News – Page 14 – Michmutters
Categories
US

Shooter still on the run as 3 others charged

Three people, including Best Western employees, were charged Monday in connection to the shooting at Mall of America on Thursday, Aug. 4. The shooter remains at large and has not been formally charged.

They’re accused of helping the shooter and another man evades arrest.

The three people charged are:

  • Denesh Raghubir, 21, of Minneapolis, is charged with aiding an offender to avoid arrest
  • Delyanie Kwen-Shawn Arnold, 23, of Burnsville, is charged with aiding an offender to avoid arrest
  • Selena Raghubir, 23, of Bloomington, is charged with aiding an offender to avoid arrest

The charges

Police working at Mall of America responded to multiple gunshots at the Nike store, where they found three shell casings on the floor inside the entrance. Officers checked surveillance video, which showed a fight breaking out involving six people near the checkout of the store, causing customers to run away.

Then two people involved in the altercation left the store briefly before the suspect returned and fired a handgun several times at the males involved in the fight. The suspected shooter, identified Monday as 21-year-old Shamar Lark, and another man, identified as 23-year-old Rashad May, then ran out the north doors of the mall, into the IKEA parking lot, charges said.

It was later learned the two men may have been picked up by a Best Western hotel shuttle at IKEA and were taken to the hotel, just south of Mall of America.

May called Arnold a few minutes after the shooting, and he received five calls from Arnold between 4:20-4:23 pm, the complaint said. Arnold then contacted his girlfriend, Selena Raghubir, who is an assistant manager at the Best Western, as well as Selena Raghubir’s cousin, Denesh Raghubir, who picked up Lark and May at IKEA in the Best Western shuttle.

Denesh Raghubir told police he knew the two men were friends of Selena Raghubir, and when he dropped them off at Best Western, Selena Raghubir immediately left the front desk and he didn’t see her for about 45 minutes, charges said. He said Selena Raghubir later called him and asked him what time police left.

On Aug. 5, officers searched Arnold and Selena Raghubir’s home and vehicle, where they found the shirts the men were wearing at the time of the shooting, charges said.

People evacuating Mall of America after shooting

Security confirms Mall of America is on lockdown. Bloomington police officers are on scene. Several witnesses told FOX 9 they heard shots fired and then saw people frantically running through the mall.

The complaint says, “The assistance provided by Selena Raghubir, Denesh Raghubir and Arnold and the misinformation provided to police resulted in the flight of [the two men] and the interference in the investigation of the shooting at the Mall of America.”

The three people charged are in custody and are scheduled to make their first court appearance at 1:30 pm on Tuesday. The two people they’re accused of helping after the shooting remain at-large.

Shamar Lark (left) and Rashad May (right) are wanted after Thursday’s shooting at the Mall of America. (Supplied)

Search for the suspects

During a Monday afternoon news conference, Bloomington Police Chief Booker Hodges released photos showing Lark and May. Hodges says May “prompted” Lark to shoot up the store – which Lark followed through on.

Thankfully, no one was hurt by the gunfire but the shooting created a panic with people rushing out of the mall while police with rifles swept the stores, looking for the shooters and victims.

Police are asking members of the public for help finding Lark and May. A nationwide warrant has been issued for their arrests.

“You cannot, in a free society, continue to enjoy all the freedoms that we have and when you show a complete lack of respect for humanity by firing in a crowded mall store,” said Chief Hodges. “We cannot tolerate that as a society.”

Chief Hodges also warned anyone else who might be helping the suspects that they will arrest any other individuals who aid the wanted men.

.

Categories
Entertainment

Collingwood wine bar Congress is closing to make way for a new, mystery restaurant

Hatted Collingwood restaurant Congress will serve its last pig’s head sanga on September 3. The slick brutalist-inspired wine bar opened by brother-sister duo Katie and Michael McCormack in 2017 is closing to make way for a fresh new restaurant whose identity is yet to be determined.

Front-of-house pro Katie McCormack, who managed Congress and helped build its reputation as one of Melbourne’s best new-wave wine bars, passed away in February aged 39 from cancer. Following that tragedy and Katie’s inextricable influence on Congress’s identity, Michael feels it’s time for a fresh start.

“It’s been a tough decision for me, to be honest,” he says. “Do we take a break, have a breath and then continue on with the name and same concept? We just thought we loved what Congress was and we don’t want to dilute that.”

Congress was the ground-floor magnet of a Collingwood apartment building, in a novel new business model that brought...

Congress was the ground-floor magnet of a Collingwood apartment building, in a novel new business model that brought together restaurants and developers. Photo: Dan Hocking



Michael says he is already in talks with a number of (unnamed) Melbourne hospitality groups to operate the space but is also considering his business, Milieu Hospitality, installing something fresh there. He says the beauty of Congress’s minimalist, concrete-forward fit-out is that it lends itself to lots of different ideas.

“If we were to partner with someone, we’d be looking to give someone an opportunity,” he says, adding that it’s a dream scenario for first-time operators who won’t need to spend a cent on the fit-out.

