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Sports

Liverpool defeats Manchester City to win Community Shield, highlights, Darwin Nunez goal, Erling Haaland, Julian Alvarez

Liverpool struck first blood against Manchester City ahead of the new Premier League season as Darwin Nunez made an instant impact for Jurgen Klopp’s men to win the Community Shield 3-1.

In a tale of two big summer signings, Nunez came off the bench to win a penalty and score his first goal since an $AUD109 million move from Benfica, while Erling Haaland had a City debut to forget.

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Trent Alexander-Arnold’s blistering strike gave Liverpool a deserved halftime lead in Leicester.

But it was City’s other new forward who hauled Pep Guardiola’s men back into the game after the break as Julian Alvarez equalised.

Tying down Mohamed Salah to a new three-year deal was Liverpool’s other major piece of summer business and the Egyptian was deadly from the penalty spot after Nunez’s header was handled by Ruben Dias.

The Uruguayan then got his own glory moment by stooping to head home in stoppage time before tearing off his shirt in celebration.

Victory saw Liverpool win the traditional season curtain-raiser for the first time since 2006 and lay down an early marker in what is expected to be another battle between the sides for the Premier League title.

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City held off the Reds to win the Premier League for a fourth time in five years by a point in a thrilling finale to last season.

Guardiola’s men had to come from 2-0 down on the final day of the campaign to beat Aston Villa and were again guilty of a slow start.

Salah was the provider for the opening goal as he laid Thiago Alcantara’s cross field pass back to the edge of the box and Alexander-Arnold smashed in off the post with the aid of a slight deflection off Dias.

City had played just two pre-season friendlies to Liverpool’s four and took half an hour to find their feet.

Haaland was denied by Liverpool stand-in goalkeeper Adrian with his first sight of goal.

However, the Norwegian should have opened his City account moments later as he failed to properly connect with Joao Cancelo’s inviting cross.

Nunez was given his chance to shine on the hour mark, but fluffed his first big chance when Ederson prevailed in a one-on-one.

Darwin Nunez got on the scoresheet with Liverpool's third goal.  (Photo by Mike Hewitt/Getty Images)
Darwin Nunez got on the scoresheet with Liverpool’s third goal. (Photo by Mike Hewitt/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

At the other end, City’s new South American striker also got his career in England off to a flying start.

Alvarez’s arrival at the Etihad has gone under the radar in the hype surrounding Haaland.

But the Argentine, who scored six goals in one Copa Libertadores match in May, is also regarded as one of the world’s most exciting young forwards.

Alvarez was quickest to react to the rebound after Adrian saved Phil Foden’s initial effort and the goal stood after a VAR review for offside.

It needed another the intervention of VAR once more for Liverpool to restore their lead seven minutes from time.

Referee Craig Pawson pointed to the spot after seeing a replay of Nunez’s header coming back off the arm of Dias.

Salah was deadly as ever from 12 yards as he drilled into the bottom corner despite Ederson going the right way.

Nunez then ended any doubt over the result when he pounced on Andy Robertson’s header across goal.

But City’s miserable day did not end there as Haaland hit the bar with the goal gaping deep in stoppage time to keep the Norwegian superstar waiting to open his account in English football.

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Categories
Australia

Pay rise for West Australian public sector workers in a bid to offset rising inflation, cost-of-living pressures

The West Australian government will give all public sector workers a 3 per cent annual pay rise, over two years, and a one-off $2,500 payment, in an attempt to offset rising inflation and cost-of-living pressures.

Industrial action had been escalating in recent weeks over the West Australian government’s wages policy, with unions urging the state to lift its 2.75 per cent wage cap to reflect the soaring cost of living.

Public service employees who have already accepted the previous agreement — including teachers, doctors and transit guards — will receive the difference and have the one-off $2,500 payment paid to them in the coming weeks.

The new offer also includes a 0.5 per cent superannuation guarantee increase per year, over two years.

Mid-shot of Mark McGowan
Premier Mark McGowan says the wage increase comes after considerable consultation with public sector unions.(ABC News: James Carmody )

Premier Mark McGowan said the government wanted to recognize workers for their efforts during the pandemic.

