As a kid, did you ever dream about getting to roam around your favourite store after hours? As a fashion-loving adult, would you adore nothing more than being surrounded by your go-to label on an overnight stay? Thanks to House of Sunny, the latter is now becoming a reality — but for just two people for one night only, at its Hackney showroom and to celebrate London Fashion Week. The good news: this collaboration with Airbnb looks like the ultimate fashion fantasy, and it's also free. The trickier news: getting to slumber in a space that's basically House of Sunny's latest collection turned into a pop-up hotel means needing to be in London this week, because the stay is for Friday, September 22. If you've seen news of Airbnb's past one-off listings — think: Barbie's Malibu DreamHouse, the Ted Lasso pub, the Moulin Rouge! windmill, Gwyneth Paltrow's Montecito abode, Hobbiton, the Bluey house, the Paris theatre that inspired The Phantom of the Opera, the Scooby-Doo Mystery Machine, The Godfather mansion, the South Korean estate where BTS filmed In the Soop and the Sanderson sisters' Hocus Pocus cottage and Japan's World Heritage-listed Suganuma Village — then nothing about this situation should come as a surprise. Just like previous extremely short-term themed stays, this one is only up for reservations at a set time, too, with bookings opening at 3am AEST on Wednesday, September 20. With what's been dubbed Sunny's House, you'll kick back at a spot that's been given a stunning makeover — and you'll also get to improve your own style. The digs include an entrance that's all about greenery, taking its cues from the Hockney dress; a red and orange bedroom designed to look like the sundown cardigan; a crimson bathroom that splashes the colour all over the room, this time paying tribute to the La Belle dress; and hanging out in the cloud-adorned "wardrobe of dreams". Sunny Williams will be on hand to give you design tips one on one, and your time in the wardrobe of dreams will involve trying on House of Sunny threads. Also, due to the showroom's location, you'll be able to head beyond Sunny's House for brunch on Broadway Market, visiting the Columbia Road Flower Market and grabbing dinner. "House of Sunny's design and ethos has always been inspired by the intersection of culture, architecture, interior, and our community's love for travel, home and aesthetics. I am excited to welcome you to my house; this immersive Airbnb is unique, crafted and eye-catching, the perfect partnership of fashion and special stays," said Williams. As always, whoever scores the booking is responsible for their own travel, including if they have to get to and from London. Money literally can't buy the overnight stay, however — so best of luck to your busily clicking fingers. For more information about the Sunny's House sleepover on Airbnb, or to book at 3am AEST on Wednesday, September 20 for a stay on Friday, September 22, head to the Airbnb website. Images: Alix McIntosh. Feeling inspired to book a getaway? You can now book your next dream holiday through Concrete Playground Trips with deals on flights, stays and experiences at destinations all around the world.
Ian Fleming's James Bond feasted on more than vodka martinis. Photographer Henry Hargreaves, the brains behind the No Seconds photography series (in which he recreated and photographed the last meals of famous death row criminals like Ted Bundy), is back with another series of snapped meals — this time from the literary adventures of 007, dubbed Dying to Eat. While the James Bond films like to focus more on cocktails, explosions, car chases and Daniel Craig walking slowly and triumphantly out of the surf, author Ian Fleming spent a great deal of time articulating the dinners, breakfasts and midnight snacks of Bond. But he didn't do this just to create some form of James Bond cookbook. It was a form of escapism for a postwar audience. "Ian Fleming wrote for the 1950s Englishman, whose everyday experience of the world was coloured by the devastating consequences of war," says Hargreaves. "The ‘50s post-war man could read Fleming’s Bond books and dream not only of adventure and villains in far-off lands, but of an exciting lifestyle of fast cars, beautiful women, finely tailored clothes, and exotic gourmet meals from around the world. Sadly these meals were missing from the cinematic adaptations." Dying to Eat is a collaboration between art director/food stylist Charlotte Omnes and Hargreaves, alongside graphic designer Will Vink, in which one scene from every Fleming title has been recreated detail for detail. Hargreaves' grandfather actually served with Fleming during the war and consulted on some of the tailoring details of the Bond books, so it's a project surprisingly close to home. From the eggs benedict of The Man with the Golden Gun to the spaghetti bolognaise of Thunderball and silver dishes of crab claws in Goldfinger, it's a visual essay into the 'exotic' meals only available at the time to a worldly, travelling human — one who stayed everywhere from a Swiss hotel room to a Miami beach club. But you'll notice there's a few Bond-like elements in the frame; a cufflink, a woman's purse, a ----. Hargreaves describes each meal as "more than just a detail contained within a sentence. It’s a story unto itself." “The trouble always is,” [Bond] explained to Vesper, "not how to get enough caviar, but how to get enough toast with it." Images: Henry Hargreaves.
That's it. December. It's summer now and there's no excuses for staying curled up inside, rain or no rain. Aside from that, Sydney's foodies and mixologists have been working hard: experimenting with ingredients, concocting new combinations and opening up a whole swathe of new places for you to visit. So get scampering around this town! Concrete Playground has your checklist ready to go. Here it is, Sydney's top new bars and restaurants for the summer season. Neild Avenue Where: 10 Neild Avenue, Rushcutters Bay Ahhh, Sydney, you can officially exhale. For all those who are desperately seeking an unpretentious dining/drinking experience that doesn’t involve having to choose between a wine bar the size of a studio apartment (in New York) with a shave of glorified ham and a lick of pâté masquerading as a meal, or a pub with sticky carpet and $10 steak: your search has ended. The duo that could turn battery acid into Beaujolais, Maurice Terzini and chef Robert Marchetti, recently unveiled their brand new slice of the Mediterranean-meets-Brooklyn, Neild Avenue. For full review and details, click here. Freda's Where: 107-109 Regent Street, Chippendale Finding Freda’s is like stepping through the back of a magic wardrobe. Walk down an unassuming, dingy alley behind Central, past the sashaying salsa dancers and through a black door with a small, hand-drawn placard and suddenly you’re in a softly lit room, easy music playing and a kindly man at your side ready to whisk you to a table. Once settled in, peruse the cocktail list, which is a pleasing mix of classics and reinventions. Of the former they do a perfectly balanced Midnight Negroni ($16) and I can imagine the Fresh Fruit Cocktail will be a sell-out this summer. The wine list has a good selection of up-and-comers, with a super smooth Pinot called Giant Steps from the Yarra and a full-bodied tempranillo/grenache called La Vendima ($10). I’m a big fan of the beer choices, which includes one of my favourites, Murrays, as well as two amber ales that are caramel flavoured and quite hoppy – choose the Sierra Nevada ($9.5) to have with food or Atomic ($9.5) for sipping solo. For full review and details, click here. Jester Seeds Where: 127 King St, Newtown 2024 Jester Seeds has only recently opened, and marks the last drinking establishment on King Street before you hit the no-man’s land of City Road and the University of Sydney campus. So a lot of people haven’t stumbled across Jester Seeds yet. It’s not especially noticeable from the street – just a collection of curious couches framing a doorway and the shadow of a bar behind. In fact, a man had to yell at me from the pavement to get my attention, but I’m very grateful that he did. The bar is a haven of recycled furniture, dark wood and shabby student chic. A room at the back is filled with sofas and intimate tables, and the couches at the front could easily keep you sitting there for hours. Essentially, it looks like they’ve transported the contents of a ramshackle vintage shop from the lower end of King Street then artfully rearranged it, and prettied it up with some lampshades and mood lighting. The staff are lovely, with many recommendations and plenty of chat, and were infinitely tolerant of my inability to make a decision. For full review and details, click here. Honeycomb Where: 354 Liverpool Street Darlinghurst 2010 Perched on a corner in Darlinghurst, Honeycomb has wide windows running down the length of one side so that from almost any seat you can see the street. It makes it feel as if you could lift the roof off and you’d have a little Italian piazza. However, it isn’t the best place for a date (eating at the 6.30pm, family-time sitting probably doesn’t help either) as the small tables are very close - it’s a little hard to be romantic while speaking to your dining partner as if they were hard of hearing. Saying that, when the sun sets and the lights dim, it definitely becomes more atmospheric. If you follow food news, you’ll know this is Andy Bunn’s (former chef at Café Sopra) project, and if you’re a regular at one of the Fratelli restaurants, don’t expect any surprises. This is far from being a criticism though: the Fratelli restaurants do some of the best relaxed, Italian food this side of Leichhardt. For full review and details, click here. Hemingway's Where: 48 North Steyne, Manly 2095 The atmosphere of a writer's den, insanely long opening hours, fun and flavorsome food, a drinks menu that will keep even the most inspired drinker guessing, and not even the slightest degree of pretension. In short, Hemingway's must be one of the best spots in town right now. And it's perhaps not where you would expect it to be. A far cry from the back lanes of Darlinghurst or even the fame of King Street, this bar is firmly situated on Manly's main strip, right across from the beach. Despite this, it's about as dissimilar from a tourist trap as you can imagine. For full review and details, click here. Dry Land Bar Where: 92 Redfern Street, Redfern 2016 The thing about Redfern is, although it has a reputation as being the ‘next big suburb’, there’s also not a lot there yet. Enter Dry Land Bar, the first small bar to open in Redfern. It possesses the kind of local, relaxed atmosphere that would make you seriously consider moving (unless of course you already live close by, in which case accept my jealous commendations). The lovely thing about Dry Land Bar is that they really know what they’re doing, bringing together folk who’ve done stints in Love, Tilly Devine and Grasshopper. On top of this, they serve the kind of drinks that cause me to do a kind of happy-wiggle dance in my chair and the best food I’ve had at any small bar in Sydney. It’s technically bar food, but I’d be quite happy to come here for dinner once a week: try the Mushroom, Jerusalem Artichoke and Fennel Tart or the Gruyere Cheeseburger. And if you’re in any way fond of after-dinner treats, the Chocolate Mousse with Poached Pear is enough to cause a very indelicate scramble for spoons. For full review and details, click here. Cantinero Where: 18 Sydney Road, Manly 2095 Something about Cantinero feels a little bit... illegal. It could be the fact that this is a coffee house by day, occupied by this underground crowd only in the late hours. Or it might be the makeshift film projector, which shows Mexican gangsters flickering across the back wall. Either way, we like it. The bunker atmosphere and a relaxed courtyard combine into something that feels like an Alice in Wonderland-style rabbit hole in the Manly landscape. That said, there's no chance of wandering in by accident. While Cantinero lies on the main strip, you need to know what you're looking for to find this dimly lit restaurant slash bar. And once you do, there's no going back. For full review and details, click here. Nourishing Quarter Where: 315 Cleveland Street, Redfern 2016 It all started with a group of friends, a handful of nutrition books and a collective desire to heal through food. Now Nourishing Quarter - barely in its second year - has attracted a serious cult following. NQ is a vegetarian and vegan-friendly restaurant dedicated to the wheat, gluten and dairy intolerant among us. But it’s also much more than that. The affable owner Lam Dinh (banker turned restaurateur, following his own health scare) describes his team’s work as contributing to the growing awareness about the importance of diet for general health and well-being. ‘We’re not about preaching’ he explains, ‘we’re about producing consistently high-quality, healthy and tasty food that’s accessible to all.’ For full review and details, click here. The Island Bar Where: Cockatoo Island, Port Jackson 2090 Key Largo, Montego, baby why don’t we go… When the Beach Boys penned those lyrics, they probably weren’t thinking of an industrial island smack-bang in the middle of an antipodean metropolis. Cockatoo Island may not have sandy beaches and swaying palm trees, but its newest resident, The Island Bar, is adding a touch of beach to Sydney Harbour. This brand new bar by renowned Sydney mixologist Marco Faraone surprises with its striped deckchairs and sunbrellas alongside the site’s antique shipbuilding machinery, a reminder of the island’s heritage past – over the years, it was an imperial prison, a shipbuilding yard, reformatory, Commonwealth naval base and industrial school. The design of the bar – it’s constructed from recycled shipping containers – picks up on this theme. For full review and details, click here. Former Glory Where: Corner of Liverpool and Palmer Streets, Darlinghurst 2010 Prostitutes and razor gangs seem to be all the rage in Darlinghurst right now. References to Tilly Devine abound. But Former Glory has a little something the other bars don't: a real dark and dirty history. Situated right across the road from what was once Devine's main brothel, this pub, formerly known as the Tradesman's Arms Hotel, was dubbed the Bloodhouse in honour of its violent scenes. Sounds like the kind of place I'd like to visit. You're likely to find that you're already familiar with the location of this pop-up bar. The East Village Hotel is, after all, a familiar marker on the Darlo drinking landscape. Duck inside and take the stairs, winding up two levels past the fading conviction notices on the walls. You'll emerge into a resuscitated space, filled with round wooden tables and white tablecloths, leather chesterfield armchairs and a tastefully subtle assortment of vintage paraphernalia. For full review and details, click here. Caffe Sicilia Where: 628 Crown Street, Surry Hills 2010 While Crown Street certainly has its attractions, it's a pleasure to duck into this slice of 1940s Sicily, take a deep breath and sip a coffee as you watch the crowds pass you by. The theme is clearly stated in the marble, tiles, polished wood and mirrors of the interior, as well as in the numerous references to Italian film icons. Relaxed Italian glamour is the order of the day. The menus are expansive, with breakfast, lunch and dinner - as well as drinks, desserts and takeaway - on offer. Opening hours are surprisingly long, stretching from 7 in the morning until midnight most days. We popped in for a lazy Sunday lunch, which is a great time to make the most of the outdoors seating. For full review and details, click here.
