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Entertainment

From WAG Nation to The Shire: the 15 Australian reality shows we all forgot about – sorted | TV-reality

From the release of “docusoap” Sylvania Waters in 1992 to produce the most outrageous international edition of Married At First Sight, Australia has played a significant role in shaping reality television. But in between there have been some less successful attempts. From the making of a Neighbors soap star’s debut album to a competition inspired by Princess Mary’s love story, here are the most ridiculous Australian reality shows canceled over the past 20 years.

15. Park Street, Arena, 2011

Remember Park Street, the reality television series based on the editors of the now defunct ACP Magazine titles Cosmopolitan, Cleo, Madison, Dolly and Shop Til You Drop? The show debuted in 2011 to an audience “so small that OzTam was unable to detect any viewing at all in Melbourne and Adelaide, while it estimated that it had 76 viewers in Perth and 856 in Sydney”, according to Mumbrella.

Scathing reviews followed (“It was about as exciting as waiting for the printer to get fixed – and we’re betting that will be the plot of next week’s episode”), and the show has almost been entirely scrubbed from the internet.

14. Australian Celebrity Survivor, Seven, 2006

Before the successful relaunch of Australian Survivor by Channel 10 in 2016, both Nine and Seven had a go at adapting the mega US franchise. Seven’s 2006 attempt gave us Celebrity Survivor: Vanuatu – a series featuring the lowest standard of celebrities ever committed to Australian television. Among them, the British model Gabrielle Richens who appeared in a singular episode of How I Met Your Mother as ‘Tramp Stamp Girl’ and singer Fiona Horne whose biggest hit peaked at No 48 on the Aria charts.

13. The Shire, Ten, 2012

“Dramality” series The Shire followed a cast of young locals in Sydney’s Sutherland Shire, in what Channel 10 hoped was their answer to Jersey Shore and Geordie Shore. After rapidly declining ratings and two cast members being physically assaulted on the street while the show was airing, the series was canceled after one season.

12. Runway to L.A., Fox8, 2007

Australia’s Next Top Model was so popular at one point that it was given a spin-off series, Runway to LA, starring season three’s second runner-up, Jordan Loukas. The five-episode show followed Loukas, described as a “Marrickville ghetto chick”, being schooled on modeling basics by mentor Charlotte Dawson, in the hopes of eventually cracking the US market.

11. The Face Australia, Fox8, 2014

Another short-lived Australian modeling show (following the same format as previous US and UK editions) that didn’t reveal any new supermodels, but did give us this iconic confrontation between mentors Naomi Campbell and Australian model Nicole Trufino.

10. Fashion Bloggers, Style Network and E!, 2014-2015

It turns out the most interesting part of fashion bloggers’ (the original Instagram influencers) lives is the highlights reel they post online. Producers were so starved of usable content in the series – which followed five of the industry’s biggest fashion influencing names – that they resorted to 20-second scenes of catching up for lunch in the very first episode. Watch season one back for a 2014 nostalgia trip of early Instagram filters, flatlays and flower crowns.

9. The Last Resort, Nine, 2017

The Last Resort felt like a significant low in reality television, with incredibly vulnerable casts and revelations that were too personal and sordid for even the most gluttonous audiences. We met five couples attempting to salvage their long-term relationships: there was Carl, who never felt guilty for cheating on his wife Lucy; Dan and Lisa, who got together while Dan was still married; and Sharday, who lied about the father of her child while on a break from partner Josh, who wanted a paternity test. It was canceled after one season.

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8. WAG Nation, Arena, 2012

Australian television producers in 2012 were trying everything to make a personality-based reality series ala The Hills and Keeping Up With The Kardashians, following the end of the talent show boom (mainly Australian Idol). One of the worst attempts was WAG Nation, which followed five wives and girlfriends of some of Australia’s most famous sporting stars for 10 very long episodes.

7. The Steph Show, Ten, 2006

The career of actress and singer Stephanie McIntosh was booming in the mid-2000s. The 21-year-old was in the middle of her initial four-year run on Neighbours, dating AFL player Nick Riewoldt, and releasing a pop album.

The Steph Show documented the album’s making in a style apparently modeled after The Ashlee Simpson Show. It was also somewhat of a marketing experiment – ​​the first episode coincided with the release of the debut single Mistake followed by the full album (McIntosh’s only to date) upon the show’s finale.

6. Aussie Ladette to Lady, Nine, 2009

A voiceover introduction of Aussie Ladette To Lady – based on a UK series – declares: “In Australia, there’s a new kind of woman emerging – loud, vulgar, drunken and dangerous.” The show’s premise was to reform eight of these “ladettes” by sending them to a British finishing school.