Collingwood locals will have to be patient, though, as Michael doesn’t anticipate the new venue will open until early next year. Current head chef Zach Tinsley will not be part of the next chapter. His desire for him to pursue his own projects was “part of the decision making process,” Michael says.

Siblings Katie and Michael McCormack at their Fitzroy North restaurant Lagotto in 2019.

Siblings Katie and Michael McCormack at their Fitzroy North restaurant Lagotto in 2019. Photo: Jason South



Congress was the first Milieu Hospitality restaurant; Richmond’s Future Future and Fitzroy North’s Lagotto followed.

The two McCormack siblings created a unique model where Michael’s property development business Milieu would build well-designed apartments in desirable locations, while Katie created restaurants at ground-level that added extra pulling power.

Milieu is working on several developments around Melbourne with Brunswick East’s Lygon Street build its next major hospitality project.

For its final month, Congress will serve a menu of greatest hits, such as the kangaroo pastrami, Dutch spice cake and, yes, the pig’s head sanga. Run, don’t walk.

Open Tue-Fri 5.30pm-late, Sat noon-late

49 Peel Street, Collingwood, 03 9068 7464, congresswine.com.au

.

Categories
US

Trump team tried to flush documents, Haberman book claims

A spokesman for former President Donald Trump has denied that he tried to dispose of White House documents by flushing them down toilets after Axios published two images of paper allegedly bearing Trump’s handwriting at the bottom of commodes.

“You have to be pretty desperate to sell books if pictures of paper in a toilet bowl is part of your promotional plan,” Taylor Budowich told the site, which published the images after they were obtained by New York Times reporter Maggie Haberman ahead of the October publication of her book “Confidence Man.”

Budowich then added that “there’s enough people willing to fabricate stories like this in order to impress the media class — a media class who is willing to run with anything, as long as it anti-Trump.”

One photo, purportedly taken in the White House, shows a ripped note with the word “where” written on it at the bottom of a toilet.

The second photo, which was allegedly taken while Trump was on an overseas trip, featured a torn piece of paper bearing the names “Rogers” and “Stefanik” – presumably referring to upstate Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-NY) – in the toilet .

Haberman, who initially reported that Trump liked flushing his notes in February of this year, stood by her reporting during an appearance on CNN Monday.

Toilet with paper at bottom.
The paper allegedly bears former President Donald Trump’s handwriting.
Maggie Haberman via Axios

“People are going to make all kinds of jokes about toilets and so forth,” she said. “It would still be a story if it was a fireplace. And the point is about the destruction of records which are supposed to be preserved under the Presidential Records Act, which is a Watergate-era creation.”

“We knew that Trump had a habit of ripping up paper and that people had to tape it back together,” Haberman added. ” … And so what was happening was White House residence staff were finding pipes were clogged with paper that they believed he had flushed … I’d had additional reporting afterwards from people confirming that Trump had indeed done this and that it happened on at least two foreign trips and in the White House throughout his presidency.”

“Again, it’s important because who knows what this paper was. Only he would know and presumably whoever was dealing with it. But the important point is about the records.”

Toilet with paper at bottom.
Since leaving office, several reports have depicted former President Donald Trump as a notorious destroyer of records.
Maggie Haberman via Axios

The former president swiftly blasted the accusation back in February, calling it “another fake story,” “categorically untrue,” and “simply made up” by Haberman to distract Americans from “how horribly our Country is doing under the Biden Administration.”

Since leaving office, several reports have depicted Trump as a notorious destroyer of records – sensitive or not.

Confidence Man: The Making of Donald Trump and the Breaking of America.
The images were obtained by New York Times reporter Maggie Haberman ahead of the October publication of her book “Confidence Man.”
Amazon/Penguin Press

CNN reported Monday that Trump would instruct aides to carry boxes of unread memoirs, articles, and potential tweets aboard Air Force One, which he would then review and tear up.

One former senior administration official told the outlet that a deputy from the Office of Staff Secretary would pull things out of Trump’s trash or remove items from his desk after the president left the room to comply with federal recordkeeping laws.

Trump has also been accused of keeping boxes of White House documents — some of which contained classified material — at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida.

The National Archives retrieved the boxes in January.

That caught the attention of the House Oversight Committee, which quickly launched an investigation into what it called “Potential Serious Violations” of the Presidential Records Act of 1978.

Federal investigators have also reportedly issued a subpoena for the documents as part of their own investigation into the matter.

.

Categories
US

Pennsylvania defense attorney charged with pressing clients into sex

SCRANTON, Pa. — A defense attorney targeted vulnerable clients and pressured them into having sex in exchange for legal work, the Pennsylvania attorney general’s office said Monday.

Corey J. Kolcharno is charged with four counts of promoting prostitution after an investigation found he sexually exploited clients, tethering “his performance as their counsel to a demand for sexual services from them or in exchange for payment,” police wrote in an affidavit.

Kolcharno — a former Lackawanna County prosecutor — was arraigned Monday and released on a $20,000 unsecured bail. A statement issued by his attorney from him said Kolcharno “has made a conscious decision to accept responsibility.” Kolcharno told reporters he intended to give up his law license.