The fight to keep Sydney's Sirius building is far from over. On Thursday, November 3, the Millers Point Community Association launched a legal challenge against the NSW Government. And it's being paid for by crowdfunding — to the tune of $50,000 provided by 600 citizens. Now, that's some serious people power, right there. The building, which was designed by architect Tao Gofers, is not only an important part of '70s history and a great example of Brutalist architecture, but also public housing. For years and years it has helped to even the score in this expensive, property-obsessed city of ours, by allowing people on low incomes to live in the centre, with harbour views. But back in September, the NSW Liberal Government under Premier Mike Baird floated plans to smash Sirius up and replace it with luxury apartments. A big public rally ensued, in which 1500 people — including the likes of Anthony Albanese, Tim 'Rosso' Ross and Lord Mayor Clover Moore — attended and the CFMEU, in collaboration with Unions NSW, coordinated a green ban. This latest challenge calls on the NSW Minister for Environment and Heritage Mark Speakman to appear in the Land and Environment Court. His and the Government's wrong-doing? Their refusal to list Sirius on the State Heritage register, despite the unanimous advice of the Heritage Council. "This building is a symbol of community values that still exist — values like inclusion and respect for diversity," said Anthony Albanese MP. "Such values are still important to millions of Australians who take pride in living in a nation that cares about all of its citizens, not just those with big bank balances." Lord Mayor Clover Moore pointed out that the Minister's decision sets a "dangerous" precedent. If the challenge is successful, it could "create a valuable new precedent that will confirm the objectives of heritage legislation and discourage the government from acting this way again". The action is just one element in the Save Our Sirius campaign. In addition to the rally and the green ban, twenty ambassadors have been appointed to support the heritage listing of Sirius and the maintenance of social housing in The Rocks. The legal action is currently in progress. Images: Katherine Lu.
From October 4-5 at The Rocks, you will feel like a kid in a candy store. The two-day Festival of Chocolate will see The Rocks transformed into a sea of market stalls, as dessert chefs from all over the country try to win you over with an array of chocolate-inspired concoctions in every mouth-watering form possible. Bar, pastries, ice-cream, crepes, cakes — we're just scratching the surface of the goodies on offer. 2014 is the debut of this festival, featuring as part of Good Food Month. Though some of what we might think of as the big guns of Australian dessert are staying home for this one, Rocks residents Ananas Brasserie, Baroque Patisserie, Bar 100 and La Renaissance will be spruiking their tasty, melty wares, alongside wider NSW choco-talent Sweetness the Patisserie, Chocolarts, Le Pain Quotidien, Adora Handmade Chocolates and Danieli's Fine Foods. Watch the people who have dedicated their life's work to making chocolate — heroes, really — demonstrate on the Chocolate HQ stage. There's also a live music stage, but since this is a Smooth FM-presented event, we wouldn't so much recommend it. Instead, gravitate to the pop-up bar with dessert cocktails, including a chocolate martini and chocolate beer. In celebration of The Rocks transformation into a chocolate haven, restaurants around the Rocks will be showcasing their dessert talents with special menus for the entire month of October. The Smooth FM Festival of Chocolate is on from 10am – 5pm each day.
It's all about the fermented hops, grains and apples on Saturday, September 13, at inner west favourite the Vic in Enmore. The third annual Craft Beer and Cider Festival will be radiating a golden glow over early spring. Last year's event focused on the stellar concoctions that have been brewed locally. This year they have expanded their horizons to include world beers and ciders alongside these local favourites, including 70 unique craft beer varieties from New Zealand, America, Japan and Italy. While you sample the great range on offer, the crafty guys (sorry, had to be done) at the Vic are also including a spit roasting of an animal to be decided. Live music will be played throughout the day. Doors open at noon and entry is free (free!), meaning this great range of unique liquid happiness can be tested without paying a single cent. Because you're worth it.
In the low-budget prison drama Rise, an innocent young man is sentenced to six years in jail after being falsely accused of rape. It's a troubling tale inspired by the real life experiences of first time writer/director Mack Lindon, who himself was incarcerated for more than 18 months before being completely exonerated on appeal. Lindon's lingering sense of outrage is palpable throughout the film, and justifiably so. At the same time, it's difficult not to feel uncomfortable with the way that his screenplay, intentionally or not, plays into false myths about sexual assault. For the record, I have nothing but sympathy for Mack Lindon. Ultimately though, a film has to exist separately from the events on which it is based. To that end, Rise totally fails to acknowledge the fact that, in a vast majority of rape cases, the accused party actually did it. It's perfectly reasonable for Lindon to want to publicly reaffirm his innocence. Yet by dramatising his story for the screen, he has ended up perpetuating the commonly held belief that phony rape complaints occur more frequently than they do. Gone Girl copped flack for a similar issue, admittedly, but there you could argue it was part of a broader social critique. No such defence can be mounted here. Even without the dodgy gender politics, however, Rise is fairly atrocious. Once in lock-up, Lindon's onscreen surrogate Will (Nathan Wilson) learns to navigate prison life, doing his best to stay out of trouble, and eventually bonding with a number of inmates. These secondary characters hold some dramatic promise, particularly hardened criminal Jimmy Cove (Martin Sacks). But the dialogue, though earnest, sounds painfully forced, and frequently lapses into melodrama. When one inmate tells Will he's been in prison "in here" while placing his hand on his head, there's little you can do to suppress a snigger. The self-righteous Christian overtones don't exactly help matters, either. Lindon attempts to inject some additional gravitas via his directorial choices, including an angst-ridden soundtrack and a handful of instances of "arty" slow-motion. Sadly, it's all pretty cringeworthy, particularly when you take into account the movie's strange tonal imbalance that neuters any stabs at dramatic weight. While Will languishes in prison, his bumbling lawyer attempts to recruit the services of Queen's Council Julie Nile (Erin Connor), in a strange comic subplot has no place in such a (supposedly) serious film. That said, it's not nearly as bad as the unintentional comedy of the climax, a contrived courtroom scene with the most ludicrous 'eureka!' moment since the finale of Legally Blonde. At the end of the day, Lindon obviously had some things that he needed to get off his chest. If nothing else, Rise is clearly an intensely personal story, and under the circumstances, perhaps its questionable content can be partially forgiven. But it's a lot harder to overlook the film's basic technical ineptitude. If Lindon has any desire to keep making movies, there's a lot he needs to learn. https://youtube.com/watch?v=Jiq2NTjut8c
Australia's undying affection for Bill Murray has been shown through film tributes the country over— at Sydney's Golden Age Cinema, Brisbane's Catchment Brewing Co. and, most recently, Melbourne's Howler — but now the man himself is set to visit the country. But the actor, comedian and all-round good guy won't be emulating Peter Venkman or Carl Spackler or even Steve Zissou — he'll be performing classical spoken and musical works alongside distinguished German–American cellist Jan Vogler. The show's called New Worlds, which comes from an album of the same name the pair released last year. In it, Murray takes a different turn to how you my have seen him on-screen — he performs vocals to classic American music, and excerpts from American greats like Mark Twain, Walt Whitman and Ernest Hemingway. This will be accompanied by classical scores (think Bach, Schubert and Ravel) by Vogel and his ensemble. The shows will be held at the Sydney Opera House on Friday, November 9, and Saturday, November 10. Image: Peter Rigaud.