Aussie Ladette To Lady was a success for Nine, with reports the show’s first season alone made up to $3.6m in advertising revenue. The contestants, meanwhile, were portrayed terribly – Nine confirmed it had paid for the women to get drunk on camera, with one contestant saying she had “never been that drunk in my life” – and were in contention for no tangible prize. It lasted two seasons.

5. Undercover Angels, Seven, 2002

Before The Block there was the first wave of “before and after” renovating and makeover shows: Changing Rooms, Backyard Blitz and, shortly after, Undercover Angels. The latter was all these shows rolled into one led by a 19-year-old Ian Thorpe who sent his “angels” (radio host Jackie O, former Bardot band member Katie Underwood and actress Simone Kessell) to perform good deeds in the community.

Undercover Angels recorded decent ratings over its 11 episodes, but critics dubbed it “the worst show in the history of the world” and noted Thorpe’s “exquisitely awful impression of a plank throughout”.

4. Australia’s Next Top Model, Fox8, 2005-2016

After the original US franchise was a huge success, Australia’s Next Top Model launched, keeping the original show’s signature deranged challenges – like a photoshoot immediately after an army boot camp (see above), or holding a runway show on a conveyer belt, or even in a bubble – and potentially damaging messages about women’s bodies. I think about this man’s “horrible, horrible legs” comment almost daily, or this photographer calling a 17-year-old contestant “ugly”. During its 10 seasons we watched one contestant attack another in an incident known as “stranglegate” (she was disqualified) and the biggest blunder in Australian reality television history, when the wrong winner was announced in the sixth season’s finale.

3. Yasmin’s Getting Married, Ten, 2006

A 29-year-old woman is presented with a cast of eligible suitors, one of whom she will choose to marry in nine weeks. It’s an entirely stock standard premise by today’s reality television standards, but Australian viewers were not ready for Yasmin’s Getting Married in 2006.

After poor ratings production ceased just four episodes into airing, leaving Dale without a groom. Channel Ten promised it would foot the bill should she eventually wed; In a 2020 profile, Dale revealed she was in a happy relationship but had never married.

2. Playing It Straight, Seven, 2004

Playing It Straight originally started in the US but was canceled after only three episodes. Australia was the first country to actually see a whole season through to the end, led by straight bachelorette (23-year-old Rebecca Olds) and 12 male suitors, half of whom were gay. If a gay contestant tricked Olds into choosing him at the end, he got $200,000. If she chose a straight man, the pair split the money.

The show once again failed to lure audiences and was moved to a later time slot, but Olds and straight guy Chad walked away with $100,000 each.

1. Australian Princess, Ten, 2005-2007

After Mary Donaldson met her future husband, Crown Prince Frederik of Denmark, in a Sydney pub, reality television creators were convinced it could happen to anyone. To prepare, they created a “princess boot camp” led by Paul Burrell, a former butler to Princess Diana, and called it Australian Princess. Contestants competed for prizes including a tiara and being escorted to a gala ball by a Polish prince. It lasted two whole seasons.

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Sports

Andy Lee and Rebecca Harding look worse for wear after Pat Cummins and Becky Boston’s wedding

Sore heads? Andy Lee and girlfriend Rebecca Harding look worse for wear as they pick up a greasy breakfast after Pat Cummins and Becky Boston’s lavish wedding

They partied the night away on Friday evening at cricket star Pat Cummins and Becky Boston’s lavish wedding in Byron Bay.

And Andy Lee, 41, and his girlfriend Rebecca Harding, 32, looked worse for wear the morning after on Saturday.

Stunning model Rebecca struggled to raise a smile as the couple picked up a greasy breakfast and some coffees at a local café.

The morning after the night before: Andy Lee and girlfriend Rebecca Harding looked worse for wear as they picked up a greasy breakfast in Byron Bay on Saturday the day after Pat Cummins and Becky Boston's lavish wedding

The morning after the night before: Andy Lee and girlfriend Rebecca Harding looked worse for wear as they picked up a greasy breakfast in Byron Bay on Saturday the day after Pat Cummins and Becky Boston’s lavish wedding

Wearing a pair of sunglasses, a makeup free and very weary, Rebecca kept her head down as she left the eatery clutching two boxes containing what appeared to be bacon and egg rolls.

After wearing a very revealing dress the night before, Rebecca covered up in a casual pair of jeans and a sweater.

Her radio star beau dressed similarly in jeans and a black zip-up sweater. The pair also donned white sneakers.