According to state police, Kolcharno targeted women who struggled with addiction, had been sexually abused or had financial problems. At first he requested nude photos or worn underwear, then escalated his predatory behavior into a demand for sex in exchange for legal services, authorities said. I have paid his clients as much as $500, police said.

Victims said they were ashamed but felt they had no choice but to give in, authorities said.

Kolcharno “picked these victims because they had limited choices, because he thought they would be easy to silence, and less likely to be believed if they ever came forward,” Attorney General Josh Shapiro said in a written statement.

Investigators said they found hundreds of sexually explicit images of Kolcharno’s clients on his cellphone.

Police said the crimes took place between 2018 and 2022, when Kolcharno was a partner in the Fanucci & Kolcharno law firm outside Scranton.

Before reentering private practice, Kolcharno was an assistant district attorney in Lackawanna County from 2005-2011.

.

Categories
Technology

Here’s when and how you can access the Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 beta







Here’s when and how you can access the Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 beta – The AU Review





















Activision has recently announced exactly how and when fans can get their hands on the Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 beta. And the best news? It’s only a few weeks away.

The beta itself will be available at an earlier date for those who have pre-ordered the game, with two separate weekends providing access to the beta over a couple of days. We’ve outlined them for you below:

  • weekend 1
    • Saturday September 17th, 3am AEST until Tuesday September 20th, for both PS5 and PS4 owners who have pre-ordered the game.
    • Monday September 19th, 3am until Tuesday September 20th, for all PS5 and PS4 owners.
  • weekend 2
    • Friday September 23rd, 3am AEST until Monday September 26th for all PS5 and PS4 owners, and for Xbox Series X|S/Xbox One/PC owners who have pre-ordered the game.
    • Sunday September 25th, 3am until Monday, September 26th, for all console and PC owners.

Call Of Duty Modern Warfare 2 Beta Dates

Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 will launch on the PlayStation 5, PlayStation 4, Xbox Series X/S, Xbox One and Windows PC on the 28th of October, 2022.

Matthew Arcari

Matthew Arcari is the games and technology editor at The AU Review. You can find him on Twitter at @sirchunkee, or at the Dagobah System, chilling with Luke and Yoda.

.

Categories
Australia

COVID in WA: Hospitals wind back COVID-19 screening to free up staff as State passes peak

West Australian hospitals will scale back their COVID-19 screening protocols in a bid to free up staff and allow more visitors.

Public hospitals will shift from “red alert” to a new blue alert level from August 15, bringing an end to several months of heightened precautions.

Patients presenting at emergency departments will only be required to undergo rapid antigen tests upon arrival if they are symptomatic.

The testing requirement will also be removed for asymptomatic visitors unless they are visiting a high-risk area or vulnerable patients.

Visitors must still show proof of vaccination but staff will conduct spot checks rather than mass inspections.

The medical system is on its knees at the moment … our system does not have enough beds to allow this to go up much more,

Healthcare workers who had been required to wear N95-style masks across all clinical areas will now only need to do so when caring for vulnerable patients or working in high-risk areas. Surgical masks must be worn elsewhere.

The changes come as hospitals continue to struggle with getting patients through emergency departments and into beds.

Ambulances spent a record 6982 hours ramped outside hospitals in July.

Health Minister Amber-Jade Sanderson says the changes will help ensure effective patient flow and free up frontline health staff.

“This is a measured approach to scaling back the COVID response in hospitals, which has been endorsed by the chief health officer, and expert infection control teams from the WA health system,” Ms Sanderson said on Tuesday.

“In a time when WA has passed its most recent peak of COVID-19, it makes sense to take practical, reasonable measures to free up some burdens, and support healthcare workers and families supporting their loved ones in hospital.”

WA Health Minister Amber-Jade Sanderson (file image)
Camera IconAmber-Jade Sanderson says the COVID screening changes will free up frontline health staff. Credit: AAP

A limit of two visitors per patient will remain but may be extended by staff under certain circumstances.

Visiting hours will be extended at every hospital and essential visitors will be allowed to visit outside the standard hours.

WA Health on Tuesday reported 2,965 new COVID-19 cases. There were 358 people in hospital including 11 in intensive care.

Australian Medical Association WA president Mark Duncan-Smith last month warned changing the screening protocols would make it easier for the virus to spread in hospitals.

“The medical system is on its knees at the moment … our system does not have enough beds to allow this to go up much more,” he said.

.

Categories
US

Victims in Texas golf cart crash by alleged drunk driver ID’d

Four people, including two children, who were killed when an alleged drunk driver plowed into their golf cart in Texas over the weekend have now been identified, police said Monday.

Police named Felipe Bentacur, 49, Destiny Uvalle, 25, Brailyn Cantu, 14, and 4-year-old Kaisyn Bentacur as the victims of the fatal crash in Galveston late Saturday night.

The relationship between the four slain victims wasn’t immediately known, but police said two different families were riding in the cart at the time.

Bentacur died at the scene, while Uvalle and the two children were pronounced dead after being rushed to the hospital.