“We’re going to change our wages policy and make it more generous for our public sector workforce, who are doing a terrific job, particularly over the COVID period,” Mr McGowan said.

“Our base pay rate is more generous than New South Wales’. It’s more generous than Victoria’s and I think it better reflects the expectations of the workforce.

“And, certainly for this year — for the vast majority of the workforce — it’s significantly above the inflation rate.

“We have significant competition for labour. It’s important we have a very vibrant, very successful economy, that we have a well-rewarded workforce, that we resolve these EBA issues, and we get back to the business of service delivery.”

The changes will apply to more than 150,000 public sector workers, with an expected price-tag of $634 million over the coming four years, bringing the total wages bill to $2.54 billion over that period.

Mr McGowan said that while the state government was doing all it could to alleviate cost-of-living pressures, it was also important to protect the state’s finances.

“Maintaining a good budget is very important to ensure that we have enough money to spend on what is important, and we don’t get ourselves into a difficult position and have the credit rating outcomes that other states and territories have had.”

Crowds of health workers in uniform and masks holding signs.
Industrial action has been escalating in recent weeks over the state’s wages policy. (ABC News: Keane Bourke)

The state’s Industrial Relations Minister Bill Johnston said the new wage policy offered the “right balance”.

“This is an important adjustment that reflects the changed circumstances that we’ve had since December last year,” he said.

“We’re responding appropriately. We have to protect the interests of the taxpayers, but we also have to be generous to the workforce.”

Many workers going ‘backwards’

UnionsWA has criticized the announcement, saying one-off cash payments are no substitute for real base wage increases.

However, it welcomed what it called the McGowan government’s recognition that its public sector wages policy did not meet the needs of workers in the state.

A head and shoulders shot of UnionsWA assistant secretary Owen Whittle outdoors wearing a blue shirt and spectacles.
Unions WA Secretary Owen Whittle says the government announced the offer without genuine bargaining. (ABC News: Jon Sambell)

UnionsWA secretary Owen Whittle said low-wage public sector workers would benefit most, but others much less so.

“For many public sector workers — police, firefighters, child protection workers, prison officers — they’ve been going backwards for five years and this policy will ensure they continue to go backwards,” Mr Whittle said.

“One-off cash payments are not a substitute for real base wage increases for public sector workers.”

Mr Whittle said the announcement was made without consultation with unions.

“This isn’t genuine bargaining. We’re not in the room bargaining these pay increases. The government is just dropping this on us.”

The Australian Nurses Federation is still considering the wages offer, but indicated lowering workloads was as important as any pay rise.

That union’s Mark Olsen said the new offer was still not as good as that of nurses in most other states.

“It still leaves West Australian nurses and midwives as the second-lowest paid in the country, without any transparent regulation of their workloads,” Mr Olsen said.

A close up of Australian Nursing Federation state secretary Mark Olsen with a serious expression
The ANF’s Mark Olsen says the offer leaves WA nurses as the second lowest paid in Australia. (ABC News: Keane Bourke)

Opposition questions long-term wages plan

Western Australia’s Shadow Treasurer, Steve Thomas, labeled the increase “moderately generous”, but said the government should do more to help those who are not in the public sector.

He renewed calls for government fees and charges to be frozen, at a cost of $160 million, which would benefit every West Australian.

Mr McGowan has previously said the current approach — which increases fees and charges at a rate below inflation and gives households a $400 electricity credit — delivers a better result than a freeze.

A man in a suit holds his hands out in front of a group of microphones.
Dr Thomas wants to see the government go further in giving all West Australians cost of living relief.(ABC News: Keane Bourke)

Dr Thomas also called for a discussion around the state’s wages policy over the longer-term, particularly as the iron ore price corrects, impacting the state’s bottom line.

“I would have liked to see an overall policy for cost of living. That is: a freeze on fees and charges, for at least the 2022-23 financial year,” he said.

“I would have then liked to see [the Premier] reassess the policy in the longer term and, instead of giving a one-off hit in terms of cash, [take] a genuine look at what the government can afford in terms of wage policy.”