Wearing a pair of sunglasses, a makeup free and very weary Rebecca kept her head down as she left the eatery clutching two boxes with what appeared to bacon and egg rolls

Wearing a pair of sunglasses, a makeup free and very weary Rebecca kept her head down as she left the eatery clutching two boxes with what appeared to bacon and egg rolls

After wearing a revealing dress the night before, Rebecca covered up in a casual pair of jeans and a sweater

After wearing a revealing dress the night before, Rebecca covered up in a casual pair of jeans and a sweater

Rebecca almost suffered a major outfit fail on Friday as she attended Pat and Becky’s star-studded wedding.

She turned heads by going braless in a black halter-neck dress that barely covered her chest.

Rebecca’s racy frock featured a large cut-out bodice that exposed a generous glimpse of cleavage, while the skirt hugged her hips and legs.

Rebecca almost suffered a major outfit fail on Friday as she attended the star-studded wedding of Pat and his partner Becky

Rebecca almost suffered a major outfit fail on Friday as she attended the star-studded wedding of Pat and his partner Becky

Her look was completed with a pair of sunglasses, a heart-shaped bag in black patent leather, and a set of striking pink heels.

Rebecca was all smiles as she arrived on Andy’s arm, chatting and joking with fellow guests outside the Chateau Du Soleil wedding venue.

Looking suave, funnyman Andy sported a black suit, white button-up shirt and bow tie.

Her look was completed with a pair of sunglasses, a heart-shaped bag in black patent leather, and a set of striking pink heels.

Her look was completed with a pair of sunglasses, a heart-shaped bag in black patent leather, and a set of striking pink heels.

Andy and Rebecca have been dating on and off for seven years and are often the subject of engagement rumours.

In October, Andy was forced to deny secretly marrying Rebecca after internet sleuths spotted what appeared to be their ‘wedding photo’ in his home.

The comedian was bombarded with questions about his marital status after fans spotted the framed picture in the background of one of her Instagram posts.

But he confirmed on The Kyle and Jackie O Show it was simply a case of mistaken identity – because he and Bec weren’t the couple in the photo.

‘I’m the most offended because it is actually my sister and brother-in-law in that photo, and [he] is 5’10” and wears glasses,’ Andy said.

He joked that it was ‘bloody annoying’ that people would confuse him with a shorter, bespectacled man.

‘I am deeply in love with Bec. I’m sure it will happen at some stage,’ he added.

Looking suave, funnyman Andy sported a black suit, white button-up shirt and bow tie

Looking suave, funnyman Andy sported a black suit, white button-up shirt and bow tie

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Australia

Skills shortage in automotive industry reaches ‘crisis’ levels, as businesses close

Clinton Godde gets enough work at his WA garage for more than half a dozen staff but an “abysmal” skills shortage in the car industry has meant he has been unable to get enough skilled workers to turn a profit.

The automotive industry estimates there are close to 40,000 vacancies for jobs such as mechanics, motor trimmers, panel beaters, and spray painters across Australia as it struggles through what is believed to be the worst worker shortage in two decades.

Mr Godde, who runs a garage in the eastern Perth suburb of Bellevue, said the shortage pre-dated COVID-19 and was showing no sign of easing.

“This is a blight that is just continuing,” Mr Godde said.

“I have been looking for staff seriously for two to three years and prior to that I have been looking for a motor vehicle trimmer for six or seven years.”

A close up of a man with a beard and a brown hat
Small business owner Clinton Godde says staff shortages mean he is not making any money.(ABC News: Jacqueline Lynch)

Mr Godde said the lack of experienced workers had taken a toll on his businesses.

“I am continuing to tread water and keep my head above the water line,” he said.

“I’m not making any money. I don’t want to say I’m going backwards but, if you stay stagnant long enough, it’s hard to know which way you’re turning.

“To have six or seven guys that are churning out work and the cashflow that revolves around that is really, really noticeable and I haven’t had that cash flow for probably the last three years.

“I quite often think I should go and be a farmer or something.”

‘Crisis’ level shortage closes businesses

The WA Motor Trade Association CEO Stephen Moir said, with skills shortages at “crisis” levels across Australia, Mr Godde’s story was not unusual.

“It’s not unique at all. In fact, it’s common,” Mr Moir said.

He said some businesses had already shut up shop.

“It seems unusual that a business would close as a result of too much work but we’ve got to remember that these are mum-and-dad businesses and the pressure of that can be too much,” he said.

“We’ve seen a few shops closing as a result of demand. They just can’t keep up.”