How often do you get to dress up all fancy, choose a unique tea from an overwhelmingly extravagant selection and eat delightfully tiny cakes and sandwiches? It's a beautiful thing. Every weekend in September and the first weekend in October, Colonial High Tea will be served in three historic Sydney venues: Elizabeth Bay House, The Governor's Table at the Museum of Sydney and Vaucluse House. For $49 per person you get a selection of cakes and sandwiches, endless amounts of tea (or coffee if you are so inclined) and a glass of Australian sparkling wine. The menu is designed in the style of the colonial era. Food offerings include cauliflower and truffle tart with samphire and parmesan crisp and smoked salmon on brioche with lemon creme and caviar. And the cakes, oh the cakes: chocolate and earl grey macarons, brioche doughnuts with lemon and lavender sugar, scones. The Colonial High Tea series is on from September 6 to October 5. Bookings can be made through
Has anyone had a better year so far than Taika Waititi? Likely not. 2022 hasn't even officially hit its halfway point yet and he's already been everywhere, doing everything, and has more to come. He was the subject of the Archibald's Packing Room Prize-winner, with his likeness now an award-worthy piece of art. He has that little Marvel movie called Thor: Love and Thunder in the works, set to hit cinemas in early July. Oh, and he went and co-starred in one of the best new TV shows of the year so far — and that series, Our Flag Means Death, has just been renewed for a second run. No, Taika's time playing a pirate isn't over yet, in supremely welcome news for everyone who sailed through Our Flag Means Death's glorious first season. His latest team-up with fellow New Zealand comedian Rhys Darby (after also working together on Flight of the Conchords, What We Do in the Shadows, Wellington Paranormal and Hunt for the Wilderpeople), it's a swashbuckling comedy that satirises the buccaneering times of the 18th century. As its first season unfurled, Our Flag Means Death also proved to be a sweet and warmhearted romance, as well as essential viewing. HBO clearly agrees, greenlighting the show's second season for its streaming service HBO Max. Exactly when it'll return has yet to be revealed, but fingers crossed that it'll cruise back into your queue — via Binge and in New Zealand via Neon — sometime in 2023. "We felt the show was special while we were making it, but fans' open-armed embrace of the inhabitants of the Revenge makes heading into a second season all the more sweet," said writer, showrunner and executive producer David Jenkins (People of Earth), who conjured up Our Flag Means Death. Based on its concept and cast alone, his series was always going to cement its spot on streaming must-see lists — and speed into comedy-lovers' hearts — and now it'll make a return voyage. If you haven't hopped aboard already, Our Flag Means Death stars Darby stars as Stede Bonnet, a self-styled 'gentleman pirate', a great approximation of Flight of the Conchords' Murray if he'd existed centuries earlier, and a man determined to bring a bit of kindness and elegancy to the whole swashbuckling game. He's based on an IRL figure, who abandoned his cosy life for a seafaring existence. The show is a loose adaptation of Bonnet's tale, though. As for Waititi, he dons leather, dark hues aplenty, an air of bloodthirsty melancholy and a glorious head of greying hair as Edward Teach — the marauder better known to the world as Blackbeard. Also featuring among the show's impressive lineup of supporting characters: Lucius (Nathan Foad, Bloods), Bonnet's righthand man and official scribe; Buttons (Ewen Bremner, First Cow), a seasoned seafarer and source of advice; Black Pete (Matthew Maher, Marriage Story), who constantly claims to have worked with Blackbeard; the fire-obsessed Wee John Feeny (Kristian Nairn, aka Game of Thrones' Hodor); and the initially secretive Oluwande (Samson Kayo, Truth Seekers) and Jim (Vico Ortiz, The Sex Lives of College Girls). Check out the full trailer for Our Flag Means Death below: Our Flag Means Death will return for a second season, with a release date yet to be announced. Our Flag Means Death's first season is available to in Australia via Binge and in New Zealand via Neon. Read our full review. Images: Aaron Epstein/HBO Max.
We don't quite have a poet laureate here. In the UK they get two, one for children, one for grown-ups. The USA has one, and a staccato history of employing poets at presidential inaugurations. While Canada too has a laureate, when it came to get a poet front and centre for the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, it chose to bring out local slam champ Shane Koyczan. Koyczan will bring his rattleshot delivery to the Sydney stage, headlining the evening at Outspoken's evening of beat poetry at FBi Social. Beat poetry is a form that never really died, living on in the music of Tom Waits and the Twitter bot that rebroadcasts lines from Allen Ginsberg's Howl on the hour. Accompanying Koyczan in bringing this faded form to Sydney will be the rhythmic Jive Poetic, host at the Nuyorican Poets Cafe and the Denver-lurking Ken Arkind. They'll be backed by local poets Alana Hicks, Alia Gabres and Randall Stephens, with visuals by collective Optic Soup. So whatever your poetic roots, the Social offers you a night to leave you lost in fast words.
Say goodbye to your childhood. Then, say hello to a beloved favourite slicing and dicing on the big screen. As announced back in 2022, the usually adorable literary critter that is Winnie-the-Pooh has been given the horror-movie treatment, in what's instantly one of the most intriguing flicks of the past few years. And, in great/cursed news for Australians, Winnie-the-Pooh: Blood and Honey is hitting cinemas Down Under in 2023. This isn't the AA Milne creation that you grew up with. Instead, it's a slasher film about the Hundred Acre Woods' famous inhabitant and his pals. And, if cuddling up with your significant other while watching a horror movie is your idea of a prime Valentine's Day date, Winnie-the-Pooh: Blood and Honey will bow locally on Tuesday, February 14, hosting sneak-peek sessions before a four-day season between Thursday, February 16–Sunday, February 19. Take every horror movie staple, every expected line and all the usual eerie settings, then throw in a favourite figure that's stopped being friendly and turned savage instead: yes, that's what's in Winnie-the-Pooh: Blood and Honey's pot. And yes, based on the trailer, it looks as creepy as the whole concept sounds. "Oh bother!" is definitely the mood, after Christopher Robin returns to the Hundred Acre Wood as an adult, years after leaving his pals Winnie, Piglet, Eeyore, Tigger, Kanga and Roo behind. All that time alone hasn't turned out well for those animals, and there's about to be a body count to prove it. No, the idea that Pooh might turn murderous hasn't ever crossed anyone's minds before this film. Gracing pages for almost a century — plus screens big and small for decades — Winnie-the-Pooh has done many things in his time, but getting grisly hasn't been one of them. Ever since Milne first conjured up the honey-loving, walking-and-talking teddy bear back in the 1920s, Pooh has enjoyed plenty of adventures involving his human and animal friends, and tried to eat as much of his favourite foodstuff as possible. We've all seen the cartoons and toys, and also watched films such as Goodbye Christopher Robin and Christopher Robin in recent years. To director Rhys Waterfield, however, Pooh is no longer cute and cuddly, even if he's a honey-fiending teddy bear who normally doesn't wear pants (although he appears to here). And if you're wondering about the tone of Winnie-the-Pooh: Blood and Honey, other than horror, the filmmaker's other upcoming titles include Firenado, Sky Monster and Rise of the Loch Ness. Clearly, Pooh breaking bad all falls into B-movie territory, which the premise makes plain as well. The setup: after seeing their food supplies dwindle as Christopher grew up, Pooh and Piglet have spent years feeling hungry. They've turned feral, in fact, even eating Eeyore to survive. So when Christopher returns, it sets the pair on a rampage, which leads to them a rural cabin where a group of university students are holidaying. From that summary, it's obvious what'll happen from there. The trailer cements that fact, and throws in more horror tropes than you could fit in a pot of honey in the process. Now all that's left is to see the end result in Aussie cinemas, with Winnie-the-Pooh: Blood and Honey also hitting screens overseas around the same time. Wondering why something that's usually so sweet and innocent is being given the creepy, bloody, eerie horror treatment — turning Winnie-the-Pooh into a killer, no less? It's because the character has just entered the public domain in America. Disney no longer holds the copyright, and no one can now hold the exclusive intellectual property rights over the character, opening the door for wild interpretations like this slasher flick. Check out the Winnie-the-Pooh: Blood and Honey trailer below: Winnie-the-Pooh: Blood and Honey will screen in Australian cinemas on Tuesday, February 14, then from Thursday, February 16–Sunday, February 19. Images: Jagged Edge Productions.
Remember The Matrix Revolutions? It’s okay if you don’t. The final instalment of the Wachowskis’ groundbreaking trilogy possessed a litany of problems, chief among them being a Matrix film featuring little to no Matrix. It was like setting The Wizard of Oz entirely in Kansas, or Waterworld on land, or Policy Academy on a holiday in Miami (see: Police Academy 5: Assignment in Miami). In the same vein, the most disappointing aspect of Tomorrowland is that it spends the lion’s share of its 107 minutes in Todayland. Under Australian consumer protection law, you might call that ‘misleading and deceptive conduct’. Under film law, you’d just call it a giant shame. If the name ‘Tomorrowland’ sounds familiar, you’ve probably been to Disneyland. Like Pirates of the Caribbean, this is a movie based on a theme park attraction, and while that’s not quite the nadir of creative inception (Battleship surely holds that ignominy), it’s not much of an improvement either. Theoretically, the land of tomorrow is a creative utopia; an alternate universe where all the dreamers — be they artists, inventors, musicians or scientists — can actually change the world free from the negative influences of politics and greed. If it sounds good, it looks even better: a sort of shiny retro future not unlike the one envisaged by The Jetsons. The question, of course, is how do you get there? This forms the basis of much of the film. A young Frank Walker (George Clooney in his later years, Thomas Robinson as the child) attends the 1964 World’s Fair to pitch his homemade jet pack. The judge (a curmudgeonly Hugh Laurie) sends him packing, but his daughter Athena (newcomer Raffey Cassidy) takes a liking to Frank and sneaks him into Tomorrowland. The story then jumps to the present day, where an apparently ageless Athena has turned her attention to the rebellious yet unfailingly optimistic Casey Newton (Britt Robertson). Athena slips Casey a magical pin that grants her a vision of Tomorrowland, fleeting in its duration yet enticing enough to send her on a quest to get there. Standing in her way are some spectacularly unexplained automaton villains and the gruff older Frank, who’s been exiled from Tomorrowland. There’s a sense Tomorrowland needs Casey, but nobody's prepared to say how or why. On the production front, Tomorrowland boasts an impressive team: a Disney vehicle written by Damon Lindelof (Lost) and directed by Brad Bird (The Incredibles, Mission Impossible: Ghost Protocol). No surprise, then, that it looks spectacular and maintains a rollicking pace throughout, with the action sequences offering a terrific blend of thrills and imaginative visuals. The performances, too, are mostly strong, with two-thirds of the leading trio coming in the form of intelligent, capable and determined young women. What lets Tomorrowland down is the heavy-handed messaging, repeatedly ramming its ‘we’re harming the planet’ line down our throats without a trace of subtlety, save for the one amusing Laurie gem: “We have simultaneous epidemics of obesity and famine. How does THAT happen!?" Tomorrowland's other significant problem is the violence. The action sequences contain a surprising level of graphic savagery, including multiple beheadings, innocent bystanders frequently being vaporised and Casey at one point going full Pesci on an automaton with an old baseball bat. Coupled with the clumsy environmentalism, Tomorrowland finds itself too preachy for adults yet too confronting for children. All the ingredients are there for an excellent adventure, and it routinely offers moments of genuine brilliance, but the overall result is something less. The constant product placement, Disney branding and clear merchandising take their collective toll, crippling the Lindelof/Bird creative utopia with the very corporate influences it sought to denounce.
Le1f, Bec Sandridge and Alex the Astronaut will headline the lineup of artists at this year's Gaytimes music festival. Set to take place over three days and two nights at the Lake Mountain Alpine Resort an hour and a half outside of Melbourne (where Paradise is held), the LGBTIQ-friendly event will feature more than 30 local and international music acts, as well as art shows, film screenings, speed dating and more. As the organisers put it: it's the camping festival "of your big gay dreams". The 18+ festival runs from February 16 to 18. Other standout acts who'll take the stage include Chicago DJ Chrissy, Paul Mac and Johnny Seymour's Stereogamous and Triple J Unearthed's Miss Blanks. In addition to the tunes, the festival will feature an array of additional action, from performance art and life drawing workshops to yoga and a drag race. Perhaps the most exciting thing will be a pop-up wedding chapel where same-sex couples will be able to get hitched (for real — it's legal now!) on the mountain. Shoot hello@gaytimes.com.au an email for more info on that one. The site will boast a cocktail bar, a coffee cart and food trucks, and you can even shell out for glamping if you're feeling extra. In keeping with their inclusive approach, Gaytimes will, as always, enforce a no tolerance policy for anti-social, homophobic, transphobic or racist behaviour. So don't be a jerk, and you should be A-okay.