Two other golf cart passengers, an adult and juvenile, remained in the hospital in critical condition, police said. Their identities haven’t been released publicly.

The six victims had been traveling in the golf cart when a suspected drunk driver, Miguel Espinoza, 45, flew through a stop sign at about 11:30 pm

Galveston police Sgt. Derek Gaspard said Espinoza allegedly crashed his SUV into a pickup truck, which then struck the golf cart.

Tire tracks are seen on the ground.
An alleged drunk driver killed four people after crashing into their golf cart in Texas.
Fox 26 Houston

Espinoza and his passenger suffered minor injuries in the ordeal. They were treated in the hospital and later released, police said.

Gaspard said that he believes the rented golf cart was operating legally on the city street at the time of the crash.

The street where the crash occurred.
Miguel Espinoza allegedly flew through a stop sign at about 11:30 pm
Fox 26 Houston

Galveston Mayor Craig Brown added that golf carts had become “quite a prolific mode of transportation” for residents and visitors to the island resort area.

“I was out last night,” Brown said on Sunday. “The island was busy and there were golf carts — residential as well as rental golf carts — out all over these streets.”

With Post wires

Galveston police Sgt. Derek Gaspard appears in an interview.
Galveston police Sgt. Derek Gaspard said the rented golf cart was legally operating on the city street at the time of the crash.
Fox 26 Houston

.

Categories
Australia

Stretton, Brisbane deaths: Inside home where man and woman found ‘sliced ​​to death’

An affluent community is in shock after the horrific deaths of a mother and son who were ‘sliced ​​to death’ at their ‘President’s Estate’ home.

Police descended on the cul-de-sac crime scene at Coolidge Court in Stretton, Brisbane, at about 9:30am on Monday – where the streets are named after famous American presidents.

Responding officers were confronted with a ‘large amount of blood’ streaming down the stairs as they discovered the bodies of Jifeng Liu, known as Eileen, 47, and her son Sam, in his early 20s.

A 49-year-old man has been arrested over the ‘frenzied attack’ and two ‘bladed weapons’ have been seized.

Police described the blood-soaked scene as ‘confronting and traumatic’.

Jifeng Liu (pictured), known as Eileen, 47, and her son Sam, in his early 20s were found dead inside their home in Brisbane's south

Jifeng Liu (pictured), known as Eileen, 47, and her son Sam, in his early 20s were found dead inside their home in Brisbane’s south

Pictured: The affluent 'President's Estate' home where Jifeng Liu and her son Sam reportedly resided

Pictured: The affluent ‘President’s Estate’ home where Jifeng Liu and her son Sam reportedly resided

Police and forensics rushed to the Coolidge Court residence in Stretton on Monday morning and found the bodies of the mother and son upstairs

Police and forensics rushed to the Coolidge Court residence in Stretton on Monday morning and found the bodies of the mother and son upstairs

Images of the property where the grisly scene played out reveal an affluent house with an interior hallway, upstairs bedroom and backyard with a swimming pool.

The photos obtained by Daily Mail Australia also shows an open plan living area with a spacious modern kitchen, four bedrooms, three bathrooms and a double garage for up to six vehicles.

A stylish brick archway sits in-between a large living room and the main hallway.

A 47-year-old man who reportedly called triple-0 and let officers inside the home is currently in custody assisting detectives with their inquiries.

No charges have been laid yet.

Police said a Cantonese interpreter was needed for the man and that he was taken to hospital for treatment to serious cuts to his arms and lower legs.

A stylish brick archway at the home sits in-between a large living room and the main hallway

A stylish brick archway at the home sits in-between a large living room and the main hallway

Pictured: An upstairs bedroom at the house where the man and woman where killed

Pictured: An upstairs bedroom at the house where the man and woman where killed

The in the affluent suburb property features a pristine swimming pool in the backyard

The in the affluent suburb property features a pristine swimming pool in the backyard

Forensic officers spent much of Monday at the home scouring for clues and photographing evidence outside the front of the double garage

Forensic officers spent much of Monday at the home scouring for clues and photographing evidence outside the front of the double garage

The victims are yet to be formally identified.

‘The scene was confronting and has been described as an (alleged) frenzied attack on the two deceased persons,’ Detective Superintendent Andrew Massingham told reporters.

A major crime scene was set up as officers cordoned off the quiet cul-de-sac and knocked on the doors of neighbours, with the street remaining under a heavy police presence on Monday afternoon.

‘So our forensic officers have been in on a couple of occasions now. The scene is quite traumatic in terms of a large amount of blood that is present,’ Det Supt Massingham said.

Police were confronted with traumatic scenes when they arrived at the Coolidge Court home

Police were confronted with traumatic scenes when they arrived at the Coolidge Court home

The bodies of a woman and a man were found upstairs inside the two storey home

The bodies of a woman and a man were found upstairs inside the two storey home

Det Supt Massingham said the man in custody is believed to have had a ‘link to the address’ but his relationship with the two found dead was yet to be fully established.

‘There were some language difficulties with the interpretation of what he was saying, an interpreter was used by the triple zero service,’ he said.

