapter in his life which at times was mired by controversy amid inquiries into the company and allegations of money laundering.

Despite the investigations, the father of three credited his casinos in Melbourne, Perth and Sydney with changing the cities ‘for the better’.

Packer is seen here at Sydney's Bondi Beach on December 21, 2003. He recently said he hopes to visit Bondi with his children next year after getting his weight down to 100kg

Packer is seen here at Sydney’s Bondi Beach on December 21, 2003. He recently said he hopes to visit Bondi with his children next year after getting his weight down to 100kg

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Laurinda takes the stage: ‘Private school culture needs to change – the insularity, the entitlement’ | australian theater

Alice Pung’s young adult novel Laurinda opens with a simple epigraph: “Life is nothing but high school.” This quote, from the US writer Kurt Vonnegut, distils a confronting truth: the things that happen to us as teenagers can, and often do, follow us through our lives.

Melbourne Theater Company’s adaptation of Laurinda, co-written by comedian Diana Nguyen and Petra Kalive (who also directed), magnifies this phenomenon by splitting Pung’s much-loved book between past and present. Her protagonist, Lucy Lam, is both 15 and 35 in this version: we see her as a teenager in the 1990s as she navigates her eponymous private school, where an elite group, The Cabinet, reigns supreme. Always present is Lucy’s friend from Ella Linh, the only person who really gets her from Ella.

But we also see Lucy looking back, exploring all the ways in which being a member of the Asian diaspora in Australia, and experiencing casual and explicit racism, has irrevocably shaped and changed her. There is both light – the daggy joys of 90s music, an energetic cast – and darkness in this adaptation; it’s a little bit Mean Girls and a little bit Fight Club, with a distinctly Asian-Australian feel.

Nguyen remembers being a child in 1996 when Pauline Hanson made her infamous maiden speech in which she claimed that Australia was being “swamped by Asians”. When Nguyen began adapting Laurinda in 2020, waves of anti-Asian sentiment were again washing over the world after China was identified as the origin of Covid-19.

“#StopAsianHate was in the media, and just before the Comedy festival in 2020, I experienced racism in the comedy room,” she remembers. “That was living inside of me – how was it possible that in 2020, even though I was writing this play set in the 1990s, it was still traveling through the generations?”

The idea for the adaptation had been sitting on the shelf for years when Kalive started at the MTC in 2020, right as the first lockdown hit. She tore through the novel in 24 hours; as a Greek-Australian, she could relate to some of the feelings it described. Kalive was keen to adapt it, and when it came to a co-writer, Nguyen immediately came to mind. “I thought there was a fabulous humor in the work and lived experience that Diana would be able to speak to and understand intrinsically,” she says.

The intersection of class and race is a recurring topic in Pung’s work, which the author feels Kalive and Nguyen inherently understand. “They have the insight that some people don’t have if they don’t live, or don’t have parents or family, who come from a very working class background, and then are thrust into this world of privilege,” says Pung .

Nguyen had read Laurinda years ago. “I was quite triggered by it,” she says. “It’s not overt racism but subtle racism, and I felt Alice did such a great job of naming what Lucy went through. When I think about the courage of any young person who has ever faced racism, that’s what we’ve created – an enduring play about a woman who lives it through school, but it travels with her through her life.

The comedian, who created the web series Phi and Me about a Vietnamese teenager and her overbearing mother, brings this same understanding of intergenerational dynamics to Laurinda. Scenes with Lucy’s refugee parents are spoken in untranslated Vietnamese – an authentic depiction of the domestic lives of immigrants.

“What’s so beautiful about this show, and the grounding parts, are the conversations Lucy has with her mum,” Nguyen says. “For me, to hear the Vietnamese language on stage is mind-blowing. The gift I’m giving to myself is to hear my home language spoken on stage.”

“Diana has always been really invested in realizing the home as three-dimensionally as possible to really ground Lucy as a fully rounded person, not just a caricature,” Kalive adds.

Both writers didn’t have the language as teenagers to describe or understand their experiences with racism or xenophobia; Words and concepts such as “microaggression” simply didn’t exist in the everyday lexicon. “As a young person, you’re just trying to exist in the world and all your energy is spent trying to deal,” Kalive says. “I definitely don’t feel like my peers were equipped with the nous that young people are now.”

The production’s all-Asian cast of seven includes Fiona Choi (The Family Law), Gemma Chua-Tran (Heartbreak High) and Ngoc Phan (Boy Swallows Universe). Between them, they play 20 characters, not all of whom are Asian; it’s a bold and significant casting choice in an industry that still struggles with meaningful representation. The personal experiences of the actors also inform what unfolds on stage. “The script continues to respond and adapt to include their perspectives, which is incredibly powerful,” Kalive says.

