• The Pig’s Arms
  • About
  • The Dump

Window Dresser's Arms, Pig & Whistle

~ The Home Pub of the Famous Pink Drinks and Trotter's Ale

Window Dresser's Arms, Pig & Whistle

Monthly Archives: April 2012

Crouching Culture, Hidden Future: You’ll Know Them When You See Them

09 Monday Apr 2012

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Warrigal Mirriyuula

≈ 30 Comments

Tags

Asia, China, Chinese culture, Chow Yun Fat, Coles, Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon, decline of the west, Jaden Smith, Michelle Yeoh, passive aggressive behaviour, pop culture, SharPei dogs, The Karate Kid, Wenwen Han, Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf

Story and Digital Mischief by Warrigal Mirriyuula

I went shopping with Sche the other day, what she calls an Entebbe Raid, and to be honest, shopping with Sche is rather like a well-executed military operation.

It occurred to me as I pushed the trolley while Sche took short forays into the various aisles, that supermarket shopping is a highly regulated act of human co-operation that transpires according to a very sophisticated set of social rules.

But I don’t want to talk about that, interesting as it is.

What I want to talk about was something that gave me serious pause for thought. But that didn’t happen until we were in the car on the way home, so here’s the set up.

While we’d been in Coles there was a point when Sche had ordered me to stand by the cart and wait for her.

Where she had ordered me stand was immediately adjacent to a checkout and one of those in your face magazine displays shouting at you about some starlet’s pain or the more prurient details of some serial football fool’s two-timing Barrier Reef holiday with the best friend’s wife. You know the sort of thing.

While I was waiting, taking in the inanity of the magazine rack and enjoying an insufferable sense of superiority, only for a few moments I promise, a couple came up and she enquired as to whether or not I constituted a line. (Those rules again)

I told them “No”, and that I wasn’t quite sure how an individual could constitute a line. They apparently didn’t want to get into a discussion of geometry, but he cracked a smile. I misinterpreted it as friendly and thought, “Here goes.”

“Yes, I’ve been instructed by my wife to wait here and guard the cart. I feel like an old red cattle dog, loyal and obedient.” It seemed innocuous enough as a conversation starter.

“What a good husband you are.” she says, odiously oozing condescension. I’m set back a little. Her tone wakens startled childhood memories of the Wicked Queen in Snow White. Now I feel like a ten year-old waiting for Mum.

Then turning to her husband she adds sourly, “You could learn a lesson or two here.”

I’m not sure I want to be a lesson to anybody, and frankly, now that I really look at him, he doesn’t appear like the docile instructable type. He’s big in the shoulders and thick necked. Was he a rugby player, private school boy? He’s a little flabby, more “well upholstered” than fat. Sort of, “Another bottle of Grange and then I’ll go to the gym.” but he’s not bad looking. That’s how he’s worked this, probably since he was a boy.

His face is still smooth like he’s in his thirties. Perhaps he maintains an expensive skin regime, privately I’m sure. He’s obviously much older. I’d say early fifties at least. The hands and neck give him away. Narcissistic personality disorder? His eyes are overbright and have a mechanical look to them. He’s wearing a Polo RL shirt. It’s sky blue with white strips, white collar, open, no tie. Suit pants and expensive hand made shoes.

When he looks at her he uses one of the faces he looks at her with. It’s been crafted over years of dystopian marriage and contains just the right balance of contempt and lustful threat. He’s daring her to do something about either. He’s calculating, weighing the odds. Banking or insurance maybe?

He takes his wife’s barb well. It glances off him and he suggests, “You may be right, Darling.” This last dripping with passive aggression.

He’s got the moves this guy.

I look at her more closely. She’s short and compact, losing what her girlfriends may once have called a good figure. Her face is a little puffy. She drinks too much. Her make up is perfect though. Not overdone; this is only the supermarket; and applied with precision and experience. This woman knows all the tricks. You almost don’t see the real face at all.

Her hair has coarsened after years of salon heat and colouring, the part is wide and scoured clean. The hair has a sallow look. A cheap blonde mixed with yellower streaks, like fat going off. Odd, I thought, given her make up.

Maintaining the depressing theme expressed in her sepulchral blonde hair, she is dressed all in black, including Victorian jet mourning jewellery, a voluminous open shirt over black T, and leggings that stop short to show her pasty ankles and slightly bloated feet to be trapped in some S&M sandal that wraps her lower leg in thronging; the dead white of her flesh becoming an inflamed red where the leather cuts into the skin. They really are quite unattractive footwear.