‘He has exercised his right to silence and has requested the presence of a solicitor.

‘It’s still very early days in the investigation and it’s important that we keep an open mind.

‘There’s been no information from neighbors to indicate that anything has been heard at this stage.’

Det Supt Massingham said there were CCTV cameras at the front of the home, which are yet to be reviewed.

Coolidge Court remained cordoned off with a heavy police presence on Monday afternoon

Coolidge Court remained cordoned off with a heavy police presence on Monday afternoon

Police described the scene inside the home as confronting and traumatic with 'large amounts of blood present' (pictured, forensic officers at the home)

Police described the scene inside the home as confronting and traumatic with ‘large amounts of blood present’ (pictured, forensic officers at the home)

The bodies are expected to be removed from the scene by Monday night with an autopsy to be completed by Tuesday.

Shocked neighbors told the Courier Mail a man, woman and boy lived at the house. They were described as ‘lovely people who mainly kept to themselves’.

‘Recently I haven’t seen them too much but normally they are out in the yard,’ one man said.

‘I think the boy just got his license not that long ago.

‘You don’t think this kind of thing will happen around you but obviously it has.’

Another told the ABC: ‘They kept to themselves, if they were going up the street you’d just wave, say hi and that was about it.’

Police hope to remove the bodies of a man and a woman from the home by Monday night

Police hope to remove the bodies of a man and a woman from the home by Monday night

Shocked neighbors say Coolidge Court is a quiet and peaceful street and that the occupants who lived at the home kept to themselves (pictured, police in the cordoned off street)

Shocked neighbors say Coolidge Court is a quiet and peaceful street and that the occupants who lived at the home kept to themselves (pictured, police in the cordoned off street)

Another local said said he heard a dog constantly barking on Sunday night.

‘In the morning it was very quiet until the police got here, the only thing we could recall was a dog barking and going crazy last night before the other dogs on the street started barking too,’ he said.

‘I have never heard any real noise or anything from that end of the street, it’s usually very quiet so it’s very scary and shocking.’

The property last sold for $760,000 four years ago, according to online data.

The median price for homes in Stretton is more than $900,000 and is home to a population of 4,334, according to the 2016 Census.

The average weekly household income for the suburb is $1,843, well above the national median of $1,234.

.

Categories
Entertainment

Olivia Newton-John said being in denial about her cancer was a ‘good thing’ – two years before death

Late music icon Olivia Newton-John confessed that she had been in ‘denial’ about her cancer battle in recent years – and refused to label her struggle to live as a ‘fight.’

In one of her last poignant red carpet appearances, the Australian star admitted that she even refused to think about cancer on a daily basis.

The fun-loving singer and actress, famous for her role as Sandy in 1978 film Grease, as well as her stellar music career, called life ‘a gift’ no matter the outcome.

A statement from her husband John Easterling posted to her Instagram revealed the singer died peacefully at her Southern California ranch Monday morning. She was 73.

Newton-John had always remained positive about her health even during the worrying times of the pandemic.

Olivia Newton-John spoke candidly about her positive outlook on life amid her long battle with cancer, in an interview with DailyMail.com at the G'Day USA benefit in Beverly Hills in January 2020. She is pictured with her niece, Australian actress Tottie Goldsmith

Olivia Newton-John spoke candidly about her positive outlook on life amid her long battle with cancer, in an interview with DailyMail.com at the G’Day USA benefit in Beverly Hills in January 2020. She is pictured with her niece, Australian actress Tottie Goldsmith

Husband John Easterling accompanied his wife Olivia at the G'Day USA event when she spoke of her denial over cancer

Husband John Easterling accompanied his wife Olivia at the G’Day USA event when she spoke of her denial over cancer

Just two years before her passing, she spoke candidly about her outlook on life at the G’Day USA benefit in Beverly Hills alongside former co-star John Travolta.

‘Gosh, life is a gift and I’ve had an amazing life and I intend to keep going with it and I want to help other people with cancer of course,’ she told DailyMail.com in the January 2020 interview.

‘I have my wellness center in Melbourne and I want to see an end to cancer in my lifetime so other people don’t have to suffer.’

Newton-John was first diagnosed with the disease in 1992 but announced she had overcome the cancer in 2013, the year after her Wellness Center first opened.

But in May 2017, she was told cancer had metastasized and spread to her bones.

Reflecting on her fight to beat the condition, she admitted: ‘I don’t see it as a battle. I don’t think about it a lot, to be honest.

‘Denial is a really good thing and I’m getting stronger and better all the time! I am doing well!…I am feeling wonderful.’

She also admitted that she had hope for her future.

‘I’m winning over and living with it well and that’s how I see it,’ she added.

Just days before her death, Olivia Newton-John posted a heartwarming photo to Instagram with her husband John Easterling

Just days before her death, Olivia Newton-John posted a heartwarming photo to Instagram with her husband John Easterling

Newton-John's husband announced her death on her Facebook page on Monday.  she was 73

Newton-John’s husband announced her death on her Facebook page on Monday. she was 73

Newton-John also reflected on her delight at still being remembered for Grease over four decades after its release.