A man in a suit and tie stands in front of a car with the bonnet open
WA Motor Trades Association CEO Stephen Moir says more needs to be done to get skilled workers from overseas.(ABC News: Jacqueline Lynch)

The association has taken on a record number of trainees this year but it is expected to be several years before they are work-ready.

In the meantime, Mr Moir said the federal government needed to make it easier, quicker, and more affordable for small businesses to bring in skilled workers from overseas.

“Right now on average it will cost a small business $20,000 to bring one migrant worker across,” he said.

“That is exceptionally high for a small businesses to cope with but when you’re needing four, five or six staff members that becomes almost impossible.”

A man with a beard fixing a car
Clinton Godde is doing work himself at his small business because he cannot get enough skilled staff.(ABC News: Jacqueline Lynch)

There are already more than 2,400 skilled migrant workers currently employed in Australia’s automotive industry, with almost 700 in Western Australia.

However, the Department of Home Affairs said it acknowledged the pressure skills shortages were putting on the community.

“The upcoming Jobs and Skills Summit will provide the opportunity for meaningful consultation with industry stakeholders to address labor shortages and ensure Australia’s economic recovery from COVID-19,” a spokesperson said.

The department said the cost of bringing in skilled workers included a tax-deductible levy.

Customers wait weeks, months for work

Worker shortages have taken their toll on customers, with people waiting up to six weeks for a standard service or even months to get their car repaired, refurbished, or restored.

Kalgoorlie resident Mandy Reidy has been waiting almost a year to get her old EJ Holden out of the garage and onto the road.

An old photograph of a woman and her dog and an EJ Holden
Mandy Reidy has been waiting about a year to refurbish a car similar to the one she took across the Nullarbor almost 30 years ago.(Supplied: Mandy Reidy)

Ms Reidy said she had reached out to several businesses to try to get the vehicle restored.

“I have looked locally, I have had people suggested from the eastern states… it’s just about a year now that I have been waiting and I still have to wait,” she said.

“It’s a bit slow-paced and I have found that with other sources that I have reached out to try to get the car restored are just either a one-man band or they can’t find workers.”

Ms Reidy bought the vehicle from a friend, to remind her of the EJ Holden she took on a road trip across the Nullarbor nearly 30 years ago.

“It means a lot to me and I just want to be able to drive it again.”

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US

Campers witness the aftermath of Apple River stabbing

River’s Edge Apple River Campground is stopping tubing operations on Sunday, following a stabbing that left one teen dead and four injured this weekend.

The business posted on their Facebook page they will resume operations on Monday, Aug. 1.

People on the campground told FIVE EYEWITNESS NEWS it was a fun, family weekend turned tragic.

“We’ve been coming here for about 15 years just as a family reunion with my mom’s side,” Monica Anderson, camper, said. Anderson calls tubing on Apple River in Somerset, Wisconsin a family favorite. “We hang out and have family time and go down the river, have some drinks,” she said.

But tubing was cut short on Saturday.

Anderson and her family were floating by when they saw people gathered on the shore giving CPR.

Soon after, they were evacuated from the water.

“We see CPR going on in two groups and it was bystanders,” she said. “The police then showed up and they had to wade through the water because it was down off and they couldn’t drive right up to it.”

The 911 call came in around 3:45 pm on Saturday reporting several people had been stabbed on the Apple River, north of the Sunrise Bridge, while tubing.

St. Croix County Sheriff’s office arrived on scene and found five people with stab wounds in the chest and torso.

According to the report, deputies, first responders and citizens provided medical care to those injured. All five victims were transported to local hospitals.

One of the victims, a 17-year-old boy from Stillwater, later died. The four others had serious injuries, but are stable, according to the sheriff’s office.

With help from witnesses, authorities found the 52-year-old suspect on the river at the exit point for tubers.

“The sheriff came by in a rush and he was like ‘you need to get out people are being hurt,’” Melanie Lu, camper, said.

Lu was tubing on the river with her family when the stabbing happened.

She said it’s the first time they spent the weekend on Apple River and it may be the last. “It doesn’t feel like it’s safe and it kind of like makes you think like we would want to come back?” Lu said.

Related: Suspect to be named Monday in Apple River stabbing that left 1 dead, 4 injured

Categories
Business

The nightmare of today’s air travel

This thought came to mind last week as I stood in a long queue at a small Spanish airport, where I saw something I had never seen in more than 30 years of flying.

The line was full of people boarding two flights to London, one to Gatwick, which I was on, and one to Stansted, both due to leave at about 11am. We were queuing to get our passports stamped, as one does post-Brexit, just a few meters from exit doors beyond which waiting plans were clearly visible.