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Categories
US

Family of pilot, who died after exiting plane during mid-flight emergency, left reeling, father says

The father of a North Carolina pilot, who died after exiting a plane during a mid-flight emergency, said his family is still trying to reckon with what led to the 23-year-old’s death.

Charles Hew Crooks had spent years working toward his dream of becoming a pilot, his father Hew Crooks told NBC affiliate WRAL of Raleigh.

Now, Crooks said his family is left wondering what led to his son’s death.

Charles Hew Crooks.
Charles Hew Crooks.WRAL

“We can’t process it right now,” Crooks told WRAL. “I don’t know.”

The body of Charles Hew Crooks, who was co-piloting the flight, was found in a Fuquay-Varina, North Carolina, backyard on Saturday — one day after the incident.

An unidentified family told WRAL that they were home and heard a loud thud in their backyard on Friday. Although they didn’t see anything at the time, police showed up and later found the pilot’s body in the trees of their backyard.

Charles Hew Crooks was not wearing a parachute and it’s unclear why he exited the plane, said Wake County emergency management spokesperson Darshan Patel on Friday. Officials said they believe he either fell or jumped out of the plane.

Charles Hew Crooks was onboard a twin-engine CASA CN-212 Aviocar with another pilot when it took off on Friday. The pilot onboard with Charles Hew Crooks asked to make an emergency landing at Raleigh-Durham International Airport after having an issue with landing gear, the Federal Aviation Administration said. The plane touched down around 2:40 pm and the pilot sustained minor injuries,

“I can’t imagine what happened,” Crooks told WRAL. “We’ll figure it out, I suppose.”

As authorities tried to piece together what happened, Crooks remembered his son as an avid aviator.

“He pursued his private pilot license while he was in college. I think he got that when he was a sophomore,” Hew Crooks said. “He said a couple weeks ago, he wouldn’t trade places with anybody in the world. He loved where he was.”

Crooks said his son was certified to fly in any condition and had previously been a flight instructor. He said the loss of his son from him has left an irreparable void in the family.

“We’re a strong family and we’re a very loving family. But this, it leaves a hole,” he said.

Categories
Technology

This Free AI Tool Restores Family Photos With a Bit of Guesswork – Review Geek

An example of how other restoration tools compare to GFP-GAN.
An example of how other restoration tools compare to GFP-GAN. Wang, Li, Zhang, Shan

We’ve reached a point where AI photo restoration tools are relatively common. But if you want to fix a family photo for free, you’re almost guaranteed to end up with terrible results. That’s why Tencent’s AI researchers launched GFP-GAN, a free and open-source restoration tool that takes just seconds to fix an old photo.

The GFP-GAN (Generative Facial Prior-Generative Adversarial Network) is quite unique. Unlike most AI restoration tools, it aims to fix old photos without obscuring the identity of their subject. That means clearing noise, patching creases, bringing out detail, and enhancing color with just a bit of guesswork.

As you can see in the above images, GFP-GAN doesn’t add much to photos. It simply cleans things up and, when necessary, fills in some gaps. Subjects aren’t losing their facial hair or mutating into a stranger. This is partially thanks to NVIDIA’s StyleGAN-2, which Tencent researchers use alongside their own GFP-GAN model. (NVIDIA’s model made waves in 2020 when it recreated Pac Man, the arcade game, from scratch. It’s good at making safe, educated guesses.)

Now, AI restoration tools are never perfect, and GFP-GAN does its fair share of guesswork. Tencent researchers warn that restored photos may not be a satisfactory resolution, and that in some cases, family members may look a bit off. If you’re unlucky, they could even transform into another person.

You can try GFP-GAN now in your browser or download the source code at Github. In theory, anyone can take GFP-GAN and tweak it to fulfill different tasks or integrate it with new software.

Source: Tencent via Engadget

Categories
Sports

Tom Burgess sat off, South Sydney Rabbitohs, Cronulla Sharks, ban, suspension, match review committee, tackle, high shot, golden point, Ronaldo Mulitalo

South Sydney enforcer Tom Burgess has taken the early guilty plea and will be sidelined for one week after he was sent off for a high shot on Saturday night.

A lazy swinging arm collected Sharks center Ronaldo Mulitalo high on the halfway line with three minutes left in golden point.