None the less, she’s as into this as he is. She will not allow him to humiliate her like this, appearing the reasonable and accommodating husband, forcing her to play the shrew. Not in front of a total stranger.

She covers me with smiles that are actually quite uncomfortable, exerting a kind of corrupting, smothering pressure; otherwise they unload their carts in co-ordinated silence. She persists with the smiles and I respond awkwardly, a grimace that might be a smile. She continues until she is sure that her husband has noticed. He’s seen my grimace and it’s game over. She has restored the balance of terror by embarrassing him.

They pay by platinum card and leave. As they walk out into mall concourse I note they walk a few metres apart, looking in different directions. I’m left wondering why I don’t come shopping more often if it’s this much fun. I haven’t seen a couple like these two since the local players put on “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?”

I was thinking that their relationship is similar to the MAD concept so beloved of the RAND Corp. back in the early days of the cold war. Should either of them take the game outside the carefully set rules of their constant skirmishing it would inexorably lead to Mutually Assured Destruction; an escalating fight to the death. Doom for them both.

It was at this point that Sche rejoined me and I let the other couple slip from my consciousness. Sche and I emptied out cart onto the conveyor. Apparently I had been “a line” after all.

As Sche ensured that the right purchases went into the right bags, I maintained my perusal of the magazines.

Kate plays hockey rather well and this is unusual for a princess; Jennifer and Courtney won’t be using Botox anymore; and lastly, though there were many other screaming headlines I might mention, that young woman who gave birth to 8 children has posed topless for a magazine. I suppose it’s nothing those eight kids haven’t seen before.

We paid for our shopping and made our way to the Chinese grocer where Sche wanted to look for some prawn meat prepared a particular way. The grocer Sche goes to is a genuine Chinese grocer. Nearly exclusively Asian lines, mostly Chinese. The place is full of Asian people, again mostly Chinese, which I take to be a good sign.

Sche only wants a couple of things, so again I’m asked to stand by the checkout with the cart. And once again there’s a magazine rack and by chance I’m parked with a couple of Chinese husbands also “guarding cart” for their shopping wives.

What strikes me is how friendly the other husbands are. Not exactly chatty, I suppose that’s cultural or maybe they don’t speak English; but they’re friendly. They smile and welcome me to the cart corral with quick bows. We’re all the same here. I smile in response.

Again my eye drifts to the magazine rack. All the titles are Chinese, the script too, but they have almost exactly the same kind of “front” as the magazines at the Coles checkout. Subtle differences of graphic focus and style but otherwise topologically identical. Pretty girls and handsome boys, movie or soap stars I assume. I can’t tell if they share the pain of the western starlet, or if the smirking young man with the confronting razor cut hair has just had a naughty weekend with a mate’s wife.

And then it strikes me. I may not be able to read a word but I do recognise the style and strangely, I also recognise many of the faces, just as I did at the other stand; and their visual context and presentation style makes them almost indistinguishable from their western counterparts.

It occurred to me that my recognising some of those Chinese faces might be the first landings, the cultural beach head of the coming change as China moves to dominate the geopolitical scene in the coming century and the focus of popular culture shifts to Asia. I’m being culturally colonised. It’s like the Britpop Invasion of the 60’s all over again.

I never miss a chance to watch Asian movies and TV on SBS. I particularly like Chinese stories, particularly the grand historical tales of Empire, or the lonely swordsman bringing justice to the rural badlands, they do a fabulous ghost story or perhaps a modern urban tale of everyday life in Beijing. That must be how I know these faces, but they are none of them Chow Yun Fat or Michelle Yeoh, and I only mention them because they’re the only Chinese stars I can readily name.

It’s all great stuff and I wonder how long it may be before I might not only recognise their faces but also be able to put some detail to their individual legends, as I can with our home grown media pop-tarts. How long before there are English language versions of those Chinese magazines on display at the Coles checkout; before we all sit down to watch a Chinese soap, a gritty detective thriller set in Shanghai, mainstream culture with eastern themes on Channel 9?

Some time ago young Wordsworth and I went to see that new Karate Kid movie with the precocious Jaden Smith in the lead and Jackie Chan as his sensei. The audience we saw the flick with didn’t mind an essentially American/Japanese notion being translated to China, (that was Jackie Chan I guess), and when it was all over Wordsworth said that the thing he’d liked most about the film was seeing China; the streets and cars, the buildings and how people lived. It was an eye opener for him and he went through a brief period thereafter when his room began to resemble a Chinoiserie of popular Asian culture.