As the clock ticked towards 11 o’clock and fears of closed gates grew, a ruckus broke out at the front of the queue. Passengers bound for Stansted, including parents who had been queuing for ages with toddlers in tow, started shouting at an airline attendant for not calling them to the front of the line earlier.

All at once, several barged past the passport station and made a break for the exit. A burly policeman bolted out of the station and ordered everyone to stay put. The would-be escapees returned, forlorn, reporting the gate had closed, and they had been left to book new flights, with no airline help in sight.

This was just one small drama among the thousands that have turned flying into a chaotic hellscape of canceled flights, lost luggage and unspeakable queues across the world this year.

The pandemic staff shortages and supply chain glitches driving this upheaval are less visible than the Icelandic volcano ash and 9/11 terrorist attacks that caused past air travel woes, but they are just as troubling.

Last week, bosses at Heathrow airport and Qatar Airways warned industry disruption could last a lot longer than expected. “I think that it will last for a couple of years,” Qatar Airways’ chief executive, Akbar Al Baker, told the FT.

Predictably, a cottage industry has emerged to advise travelers what to do. Some tips are obvious: prepare for queues; fly direct; take only hand luggage and if you must check bags, bring medicine and other necessities with you in the cabin.

Some ideas seem daft: you can check your bags the evening before an early morning flight with some airlines and a lot of experts recommend it, on the grounds you can sail through calmly the next day. But it requires an extra trip to the nightmare that is today’s airport.

Other advice was new to me. It’s best to fly as early in the day as possible because first flights are rarely cancelled, a flight attendant wrote in New York Times the other week.

Later flights are more vulnerable to thunderstorms that build as days get warmer, plus rising traffic at busy airports and flight crews reaching duty limits.

For what it’s worth, my brush with summer travel has taught me this: it’s more important than ever to fly on weekdays if you can.

If you are in a long queue, do not be afraid to ask staff to take you to the front of the line if it is getting close to boarding time.

Finally, be pleasant to those staff. Most are doing their best on the front lines of a bleak situation they cannot avoid. You, with luck, are only passing through.

Financial Times

Categories
Technology

Intel Raptor Lake Core i5 and Core i7 samples appear in new benchmarks

A reviewer in China has been building up a small collection of early Raptor Lake processor samples. We’ve already seen the 13900K tested in benchmarks and now, the same reviewer has returned with early performance numbers for Intel’s upcoming Core i5-13600K and Core i7-13700K processors.

Chinese reviewer Extreme Player (via VideoCardz) tested the two chips on two ASRock Steel Legend Z690 motherboards, one using DDR5-5200 memory and the other DDR4-3600. According to the reviewer, the Core i5-13600K is a 14C/20T chip that can boost up to 5.2GHz on the P-cores and 3.9GHz on the E-cores. As for the Core i7-13700K, it comes with 16 cores and 24 threads, with the P-cores clocking up to 5.4GHz and the E-cores up to 4.3GHz. Besides the higher clock speeds compared to their predecessors, another noticeable difference is the L2 cache, which doubled from one generation to the other.

Extreme Player benchmark suite included a wide variety of tests, including Blender, Cinebench R23, CPU-Z, AIDA64 and Geekbench. Overall, the Core i5 chip was 5% faster in single-core loads than its predecessor, while the Core i7 was 9%. In multi-core workloads, the i5-13600K scored about 40% higher than the i5-12600K, and the i7-13700K was around 30% faster than the i7-12700KF.

Although the performance improvements are decent, they brought a considerable power consumption bump. For example, the 13th Gen Core i5 chip was pulling 178W, up from the 148W of the 12th Gen Core chip. In the i7’s case, it’s even worse, with the 13700K consuming 244W, while the i7-12700KF was “only” at 188W.

KitGuru says: Raptor Lake is shaping up to be Alder Lake with higher clock speeds and additional cores. With that in mind, we’ll see some decent multi-core gains, but less impressive growth in single-core performance and of course, increased power consumption.

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Entertainment

Artists and performers with disabilities given mainstream platform in regional town

Vincent Worlters remembers the moment his dreams of being a professional musician were initially crushed.

“As a young man, I was being trained to be an opera singer, but life got in the way with the onset of my disability, which was quite profoundly disabling,” Mr Worlters said.

“And basically, it destroyed my opportunities to be a professional singer.”

Despite his diagnosis, Mr Worlters was determined music would remain a big part of his life.

“The only breath I got from my horrible illness was to grab my guitar and sing and then the symptoms would come to a stop.”