Burgess was charged with a careless high tackle and will miss next week’s clash against the Warriors.

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Burgess was sitting off in the loss.Source: FOX SPORTS

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The Rabbitohs were penalized over the shot and three tackles later Cronulla halfback Nicho Hynes’ slotted the match-winning field goal.

“High tackle Burgess, it’s a big problem, it’s on halfway,” Dan Ginnane said on Fox League.

“No matter what it’s a penalty to Cronulla, but what is the aftermath.

Ooft, a bit of force in that from Burgess. The players from Cronulla have just seen a replay and that’s got them bubbling again.

“Gone. Sit off. Tom Burgess straight from the field and they will finish with 12 and they have three and a half minutes to hold on with 12.”

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Co-commentator Steve Roach believes Burgess was unlucky to be penalized, let alone sent off.

“He was just trying to do something for his team, a bit over the top but I don’t think he hit him in the head actually, it slid up,” Roach said.

Hynes kicked for touch and three tackles later sent the home crowd into raptures by slotting a golden point field goal.

“Nicho Hynes is ice cool, it’s Cronulla’s night, they’ve done it again at the death in the Shire,” Ginnane said.

“It might be the moment that catapults them into the final four.”

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Categories
Australia

First Nations women don’t report domestic violence due to racism, court told

The inquiry into Queensland Police Service’s response to domestic violence has heard Aboriginal community-controlled organizations must act as first responders for First Nations women to feel safe reporting their experiences.

Dr Marlene Longbottom has told the court many Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women are unwilling to come forward and share their experiences of domestic violence, as the inquest continued in Brisbane on Thursday.

She drew on her research undertaken as part of the 2018-2019 First Response Project, including findings that outlined why Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women are reluctant to report domestic violence to the police and the desperate need for an alternative option.

“First of all, [an Aboriginal community-controlled organisation] would be culturally safe. A police station is not culturally safe,” she said.

“When it comes to the retraumatizing of victim survivors when they’re making a complaint or reporting violence, they have to tell their story over and over and over again.

“There has to be alternative ways for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women to report violence and not necessarily [be] reliant on the police and the police station, because it’s likely that racialized and gendered experiences will occur and [also] further discrimination.

“The other layered context to this is the fact that police being mandatory reporters has the potential for removal of children – we have all of these complex factors.

“So Aboriginal community-controlled organisations… could actually be places where they’re safe, they’re able to come to and actually get the support that they need in a holistic and comprehensive way.”

Racism ’embedded’ in policing culture

The project, which was funded by the Lowitja Institute and was part of Dr Longbottom’s PhD, stated the evidence behind the academic’s personal experiences.

“My research… was an affirmation about what I was seeing as I was growing up in Aboriginal community, with Aboriginal women experiencing violence, but also my own personal lived experience” she said.

“The PhD, what it taught me was that racism is embedded within policing culture. It actually comes out in the racial and gender-based micro and macro aggressions within these structures and systems.

“What I also found was that interpersonally, if a person is displaying certain behaviors that can be seen to be a discriminatory or a racialized experience, that then layers the Aboriginal woman’s experience.

“They’re layered in terms of the Aboriginal woman reporting the situation or the experience, and then having to navigate these attitudes or behaviors by police and self-regulate emotions and thoughts and feelings in that process.”

In her submission provided to the Women’s Safety and Justice Task Force, Dr Longbottom also “urged caution” against the rollout of a women’s only police station as a solution to First Nations women currently not reporting to police stations.

“Again, it comes back to the cultural safety. You can’t just add women and stir,” she said.

“What we see is white services did not support or provide culturally safe services for Aboriginal communities.

“This is why a lot of people get frustrated because there’s a perception that what works for white women will work for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women and that’s simply not the case.

“There’s a whole cultural construct that’s being overlooked and missed… Again, it comes back to a racialized space, and I can’t emphasize enough that we need to cut to the chase and start looking at how race actually impacts service provision and access to services.”

Categories
US

Northwest heat: 6 Oregon deaths may be heat-related as 13 million people swelter under heat alerts

More than 13 million people across the Northwest are under heat alerts Sunday, CNN meteorologist Haley Brink said. Major cities impacted include Portland; Seattle; Billings, Montana; and Boise, Idaho.