We know it breaks both the first and second cardinal rules, but we need to talk about Fight Club right now. It’s been confirmed that director David Fincher, his long-term musical consort Trent Reznor and OG author Chuck Palahniuk are collaborating on Fight Club the rock opera, for reals. It’s literally going to be the all-singing, all-dancing crap of the world (in a good way). Culture journalist Jeff Goldsmith tweeted that Palahniuk confirmed the rumours in an interview, and Palahniuk tweeted a second confirmation the next day that has since been deleted. However Palahniuk did retweet Goldsmith’s tweet (isn’t Twitter such a murky swamp of Chinese whispers) so that’s all the confirmation we need. In April, Palahniuk told MTV that the Fight Club rock opera would take its place alongside previous musical legends Tommy and The Wall, and become the defining rock opera for the current generation. Although anti-materialism, anti-authority anarchist Tyler Durden probably wouldn’t approve of a glitzy, glamorous Broadway show, we sure do. And with Nine Inch Nails legend Reznor involved, it’s sure to be pretty spectacular. Reznor has scored a fair few of Fincher's films — Gone Girl, Girl with the Dragon Tattoo and The Social Network — and invariably his involvement turns whatever it touches to gold. No concrete dates have been mentioned by anyone involved in the project, but if you want more Fight Club while you wait, Palahniuk has released a Fight Club 2 comic book that delves into the backstory of Sebastian and Marla, and examines what Tyler Durden represents to us all. In the same MTV interview, Palahniuk says, "Tyler Durden is kind of an internal meme, a parasitical meme that has found a host or created a host in every generation going back for all of human history ... Tyler really brought Marla and Sebastian together, so they would have a child, in a way kind of bred them together, and that this child would ultimately be Tyler’s next vehicle." Unff. We are Jack’s crazy excitement. Via Spin.
Prepare for another actively sedentary June: the Sydney Film Festival has announced its full program for 2014. It's a canny balancing act between hotly anticipated preview screenings and little known international gems by festival director Nashen Moodley, with the Sydney Film Festival Hub tying things together over a vino at the Town Hall. "We feel this program represents the best of international film in the last 12 months," said Moodley at the program launch, and the best of the best are surely found in the SFF Official Competition. Doing dual duties as the opening night film is 20,000 Days on Earth, the Nick Cave documentary that's said to defy categorisation and won two gongs at Sundance. Formal experimentation is a bit of a theme in this year's competition, which also features Richard Linklater's Boyhood, a family drama which he shot with the same actors (Ethan Hawke, Patricia Arquette and kids Ellar Coltrane and Lorelei Linklater) over a 12-year period; Iranian director Shahram Mokri's Fish & Cat, shot in a single 134-minute take and based on a real news report; and The Kidnapping of Michel Houellebecq, starring the controversial author himself in a fictional scenario based on real-life rumours. David Michod's Animal Kingdom follow-up, The Rover, and Amiel Courtin-Wilson (Hail) and Michael Cody's Ruin are also ones to watch. The SFF Hub is not only returning for a third time but expanding its presence at the Town Hall to encompass the Treasury Room upstairs. As well as its scintillating lineup of talks and performances, this year it's decked out with designer furniture showcasing the legacy of the Eameses, a TITLE pop-up shop, Gelato Messina cart, vintage photo booth and the festival's discount ticket booth. A definitive highlight among the Hub's cinematic tangents is the Vladmaster Viewmaster Experience by artist Vladimir, who hijacks the classic toy for art purposes, crafting a story you experience click by click. Also featured are talks Altman on Altman (with son Robert Altman) and Eames on Eames (with grandson Eames Demetrios), film trivia, a film critics death match and Hugh Hamilton's Rosebud exhibition of film star portraits. All the popular streams in the festival return, including Freak Me Out, Sounds on Screen, The Box Set, International Documentaries and Documentary Australia Foundation Award for Australian Documentary. Special presentations at the State Theatre include the much-anticipated/mocked Zach Braff movie Wish I Was Here, Michel Gondry's scribbly Noam Chomsky doco Is The Man Who Is Tall Happy?, and the directorial debut from the writer of Drive, The Two Faces of January. These films you'll be able to see in cinemas later in the year, but this is your chance to see them in stately picture-palace surrounds (and see them before everyone else). The festival closes with What We Do in the Shadows, which is just what you'd expect of such a highbrow event — an NZ vampire mockumentary from the makers of Flight of the Conchords. Check out our top ten picks of the Sydney Film Festival. https://youtube.com/watch?v=7w1E5ibqEd4
To get 2023 started in style, Adelaide scored a brand-new music festival back in January, with the team at Secret Sounds unveiling Heaps Good. The one-day event featured Arctic Monkeys as headliners, and gave the South Australian capital a taste of the summer fest circuit. It clearly went well, because the fest is now tripling its footprint to see out this year and begin 2024. Adelaide Showground will still host the SA stop, this time on Saturday, January 6, 2024 — but Heaps Good will first hit up Sidney Myer Music Bowl in Melbourne, then Sandstone Point in Brisbane. That's ace news if you live in either city, or plan to be in Victoria or Queensland over the summer. Sydneysiders, it's an excuse for a trip either north or south, too. The Melbourne leg will kick off Heaps Good's three-city, three-state tour in the fest's second year. Need something to do for New Year's Eve? That's now sorted, because that's when the event is coming to town. Sandstone Point in Brisbane gets the nod to usher in 2024, taking place on Tuesday, January 2. Yes, that's all the reason you need to extend your Christmas and New Year break. "The inaugural Heaps Good was such a great day, and we're thrilled to take it on the road to more music lovers around the country over the coming New Year. Heaps Good is all about keeping it simple... single-day shows in convenient locations with great artists and your best mates," said Heaps Good producer Paul Piticco, announcing the fest's new cities. And the lineup? That hasn't been revealed as yet, so watch this space. As well as Arctic Monkeys, Heaps Good's debut fest also featured Peggy Gou, CHVRCHES, Jamie xx, Ocean Alley, Spacey Jane, PinkPantheress, Young Franco, King Stingray, Peach PRC and Ebony Boadu. HEAPS GOOD 2023–24 DATES: Sunday, December 31, 2023 — Sidney Myer Music Bowl, Melbourne Tuesday, January 2, 2024 — Sandstone Point, Brisbane Saturday, January 6, 2024 — Adelaide Showground, Adelaide Heaps Good will hit Melbourne, Brisbane and Adelaide across December 2023–January 2024, with lineup details and ticket sales to come. We'll update you when more details are announced — head to the festival's website for further information in the interim. Images: Dylan Minchenberg.
Dance music hits. An orchestra. Combine the two and Ministry of Sound Classical is one end result. For a few years now, this event has been giving Australia what no one probably knew they wanted when Ministry of Sound first started as a London club night back in 1991: tunes that usually fill dance floors performed by classical musicians. If you're a fan of making shapes and you're fond of getting nostalgic, then Ministry of Sound keeps indulging — sometimes by throwing huge 90s and 00s parties that nod back to raves three decades back and club nights at the turn of the century, and sometimes via this orchestral tour that gives bangers from the past 30 years a new live spin. In Australia, the latter is returning before 2025 is out, including welcoming summer in Sydney. This year's run heads to the Harbour City's Entertainment Quarter on Saturday, December 6, with Cassius headlining. Conducted by Vanessa Perica and with DJ Groove Terminator on backing duties, the Ministry of Sound Orchestra takes pride of place, of course, with vocalists and other talents on hand to assist. Ministry of Sound Classical is calling 2025's run a summer dance music festival, which means that a curated food and bar lineup is also on offer, as are multiple Sydney stages. As for the soundtrack, the event surveys tunes that've packed dance floors over Ministry of Sound's existence — so you just might hear classical renditions of Basement Jaxx, Darude, Röyksopp, Robin, Underworld, Moby, Fisher and more played by its orchestra. Images: Ruby Boland, Ashlea Caygill and Jack Dullard.
Macquarie Park will be the site of a huge $2.2 billion residential development — but it's not the high-price high-rise apartment complex that you might have come to expect from Sydney. This new development, which will be partially government funded, will provide a 3000 new homes to Sydneysiders — about 950 of which will provide social housing. A further 128 will be classed as affordable. As part of its Communities Plus project, the NSW Government this week announced the successful tenderers for the Ivanhoe Estate development as the Aspire consortium, which is made up of Mission Australia and developers Frasers Property Australia and Citta Property Group. The consortium will work with the government to develop housing that is affordable and sustainable for those who need it most. "The redevelopment will provide $120 million towards social and community infrastructure and $21 million towards social housing programs within the Ivanhoe estate," said Premier Gladys Berejiklian. "This will see services including tailored and personal plans to connect social housing tenants with education, training and employment." On top of the housing will be a stack of community facilities, including a high school, two childcare centres, an aged care centre, playgrounds, green spaces, gardens and a basketball court. Some commercial interests will be getting a look-in too, with retail shops, a supermarket and cafes all in the plans. Social housing residents will be able to access on-site Mission Australia offices, which will offer social services, including personalised support for tenants and community programs. "Everyone deserves a safe place to call home and everyone who lives in the Ivanhoe community will have the opportunity to fulfil their potential and connect with people in the neighbourhood, as well as having easy access to education, transport, jobs and services in the area," said Mission Australia CEO, Catherine Yeomans. Apart from bringing together people of varied social-economic backgrounds, the development has some pretty weighty sustainability goals. The aim is a six-star Green Star Communities Rating and overall carbon neutrality. To that end, water will be caught and reused, recycled materials will form part of construction, roofs will be green and a photovoltaic system will power a whopping 1.5 megawatts. Ivanhoe Estate — which is located close to Macquarie University and the train station — is part of the government's $22 billion Communities Plus project. Construction is set to start later this year, with the project to be delivered in stages of the next ten to 12 years. It's the first site to be developed; developments in Waterloo, Arncliffe, Telopea and Riverwood are set to follow.