I wish I still had that sponge like quality. The ability to guzzle culture like the Solo man, all eager imperative, throat open and bugger the spill; but I’m too old for that now. My old brain just doesn’t have the plasticity his does at 11 years old.

I was thinking of young Wordsworth’s future in the car on the way home. That’s when it finally resolved in my mind.

Shopping, the typically over-privileged, unsatisfied western couple, the friendly but quietly waiting Chinese husbands, the two magazine racks and the ubiquity of pop culture. It all suggested a changing balance, things in transition, phase shift, dynamism. There was energy in it, the increasing tension before the snap to a new attractor.

The future needs young Wordsworth’s plasticity, his eagerness to embrace change and innovation. It needs his love of difference and diversity because he will grow up and grow old as a member of one of the first generations of European descendents in the last 500 years that will not have the hegemonic grip on global culture. While the strength of English as the global lingua franca is likely to continue indefinitely, there will come a time when the simple economics of pop cultural production will see Wordsworth or his kids listening to Chinese and Indian pop, watching Chinese TV and movies and reading Asian narratives. Perhaps the TV and movies will be dubbed into English, the books, comics, games and websites with an English language version, but they will be indissolubly Asian. In creative impetus, style and content they will express and reflect a completely different cultural heritage.

The future is Asian and it’s a pity I won’t get to see it flower, but Wordsworth will, and his children and their children. I wonder what it will be like.

You Might Call it Lucky (but I call it Genius)

09 Monday Apr 2012

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Lehan Winifred Ramsay

≈ 10 Comments

Tags

Apple, Electropolis, faith, future, luck

Peace

Story by Lehan Winifred Ramsay

I want to talk about faith. I’ve thought a lot about it these last months. It was my niece who got me thinking. We were painting together, some mistake turned out unexpectedly well. “Lucky!” I exclaimed. “You might call it lucky”, she said. “I call it God’s help”. Thus clearing up for me something I had never been able to understand. How does faith WORK?

Faith is like a reprogramming, so that instead of noticing the things that are going wrong, you start to take notice of what is going right. And it has one brilliant feature. Once you start to notice how many things are going right, you start accumulating fortune. Because you don’t take any of those fortunate things off your list, you just keep adding to them. All that success makes you stand taller, smile more, be more assertive, and if you are more confident and assertive, you will be more successful. So whatever it is that you have chosen to have faith in – whether it is your own luck, or the hand of God, or the course you have started, or some kind of guru – is going to look good, very good. The better it looks, the more faith you’re going to have.

But speaking of gurus, the proclamation of all the online newspapers I’ve seen today that The Future is Tablet. These days we could be talking about another medical breakthrough, but it is of course The Hand of Jobs of which we speak. I have total faith that anyone who can get that much publicity for their product is speaking with the authority of a Higher Being anyway. But I note that Apple didn’t declare their faith in this Future until the goal was well within sight. Thankyou, all the companies that contributed, and all the consumers that bought, all the people who wanted an easier format, for making it possible for Apple to rule the Electropolis.

Nullarbor – the Magnificent Lampshade Collective

09 Monday Apr 2012

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Entertainment Upstairs

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

Animation, Lampshade Collective, Nullarbor

So while FM was doing the right thing working off a few hundred croissants in the “gym” downstairs, yours truly was doing what he does best – feet up lying in bed channel surfing.  On French TV – a channel devoted exclusively to the cinema (I saw not one commercial unless you count interviews with cinematographers, directors and such as commercials), I chanced upon this gem – from a Melbourne-based outfit.

The further you get from home, the better view you get, I reckon.

Check it out.  It’s bloody magnificent.

Nullarbor

Reverence for Phar Lap’s Heart,what about Patrick White?

06 Friday Apr 2012

Posted by gerard oosterman in Gerard Oosterman

≈ 14 Comments

Reverence for Phar Lap’s Heart ,what about Patrick White?

April 6, 2012

Last week-end’s Australian Review featured a double paged article about a new book being published, almost two decades after the writer’s death, written by our national icon and Noble Prize Winner, Patrick White. It’s called ‘The Hanging Garden’. Its timely rescue from possible oblivion due to David Marr’s boundless admiration for Paddy whom he quoted as the ”most prodigious literary imagination in the history of this nation.”