There’s a brief nod in the play to another 1990s-set Australian YA novel also recently adapted for stage: Looking for Alibrandi, which tells a similar story of a teenage girl from a migrant background struggling to find her place in a world of whiteness and privilege . These stories are more relevant now than ever, contributing to ongoing discussions about the place of private schools in Australia.

“Some of the culture of private schools needs to change – the insularity, the sense of entitlement,” Pung says. “It’s an unacknowledged and unaware sense of entitlement, which I hoped to bring out in the writing of Laurinda.”

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Hunted stars Jake and Rob don drag disguises | Photos

Fans of Ten’s cat-and-mouse reality game show Hunted could have been forgiven for thinking they were watching Drag Race Down Under during Monday’s episode, as the four remaining fugitives all leaned heavily on drag to try to evade the Hunters.

After a season of contestants donning dodgy wigs and op shop dresses, leave it to friends Jake and Rob – who’ve been running rings around the Hunters since the start of the game – to bring some truly unrecognizable disguises.

Rob, a hairdresser and make-up artist, got he and police officer Jake into very convincing drag for their next outing, knowing that stepping out in public as themselves was just too risky.

Their mission: To go to a local pub and befriend some strangers, who would hopefully take them in separately for the night as they went their separate ways for the final stage of the game.

And Rob had come prepared, putting them both in wigs, make-up, breast plates and even facial prosthetics:

Cut to Jake and Rob in full drag, blending in very well as they sipped cocktails with a group of girls at a Footscray pub – one of whom announced, “You can come stay with us if you like.”

One complaint – hunted brushed over this undercover operation, showing us barely more than 30 seconds of Jake and Rob in drag at the pub before we skipped to the next scene.

It raised a lot of questions: How exactly did two large men in drag convince some strangers at the pub to let them crash? Release the extended pub scene, Have!

Also relying on the power of drag were contestants Stathi and Matt, who had fled to Daylesford’s LGBTI ChillOut Festival with a plan to meet a drag queen friend who would get them frocked up so they could move around the town in disguise.

Unfortunately, the Hunters intercepted their meeting (perhaps meeting a large, purple-wigged drag queen at the local pub wasn’t the best plan to evade detection), capturing Matt and leaving an emotional Stathi on the run by himself.

That means just Stathi, Rob and Jake are left in the game as the show heads towards tonight’s finale – will all, or indeed any, of them make it to the ‘extraction point’ and share in the $100,000 winnings?

Hunted concludes 7.30pm tonight on Ten.

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Albert Namatjira’s work hitting new highs on the art market as demand arises

In the 1950s, Albert Namatjira’s iconic watercolor artwork would often sell on the streets of Alice Springs for just a few shillings.

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

Over the years and following his death in 1959, his paintings of the vast Central Australian landscape became highly sought after, with collectors across the world clamoring to own a piece of his work.

Now there’s been a renewed interest in the Arrernte artist and father of the Hermannsburg School with his work setting new records.

Namatjira’s Glen Helen Gorge on paper fetched more than $120,000 when it went under the hammer in Melbourne earlier this year.

In July his painting The Granseur – Mount Sonda sold in Adelaide for $54,000, an unprecedented price almost $10,000 above expectations.

Albert Namatjira, photographed by Jim Gallacher at Areyonga in 1950.
Albert Namatjira was a pioneer of the Hermannsburg School of painting.(Supplied: Northern Territory Library)

“Namatjira’s work doesn’t come on the scene very often, but those works … bringing enormous value,” said Jim Elder, auctioneer and proprietor at Elder Fine Art in Adelaide.

“I don’t feel that the people in Alice Springs would be would au fait with what has actually happened to his work.

“He should be taken a lot more seriously and I think it’s at this present time that people are waking up to how important an artist he really is.”

Born and raised at the remote Hermannsburg Lutheran Mission, southwest of Alice Springs, Namatjira was taught the art of watercolor by visiting European artist Rex Battarbee and greatly encouraged by the local pastor.

His status grew rapidly in Australia, and as a result he became the first Indigenous person to gain full citizenship, enabling him to vote and buy alcohol in 1957.

A Christmas card with watercolor painting of a landscape
A Christmas card from 1954 featuring artwork by Albert Namatjira.(Supplied)

Mr Elder said the whole Australian art market was enjoying a rush of buoyancy of late, but Namatjira’s work had far surpassed the market trend.

“What’s driving all this is availability, naturally, and people are coming more au fait with where this artist actually stands in the history of Australian Art,” he said.

“One wonders today, if Namatjira didn’t come along and Rex Battarbee didn’t come along and discover him, that whole school of paintings wouldn’t have existed.

“We owe a debt, a great debt, to the likes of Albert Namatjira, Rex Battarbee, and the Hermannsburg School of artists.”

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