Update Thursday, October 13: Due to rain, the 2022 Sydney Night Noodle Markets will run from Wednesday, October 12–Sunday, October 16 in Prince Alfred Park, Chalmers Street, Surry Hills. To stay up-to-date with any further changes, head to the event's Instagram page. This spring, Sydney's Night Noodle Markets will finally make its glorious return for six nights of tasty things on sticks, bowls of noodles, all the bao you can handle and oh-so-many extravagant desserts. After a couple of disrupted years, the beloved food event will hit up Sydney from Tuesday, October 4–Sunday, October 9 at Prince Alfred Park. With under a month left until the markets return, we've now been given insight into all the food you'll be able to consume across the six-day festivities. After the lineup of vendors was revealed last month — featuring favourites ranging from Hoy Pinoy and Wonderbao to Messina and a non-alcoholic bar from Dan Murphy's — each vendor's menu has now been unveiled and we're here to break down the best eats on offer at the markets. [caption id="attachment_815530" align="alignnone" width="1920"] Messina mango pancakes[/caption] Starting with the market's namesake, there are plenty of noodle dishes on offer. Flying Noodle's gravity-defying noodles are an always-popular option, coming in two varieties — Way of the Dragon with pork belly and honey soy sauce, and The Big Boss, featuring diced chicken tenders marinated in a soybean sauce and served with Chinese broccoli and seasonal vegetables. [caption id="attachment_816579" align="alignnone" width="1920"] Flying Noodle[/caption] If you prefer your noodles less reality-breaking, you can opt for Teppanyaki Noodles' take on yakisoba fried noodles, mee goreng from May's Malaysian or chicken karaage noodles from Queensland's Raijin Noodles & Dumplings. Raijin will also be a popular choice with vegetarians and tofu-lovers alike, offering its karaage noodles with crispy fried tofu instead of chicken, as well as a selection of gyoza. [caption id="attachment_868913" align="alignnone" width="1920"] Teppanyaki Noodle[/caption] Moving on from noodles to all things skewered, a returning highlight of the markets will be Hoy Pinoy. The Filipino barbecue street food masters and regular Gelato Messina collaborator will be back with its perfectly marinated meats. Fan-favourite dishes include the Inihaw an Baboy, pork belly skewers in banana ketchup glaze; Inihaw an Maok, traditional soy-glazed chicken skewers; and Bistek Tagalog, charcoal-roasted beef rump with a soy glaze and served on rice. ToastieSmith will be making its first appearance at the Sydney edition of the markets, rolling out four loaded toasted sandwiches for the occasion. Order the Chicken Barbie and you'll be treated to spiced chicken, American cheese, roasted sesame slaw, pineapple, smashed avocado, yuzu mayo and shichimi powder all between two pieces of bread; or mix things up with the Shrimp-in-the-Egg, packed with fluffy scrambled egg, grilled garlic prawns, cheese, corn chips, sweet chilli sauce, yuzu mayo and slaw. [caption id="attachment_785274" align="alignnone" width="1920"] ToastieSmith Shrimp-in-the-Egg[/caption] Other savoury standouts include Calabang's crispy skewered calamari, Korean fried chicken gua bao and okonomiyaki tofu bao from Wonderbao, creamy prawn wonton sandwiches from Pho Real Vietnamese, a variety of flavours of hand-cut twisted sweet potato on a stick, roti rolls from Roll Up, Donburi Station's chicken donburi, and dumplings from Masterchef alumni Brendan Pang. [caption id="attachment_868916" align="alignnone" width="1920"] Calabang crispy calamari[/caption] Dessert-wise, there are some inventive creations from beloved treat-makers. Alongside Donut Papi's regular array of doughnuts, the Sydney mainstay has created a Mi Goreng doughnut coated in Indomie's cult-favourite instant noodles. 15 Centimetres will be on-site serving up truffle basque cheesecake. Gelato Messina will be on hand with mango pancakes, french toast and deep-fried milo gelato. And, Wonderbao will be pairing its savoury selections with its signature buttery custard bao. Finally, in terms of drinks, choose between beers from Gage Road Brewing Co, Rekorderlig Cider, spritzes from Aperol and Dan Murphy's non-alcoholic bar featuring booze-free Salted Caramel Espresso Martinis. [caption id="attachment_856039" align="alignnone" width="1920"] Hoy Pinoy[/caption] The Night Noodle Markets were set to run between Tuesday, October 4–Sunday, October 9, however, after rain delays, they will run from Wednesday, October 12–Sunday, October 16 in Prince Alfred Park, Chalmers Street, Surry Hills. To stay up-to-date with any further changes, head to the event's Instagram page.
It's tempting to wallow in sadness that summer's over and start counting the weeks until December 1 rolls out (for the record, it's 36), but we'd rather concentrate on the positives. And one very big positive is an end-of-season sale. There's never a bad time to treat yourself to some new clothes — especially when you're saving a heap of money in the process. Resort and swimwear label Tigerlily is offering something very relevant to your interests: a big old four-day warehouse sale to get you some much-welcome bikini bargains. The Aussie brand is known and loved for its timeless prints and unique swimwear, so getting your mitts on some of the goods for up to 70 percent off is a major win. Past-season Tigerlily collections will be on offer with pieces starting at just $20 — and it isn't just swimwear. Dresses, shorts, kaftans and other clothing will also be reduced to help with your 2019 summer stockpile. The Tigerlily warehouse sale will take place at Paddington Town Hall from March 28–31, running from 9am–9pm on Thursday, 9am–6pm on Friday and Saturday and 10am–4pm on Sunday.
If you wander down to Darling Harbour during Sydney Festival you might catch a glimpse of people dangling precariously from a 19th-century building. However, these daredevils are actually partaking in an optical illusion. Argentinian artist Leandro Erlich allows you to experience the impossible with his interactive work Merchants Store. This delightful work is comprised of a facade lying flat on the ground with a mirror positioned perpendicular, creating the illusion of an upright building. Viewers are free to roam the uncanny architecture, scale the walls or casually lounge inside a window frame for an unmissable photo opportunity. After enjoying success in both Paris and London, this unique public art project invites creative Sydneysiders to defy the laws of gravity. Elrich is a master of 3D optical illusions. His works are visually confounding, creating spaces with unstable boundaries that challenge our understanding of human perception. His practice thrives on the psychological double-take; it is playful and humorous whilst continually provoking the viewer to question what it is we call 'real.' Image by Gar Powell-Evans. Barbican Art Gallery 2013.
Following a COVID-impacted 2020 ski season, some normalcy is beginning to return to the Snowy Mountains, with Thredbo announcing dates and extensive plans for its winter season. Last year's ski season saw ski resorts across Australia implement strict social distancing rules and limit the usual array of programs and activities usually provided to mountain-goers. Throughout the season, Thredbo opened at 50 percent capacity — with its website crashing as folks tried to get their hands on lift passes — while other resorts such as Hotham were forced to close. For 2021, Thredbo is planning to slide closer towards its usual winter routine, announcing a jam-packed season schedule full of new mountain experiences. The resort's ski season will kick off from Saturday, June 12, subject to snow conditions, and run through until October. On the slopes, a full slate of skiing and snowboarding lessons and programs will return in 2021, and a range of luxurious mountain activities have also been revealed. Those experiences start with sunrise sessions, which will grant you early morning access to watch the sunrise from Australia's highest lifted point, also include breakfast on the mountain and then let you have first ski of the day. Elsewhere, a series of dinners will see you transported to the Kareela Hutte restaurant to enjoy a four-course dinner with wine, complete with GH Mumm champagne. If you're looking for an extravagant Saturday night on the mountain, you can also take a star-lit ride in Australia's only alpine gondola, then tuck into a Bavarian-style feast in Merritts Mountain House. Thredbo's village, which is often the life of the party at the ski resort, will return with a full calendar of events after COVID-19 dampened the atmosphere in 2020. You can expect live entertainment, festivals for kids, and skiing and snowboarding events. Qantas is also starting new flight routes to the Snowy Mountains, to make travelling to the area easier. Flights directly to Cooma, about an hour out of Thredbo, will run from July 1 out of Sydney and Brisbane. The winter season opens for sale on Wednesday, March 31 — for season passes, with day pass, lesson and rental sales staggered from Tuesday, April 6 onwards — and spots are expected to be limited with the resort still responding to the current times. "We anticipate we will be operating under certain COVID-19 restrictions and expect demand to be high," said Thredbo General Manger Stuart Diver. "We encourage guests to plan their visits early, book in advance and be flexible with travel dates to avoid disappointment." Thredbo's winter ski season will return from Saturday, June 12. Find all the information on dates, pricing, experiences and accommodation via the Thredbo website.
The City of Sydney will showcase the 22 best photo entries from their annual Australian Life photography competition from Thursday 15 September. A panel of photographers, artists and curators narrowed down more than a thousand competition entries they received down to the finalists, who are a combination of amateur and professional photographers. All have a shot at winning the overall prize of $10,000, which will be announced on the exhibition's opening night. Afterwards, the images will remain on display until Sunday 9 October in a huge outdoor gallery in Hyde Park as part of Art & About, the City of Sydney's ongoing exhibition of temporary art throughout the city. Images that the entrants captured to represent the essence of Australian life include a double-fronted weatherboard house with several lambs resting on the porch, a truck pushing sand back towards the sea on a secluded beach and, naturally, seagulls stealing chips. Image: Taweechai Iam-Urairat.
Have you spent a lot of time playing mini-golf lately? The popularity of Holey Moley Golf Club would suggest so. Well, here's your chance to make back the money you've spent on 'practising': the inaugural (and, surprisingly, very lucrative) Holey Moley Masters. Holey Moley — which has eight mini-golf clubs across the East Coast, including one in Melbourne, one in Brisbane and two in Sydney — is launching what's set to be the country's biggest ever mini-golf competition. Kicking off with round one on March 28, the tournament will end with the best team from each Holey Moley venue battling it out for national glory and a cool $10k at a Melbourne final. A series of DJ-fuelled competition nights will be held to find the champion team from each Holey Moley course. Then, on April 19, the winners will be flown to Melbourne to represent their states at a huge final celebration, with the winners scoring their own 'Golden Jackets', a home-course party in their honour and, of course, that sweet, sweet cheque. It's all very official for something that is, at its core, a novelty. Nonetheless, it could be an easy way to make some cash. If you want a shot at victory, start working on your golf game and head here to register by March 18.
Future Archaeology, opening just shy of November, is an exciting showcase of work from early and mid-career artists. Future Archaeology pinpoints moments of disruption, taking the somewhat antiquated discipline of archaeology and transforming it into a complex picture of social and political movements throughout Asia and the Middle East. The big themes driving this show are migration, cultural displacement and appropriation. Future Archaeology will present work from Léuli Eshraghi, Nathan Beard, Deanna Hitti, Abdullah M.I. Syed, Andy Mullen, and Claudia Nicholson. Each artist will grapple with a unique sociopolitical phenomenon, whether it is the widespread impact of deforestation in Central America of the fraught concept of masculinity in Pakistan. One of the aims of the exhibition is to rouse cross-cultural and transnational conversation. Image: Claudia Nicholson, Baby I Would Climb the Andes (2014).