In Oregon, officials believe at least six deaths over the past week were heat-related.

The most recent death was reported Saturday in Clackamas County.

“The elderly male who died was in his home that had a non-functioning air conditioner,” the county said in a news release. The medical examiner’s office is investigating the official cause of death.

Maggy Johnston hands out water Tuesday in Salem, Oregon, where temperatures topped 100 degrees.

Five other suspected heat-related deaths happened in Multnomah, Clackamas, Umatilla and Marion counties, Oregon State Police spokesperson Mindy McCartt said Friday.

The official causes of those deaths are also under investigation, McCartt said.

The temperature at Portland International Airport reached or exceeded 95 degrees for “6 straight days, with 3 of those at or just above 100,” the National Weather Service said Saturday.

Portland remains under an excessive heat warning Sunday, the weather service said.

A sign welcomes visitors seeking relief from the heat Tuesday at Charles Jordan Community Center in Portland, Oregon.
The Oregon Department of Emergency Management tweeted resources to get help, including a map showing cooling centers in the state and details on how to get transportation.

But the heat wave scorching the Northwest will ease up this week.

The most extreme temperatures have shifted away from the coast and into interior portions of the Northwest, Brink said Sunday.

“This dome of heat will shift into the northern Plains by Tuesday and into the Midwest by Wednesday,” she said. “And even the Northeast will get into above average temperatures by Thursday and Friday.”

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Categories
Technology

Sony has “officially” ended the PlayStation 4 lifecycle

This just in: Sony has officially “killed” the PlayStation 4.

The PS4 couldn’t quite sell a few million more units to reach the 120 million mark.

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sony has "officially" ended the PlayStation 4 lifecycle

This is one of the biggest takeaways from Sony’s latest gaming earnings report. Make no mistake, the focus is still on the slight hit that video game unit sales took in the last quarter. But, as TweakTown points out, it also served as the “death certification” of the PlayStation 4.

According to TweakTown, all the Sony earnings reports from 2014 until the quarter before its latest one had a section specifically for PS4 console shipments. The Q122 report did not have such a section. Instead, Sony replaced it with a section for PS5 sales. This is the signal for the end of the PS4. Then again, this was a long time coming. Sony first launched the PS4 in 2013. With this “confirmation”, it appears that Sony’s earlier statement that it will make a million more PS4 units for the year was for the last batch.

Now that Sony will stop producing more PS4 units, PS4 sales will top out at 117.2 million. It’s not quite enough to topple the PlayStation 2’s record at 155 million but it should secure a top 5 finish of all time as the Nintendo Switch is expected to eclipse its sales in the next few years after already outselling the PS4 in the United States.

The PS4’s place as the fourth best-selling console in history is probably safe for a couple of years.

At the end of the day, this is good news for PlayStation fans. Sony eventually had to stop supporting the eighth-generation console. With this revelation, God of War: Ragnarok is the last big exclusive to be playable on the PS4. Although this would mean that PS4 owners will have to upgrade to the PS5 to enjoy future exclusives, Sony is making sure that more of its flagship console will become available. In the same report, Sony confirmed that it will start to ship more PS5 consoles this fiscal year than ever before.

If Sony succeeds with its plans, it will ship 18 million PS5 systems through the current fiscal year. This is a new PlayStation sales record.

In the meantime, PS4 and PS5 owners can enjoy the PS Plus free games lineup for next month starting on August 2. A boatload of Yakuza games is also headed to the PS Plus Extra and Premium lineup in the next few months.

Categories
Entertainment

‘Ice-cream’s a disaster!’: behind-the-scenes secrets of Australia’s reality cooking shows | Australian food and drinks

Yot’s battle time on Netflix’s cooking competition Iron Chef: Quest for an Iron Legend, and celebrity chef Curtis Stone is facing challenger Mason Hereford. Their task? To cook five courses in 60 minutes with the surprise ingredient (lamb). Each dish must be inspired by street food and cooked by fire.

“Allez cuisine!” shouts the host. Stone throws a whole lamb over his shoulder and runs with it to the workbench. He saws at the lamb neck, pounds furiously at spices and puffs into a charcoal blower. After a frantic hour, both chefs have miraculously created five gorgeous courses.