Hang on; national icons, I thought they were Donald Bradman or Phar Lap. It is strange that our sport heroes continue to have a greater place in our admiration than our much more enduring artists. We can still read Patrick White or listen to our Joan Sutherland but somehow dead sport heroes seem to have priority over our artists. (Do people really watch old footage of Bradman swinging out with his bat?)Perhaps this is because there is very little public exposure of our deceased artists. We don’t easily bump into them, especially not in bronzed sculptures scattered around our public parks.

We all know that people in Russia are well provided with larger than life size bronze statues scattered around most of their public parks and open spaces. Those sculptures usually depict the heroic male farm worker holding a scythe or a stout busty female pointing a sheaf of wheat skywards with a clutch of children at her feet. It’s hard to take a seat anywhere in public and not be overlooked by the revolutionaries of Russia. Enormous Lenin’s also made those eating pirozhki at Gorki Central park of Culture and Leisure a rather noble and humbling experience.

Fortunately, the bronzed sculptures are not all heroes of revolution or political mayhem. Many are also of their writers, poets and other artistic giants. While I was there I saw many very pensive and good looking Pushkins about. The bearded Tolstoys seemed to feature much less in number. This might well be for technical reasons. It is not easy to cast a figure with large flowing beard and seated in a cane chair into a bronze statue. What do you think the pigeons would do perched on the cane chair?

We don’t revere our mayhem causing revolutionaries and political   wreckers to that degree. We would be very chagrined stepping out of the train at Wynyard being greeted by a life size Beazley on horseback. Can we imagine for one moment, after a big night out at the Bankstown RSL, bumping into a John Howard with cricket bat?

We do have a stern looking Queen Victoria at the entrance to the Queen Victoria Building near Sydney’s Town-hall. She hails from such a historical distance away that we accept her as easy as we do a park-bench. She served our calm Anglo history very well. The kids just love her too.

Captain Cook is peering beyond distant horizons. He just needs an occasional dusting of his binoculars. Not much further is a mysterious bronze pig whose snout gets polished together with coins being donated for the hospital just behind it.  I am not sure if the pig polishing and coin throwing is still connected to making a wish as well! The relentless march of history has a habit of finally blurring out the edges.

Another animal cast in heavy metal is the Gundagai drover’s dog. I could not see him at the spot he was supposed to be last time. Perhaps dogs roam around even after cast in bronze.  Maybe the drover’s tucker box was getting empty.

A weird and rather spooky relic of the past is the sad and somewhat forlorn sight of a large heart kept in a jar of alcohol. It is Phar Lap’s ticker. For those outside Australian territories and our horse ignorant young; Phar Lap was one of the fastest horses to run around a race course. It was a phenomenal winner, making lots of money for the punters. I can’t imagine the horse being too impressed if it knew its heart ended up being pickled inside a jar.

The omission of our well known artists cast in bronze seems to stick out somewhat. Mind you, not far from my place we do have that famous icon, a cricketer in tarnished bronze. His name is Donald Bradman. He is famous and certainly an artist with the bat & ball. People queue up to get their picture taken standing next to him. They arrive from all parts of the world, even Fiji and Pakistan.

Are we ready to grace our parks and public open spaces with sculptures celebrating our best in the arts. Why can’t we have our greatest writer, Patrick White being honored with a life size sculpture or even a statue? I know he would be horrified but he won’t see it. His ashes were scattered around Centennial Park.  He was always a bit grumpy when it came to bestowing recognition and fame on him. He would rather stay home than face the media or the hungry crowds.

He was a modest man. Even so, we do need to give greater recognition to our creative artists…For posterity.  For our children. They need to know and see our artists as well as the sporting heroes.

What about a Joan Sutherland in bronze, a corrugated zinc alume armored Sydney Nolan? Perhaps a Brett Whitely in shimmering stainless steel next?

Just let’s start first with Patrick White though. I can see him already, jutted jaw, his mouth firmly set, looking straight at us. A bit miffed but pleased about ‘The Hanging Garden’ also been published.

Tags: Australian Review, Bankstowen, Beazley, David Marr, Gorki, Hanging Garden, Joan Sutherland, John Howard, Lenin, Noble Prize, Patrick White, Pushkin, Sydney Nolan, Tolstoy Posted in Gerard Oosterman | Edit |   Leave a Comment »

Crisis and Opportunity

06 Friday Apr 2012

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Uncategorized

≈ 96 Comments

Crisis and Opportunity by Katherine Xiao Image on sale in http://www.club21global.com/ Singapore Gallery 21

I had the pleasure to look at this – and some other wonderful calligraphy as FM and I stopped over in Singapore.  Apart from the aesthetic qualities of Katherine Xiao’s work, I was struck by its challenging title.  Crisis and opportunity.  Interesting.