Man in a floral shirt and vest smiles at the camera with green and purple stage curtains in the background
Vincent Worlters did not realize his love of acting until he joined a disability theater group.(ABC Mid North Coast: Madeleine Cross)

A new inclusive arts program on the NSW mid-north coast has now given Mr Worlters a chance to live out his dreams on stage.

The Wauchope Regional Art Program, also known as WRAP, is designed to assist artists with disabilities to build their confidence and skills. It connects them with professional artists so they can participate in the mainstream industry.

Mr Worlters joined WRAP’s theater class, along with Steph Smith and Kirsty Georges.

“The acceptance is really quite beautiful,” he said.

“Groups like this give me an opportunity, whereas nothing else will.”

Two men sing together while sitting on a stage, two women dance in the background
The WRAP theater group rehearsed for weeks with mentor Ian Castle.(ABC Mid North Coast: Madeleine Cross)

The trio is mentored by singer and musician Ian Castle.

“It’s this collaborative effort building on the strengths they have as individuals and myself inspiring them to try other things,” Mr Castle said.

The theater group performed on stage at a mainstream arts festival in the region called ArtWalk in front of a crowd of spectators.

It was a dream come true for the close-knit team.

“When the audience gets behind you, your whole performance totally lifts to a whole new level,” Mr Worlters said.

“You can see it in their faces, or the cheers, and their claps. It’s really uplifting.”

Audience watches performers on stage as the sun sets behind them on a river
WRAP groups performed at Port Macquarie’s ArtWalk event, which attracts thousands of spectators.(ABC Mid North Coast: Madeleine Cross)

Kirsty Georges said her parents and family were “stoked” about the program and her performance.

“I feel it inside my chest. I feel happy,” she said.

And it is not just stage performers who have thrived in the inclusive program.

Artists celebrate inclusion

Creating visual art has always been a source of joy for Kerri Cains but, due to her intellectual disability, she often found it hard to be taken seriously.

“I’ve always had trouble with reading and writing and maths skills,” Ms Cains said.

“But it’s always been a passion of mine to do art.”

Lady in floral shirt stands in front of colorful art work.
Kerri Cains is over the moon to have her artwork on display at a local gallery.(ABC Mid North Coast: Madeleine Cross)

Ms Cains said she was over the moon to be involved in the Wauchope Regional Art Program and its workshops.

“It’s hard to find places sometimes that are so inclusive,” Ms Cains said.

“In this art class, in particular, we don’t feel like we’re just put on the side … it’s actual artists actually teaching you how to do it and they treat you like they would treat everybody else.”

Two women in floral shirts stand in an art gallery looking at pieces of art work on a table.
Graphic designer and mentor Michele Kaye worked with Kerri Cains to develop the WRAP logo.(ABC Mid North Coast: Madeleine Cross)

Thanks to WRAP, Ms Cains’ work has been displayed front and center at Wauchope Art Gallery as part of the ArtWalk event.

“I can show my family and my friends and everybody in town will see my artwork,” she said.

“It’s just good to see that disability and the arts are coming together in such an amazing way.”

Ms Cains was paired with and mentored by graphic designer Michele Kaye.

“It’s beautiful, its humbling, its real, it’s life. It’s what everyone should be seeing day by day,” Ms Kaye said.

Two women in floral shirts stand side by side and smile with artwork in the background
Michele Kaye says she loved every moment of mentoring Kerri Cains.(ABC Mid North Coast: Madeleine Cross)

Artists’ skills ‘skyrocket’

WRAP was established by the Wauchope Community Arts Council, through an NDIS Information, Linkages and Capacity Building Grant.

Project coordinator Vicky Mackey said WRAP was started due to a lack of similar services on the Mid North Coast.

“Even though we have a very busy arts community, they weren’t connecting with people with disabilities,” she said.

“Disabled artists were segregated.”

Woman in white and red costume performs on stage, under a blue light
WRAP theater group member Steph Smith performed a solo show on stage.(ABC Mid North Coast: Madeleine Cross)

Ms Mackey said it was fantastic the group had been given its first mainstream platform at ArtWalk.

“It’s the first time that a lot of them have got to perform in public,” she said.

“The growth in their confidence and just the way they hold themselves, the ability to communicate with strangers, it’s skyrocketed.”

Woman with blonde hair and green jacket smiles at the camera, with artwork behind her
WRAP project coordinator Vicky Mackey was inspired by her own daughter’s disability.(ABC Mid North Coast: Madeleine Cross)

Ms Mackey said she was inspired by her own daughter who has a disability.

“I always try to have the best for her, living the best life she can, and that’s what it’s all about — giving these guys an opportunity,” she said.