Drama, fire and closeup shots of the most mouth-watering dishes are just some of the reasons why we love reality cooking shows. But how do they do it? How can you seamlessly conjure up photogenic phos and telegenic tartines? Legend has it that eyeliner makes great grill marks on steak, glue looks just like ice-cold milk and that car oil gives meat a lovely sheen. So, how much behind-the-scenes “magic” is involved?

Stone preparing lamb
‘There’s no ‘glam squad’ touching up your makeup in the middle of a battle,’ Curtis Stone says of Iron Chef. Photograph: Adam Rose/Netflix

Very little, says Kate Nichols, a former chef who has worked as a food producer on many major shows, most recently SBS’s the Cook Up with Adam Liaw.

“Our audiences are smart,” she says. “You can’t get away with fake food with high-definition cameras, and once you start touching it up, you lose the essence of the dish.”

Because the show is about “real, home-cooked food,” Nichols says the approach is “Adam [Liaw] puts his recipe in the oven and takes it out of the oven.”

“We don’t touch up or replate dishes unless the sauce has set. If it’s a starchy food like risotto, then we might spritz it with water and olive oil, but that’s it.”

Stone (who, incidentally, triumphed in the lamb battle) affirms that on Iron Chef, what you see is what you get.

Adam Liaw with a frying pan over a stovetop
‘adam [Liaw] puts his recipe in the oven and takes it out of the oven’ on the Cook Up. Photograph: SBS

“People always ask me if it’s real. Are the time pressures real? It’s legit – the craziness, not knowing what you’re using beforehand, the running around the kitchen … On Iron Chef they like the gritty bits and don’t care if you get messy. There’s no ‘glam squad’ touching up your makeup in the middle of a battle.”

In episode one, Stone presented the judges with a lamb arepa served under a glass dome filled with smoke. “I was clearly a little nervous as I was carrying it up. You can hear the cloches shaking in my hand! You’ve got to hold the plates perfectly still, walk across the room and describe something without huffing and puffing.”

Time pressure is also an issue for the people behind the cameras. Producer and director Lin Jie Kong traveled around Australia with comedian Jennifer Wong, visiting regional Chinese restaurants for ABC’s Chopsticks or Fork?

“Our show was different from those where everything is beautifully stylized and they’re in a controlled environment with a crew of 20. We had a crew of three, so it was incredibly low budget.”

The Kitchen at the Gawler Palace, South Australia
The Kitchen at the Gawler Palace, South Australia, featured on ABC’s Chopsticks or Fork? Photograph: ABC/Teresa Tan

Kong had just two days to shoot each restaurant, typically filming between lunch and dinner.

To ensure that the chefs didn’t need to make dishes twice, she shot the preparation in the kitchen while the other crew members set up in the dining room, ready to get the “hero shot” as the dish emerged.

“We are rolling as soon as the dish hits the lazy Susan. You only have minutes to get the shot where you see steam rising or the broth glistening and before sauces start congealing.”

Small and awkward kitchens also present a physical challenge. “I’m not that tall and a lot of the workstations are high and the woks are deep. To film inside the woks, I’d have to raise the camera really high above my head, which is quite difficult, especially if they’re stir frying for five minutes and I’m trying to get that slow-motion stir-fry shot .”

Iron Chef is big budget and plentifully resourced, with, Stone reports, an art department that makes everything “big and beautiful.” There’s a culinary team, too. “If you ask for a rotisserie with a live fire bed, they just roll one in. Or you say: ‘I need an inversion circulator’ and they hand you one.”

But while a big budget expands creative possibilities on both sides of the camera, it can’t do a thing about the ticking clock. “Iron Chef is similar to a restaurant where your guests arrive, they sit down and order and you have 15 minutes to get them an appetizer before they get restless.”