She confessed: ‘We did something very special together. That movie is still loved.’

She recalled how caring Travolta was during the filming of the musical romantic film.

Asked about her favorite memory on set, she relied: ‘His kindness to me. When there was one scene in the movie – it was my close up, when Rizzo pulls me forward in the bonfire scene – and in the middle of my take, he stopped it and came over to me and whispered in my ear: “I think you can do better.”

‘So that’s really generous. For an actor to do that for another actor. I wasn’t as experienced as him. He was very nurturing and sweet.’

During that same event, lifelong friend and Grease co-star Travolta praised her positive outlook on life, despite her health worries.

He said: ‘Olivia is a survivor and she’s smart and she’s got a lot of life in her and I think she looks at it from the glass half full always and that’s her beautiful, natural approach towards life and I think we all need to do that.’

At the time, Newton-John also said that tumors were ‘receding or they’re going away, which on a Stage 4 metastatic breast cancer – that’s pretty amazing.’

Olivia Newton-John and John Travolta in the iconic 1978 movie Grease that catapulted her career.  He was among the first to pay tribute to her on Monday

Olivia Newton-John and John Travolta in the iconic 1978 movie Grease that catapulted her career. He was among the first to pay tribute to her on Monday

John Travolta was among the first to pay tribute to Newton-John on Instagram.  Their joint performance catapulted both of their careers in 1978

John Travolta was among the first to pay tribute to Newton-John on Instagram. Their joint performance catapulted both of their careers in 1978

Newton-John and John Travolta at the 40th Anniversary of Grease in 2018

Olivia Newton-John and John Travolta, This Christmas, their 2012 Christmas album

Olivia Newton-John and John Travolta at the 40th Anniversary of Grease in 2018 (left) and (right) promoting their 2012 Christmas album

However on Monday, husband John Easterling announced the tragic news that his wife had lost her battle.

‘Dame Olivia Newton-John passed away peacefully at her ranch in Southern California this morning, surrounded by family and friends,’ he said in a statement.

‘We ask that everyone please respect the family’s privacy during this very difficult time.

‘Olivia has been a symbol of triumphs and hope for over 30 years sharing her journey with breast cancer.

Her healing inspiration and pioneering experience with plant medicine continues with the Olivia Newton-John Foundation Fund, dedicated to researching plant medicine and cancer.’

Newton-John balanced her career with spending the last 30 years as a bold advocate for cancer patients and survivors.

She admitted in 2020: ‘I live in the most beautiful place in the countryside and I just play with my animals and get out in nature. That’s my healing place. But I never feel kind of overwhelmed with helping people if I can.

‘I have a little group of women that I stay in touch with who are going through metastatic breast cancer also and we stay in touch and communicate.

Newton-John famously resisted the part of Sandy in the 1978 movie Grease. She was 28 at the time and thought she was too old to play a fresh-faced high school student

Olivia's iconic sweet-to-sexy transformation was recreated for years to come in costumes and tributes

Olivia’s iconic sweet-to-sexy transformation was recreated for years to come in costumes and tributes

‘And I’d love to take that to a broader audience so people can share their experiences and share the things that they are doing that are helping them.

‘I’m in a very happy place. My baby has been born, the foundation has been born and now we can move forward and raise the funds so that we can find the best scientists and researchers to do the studies.’

She often promoted the use of cannabis and gardening as key to fending off cancer symptoms.

‘My husband’s a plant medicine man so he grew cannabis for me and made tinctures for me to take for pain and inflammation and so many other things that cannabis can do.

‘It’s been a maligned plant all these years and it really is a magical miracle plant.’

Olivia said using marijuana was a ‘no brainer.’ rather than popping pills and taking steroid creams.

‘It helped me a lot with pain, because, you know, I don’t like taking prescription drugs, so it’s kind of a no-brainer.

‘It is kind and it’s compassionate. It’s what should be available for everybody to use.’

Olivia Newton-John's home in southern California where she died peacefully Monday surrounded by family

Olivia Newton-John’s home in southern California where she died peacefully Monday surrounded by family

Born in Cambridge, England, Newton-John spent the majority of her schooling in Melbourne, Australia, where her family moved when she was six years old.

In high school, she carved a name as a talented singer, before returning to the UK as their representative at the Eurovision song contest, losing out to Swedish pop legends ABBA in 1974.

As her career grew, she first landed the role of Sandy in the Broadway musical Grease, before being cast opposite Travolta in the blockbuster film.

It turned her into a global star leading her to huge music and movie success.

.

Categories
Business

Inside the home fridges of four young chefs

Years ago, when Shannon Bennett’s star was rising at Vue de Monde, I went to his Melbourne home for a photo shoot, during which he was to cook a meal for friends. Of course, the food was pretty and delicious.

What didn’t make it into the story was how foreign a visitor the chef was in his own home kitchen. I couldn’t find the plug for the sink. The oven was an unsolved mystery. And he didn’t even use the fridge: the ingredients came out of chilled crates transported from the restaurant.

