theJBJshow / tags / melbourne

Tagged with “melbourne” (13) activity chart

  1. In Defeat We’ll Always Try: the death of the Fitzroy Lions - Hindsight - ABC Radio National (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

    This is a story all about the game, and the hardcore business, of the code once known as Aussie Rules. It may have slipped from public memory, but it remains a bitter pill in the hearts of some followers of one football team. In 2011, the AFL signed a $1.25 billion television rights deal—so it’s hard to imagine that, a little over a decade ago, a debt of a few million dollars was enough to send one of Australian football’s foundation clubs under. But that’s what happened to the Fitzroy Football Club.

    In the early days of the Victorian Football League, Fitzroy was king of the code—they were known as the Maroons, and in the early decades of the 20th century, they won seven premierships. Between the wars, they came to be known as the Gorillas, and in 1944, they snatched another premiership.

    But since that last wartime victory, Fitzroy’s prowess began to dwindle—and even with the moniker ‘the Lions’, they finally became known as the ‘lovable losers’.

    And so it was, in 1996, that the Lions of Fitzroy were no more. In their wake, a new football team emerged, up in the steamy northern city of Brisbane.

    This story charts the events of that year, which involve debt, treachery, betrayal and cold hearted business pragmatism. One-eyed Fitzroy fan Jack Kerr documents the demise of Fitzroy, and the rise of the Brisbane Lions.

    The program features passionate fans and veteran players, as well those inside the club, whose fight to keep Fitzroy alive is embodied in the team’s old anthem ‘In Defeat We’ll Always Try’.

    http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/hindsight/fitzroy-lions/4565326

    —Huffduffed by theJBJshow 2 months ago

  2. The Cinema of Distraction: the Australian drive-in - Hindsight - ABC Radio National (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

    In February 1954 the first drive-in opened in Australia, in the outer Melbourne suburb of Burwood. Within two years, drive-in cinemas had sprung up in cities and country towns all over the country, as Australians embraced this new form of leisure that combined their twin passions for the cinema and the car. This feature explores the social changes that took place in Australia in the post war decades, which provided the backdrop for the popularity of drive-in cinema, where ‘the comfort lay in all the things you could do’. We also hear from some of the pioneer operators, and from those with memories of visits to the drive-in.

    Further Information:
    A tribute to Australian Drive-ins (http://www.drive-insdownunder.com.au/)

    http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/hindsight/drive-ins/4295984

    —Huffduffed by theJBJshow 8 months ago

  3. Wilbur Wilde, Lenny Henry and Toni Lamond - ABC Melbourne - Australian Broadcasting Corporation

    An hour of hilarity and madness with three showbiz legends.

    Wilbur Wilde joined Jon Faine as his co-host for today’s Conversation Hour, you’ll know him as a saxophonist for Ol’ 55 and Jo Jo Zep and the Falcons, as well as his regular TV gigs (memorably Hey Hey It’s Saturday). Today he chatted with Jon about touring the canals of France, and being the 2012 Variety Club Bash Champion!

    Then he and Jon were wowed by the comic genius of Lenny Henry, the UK comedian, actor and writer currently touring Australia. Fresh from a performance for the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee, this is a man who’s just about done it all - from television’s ‘The ‘Lenny Henry Show’ to live stand up, film, docos, hosting the BAFTAs, the West End and Shakespeare Now, he brings his latest autobiographical show to Australia.

    Lenny Henry’s one-man show Cradle to Rave is on tonight (Friday 29 June) at Her Majesty’s Theatre and there are shows still to come in Adelaide, Sydney and Canberra. And what a combination, when Toni Lamond joined in the conversation!

    Toni was a regular on Graham Kennedy’s In Melbourne Tonight, has starred in countless musicals and theatre shows (Oliver, Pirates of Penzance, Caberet, Annie, Anything Goes, 42nd Street) and her television credits include Starsky and Hutch, Murder She Wrote, The Love Boat and Days of Our Lives.

    And, as she told us today, she is still performing, teaching, writing and coming up with new projects. Her latest is Learn English As You Sing Along. After a comment by a taxi driver, Toni realised music could be a tool to help people learn English. She recorded ten popular songs, along with an introduction to each and a lyric book to read as you sing along.

    http://www.abc.net.au/local/audio/2012/06/22/3531389.htm?site=melbourne&WT.svl=local0

    —Huffduffed by theJBJshow 12 months ago

  4. Do That Dance! Australian Post Punk 1977-1983 - Hindsight - ABC Radio National (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

    Part two of the series explores the evolution of post punk in Melbourne.

    The years 1977 to 1983 saw an explosion of musical creativity in inner city Sydney and Melbourne. Following the do-it-yourself revolution of punk, young Australians were inspired to make challenging music without boundaries, to form bands, start independent labels, and to run live music venues, all outside the commercially driven confines of the mainstream industry. This groundbreaking activity laid the foundation for contemporary music in Australia. The vital output from Australian post punk has gained an international reputation.

    Sydney’s inner-city post-punk music scene revolves around a social set based in the terrace houses and industrial spaces of then run-down Darlinghurst and Surry Hills. Bands shared living spaces, rehearsal rooms, equipment, and band members, forging sounds without precedence. And for the first time, women were taking their place as equal and integral players. Inner city pubs and clubs, faced with a dwindling clientele of working men, opened their doors to the art-punk bands and an enthusiastic audience soon followed. Iconic venues included the Sussex Hotel and the Trade Union Club. By 1980, the burgeoning scene also gave rise to the independent labels M Squared and Terse Tapes.