I’ve written in recent times that I am heartily sick of the way almost all mainstream media bombards us with one major disaster after another.  Just before our subscription to the Sydney Morning Herald ran out, I wrote to the editor of the Good Weekend pointing out that they were not presenting us with a very good weekend.  In one edition alone there were three  cancer stories – these are supposed to show us the meaning of courage against awful odds – particularly the one in  the “Two of Us” section where a woman’s diagnosis was followed quickly by her husband falling into his own battle with the big C.  And there was another C story reported plus a person who had brain damage rewiring their working hemisphere to cover the bit that had gone AWOL.  Even the usually humorous Danny Katz was having a shot at someone with deep pockets and short arms dudding his mates during his shout at the pub.  FFS !

Have you noticed that there is so little or no joy in any of this ?  Crisis. Crisis. Crisis.

The end result – or the impact on me is to start  a chain reaction of negative or nihilist thinking.  What’s the point of going on ?  Crisis.  Crisis.  Crisis leads to depression depression depression and an internal voice shouting “Why fuckin’ bother ?”

This is how I’ve been feeling about the Pig’s Arms lately.  It’s a question put to me directly by one of our clearest and deepest thinkers.

Next month, the Pig’s Arms will be three years old.  This makes it an oldy in Internet years, somewhat like the community members.  This last year has seen significant changes, not the least of them being one of our founders and a tireless worker on the blog going feral and abusing the other patrons and generally acting like a dickhead.

I know that most if not all of us forgive our friends and make allowances for their difficult times and I have been deeply impressed by the lengths some of us have gone to help others and show inclusiveness and caring.

Throughout the last few months I’ve seen other regulars taking a particular club to each other and saying things that may not have been intended to wound – but which apparently have felt that way to the recipient(s).  I can’t for the life of me work out why this is so – and yet I did it myself when I was I think, pushed too far.  After a couple of gentle warnings I told the person to fuck off and never come back.  And that’s what has happened and we’re all the poorer.

I’ve felt the pressure of work when it’s been on and the pressure of no work when it’s been off – intruding on my time and sapping my energy for getting behind the bar and keeping the life of the pub a life I think is worth living.

We’ve also seen some of our regular contributors finding their lives in more fertile grounds elsewhere – often for the same reasons as I’ve expressed above.  While I don’t mind patrons using the pub as a conversation space for gardening and television commentary, and Twitter-like announcements about the next excitement-packed dog walk, for example, these are not things I personally find compelling.  But they’re not something to go all abusive over either.

We opened the pub so that we could get pieces published without all the palaver that the ABC laid over Unleashed and their random, conversation-killing moderation.   The Pig’s Arms was and to some extent still is such a place – for exploring creative web writing and generally having a bit of fun.  And having commentary that reflects a willingness to lay a few more courses of bricks over the (sometimes slim) foundations of the posts.

But these days it feels to me like our commenters are happier knocking out each other’s bricks and we don’t seem to be building anything substantial.

From time to time I have felt like either abandoning the pub and leaving the community to its own devices,  but the pub has my name all over the place and it’s a child I prefer to not leave on the street to suffer the vicissitudes of a random and capricious world.  Neither am I easily able to abandon friends or the massive body of work we’ve produced.

So what is my job in what looks to me like a time of crisis for the Pig’s Arms ?  In the real world patrons of a watering hole come and go and come back.  Sometimes they get chucked out for behaving badly.  Sometimes it’s for their own god.  Other times its for everyone’s good.  Sometimes pubs go into hibernation until a new publican is prepared to give the old thing a new lease of life.

Is my concern supposed to be for the people or the pub – or both ?

Since Waz asked the question I’ve been trying to ignore the elephant in the room – this, our porcine crisis.

But now the idea put so elegantly on paper by Katherine Xiao – that with crisis comes opportunity – suggests to me that by asking questions rather than by pretending that everything is hunky dory and just keeping on keeping on, we could drive a crisis into identifying a new opportunity that is a fresh and vibrant as the pub has been in previous years.  Or we could torch the place and let something new rise phoenix-like from the ashes.

In the past some of us have referred to me as “Boss”.  While it’s flattering on one level, some of us will remember that my first published story for Unleashed was “All bosses are bastards”.  Am I proving myself right or what ?