“In art, it’s not about being perfect or the best. It’s about the passion and the joy that the person can show in their artwork or their dance.

“It doesn’t have to be perfect and that’s great — life’s not perfect.”

Crowd of people watch performance with buildings and palm trees in the background
The WRAP performances attracted a large crowd at Port Macquarie’s ArtWalk event.(ABC Mid North Coast: Madeleine Cross)

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Categories
Australia

New Zealand’s borders fully reopened, as Ardern highlights China concerns

Shared interests with China

At the event, Ardern spoke at length about New Zealand’s relationship with China, saying that even “as China becomes more assertive in the pursuit of its interests”, there are still shared interests that the two countries can and should co-operate on.

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She added that she looked forward to in-person ministerial visits and planned to lead a business delegation to China when COVID measures allowed and that there was the potential for foreign ministerial visits between the two countries as well.

New Zealand has toughened its tone recently on both security and Beijing’s growing presence in the South Pacific, in part due to the signing of a security pact between China and Solomon Islands earlier in the year. But at the same time New Zealand remains dependent on trade with China.

Ardern said that while there were areas that mattered deeply to New Zealand and where the country’s view differed from that of China, New Zealand was willing to engage.

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“We will also advocate for approaches and outcomes that reflect New Zealand’s interests and values, and speak out on issues that do not,” she said.

“Our differences need not define us. But we cannot ignore them,” she said.

New Zealand has consistently expressed concerns about economic coercion, human rights infringement and particularly the treatment of Uyghur in Xinjiang, and democracy advocates in Hong Kong and most recently about the potential militarization of the Pacific. On a number of occasions New Zealand has been part of joint statements on these concerns.

Ardern added managing the differences in the relationship between the two countries would not always be easy and “there were no guarantees”.

Ardern also on Monday urged China to condemn Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, saying Beijing has benefited from international rules and has a duty to uphold them.

“As history shows us repeatedly, when large countries disregard sovereignty and territorial integrity with a sense of impunity, it does not bode well particularly for small countries like New Zealand,” Ardern said.

“And that’s why as a permanent member of the United Nations Security Council, and in line with its commitment to the UN Charter, we continue to urge China to be clear that it does not support the Russian invasion, and have called on China to use its access and influence to help bring an end to the conflict.”

Reuters, with Bloomberg

Categories
US

Will Ivana help Donald Trump with tax breaks from beyond the grave? | donald trump

When Ivana Trump, Donald Trump’s first wife, was buried last month near the first hole of Trump National Golf Club in Bedminster, New Jersey, few immediately guessed that her grave’s location might also serve her ex-husband’s long-held tax planning purposes.

Tax code in New Jersey exempts cemetery land from all taxes, rates, and assessments – and her serious, as such, potentially has advantageous tax implications for a Trump family trust that owns the golf business, in a state where property and land taxes are notoriously high.

According to documents published by ProPublica, the Trump family trust previously sought to designate a nearby property in Hackettstown, New Jersey, as a non-profit cemetery company.

But Ivana Trump, who died earlier this month at 73 after a fall at her home in New York City’s Manhattan, is the first person known to have been buried at the golf course, where Donald Trump and his family spend a lot of time in the summers.

Under New Jersey’s tax code, cemetery companies are not only exempt from real estate taxes, rates, and assessments or personal property taxes, but also business taxes, sales taxes, income taxes, and inheritance taxes, according to Insider.

Brooke Harrington, a professor of sociology at Dartmouth College in New Hampshire, tweeted on Saturday that she had looked into claims that Ivana Trump’s resting-place might also benefit her ex-husband’s tax planning from beyond the grave.

“As a tax researcher, I was skeptical of rumors Trump buried his ex-wife in that sad little plot of dirt on his Bedminster, NJ golf course just for tax breaks. So I checked the NJ tax code & folks…it’s a trifecta of tax avoidance. Property, income & sales tax, all eliminated,” Harrington wroteafter opinions accusing Trump of being primarily motivated by the possibility of a tax break began pop up on social media.

Harrington later tweeted the full New Jersey tax code for cemetery land. While there is no stipulation for the amount of human remains necessary in order to qualify for the break, sales of wreaths, larger evergreen arrangements, flowers and other similar items are taxable.

While saying she was surprised about the tax suggestions she also accused Donald Trump of burying his wife in “little more than a pauper’s grave” and as a result disgracing the three children they had together, Ivanka, Don Jr and Eric.

And it is. I was surprised. That’s why I checked and why I posted the thread.