    Melbourne’s post punk scene is defined by distinct locations, and ideologies — the North Fitzroy Beat; St Kilda’s Crystal Ballroom; and the Clifton Hill Community Music Centre. Led by Melbourne’s most infamous band the Primitive Calculators, the North Fitzroy Beat gave rise to the anarchic Little Bands movement, with the Calculators inviting anyone to step up and use their music equipment. Meanwhile, ‘south of the river’, St Kilda was the decadent playground of larger-than-life groups such as The Birthday Party, the Moodists, and the touring Go-Betweens. The Clifton Hill Community Music Centre was an experimental space for a strange mix of Melbourne intelligentsia, music academics, and precocious post punks, giving rise to the groups Tsk Tsk Tsk and Essendon Airport.

    http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/hindsight/do-that-dance-australian-post-punk-1977-1983/3658650

    —Huffduffed by theJBJshow one year ago

  5. 4Stories - Story 1

    4Stories is a Locative Literature project.

    Its four narrated stories are of four different perspectives, set in different seats across a single table of an outdoor cafe in Degraves Street, Melbourne Australia.

    —Huffduffed by theJBJshow one year ago

  6. 4Stories - Story 2

    4Stories is a Locative Literature project by Matt Blackwood.

    Its four narrated stories are of four different perspectives, set in different seats across a single table of an outdoor cafe in Degraves Street, Melbourne Australia.

    —Huffduffed by theJBJshow one year ago

  7. 4Stories - Story 3

    4Stories is a Locative Literature project by Matt Blackwood.

    Its four narrated stories are of four different perspectives, set in different seats across a single table of an outdoor cafe in Degraves Street, Melbourne Australia.

    —Huffduffed by theJBJshow one year ago

  8. 4Stories - Story 4

    4Stories is a Locative Literature project by Matt Blackwood.

    Its four narrated stories are of four different perspectives, set in different seats across a single table of an outdoor cafe in Degraves Street, Melbourne Australia.

    —Huffduffed by theJBJshow one year ago

  9. Hindsight - 25 September 2011 - Queens of Harlotry: sex, power and moral panic in 19th century Melbourne

    In the wake of the Victorian goldrushes in the mid 19th century, the city of Melbourne boomed,and was transformed from a small town into a bustling metropolis, with all the attractions and excesses that a city can offer. The city also, at this time, became the site for a struggle over morality, sex and power. This program explores this moral panic which emerged in 19th century Melbourne through the stories of two well-known women of the period - the ‘entertainer’ known as Lola Montez [Irish born Maria Eliza Gilbert] and the notorious brothel owner Madame Brussels [German born Caroline Hodgson]

    During their lives, both of these women challenged the prevailing Victorian orthodoxies around gender and sexuality. And both of their real life stories were richer and more complex than the public personas that each of them has been remembered by.

    Guests:
    Dr Clare Wright – http://www.clarewright.com.au

    Professor Rae Francis, Dean, Faculty of Arts, Monash University

    Professor Shurlee Swain, Australian Catholic University

    Lenny Robinson

    Publications: Title: Selling Sex: A Hidden History of Prostitution
    Author: Rae Francis
    Publisher: UNSW Press, 2007.

    Title: ‘Madame Brussels - A Moral Pandemonium’
    Author: LM Robinson
    Publisher: Arcade Press 2009

    Title: Negotiating poverty: women and charity in Nineteenth Century Melbourne
    Author: Shurlee Swain
    Publisher: Women’s History Review, 16(1): 99-112. 2007

    http://www.abc.net.au/rn/hindsight/stories/2011/3312308.htm

    —Huffduffed by theJBJshow one year ago

  10. Hindsight - 21 August 2011 - The Imaginarium of EW Cole

    Cole’s Book Arcade was a massive three-storey bookstore in the heart of Melbourne that opened on Cup day in 1883. But this was a bookshop with a difference. It had a fernery, a wonderland with funny mirrors, a music department, a lolly shop, a lending library…there were secondhand books for sale, a Chinese tea salon, even a live monkey display! The arcade was the embodiment of one man’s vision and humanitarian ideals: Edward William Cole.

    For visitors to the city in the 1880s, the journey was not complete without a tour of Cole’s Book Arcade, where one could pick up a copy of the much loved and rightly famous Cole’s Funny Picture Book. Such was its renown, that the arcade was visited by writers Rudyard Kipling and Mark Twain during their travels in Australia.

    Edward William Cole was an eccentric, humble man who came to Australia in 1852, aged 20, with the Victorian Goldfields in his sights. But it did not take him long to discover that his own pot of gold was not to be found in the ground. While Cole called the arcade his ‘hobby’, he was a savvy and astute businessman who died, in 1918, a very rich man.

    While Edward Cole’s life has been re-imagined by author Lisa Lang in her novel Utopian Man, today all that’s left of his grand arcade is a glass ceiling in one of Melbourne’s busy CBD laneways.

    Readings from Utopian Man are by Richard Piper.

    http://www.abc.net.au/rn/hindsight/stories/2011/3289272.htm

    —Huffduffed by theJBJshow one year ago

Page 1 of 2Older