There are never enough hours in the day. I could adopt some time management techniques, pick up a minute here, another there but in the end, it is a fool’s errand. There is not now and never will be enough time for me to read a Van Badham column in The Guardian.
As a useful expedient I could turn to Twitter to bask in her wit and wisdom as it tumbles from mind to manicured nail, albeit expressed in expurgated 280 keystroke form but alas, Badham dispatched me to Coventry some years ago.
Long story short, I callously mocked Badham for headlining some ghastly Guardian event where she promised to unlock the secrets of column writing to a paying audience. Presumably those in attendance would be enlightened to within an inch of their lives and leave toting the dreaded Participation Award.
I ventured on Twitter that ponying up to attend may not be an especially prudent use of the punters’ hard-earned, caveat emptor and all that, and was sent to Twitter detention for my trouble.
Why does any of this matter? Well, on Tuesday evening in Brisbane, Labor leader Bill Shorten strode purposefully to the stage at the ACTU Congress dinner and delivered a speech Badham regarded as akin to the Sermon on the Mount.
Only after the event did we learn that Shorten’s speech was one of the ‘My first hundred days in office’ type. A little presumptuous, you might think. Sure, Labor has led in 36 successive Newspolls but those same polls show Shorten about as popular as something I just stepped in. Still, Shorten is the alternative PM and as such any undertaking he makes in a speech of this kind is absolutely in the public interest.
But the public was kept in the dark. If Shorten did have a dream we were not to know about it because the media was forbidden to enter. Journalists, including Ewin Hannan from this august journal, were denied entry at the door. No shorthand, no scribbles, no service.
This left Ms Badham as the sole journalist — and I apply the term with the broadest of brushes — to live-tweet the oratorial magnificence.
That she is a Labor shill is not especially important. After all bias, like beauty, is in the eye of the beholder. All columnists engage in polemic and sophistry. We are not paid to be right, we are paid to be certain and Ms Badham was certain that Bill Shorten’s speech was one for the ages.
Her social media gushes were all the contemporaneous reporting the public had to go on, presuming she has not already blocked them on Twitter for the crime of poking a bit of fun at her expense.
But Van Badham is not just a Labor abettor. She is a Vice President of the MEAA’s Victorian branch. The MEAA is the union responsible for journalists and other assorted weirdos who dwell somewhere on the media spectrum.
Certainly, it was not Badham’s call to ban journalists from what should have been a public function. It was said the secretary for the ACTU, Sally McManus, wanted delegates to ‘relax.’ However, the media ban extended to some of the sessions at the Congress. Presumably delegates needed a little more time to put their feet up.
Working journalists were not just prohibited from working, the entire industry, including thousands of journos represented by the MEAA specifically and the ACTU generally were virtually told to get stuffed. Freelance journos who were stopped at the door, were left to contemplate their losses in time and travel expenditure.
For what it’s worth, the MEAA has registered a complaint with the ACTU. It will almost certainly come to nothing. I suspect even Shorten would be annoyed by the censoriousness, having made a significant speech that exists now only on the flat surface of a screen on his own website.
Of the media ban, Van Badham, who is supposed to be representing journalists, said and did precisely nothing. She merrily tweeted through the evening and into the following day on sundry topics and unrelated matters. She must have known the people she was charged to represent had been royally shafted.
Solidarity, like hours in the day, has its limits.
No more Dick, Mr. Insider as we see Dick Smith to close his Grocery Line Business in the next few weeks beaten into submission by ALDI it seems and he’s none too happy!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h7y6iE0aB5s
Big Media news Mr. Insider as we see Fairfax and Nine have announced a merger that will create an integrated media giant across television, online video streaming, print, digital and real estate advertising. Good or bad I wonder?
https://tinyurl.com/ydbh4zos
You have to wonder? I direct you to PJK’s synopsis. Samantha Maiden has responded to that on Twitter in a manner which indicates that she’s carrying some sort of chip on her shoulder re PJK similar to Milton.
They both reportedly like a drink or 30 also.
If anyone has a chip on their shoulder it is the perpetually embittered PJK.
https://www.theage.com.au/politics/federal/paul-keating-s-loathing-of-all-thing-packer-will-never-die-20180727-p4zu0e.html
Difference now is the can kicking QE.
http://www.asgoodasgoldaus.com.au/blog/
Yes, those who may experience a sense of anguish about the great benefits still on offer from our fairly unconstrained free enterprise system (although there are some among us who would appear to have it otherwise) may not realize that there’s still good money to be made out of Royal Watching. Simples.
Something the Libs may regret in Braddon is the bright idea someone had to bring up Craig Garland’s assault charge in Geelong 24 years ago.
He’s a popular guy in those parts and the locals won’t take kindly to that mud sling. He’ll just get more votes now than he may have. All going to Labor.
It’ll be an interesting day!
Politics a dirty grubby business as you know, Boadicea. I personally would like to see Billy Shorten’s butt kicked hard this Super Saturday the smirking, shifting, stand for nothing he is. Cheers
I’d like to see Malcolm Turdball’s butt kicked hard this Super Saturday the smirking, shifting, stand for nothing he is.
Cheers.
Abetz = genious
Seen better heads on a cabbage.
or a potato
If you’re the opposition leader making a (supposedly) significant speech, why wouldn’t you have the press along? If you’re a Labor opposition leader constantly accused of being beholden to the unions, why would you let them set the rules? It makes no sense.
While it’s been reported as being a bit “over the top”, what does make sense is the strong approach taken by the French in tackling drugs in sport. In an event that takes three weeks to see who comes first and then up to a decade to find out who really won, they’ve tackled the problem head on. Tear gassing the whole peloton is genius. Do it every day until the cheats own up or the clean ones dob them in. Great stuff.
Haha, Perentie. This years race is certainly full of intrigue.
🙂
Not funny Perentie. They teargassed a peloton! Still, no surprises, we’ve seen what they do to geese to make pate.
As callous an act as that Collingwood low-life bouncing the ball off a pigeon.
What happened to sport? They make too much money these days, that’s the problem.
Yep JB. Win at all costs – and lucrative sponsorships are linked to winning .
Angry again as I watched a Current Affair or was it ABC730 – is there any difference – and some reporter is interviewing Mike Pompeo, US Secretary of State. Clearly, to me at least, the Pompeo interview was scripted. Should not viewers be informed up-front, like Spanish language punctuation, that the questions are given to the interviewee in advance? Why does the reporter even have to be in the US if the questions are scripted?
Mmm awks…Is there enough handcuffs?
https://gosar.house.gov/uploadedfiles/criminal-referral.pdf
WTF???
https://www.rt.com/op-ed/434120-uk-skripal-case-novichok/
Fair suck of the saveloy, Mr. Insider as we read New Zealand Acting PM Winston Peters calls on Australia to change its flag! Strewth he goes on to moan by claiming Australia copied the Kiwi flag and should get a new one.
Things must be quiet at the moment in NZ Politics.
https://tinyurl.com/yctupx5e