Sweet and Sour Barramundi at Happy Garden in Darwin, on ABC's Chopsticks or Forks
Kong found stir-fries – a staple of Chinese cooking – were not naturally photogenic, because ‘they’re saucy and flat’. Sweet and Sour Barramundi at Happy Garden in Darwin, on ABC’s Chopsticks or Forks. Photograph: ABC/Teresa Tan

Keeping calm on set is essential. “It’s a mental game. You are constantly creating dishes in your mind while making sure that it’s all coming together on the plate,” Stone says. “There’s cameras everywhere, producers asking you questions, you’re worried about what the other team is doing, you have sous chefs to keep an eye on … That 60 minutes flashes by, then you think, ‘Oh my God, what did I serve?’”

For non-competitive shows, organization minimizes the risk of on-set disasters. Nichols describes the Cook Up as “a military operation.”

“All the refrigeration, storage and cleaning is kept like a commercial kitchen. On set, it’s all about being prepared for any last-minute problems and having a sense of how to cook food and knowing how it will react.

“Anything that melts, solidifies or is structurally unsound is challenging!”

There are other constraints too. “The studio lighting is quite harsh, so you have to think about pastry under hot lamps or the food props at the back of set that sit out all day,” Nicholas says. “When you work with cream, you put the bowls in the fridge before you whip it so that it can last longer. With ice-cream – ice-cream’s a disaster! – you need dry ice, freezers and extra scoops on hand.”

While working on Chopsticks or Fork, Kong found that stir-fries – a staple of Chinese cooking – were not naturally photogenic, because “they’re saucy and flat”. She worked hard to find their beauty.

Salt and pepper squid at New Bo Wa in Moree, NSW
Salt and pepper squid at New Bo Wa in Moree, NSW which Kong says ‘looked gorgeous’ in the afternoon light. Photograph: ABC/Teresa Tan

“If you get something like Mongolian lamb, it usually comes on a sizzling hot plate and you get the extra texture and steam off the top.

“There was a salt and pepper squid dish we shot which I think looked gorgeous. There was height in the dish, garnishes and a beautiful afternoon light coming through the window.”

So the magic ingredients for making food look beautiful aren’t magic at all – just preparation, hard work, food knowledge, passion and staying cool under pressure.

Kong also cites another influence on what audiences see.

“We can talk about how to plan the shots, but there’s more to it than that,” she says, reflecting on the people she met throughout filming the series. “How we tell a story and what you see on screen is influenced by all of our individual backgrounds. Food is such a vehicle for love and emotion… I hope that we were able to capture that connection in how we shot the food.”

Categories
Sports

Giants coach Mark McVeigh slams own team after Sydney Swans thrashing

The GWS Giants have been lambasted by interim coach Mark McVeigh who said the club was embarrassed in their 17.10 (112) to 5.9 (39) thumping in the Sydney Derby and questioned whether some of his players had “checked out”.

The Sydney Swans victory was courtesy of their highest margin in a derby since 2015 and further incurred humiliation on a Giants outfit that have won only five games for the season and now sit in a 16th position.

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It’s a horrible predicament for a list still laden with so much talent and that prompted McVeigh to lash out post-game.

“We embarrassed our club,” he said.

“They’re far superior to us at the moment, clearly. It’s an unfortunate part of dealing with whether players have checked out or not.”

“I’m extremely disappointed with our midfield as a whole today. It’s just pure work rate and effort. Wanting to defend, wanting to tackle. The motivation should be how proud you are of you as a player and how proud you are of playing for the Giants.”

McVeigh said only eight players in Sam Taylor, Harry Perryman, Josh Kelly, Callan Ward, Adam Kennedy, Lachie Whitfield, Jesse Hogan and Toby Greene “went to the wall” and fought through until the end of the game.

The former Essendon great said he spent a long time in the rooms with the players after the game and sat in silence to see what responses were elicited from the playing group.

I have added that there needs to be a leadership change over in the playing group at the club.

“Without going too much into it we got some good honest feedback from our peers and players which is good. Some players spoke up that you don’t often hear from which is what we need from this club going forward.”

McVeigh singled out two players as future leaders of the club in Harry Perryman, who did an excellent job tagging Swans jet Chad Warner and Sam Taylor who was supreme at the back yet again as he pushes for an All-Australian guernsey and first best and fairest award.

“He is severely dominating games. I’d hate to think if he wasn’t playing how many goals they would have kicked. He’s a star, absolute star,” McVeigh said.

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