I couldn’t believe her 3 kids–whom she apparently loved & who loved her–would allow their father to treat their mother like this. Burying Ivana in little more than a pauper’s grave disgraces them all.

— Brooke Harrington (@EBHarrington) July 31, 2022

Previous reports have suggested that her former husband has planned to build different types of cemetery operations at the Bedminster golf course.

Last week it was the venue for the Saudi Arabia-backed LIV Golf tournament and was the focus of protests by some families of victims of the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the US, after Donald Trump previously joined opinions that the kingdom was behind the Al-Qaida plot to hijack passenger jets and crash them into the World Trade Center in New York and the Pentagon.

US public radio station NPR reported in 2012 under the online headline “Fairway to Heaven” that Trump planned to build himself a mausoleum on the property, prompting some local objections. That proposal was later expanded to a cemetery that could contain upwards of a 1,000 possible graves.

That plan was later dropped and replaced with a design for a “10-plot private family cemetery” in the same spot, and refined again into a proposal for a commercial 284-plot cemetery, the station reported.

Ivana Trump was buried in a plot close to the first tee of the golf course, following her funeral in Manhattan on 20 July. Her resting place in Ella is currently marked with a rudimentary wreath of white flowers and an engraved granite stone.

However it is unlikely that the 1.5 acre plot would deliver tax exemptions to the entire Bedminster property – any break only applies so long as the plot is less than 10 acres.

But every break counts, and the former president has previously designated the plot as a farm because some trees on the site are turned into mulch used for flower beds, according to the Washington Post.

Trump’s notions to partially designate the golf course as a cemetery date to at least 2014. Plans then filed with local and state authorities listed a proposal for a pair of graveyards – one for the family, another with 284 plots for sale. The Washington Post noted that buyers, presumably avid golfers, “could pay for a kind of eternal membership” to the club.

But Trump, true to form, had not at that time settled on a course of action. Robert Holtaway, a Bedminster town official, said he had doubts about the cemetery plans. “It never made any sense to me.” But, I added, “we don’t question motives. We’re there as a land-use board”.

Trump already has a plot at All Faiths Cemetery in Jamaica, Queens, close to his mother and father, but plans for his Bedminster mausoleum were suitably grandiose: 19 feet high, in stone, with obelisks, and planted smack in the middle of the course .

Trump has kept silent about his plans for how the “Eternal Donald” will be commemorated in the earthly realm. In 2007, then aged 60, he told the New York Post that the golden course mausoleum was a rational choice.

“It’s never something you like to think about, but it makes sense,” he told the paper’s Page Six column. “This is such a beautiful land, and Bedminster is one of the richest places in the country.”

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Crypto clients beg for their cash back after lender’s crash

An Irishman at risk of losing his farm. An American having suicidal thoughts. An 84-year-old widow’s lost life savings: People caught in the meltdown of crypto lender Celsius are pleading for their money back.

Hundreds of letters have poured into the judge overseeing the firm’s multi-billion-dollar bankruptcy and they are heavy with anger, shame, desperation and, frequently, regret.

Celsius and its CEO Alex Mashinsky had billed the platform as a safe place for people to deposit their crypto currencies in exchange for high interest, while the firm slowed out and those invested deposits.

The company owed $4.7 billion to its users, according to a court filing earlier this month, and the endgame is unclear.

“From that hard-working single mom in Texas struggling with past-due bills, to the teacher in India with all his hard-earned money deposited in Celsius — I believe I can speak for most of us when I say I feel betrayed, ashamed, depressed, angry,” wrote one client who signed their letter EL

“I have been a loyal Celsius customer since 2019 and feel completely lied to by Alex Mashinsky,” wrote a client who AFP is not identifying to protect his privacy. “Alex would talk about how Celsius is safer than banks.”

– Repeated assurances before fail –

“We have made it through crypto downturns before (this is our fourth!). Celsius is prepared,” the firm wrote.

One client, who reported having $32,000 in crypto locked up at Celsius, noted the impact.

But that changed quickly, and on June 12 Celsius announced the freeze: “We are taking this action today to put Celsius in a better position to honor, over time, its withdrawal obligations.”

“By the time I finished the e-mail, I had collapsed onto the floor with my head in my hands and I fought back tears,” wrote one man who had about $50,000 in assets with Celsius.

Others reported heavy stress, lack of sleep and feelings of deep shame for putting their retirement savings or their children’s college money into a platform that was far riskier than they knew.

Celsius did not reply to a request for comment on the clients’ letters.

“It’s just not unusual for people to come out of something like this with zero,” said Don Coker, an expert witness on banking and finance.

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