Perhaps things are different now. A little more work-life balance. More of a focus on health. And, as we see with these young guns, miso and kimchi are now compulsory. It seems today’s up-and-comers not only have food in their fridge they also – lo and behold – cook and eat it.

Good Food fossicked in the fridges of four accomplished young chefs. Two of them, Hugh Allen and Charlie Carrington, cooked at the recent Melbourne Food and Wine Festival 30th birthday gala dinner.

This is voyeuristic, for sure, but can we also glean pro tips for home? I think we can.

Hugh Allen

chief chef
View of the World, Melbourne

Hugh Allen’s fridge bounty falls into one of three categories: food from friends, jazzy condiments and seasonal fruit and veg. “I only cook simple food at home, unless I’m on holidays,” he says. “I’ll do curry, steamed rice with egg, a piece of meat or fish.”

Fruit is a must. “I’m not a sit-down breakfast person but I’ll grab and go,” says Allen, biting into a pear. He’ll also reach for Market Lane coffee beans to brew in a Moccamaster batch filter. Vegetables reflect those on the menu at the restaurant, partly because they’re in season but also because they’re front of mind. In summer, it’s tomatoes and berries. Now it’s turnips, celeriac and lion’s mane mushrooms. “There’s nothing wrong with potato but celeriac is less starchy and heavy,” says Allen. “You can roast it, mash it, make gratin or chips.” Mushrooms can be sliced ​​to make a schnitzel or chopped into a curry. “They are an awesome replacement for meat, they hold their shape and absorb flavor really well.”

He loves umami bombs such Ronin Kelp Wild Soy Sauce, a locally made tamari-style sauce that he uses instead of salt in many dishes (available from chefshat.com.au) and macadamia nuts from Meru Miso in Tasmania (widely available in delis and from merumiso.com). “I’ll add it to cookies, salad dressing, barbecued corn or steamed broccoli, and butter when I’m frying an egg. It makes dishes much more interesting.”

Cheese is from the same local artisans who star on the Vue cheese trolley. “We know them all,” says Allen. “I’d rather buy cheese from someone I’ve met than French cheese I have no connection with.” He loves the White Savourine Log from Yarra Valley Dairy, a delicious semi-mature white mold goat’s milk cheese; a triple cream brie from Woombye Cheese on the Sunshine Coast; and Oasis from Boatshed Cheese on the Mornington Peninsula, a fluffy goat’s milk cheese with native bush herbs.

Free-range chicken liver pâté from chef Robbie Bell of City Larder (city-larder.com) is a constant. “I’ve known Robbie since I was 15,” says Allen, who started his apprenticeship at Rockpool, where Bell was then a senior chef. “I love everything he does,” says Allen. There’s also a very recognizable Meredith jar. “That marinated goat’s cheese, I love it. Salad, avocado on toast, it sneaks its way into heaps of stuff. I think it’s a staple in many Australian households.”

And drinks? “I am a beer man,” he says. “Stone & Wood Pacific Ale is my favourite.” bottled cocktails are from Byrdi, a Melbourne bar owned by friend Luke Whearty. Currently on the shelf, there’s brandy infused with fennel pollen and a liquid “Lamington”, with coconut oil and raspberry vermouth available at byrdishop.com.au). “It’s nice to offer people something more exciting than a martini or negroni,” says Allen.

Abbey Kitchen head chef at NOMAD showing the contents of her fridge at her Surry Hills home.  26th July 2022 Photo Louise Kennerley SMH

‘It’s all about the prep game’ in Abby Kitchen’s home kitchen. Photo: Louise Kennerley

Abby’s Kitchen

head chef
Nomad, Sydney

Abby Kitchen starts with a confession. “That’s the fullest my fridge has been in six months,” she says. Ella’s partner Tom Jeffery is head chef at Totti’s Bondi and when they’re off work together, they like going to new restaurants. Cooking at home is a luxury. “All that said, I tried to be as true to myself as possible,” says Kitchen.

Her shopping and cooking are strategic. “I think about quick breakfasts before work or late-night snacks that won’t make me feel ill at one in the morning,” she says. The red Le Creuset casserole is often key. “I like a one pot wonder that I can graze on for a few days,” says Kitchen. “That one is braised white beans with kale and tomato. I might crack a poached egg on top and it becomes brunch, or put crispy bacon through and it becomes a hearty stew, or saute extra greens and anchovies and fold them through. I like multi-purpose dishes that also work as a fridge cleaner.”

fennell is a constant. “I usually have a dip of some sort and make myself a vegie and dip plate, or I’ll shave it into a salad for lunch on the go, maybe with tuna. I often boil potatoes and keep them for a few days – they might become a hearty salad with eggs, fennel and mayonnaise. “I’m American – I love May,“says Kitchen, explaining away the fridge door stocked with Kewpie, vegan and whole egg mayonnaise.

What about those jars? “Kimchi is always there,” she says. “Kimchi quesadilla was my lockdown thing: a breakfast burrito with scrambled eggs, kimchi, avocado, maybe halloumi.” pickles for adding to salads and olives for cocktails or snacking.

