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It was many years ago, when children still had birthday parties in parks with friends and parents. A couple of kilos of sausages and some cordial were all that was needed. The barbecue was soon set up, the bread rolls buttered and gifts unwrapped. Not anymore now. It has to be at Fox-Tell studios, at MacDonald’s or at the Ten pin bowling alleys. They are all now screaming hordes demanding endless wallet openings of stressed parents unable to resist the exploitation by commerce. They capitulate, roll over and give up a battle that was never there to be won anyway.
I remember, again, many years ago, the start of a future of which wallet opening would become the norm. There was a six page spread in The SMH and bands playing on the streets with banging drums and blaring trumpets. It was the opening of Roselands shopping centre in Sydney.
Opened in 1965, Roselands was Australia’s largest shopping centre in the Southern hemisphere for years, even though it is quite small by today’s standards.
It had a magic waterfall of three stories high. Some liquid; was it water or oil? Whatever it was would be cascading down along nylon lines creating a faux effect of luxury and steaming jungle. It also had a restaurant with a small stage, called The Viking. We had dinner there with another couple some time after the opening, perhaps around the late mid sixties. Our choice was ‘chicken in the basket’; I suppose it came with baked potatoes. The desert was peaches with ice cream ‘a la framboise’, or some expensive name like that. The conversation was starting to falter; perhaps the Barossa Pearl had not yet worked its way down yet. Fortunately, the peroxide chanteuse started her show with a stirring rendition of ‘Old Man’s River’ albeit at a much higher pitch than usual. After all, Paul Robeson’s deep base would be a bit hard to follow for any man, let alone a woman. After the peaches arrived she changed the music to a less demanding, “I never felt like singing the Blues”. The rest of the evening I have forgotten accept than the wife of the couple solemnly declared,” she is not a good singer but she has a lovely personality.”
From then on it all became a world of fast bucks and faux reality, tingling cash registers and a world swept away by the money merchants and their seductive easy terms on everything. Wallet openings not only became the norm, it became the main driving force for families to continue. Now Roselands is dwarfed by much larger shopping centres which work like giant vacuum cleaners sucking in entire societies with millions of pale looking shoppers, hopelessly addicted to endless wallet opening giving a very faux respite from the ennui of everyday living. They then get spat out to the concrete reality of the car park.
There has to be more to life.
I remember once going to the Jazz club at the Teacher’s Federation building somewhere near Circular Quay and I got a chicken in a basket and it included a date with girl. I wasn’t too impressed because she kept saying “oh, how nice.”
So I just ate the chicken.
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Was it nice?
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The date , or the chicken?
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Nothing much, I wasn’t around at the time.
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My reply was meant for Algy, don’t know why it jumped up there…
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Interesting menu chicken and a date. what else was available.
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Gez, as a boy of the West Ward of Bankstown Shire (now the City of Bankstown), Roselands was a magnet for me. I remember it well. The International Food Court, no less with exotica like Italian, Continental (whatever that was), Asian (whatever that was) and Dinki Di – burgers and chips, (I think) and British (roasts, but “British” and “food” are of course oxymorons).
Any way, I was working there in the toy section of Grace Brothers one Christmas holidays. I think I was 18. I got chicken pox. Which is not so great when you have an adult’s surface area. Needless to say, OH&S was not going to cover it and it was a pretty impecunious and house bound few weeks.
I reckon the Raindrop Fountain was some kind of glycerine or glycol-based wetness. It was something to behold though. And Roselands certainly generated a lot of lowly paid part-time and casual jobs – which was OK by me. I seem to recall the parcel pickup for Woolies as being the best job. No money changing hands and grateful punters – except when they got there to quickly – before their paper bags of groceries.
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At the corner of Woodville road and the Old Hume Highway, towards Georges Hall, was a fruit and vegie merchant called ‘Bardies or Beardies’, selling apples, oranges etc by the bucket. The buckets came in large and small sizes. All my brothers worked there during week-ends. Beardy himself had a tower built so he could overlook the boys selling the fruit and vegies. He was a hard man and no one dared to pinch an apple or so. This was pre- Helvi , perhaps during the late fifties.
I used to buy a small bucket of manderines, cross the Hume Highway and settle down in some tall grass and ate the lot overlooking scenery towards the Blue Mountains..
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Do you remember the little Mall off Stacy Street, the best laksa ever
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No, no, Hung, don’t eat the basket…
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Happy father’s day to all. Don’t forget your colonoscopy!
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Wouldn’t live with out one or as my specialist said after my last one that it saved my life.
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Cheer up OL Man! The Father’s Day is tomorrow, with a bit of luck someone might take you to the old Roselands and treat you to a Chicken in the Basket.
What’s this obsession with the shopping malls of late…Bankstown Square next ?You can take a boy from Bankstown but not……..
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Yes happy fathers day to all us fathers. I know my kids will totally ignore me like usual.
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I sent mine out with a beer list!
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Of course the chicken in a basket would have to be consumed next to the raindrop fountain.
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And the basket would have to be gluten free
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Algy, raindrops and chooks in the baskets, these are some of my favourite things…sounds almost like a Julie Andrews song.
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What the basket or the chicken
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Do you have whiskers on chooks, Helvi.
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…no whiskers on chooks or baskets, Algy !
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I remember going to a restaurant once for a seafood basket and the basket was made of potato
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Did you eat the basket Hung or did that have flour in it.
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It was in the days when I could eat flour but no it was deep fried potato in the shape of a basket
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When I was a kid we used to have chicken in a basket at church functions, lumps of chicken from Coleses, and Smiths Crisps. By the time you got your little mits into it the chips were full of chicken fat so the whole thing tasted like sh^%.
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I suppose that was better then getting molested by the priest
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Big M mightn’t have been a Catholic.
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Good point Algy, I assumed didn’t I?
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We was Uniting Church, so the minister was married, to a woman. Amazing.
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