Spring. As the weather shifts from gloom to nudge at some summer heat, the MCA begins to get stuck into the theme of fertility and renewal. Primavera — 'spring' — is its annual exhibition of new art by up and coming under-35s. The now venerable museum is in the midst of its own rejuvenation as it renovates and adds to its exterior, moving entrances and shuddering the frame of its art deco building. So, this year's Primavera show has escaped the confines of gallery walls, halls and plinths — being loosed instead on the alternative art space of the Rocks' narrow squares and forgotten alleyways. While other public art shows are usually hard to find but difficult to ignore, most of Primavera's installations are hidden in plain sight. Eric Bridgeman's art is plastered on posters around the MCA and Argyle Bond Stores competing with fantastically vivacious drawings by Tom O'Hern, full of junk, native animals and spaghetti-like hair. The gallery-like space of the roomy Cleland Bond houses the show's collection of wall-hung art, including Rebecca Baumann's TV-shaped Automated Monochrome, which turns over blues, purples and greens with satisfying clicks. Tessa Zettel & Karl Khoe have been busy installing wooden bird-houses on top of telephone boxes, perching climbing animals at the back of Cleland Bond and forming their own secret society intermittently during the festival in the form of the Delirious Bakery's low teas at the Red Room Company's underground den. And on the hour, Parachutes for Ladies promises to re-choreograph the lives of the Museum's regular staff. *You can grab a program with a map from outside the MCA's George Street entrance, or send your phone to the website for a similar digital experience. Images by the Brown Council and Tom O'Hern
The world said goodbye to Amy Winehouse in 2011, but that doesn't mean that the British singer isn't still taking to the stage. The 'Back to Black' and 'Rehab' songstress is the latest celebrity to get the hologram treatment, with a new technologically enhanced performance set to hit the road in 2019 — featuring the late talent crooning her hits accompanied by a live band and on-stage singers. Attendees can expect between 75–110 minutes of Winehouse's music, all thanks to the folks at Base Hologram, who are behind similar shows involving Roy Orbison and Maria Callas. Bringing back dearly departed music icons seems to be their new niche, in a trend that just keeps gathering steam since the Tupac hologram back at Coachella in 2012. Base Hologram states that the Winehouse show will utilise "new state-of-the-art proprietary technology" and feature "digitally remastered arrangements of her classics" as well as "theatrical stagecraft". Exactly where the production will be headed has yet to be revealed, although it's expected to launch towards the end of 2019. The Guardian also reports that the the tour will raise money and awareness for the Amy Winehouse Foundation. Via The Guardian. Image: Rama via Wikimedia Commons.
Everyone knows that, in 2016, the lowest thing you can do is spoil Game of Thrones for a poor soul first-thing Tuesday morning. Usually the spoiling is an honest mistake (and the result of too many feels) — but what if it was actually something more sinister? Well, someone's created a service that is just that. Inspired by this story of a woman who sought revenge on her ex-boyfriend by sending him GoT spoilers, Spoiled will text your unsuspecting friends all the main plot points after each new episode airs. Because people are jerks. All this amazing but truly horrifying new service needs to get spoilin' is the mobile number of the friend you want to never speak to you again and your credit card number. Then, straight after the episode airs, your mate will be sent spoilers — images included. Each spoiler sent will cost you a mere $0.99 USD, and can be sent to any mobile number around the world. It truly doesn't cost much to ruin someone's day/week/year these days. We definitely do not endorse signing up your friends to this service. That guy who spoiled Breaking Bad for you though? Go right ahead.
In time to come, we may well look back on the 21st century as the 'Age of the Bicycle'. We've run music festivals on pedal power, attempted to crowdfund the world's first flying bicycle, designed fashion for two-wheeling commuters, built cycle super highways and proposed the construction of sky-high bike paths. Nearly every week, it seems, someone, somewhere finds a way to extend the scope, relevance and fun factor of the humble bicycle. Now, a maverick composer by the name of Johnny Random has demonstrated its capacity as a musical instrument. Actually, not just an instrument, but an entire orchestra. He's written and recorded a song titled 'Bespoken' in which every single sound is generated via bicycle parts. As difficult as it is to believe when you hear it, no traditional instruments, synthesisers, samplers or drum machines are used. Instead, the spokes are tuned to various pitches, then plucked, picked and bowed to create melody, with other components employed percussively. "I remember my first time riding a bicycle," Johnny Random says. "It felt like freedom. I associate the sounds of a bike with this feeling. As a composer, I wanted to capture this through music, specifically by using the sounds of bikes and their components ... Through music, I want to change the way that people perceive their surroundings and I hope that this will inspire others to look at every day objects with more curiosity and wonder". Via PSFK.
We all know how boring wet weather is. Now, two women have developed a way to cure that boredom with an umbrella that makes 8-bit sounds when it is hit by rain. Alice Zappe and Julia Läger used 12 sensors, 2 speakers and an Arduino minicontroller to enable their umbrella to create sounds. The intensity of the rain changes the sound, surely making for an interesting compilation in a torrential downpour. Although the umbrella doesn't produce actual songs it could easily be modified to play pre-recorded tunes. It's a bit of fun while you are walking in the rain and will most definitely put some smiles on otherwise glum faces in the rainy street.
Fresh flowers. Just-baked cakes. The air just after a storm. Newly brewed coffee. They're all distinctive scents that not only smell nice, but conjure up warm and fuzzy feelings. And if you find that the odour of cracking open a new computer or gadget from a certain popular brand evokes the same kind of reaction, then you're going to want to order a Mac-scented candle. Replicating the smell of a brand new Mac, the hand-poured candles clearly answer an the age-old question: "what do you get the Apple fan who has everything?". They're made from 100% soy wax, cost US$24, and also conjure notes of mint, peach, basil, lavender, mandarin and sage. We have to say, if that's what you're sniffing out when you open your new laptop, you must have super olfactory capabilities. Sure, it sounds like something out of a Seinfeld episode, were the hit sitcom still airing — or a gag one of the many modern-oriented Twitter parody accounts of the show might come up with; however it really isn't a joke. Mac accessories company Twelve South has added the item to their store, alongside their usual lineup of docks, stands, covers, shelves, bass boosters, plug converters and keyboard extenders (you know, the standard computer, tablet and phone gizmos). One US Mac hosting solution outfit put the candles to the test, and decreed that they do indeed emit the apparently much-sought-after "new Mac smell". There must be a fair number of folks looking to fill their home with that particular scent, because the range has already sold out. Don't worry, Mac sniffers: more will be in stock at the end of the month. Via Fast Company.
Uber drivers may want to start thinking about a change of career. The ridesharing giant, whose relationship with its drivers has been turbulent in recent times, may soon reach the point where it no longer has any need for them at all. After all, why spend millions settling lawsuits when you can get the cars to operate themselves? That seems to be the thinking as the company rolled out its first fleet of self-driving cars in the U.S. today. After beginning testing back in May, the fleet of modified Ford Fusion Hybrids, complete with roof-mounted cameras, radar and Uber branding, took its first official outing streets of Pittsburgh on Wednesday — beating other tech companies to the punch. At the moment Uber is still sending a safety driver along in the driver's seat, so they can intervene if anything goes awry. The idea is that eventually those safety drivers won't be needed anymore — but, safety, y'know? "This pilot is a big step forward," said the company via a statement on their website. "Real-world testing is critical to the success of this technology. And creating a viable alternative to individual car ownership is important to the future of cities." They hope that driverless technology will, eventually, help to lower the number of traffic accidents, cut congestion and free up parking space in our cities. At the moment the self-driving cars are only available to "loyal" Pittsburgh Uber riders — if one of the cars is available when they request an uberX, that's what they'll get. That's all well and good, but will these self driving cars be offering their passengers complimentary mints? Where are we on that technology, exactly? By Tom Clift and Lauren Vadnjal.
Just look at that hair. This large-scale installation — which not-so-subtly resembles the dome of Donald Trump — is the work of Canadian-born visual artist Callum Morton. Titled Monument #32: Helter Shelter 2018, the giant protruding head is now on display along Barangaroo Wharf, and you're welcome to sit inside its cavernous fiery interior, too (if you feel comfortable doing so). Morton's thought-provoking and shelter-providing sculpture is on display along with two other works as part of Carriageworks' annual art fair, Sydney Contemporary. Joining the head is Cameron Robbins' installation Remote Sensor, which combines elements of nature, wind, the tides and light in a series of drawings, photographs and moving images that will take residence along the Barangaroo foreshore. If you visit at the right time, you might also catch Mel O'Callaghan's breath-based performance, Breath repertoire. O'Callaghan and Sydney Dance Company will perform an intense movement-focused performance that uses intersecting graphic lines as a language and musical score for the dancers at 12.30pm on September 6, 7 and 13 at Barangaroo's Exchange Place. All three installations are free to view and will be on display until September 24. Sydney Contemporary will return to Sydney for its fourth year on the weekend of September 13–16. The lineup is overflowing with performances, exhibitions, tours, talks and afterparties that celebrate both homegrown and international art. The installation works at Barangaroo for Sydney Contemporary are now open from August 31 through September 24. Check the website for more information.
Continuing the trend of ingenious bike accessories, the MAMA bike rack allows your two-wheeler to literally stand above the rest. A collaboration between furniture designer Matt Elton and graphic designer Matteo Baldarelli, this neat device has two smooth hooks for you to hang your bike on. The rack also has three holes where locks and cables can be looped through and secured. The powder coated finish means that this rack can be secured to walls both inside and outside. Impressively, the rack's simple and compact design also provides a small shelf above the two hooks. This leaves an ideal platform for you to place your morning flat white. The MAMA bike rack will ensure that your bicycle stands in style, and are available for purchase from designer Matt Elton.
Since 1987, if you've wanted to hit up South by Southwest, then you've needed to visit Austin in Texas. Come October this year, however, that'll no longer be the case. Across eight days, the acclaimed tech, innovation, music, gaming, screen and culture festival and conference will embark on its first-ever non-US event — and more details about its massive four-day music festival have just dropped. Unlike your standard music fest in The Domain or Centennial Park, SXSW will be creating a bustling precinct spanning Ultimo, Darling Harbour, Chippendale and Surry Hills, with over 300 performances popping up across 25 different venues. As with the Austin iteration, the festival is all about discovery and catching the next big thing before they're headlining other festivals, so you'll find a lineup stacked with local and international talent doing interesting, boundary-pushing things. Up until this point, you've only been able to purchase the festival's next-level all-access badges. But now, SXSW has unveiled more financially accessible options with the introduction of the music wristband. These passes start from $280 and grant you access to all 300 performances between Wednesday, October 18–Saturday, October 21. [caption id="attachment_903438" align="alignnone" width="1920"] Alana Dimou[/caption] You'll also be able to pop into the showcases and parties being presented by brands like Laneway Festival, Dr Martens, Vans and Warner Music. And, you'll be able to hit up the country houses that've become synonymous with the Austin festival, including pop-ups from the British Music Embassy and Korean Spotlight. Some of the notable artist inclusions include frantic Japanese punk group Otoboke Beaver; Denzel Curry and JPEGMAFIA collaborator Redveil; First Nations trailblazers Barkaa, Kobie Dee, Jem Cassar-Daley and Dobby; TikTok sensations Ula and Flyana Boss; Indonesian jazz trio Batavia Collective; plus Dylan Atlantis and Friday*, both of who are members of the Western Sydney music collective Full Circle that were spotlighted in the SBS short film We Just Live Here. If you've been to see the new Australian horror movie that's taking the world by storm, aka Talk to Me, you would have caught the vocals of one of SXSW Sydney's artists IJALE opening the film with his song 'Ducks In a Row'. And, you can also catch a heap of beloved stalwarts of the Sydney and Australian live music scene as well, like Andy Golledge Band, These New South Whales, Andrew Gurruwiwi Band, Caitlin Harnett and the Pony Boys, and The Terrys. Expect more artists to be added to the lineup as the fest gets closer. Over in Austin, musicians big and small will often join the program all the way up until the week of the festival. All of these musicians will be popping up across Sydney venues like The Lansdowne, The Lord Gladstone, Hollywood Hotel, The Civic Underground, The Abercrombie, Phoenix Central Park, The Soda Factory, The Chippo Hotel, the Powerhouse Museum, Sneaky Possum, UTS Underground and Tumbalong Park. Plus, SXSW Sydney has partnered with the festival Someday Soon, which will be popping up at the University of Sydney on Saturday, October 21 with a stacked program featuring Peach PRC, What So Not, 1300, Northeast Party House, Royal Otis and Sly Withers. Platinum and music badgeholders will be able to attend the affiliate event as part of the week's festivities. [caption id="attachment_848402" align="alignnone" width="1916"] Barkaa, Luke Currie Richardson[/caption] Basically, you'll get access to a citywide party, at which established and emerging bands will be filling every stage across four different suburbs for four whole days — all for the price of a standard music festival. Of course, SXSW isn't all about the music. There will also be a film festival featuring the world premiere of the documentary Hot Potato: The Story of The Wiggles; a gaming strand with a massive esport competition and indie game showcase; and a conference with talks from Queer Eye star Tan France, the CEO of Coachella, Osher Günsberg and Layne Beachley. Each section of the festival has its own wristband system — with the music, screen and games tickets going on sale this Friday, August 25. You can get a full breakdown of the difference between badges and wristbands at the SXSW Sydney website. [caption id="attachment_889033" align="alignnone" width="1920"] Maria Boyadgis[/caption] SXSW Sydney will run from Sunday, October 15–Sunday, October 22 at various Sydney venues, with the SXSW Sydney Music Festival running from Wednesday, October 18–Saturday, October 21. Music wristbands go on sale this Friday, August 25, with early bird prices starting at $280. Top image: Jordan Munns. If you're keen to make the most of Australia's first SXSW, take advantage of our special reader offer. Purchase your SXSW Sydney 2023 Official Badge via Concrete Playground Trips and you'll score a $150 credit to use on your choice of Sydney accommodation. Book now via the website.