Making food last a while is a focus. “It’s all about the prep game,” she says. herbs and radishes are stored in water in the fridge to keep them zesty and lettuce is a no-no. “I need something that will hold up in the fridge for a few days.” Food waste upsets her. “Overall it’s about not buying too much and having long-lasting staples plus a few bits and pieces to make it a bit fancier or creative,” she says.

Kitchen has a pro tip. “One thing we do that feels cheffy is to saute mushrooms in miso and butter and serve them on a chunky piece of sourdough toast finished with a big squeeze of lemon,” she says.

Taylor Cullen head chef at Chiswick showing the contents of his fridge in his Bondi apartment.  26th July 2022 Photo Louise Kennerley SMH

Taylor Cullen uses a ‘first in, first out rule’ in his home kitchen. Photo: Louise Kennerley

taylor cullen

head chef
Chiswick Woollahra

“I’ve been cooking at home more recently because I’ve been focusing on being healthy,” says Taylor Cullen. “That means a lot of healthy vegetarian bowls with sweet potato, eggs, spinach, kimchi, hummus.” At lunchtime, he often slices zucchini and cucumber straight into a bowl and eats them raw with prickly pear, hummus and kimchi. “It takes two minutes, it’s healthy and you’ve got a meal.”

If he wants something warm, it’s often a brother. “I usually have stock, noodles and miso on hand,” says Cullen. “I make a nice miso broth, add udon noodles to cook in there, maybe broccolini and herbs from the window sill.” Curry is another option, with Thai green curry paste and Indian curry paste both on hand. “At work I would make all that stuff but there are so many good store-bought ones for home. You get heaps of flavor without spending too much time.”

Cullen fasts from 7pm to noon but he often starts the day with japanese green tea and then goes for a surf. “I get up at six, stretch, have a matcha using a proper bamboo whisk and bowl, at the correct temperature, and consumed in three mouthfuls. It’s a really nice routine. I love tradition – why would you change it?” He has a selection of single origin Zen Wonders matcha tins (zenwondersmatcha.com.au), stored in the fridge so they last longer. “They’re expensive – up to $70 for 20 grams – but once you have beautiful matcha, it’s hard to go back,” he says.

Cullen’s fridge reveals a few cheffy tricks. “If I’m making chicken soup, I roast the whole chicken, then take the skin off, put it on a piece of paper and back into the oven until it’s really dry and crisp. Then I’ll chop it up, put it in a jar with oil, soy sauce and chilli flakes. super umami crispy chilli oil and it lasts for a couple of months.” What about the chicken meat? “I make a turmeric, ginger and lemongrass chicken stock with the bones I’ve roasted then I put the meat through at the end,” he says.

Ginger, prepared two ways, offers another barrage of flavor bombs. “I cook whole ginger on the barbecue until it’s black, then slice it and store it with mirin and rice wine vinegar to make pickled ginger,” says Cullen. “The offcuts I cook down with sugar until they are burnt and crystallized. They are amazing in orange polenta cake: you get the char and the floral ginger flavour.”

Kitchen protocols have been carried over from restaurants. “I have a first in, first out rule,” he says. “You don’t want a moldy whatever in the back of your fridge. A neat and tidy fridge makes it easier to cook. I couldn’t stand it messy. I wouldn’t open it.”

charlie carrington

owner/chef
Atlas Dining

Everyone’s fridge tells stories. Charlie Carrington’s says he’s a highly organized dog lover with a penchant for noodles. “I cook at home Sunday, Monday and Tuesday,” he says. “I love Thai curries, steaks and Chinese stir-fries.“Carrington has the advantage of running a mealbox business, AtlasWeekly, so he often grabs a crate for himself, topped up with extra vegetables. “I eat raw carrot and broccoli,” he says. “It might seem very strange but I love them.”

Carrington’s dogs keep a close eye on the Ilume fancy dog ​​food on the top shelf. The company cooks human-quality canine meals such as turkey and spinach medallions, chicken rainbow slaw and bone broth. “I actually work with them,” says Carrington. “I had a very sick dog and good food has changed its life.” The lactose-free yogurt is also for the dogs.

When it’s time to feed the humans, Carrington often grabs noodles or fresh Otway pasta. “My personal favorite is spaghetti with clams and white wine,” he says. olives are a favourite. “I absolutely love eating them, adding them to charcuterie plates and shopping for them at Prahran or South Melbourne markets.”

You can take the chef out of a restaurant but you can’t take the principles of a neat coolroom out of a chef. “I love seeing things organized so I always have everything in order,” says Carrington. “I need to be able to see what I have at a glance.” Pro kitchen lore extends to keeping things fresh. “I wrap my herbs in damp towels because it really helps with the shelf life,” he says. “Also I store my olive oil in the fridge. I treat it like butter, which keeps that pure, fresh flavor when I use it in a salad dressing.”

TAKE HOME TIPS

  1. Make a one pot winner that can be added to and adapted during the week.
  2. Keep your fridge clean and tidy so it’s a pleasure to open it.
  3. put miso in everything, especially in butter to fry an egg.
  4. Store food well to extend its life: wrap herbs and leaves in damp paper towels.

.