I don’t feel a strong fatherly relationship with the pub any more than I stay wedded to any other of my hair-brained ideas that have been flushed out in the name of a joke.  It’s your pub too.

IS there an opportunity – or just a crisis ?  Is there some good to hand ?

What are you going to do to breathe some life into the Pig’s – or to build the bonfire ?

Or will it be not with a bang, but a whimper ?

Waving – Its all new

02 Monday Apr 2012

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Algernon, Bands at the Pig's Arms, Entertainment Upstairs

≈ 22 Comments

Tags

Nick Lowe, Pretenders, Streanglers

Playlist by Algernon

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YfpRm-p7qlY&ob=av3e

Town called malice –The Jam

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NIC6_nApwjc

West End Girls – Pet Shop Boys

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qHYOXyy1ToI&ob=av2e

Love will tear us apart – Joy Division

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LKrZ8oWO5-w

Just can’t get enough – Depeche Mode

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OSSGdnyvl1I

Promise you a Miracle –Simple Minds

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RIJlw7QbB4s

Relax – Frankie goes to Hollywood

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gj-CPouUAWo

Watching the Detectives – Elvis Costello and the Attractions

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DnG1vqVlPGE

The nips are getting bigger – Mental as Anything

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B-0rNzpaxzg

Quasimodo’s dream – The Reels

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Osz-GQbX37o

The unguarded moment – The Church

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=80A26-uo-CA

I love the sound of breaking glass – Nick Lowe

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PSTHMxBttlU

Night boat to Cairo – Madness

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f_-7fqUMuyg

Mirror in the bathroom – The Beat

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oc-P8oDuS0Q

Come on Eileen – Dexys Midnight runners

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I1wg1DNHbNU

Once in a lifetime – Talking Heads

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=szhJzX0UgDM

Rock Lobster –B52’s

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xbt30UnzRWw

Whip it – Devo

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-7Hy7uAb_eU

Brass in Pocket – The Pretenders

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uAdal53PKmk

The Paris Match – The Style Council

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WXzFCS72QIA

Roxanne – The Police

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tgFh4RHgn0A

White Wedding – Billie Idol

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VPgHbt0ODr4

Stand and Deliver  -Adam & the Ants

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7m94ip38UKs

Shout to the top – The Style Council

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dmbwsebJNe4

Always the sun – The Stranglers

Break(fast)ing News – Julian in Sydney

01 Sunday Apr 2012

Posted by Voice in Julian London, Travels

≈ 21 Comments

Gold Coast identity Julian was sighted in Sydney this morning, out on the town with a few friends.

Julian Meeting Some Pigs Arm's Friends

Julian's Pigs

The Good Looking Ones Hitting the High Spots

Newer posts →

Patrons Posts

  • The Question-Crafting Compass November 15, 2025
  • The Dreaming Machine November 10, 2025
  • Reflections on Intelligence — Human and Artificial October 26, 2025
  • Ikigai III May 17, 2025
  • Ikugai May 9, 2025
  • Coalition to Rebate All the Daylight Saved April 1, 2025
  • Out of the Mouths of Superheroes March 15, 2025
  • Post COVID Cooking February 7, 2025
  • What’s Goin’ On ? January 21, 2025

We've been hit...

  • 767,955 times

Blogroll

  • atomou the Greek philosopher and the ancient Greek stage
  • Crikey
  • Gerard & Helvi Oosterman
  • Hello World Walk along with Me
  • Hungs World
  • Lehan Winifred Ramsay
  • Neville Cole
  • Politics 101
  • Sandshoe
  • the political sword

We've been hit...

  • 767,955 times

Patrons Posts

  • The Question-Crafting Compass November 15, 2025
  • The Dreaming Machine November 10, 2025
  • Reflections on Intelligence — Human and Artificial October 26, 2025
  • Ikigai III May 17, 2025
  • Ikugai May 9, 2025
  • Coalition to Rebate All the Daylight Saved April 1, 2025
  • Out of the Mouths of Superheroes March 15, 2025
  • Post COVID Cooking February 7, 2025
  • What’s Goin’ On ? January 21, 2025

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 374 other subscribers

Rooms athe Pigs Arms

The Old Stuff

  • RSS - Posts
  • RSS - Comments

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 374 other subscribers

Archives

Website Powered by WordPress.com.

  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Window Dresser's Arms, Pig & Whistle
    • Join 280 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Window Dresser's Arms, Pig & Whistle
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...