Sean Penn’s one of those guys who definitely has nicknames for his biceps. Best bet: ‘Humanitarian’ / ‘Crisis’. In his latest film, The Gunman, the two biggest guns are to be found either side of his almost unceasingly topless torso. For a man of 54 he’s definitely sporting an impressive rig, but - as a man of 54, that rig is weirdly distracting and afforded unfathomable screen time. The film itself is unfortunately less impressive, a ‘political thriller' that’s neither. Beginning in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, we meet Penn in the role of Jimmy Terrier, a hitman masquerading as a private security contractor for a construction company. When said company has him assassinate the Congolese Mining Minister, Terrier is forced to disappear, leaving behind him not just an imperilled country but also the love of his life, Annie (Italian actress Jasmine Trinca). Fast forward eight years and Annie has shacked up with Terrier’s old boss Felix (Javier Bardem), the company has expanded into a giant multinational and Terrier finds himself on the receiving end of an assassination attempt. If you’ve already had a guess at who’s behind the plot, you’re right. With a setup that offered genuine promise, The Gunman sadly proves predictable to the point of soporific. Directed by Pierre Morel, it combines the ultra violence of his most successful film Taken with a plot about as dull as his woeful follow-up, From Paris with Love. The performances offer little to celebrate, either, with Penn rarely lifting above ‘disinterested’ and Bardem channeling the camp pantomime he displayed in The Counselor. Idris Elba and Ray Winstone both cameo in roles that might actually have provided substance had they been given more than a few minutes each, leaving Trinca as the lone source of enjoyment to be found. She extracts every bit of emotion and performance from a character who had little to work with in terms of script. The Gunman is ultimately an action film without substance: too violent to be taken seriously, but too serious to be any fun.
Suzanne Collins is entering the arena again. She's also stepping back into Panem and The Hunger Games' past, and into the tale of a well-known character from her initial three books in the dystopian franchise. After first going down the prequel route with 2020's The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes, the author has announced that Sunrise on the Reaping is on its way. The fifth novel in the series will arrive in 2025. This news isn't just about a fresh opportunity to explore all things The Hunger Games on the page, however. It took three years for The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes to become a movie, but Sunrise on the Reaping will hit the big screen just a year after the book makes its way shelves. So, also mark 2026 in your diary — because the odds of spending more time in The Hunger Games' world are definitely in your favour thanks to the saga's sixth flick. As a novel, Sunrise on the Reaping has a Tuesday, March 18, 2025 release date, including Down Under. As a film, it'll get flickering in picture palaces on Friday, November 20, 2026 in the US — which will likely mean Thursday, November 19, 2026 in Australia and New Zealand. Both versions will tell a tale set around the Second Quarter Quell, presumably pushing Haymitch Abernathy to the fore as he won those games — the 50th, which took place 24 years before Abernathy met Katniss Everdeen in the first The Hunger Games book. Sunrise on the Reaping's narrative will start on the morning of the reaping for the 50th Hunger Games. "With Sunrise on the Reaping, I was inspired by David Hume's idea of implicit submission and, in his words, 'the easiness with which the many are governed by the few'," said Collins in a statement announcing the new novel in the franchise that she started with the initial 2008–10 trilogy. "The story also lent itself to a deeper dive into the use of propaganda and the power of those who control the narrative. The question 'real or not real?' seems more pressing to me every day." In 2012–15 movies The Hunger Games, The Hunger Games: Catching Fire, The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part I and The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part II, Woody Harrelson (Suncoast) played Haymitch. There's no word yet who'll slip into the character's shoes in his younger years in the Sunrise on the Reaping film, which has been named The Hunger Games: Sunrise on the Reaping. It's also far too early for any other casting details, or news on who'll be directing the flick that's following The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes to the screen. That movie gave Coriolanus Snow an origin story, charting his life before he became President of Panem and kept having encounters with Katniss, when he was an 18-year-old Capitol resident tasked with mentoring District 12's female tribute. Set 64 years prior to the first The Hunger Games, it enlisted Tom Blyth (Billy the Kid) to do his best to become a young Donald Sutherland (Lawmen: Bass Reeves), with Rachel Zegler (Shazam! Fury of the Gods), Peter Dinklage (Unfrosted), Jason Schwartzman (Asteroid City), Viola Davis (Air) and Hunter Schafer (Euphoria) co-starring. There's obviously no trailer yet for trailer for The Hunger Games: Sunrise on the Reaping, but you can check out the trailer for all of the past Hunger Games movies below: Sunrise on the Reaping will hit bookstores on Tuesday, March 18, 2025 and The Hunger Games: Sunrise on the Reaping will reach cinemas on Friday, November 20, 2026 in the US — which will likely mean Thursday, November 19, 2026 Down Under. We'll update you with more details when they're announced. Images: Murray Close.
Now in its 65th year, the annual Tesselaar Tulip Festival features over a million tulips planted across 25 acres of farmland. This huge collection of tulips is the perfect excuse to wander through endless fields of flowers to celebrate the start of spring. There's heaps of stuff happening at the tulip farm throughout the month, which sits on the cusp of the Dandenong Ranges and the Yarra Valley (east of Melbourne). For the food fans, we would highly recommend pencilling the Food, Wine & Jazz Weekend (September 27–29) into your eating plans. Boasting locally brewed beer, wine and a tasty snacks from the area — including warm, buttery fire-baked scones, mini dutch pancakes and loaded baked potatoes among the tulips. If you're still not convinced, entry includes complimentary wine and beer tasting. Similarly, the Dutch Weekend (September 20–22) will showcase the best that the Netherlands have to offer – other than tulips — with music, markets, unique crafts (wooden tulip-making, anyone?) and Dutch food available inside the festival. Or, head by on the Irish Weekend (October 11–13), where Irish pipers and dancing will perform (and plenty of Guinness and Kilkenny-drinking will take place) around the site's floral rainbow The Tesselaar Tulip Festival runs from Saturday, September 14 through to Sunday, October 13. Tickets are available at the farm, but you can buy them online in advance to skip the queue.
Here's some news worth slathering whichever type of food you love in McDonald's coveted Szechuan sauce: in less than a month, Rick and Morty will return for its sixth season. Anything can happen in the animated show's next batch of episodes, because that's the kind of dimension-hopping sci-fi series it is. Don't just take our word for it, though — the just-dropped full trailer for the upcoming season drips with chaos, unsurprisingly, and also paranoia. Well, actually, the sneak peek is set to the sounds of 'Paranoid' by Black Sabbath, but it's also a rather apt theme tune for the show's titular duo. When you're zipping around the galaxy and sliding through time, changing multiple worlds, making a whole lot of enemies and just generally causing interstellar mayhem in the process, being suspicious and mistrustful is bound to come with the territory. As for what'll occur from there, the trailer teases lectures about Die Hard, killer robots, vanishing from reality, alien armies, Wolverine-style claws, using Jerry as a human shield, arcade shootouts and exploding cars. So, just your usual Rick and Morty shenanigans. As always, anyone keen to get schwifty with the episodes can probably expect that Rick Sanchez and Morty Smith (both voiced by show co-creator Justin Roiland, Solar Opposites) will keep wreaking havoc, and that the series will keep zooming between as many universes as it can. And, because that's the way the news goes, Rick and Morty's hijinks will keep drawing in Morty's mother Beth (Sarah Chalke, Firefly Lane), father Jerry (Chris Parnell, Archer) and sister Summer (Spencer Grammer, Tell Me a Story). Everywhere across earth where television is screened and streamed — interdimensional cable, too — Rick and Morty is set to return on Sunday, September 4 in America. That's on Monday, September 5 Down Under, where the series beams into your queue via Netflix. And if you're wondering what kinds of chaos are in store this time around, Adult Swim, the US channel behind the show, has advised that the new season will pick up with its titular pair "where we left them, worse for wear and down on their luck". "Will they manage to bounce back for more adventures? Or will they get swept up in an ocean of piss! Who knows?! Piss! Family! Intrigue! A bunch of dinosaurs! More piss!" the network also teased. Check out the trailer for Rick and Morty's sixth season below: Rick and Morty's sixth season will premiere globally on Monday, September 5 Down Under. It streams via Netflix in Australia and New Zealand.
Sydney's ride-sharing game is about to get a whole lot more competitive, as Estonian company Taxify launches its own rival service, rolling out across the city from 10am today. The fast-growing company announced in October plans to kick-start an Aussie roll-out before the end of the year, having already launched in about 30 other countries worldwide. Now boasting the title of Europe's largest ride-sharing platform, Taxify is all set to hit the streets of Sydney this morning, with plans for a Melbourne launch just weeks away. How do they plan on luring you away from Uber, you ask? Well, to celebrate its arrival in Sydney, Taxify is offering 50 percent off all rides for at least this first month of operation, promising to save you plenty of coin across this party season. Even after the launch period, Uber faces some pretty stiff competition, with Taxify insisting its regular prices will be at least 5 percent cheaper than that of its main rival. While many competitors are charging 20-30 percent commission, Taxify works on a commission of just 15 percent, which is sure to be a drawcard for drivers. It claims over 4000 Sydney drivers have already registered with the platform. "Drivers can expect to earn more when driving with Taxify, and riders can expect to save money at the same time," Australia Country Manager for Taxify Samuel Raciti said. "Our focus as a company has always been providing our drivers with higher revenue-per-ride, as we're firm in our belief that happy drivers means happy riders." The Taxify app is available now on iOS and Android. Jump on board from 10am today, Tuesday, December 12.
As if it wasn't stressful enough to get a ticket to Splendour, this morning potential festivalgoers were faced with an A-grade nightmare on ticketing provider Moshtix involving price glitches and what appeared to be an outside hack. After dutifully logging on at 9am to fight the virtual queues, many punters were led astray by a rogue link advertising tickets at a 50 percent discount. After providing details to finish the purchase, they were met with credit card fees upwards of $3,000. As Moshtix users began to flood the Splendour social media accounts, representatives became aware of the glitch and responded on Twitter in an appropriately panicked fashion. High credit card fees happening on invalid 50% off tickets - DO NOT PURCHASE THESE 50% OFF TICKETS! — SplendourintheGrass (@SITG) May 1, 2014 However there were numerous reports of the exorbitant fees occurring on full-priced tickets too. While some users powered on with the purchase either not seeing the price hike or being blinded with SITG ticket lust, most sensibly cancelled the purchase and attempted to restart the process. Unfortunately — because it's Splendour — by this point the ticket allocation was completely exhausted. Cue bouts of justified internet outrage and quiet weeping. Moshtix owner Harley Evans released a statement soon afterward saying anyone who bought tickets at the increased prices will still be eligible for tickets. "All of these affected orders will be cancelled today, and customers contacted to allow them to purchase at the correct prices," it read. However such actions don't accommodate those who backed out of the purchase and many are calling for an (incredibly unlikely) resale. Though the cause of the glitch is currently under investigation, many claim it could be a hack associated with infamous narcotics website Silk Road. While completing purchases many users cited suspicious links associated with the website, one of which even read 'mosh+hack'. .@moshtix_com_au hacked? Defaced w/ silkroad links, reports of strange credit card fees appearing. Now HTTP 503 #SITG pic.twitter.com/PGvAnsiZ3J — %256x%n (@justinsteven) May 1, 2014 The good news is, Moshtix have confirmed that no credit card information has been compromised during the ordeal so no need to rush off and cancel your cards if you got duped. The bad news is literally everything else. If you somehow got tickets, all your friends will now seethe at you. If you forgot tickets went on sale, it's too late — you will never get to sing 'Hey Ya!' with Outkast. And, if you were affected by the 'technical difficulties' this morning, you can look forward to a wonderfully entertaining complaint line over at their ticket support site.
It's insanely difficult to say no to free pastries at the best of times, but it's impossible when Loulou Bistro, Boulangerie & Traiteur is giving them away. To celebrate the launch of a new sister store, Petit Loulou in Martin Place, the French pastry connoisseurs are hosting a five-day free croissant giveaway, ensuring visitors and lucky passersby experience the taste of Paris in Sydney's CBD. Available from February 10–14, every coffee purchase comes with a free, freshly baked croissant (limited to one per person). It's good news for early risers too, as the offer starts every day at 6.30am and runs until sold out. Plus, each day of the giveaway is focused on a new flavour, so you have the chance to savour a variety of authentic French pastries over the week. On the agenda is Loulou's signature croissant, pain au chocolate, pain suisse and a special Valentine's Day treat. We don't know about you, but we think there are few better ways to start the day than with a flaky, buttery treat.
The foundation that awards journos for the most powerful stories of the year is hosting a series of talks at Sydney Town Hall for anyone who's been gripped by the news lately. You can hear from journalist and documentary maker Pat Abboud on storytelling from within diverse communities and sub-cultures; The Sydney Morning Herald's investigative journalist Kate McClymont joins Jan Fran to discuss the city's underbelly; and Guardian Australia's Indigenous Affairs editor Lorena Allam joins journo Laura Murphy-Oates to talk about tracking the state-sanctioned massacres of Indigenous peoples across Australia. Each talk is ticketed from $25 per session.
Any self-respecting Melbourne foodie has knelt at the food altar that is Chin Chin. Kneeling being an appropriate action because, before being granted access, one invariably has to wait in a one or two-hour-long queue. With an infamous no-bookings policy, this is one culinary sanctum where you must first prove your devotion. Now, after unmitigated success in Melbourne, Chin Chin is taking its brand of worshipped, jazzed-up Thai food to Sydneysiders. Chin Chin's owner, Chris Lucas, has locked the restaurant in to a spot at the Sydney Night Noodle Markets in October this year, but he's also looking at possible permanent locations. "The CBD is one of our preferences," he said. "We've [seen sites in] Surry Hills, and looked at Bondi as well. Ideally, we'd like to open next year. We don't want to be too big. If we could have a Chin Chin in Sydney and one in Brisbane, we'd be more than happy." With a menu inspired by Asian hawker-style cuisine, Chin Chin comes from the same breed of restaurant as Sam Christie's Longrain. The large menu is characterised by ornate dishes, bold flavours and quality cocktails to accompany your meal. There's a big focus on communal dishes too which ensures you get to try a smorgasbord of Thai treats (if you bring enough obliging friends). Though much of the planning is still up in the air, Lucas hopes to confirm a new location during his visit this October and is very optimistic about the restaurant's reception. "One of our largest customer bases is from Sydney," he said. No word yet on what their bookings policy will be, but your best bet will be to start lining up now. Via Good Food.
Movember is un/fortunately coming to an end and men across the country have never felt more masculine or virile. On the other hand, women across the country are counting down the days until December when that upper lip of scuzzy peach fuzz is mercifully removed. As Nick Offerman from Parks and Recreation teaches us "Growing a moustache isn't easy. Nothing incredibly awesome ever is." And while we all know that there are thousands of grieving gentlemen out there whose poor excuses for a handlebar or Magnum PI knock-off leave much to be desired, there are certain men throughout history who give new meaning to the idea of a "lady tickler". So in the spirit of Movember and as a little inspiration for those poor fellas whose final week of furry, nose-warming bliss has fallen well-short of its glorious potential, here are thirteen of history's most magnificent mos that prove that often with great power comes a great moustache. Kaiser Wilhelm I Teddy Roosevelt Pancho Villa Genghis Khan Civil War hero Joshua Chamberlain Walter Cronkite Wyatt Earp Friedrich Nietzsche US President William Taft Salvador Dali Mark Twain US Baseballer Rollie Fingers General Ambrose Burnside
Gaming and esports are coming to Melbourne in a big way. Come early 2020, the Emporium precinct will welcome Fortress, a 2700-square-metre centre devoted to computer, video, console and tabletop gaming. When it launches, it'll become the largest venue of its type both in the country and in the southern hemisphere. If you're eager to mash buttons with your mates somewhere other than your lounge room, you'll be able to do so in this sprawling two-level spot — which'll feature more than 160 gaming PCs, several suites dedicated to consoles, an entire lounge for online gaming, four streamer pods, and an area just for role-playing and board games. If you take your favourite pastime a bit more seriously, you'll also be in the right place. As well as an esports arena with grandstand seating for 200 people, Fortress will include an esports bootcamp room, a training space, and broadcast and production facilities. At least five big screens will grace the venue's walls, playing live tournaments and international playoffs. Elsewhere, function rooms with their own computer setups will be available to hire for private events and parties — and there'll be a merchandise store onsite as well. When it comes to kicking back after a few games, the esports area will boast its own bar, while the basement will be home to a 400-square-metre tavern that'll serve both drinks and food. Whether you're a Super Smash Bros lover or a Counter Strike fiend, Fortress Melbourne aims to appeal to everyone, catering for casual gamers, competitive gamers and esports diehards, as well as families and after-work crowds. A collaboration with US-based Allied Esports, which runs venues such as Las Vegas' HyperX Esports Arena, the Melbourne facility marks the first in a planned chain of similar spots across Australia over the next few years — although no date has been given as yet for the rollout around the rest of the country. Fortress Melbourne will open at Emporium Melbourne, 287 Lonsdale Street, Melbourne, sometime early in 2020. We'll update you with a launch date when one is announced.
It's time to celebrate the return of the warmer months, summer fits, linen shirts and padded slides. Springtime is here, and it's not going anywhere. If you treat spring as a preparation session for summer, then you should make your way to a Stockland shopping centre and hear from the experts at Stockland's Shades of Summer. This is a spread of events across Stockland shopping centres, specifically Green Hills, Wetherill Park, Shellharbour and Merrylands. Each of those centres will be playing host to three events geared to get you ready for summer via styling, skincare and DIY makeup. First up, all centres will feature skincare workshops, led by professional stylist and makeup artist Amy Chan. Amy is set to enlighten you on how to achieve radiant and healthy skin by discussing common skin issues and how to equip yourself with the remedial products available at Stockland. The skincare workshops are taking place on Thursday, October 12 (Green Hills), Friday, October 20 (Wetherill Park), Thursday, October 26 (Shellharbour) and Friday, November 3 (Merrylands). Next up are styling and colour workshops hosted by expert stylist Caitlin Stewart. Caitlin will use her skills to identify the colours that complement or clash with your unique skin tone, eye colours and more. She then field tests her theories with select fashion pieces available on hand. You'll walk away feeling inspired about wardrobe choices and with a free colour wheel to try your new styling skills in centre. The styling and colour workshops are taking place on Friday, October 13 (Green Hills), Saturday, October 21 (Wetherill Park), Saturday, October 28 (Shellharbour) and Saturday, November 4 (Merrylands). Following that, each centre will host DIY lip gloss shade workshops to cap off your newly acquired colour knowledge. You will mix a custom colour with a plain gloss base, uniquely tuned to your skin tone and packaged to take home. The custom lip gloss sessions will be available on Saturday, October 14 and Sunday, October 15 (Green Hills), Sunday, October 22 (Wetherill Park), Friday, October 27 (Shellharbour) and Sunday, November 5 (Merrylands). Bookings are required for every workshop, which you can make on the respective centre websites. Throughout the period, all visitors can snap a memory in high-tech photobooths and with stylised selfie mirrors to transfer the summer vibes to your socials. Stockland's Shades of Summer will take place at Stockland Green Hills from Thursday, October 12 to Sunday, October 15; Wetherill Park from Friday, October 20 to Sunday, October 22; Shellharbour from October 26–October 28 and Merrylands from Friday, November 3 to Sunday, November 5. For more information or to make a booking, visit your local Stockland centres' website.
Think you've seen it all when it comes to wedding fairs? Think again — this one's a little less about the dress and a little more suited for, well, suits. Groom Fest will unite around 40 wedding vendors from all over Australia to concentrate on those who need a snappy three-piece suit and a pocket square to top it all off — the grooms of the world. There'll be much to see in the way of men's fashion, not to mention suiting, styling and grooming advice, with a barber setting up shop to do live hairstyling demonstrations. Model and rugby player Luke Casey will play MC for the day, while you wander through the stalls and get that special day sorted. To help you sail even closer to being your smoothest self, live panel sessions will cover everything from delivering a killer wedding speech to nailing that daunting first dance. There'll be plenty of food and drinks on offer, including gin tastings from distillery Archie Rose and live music performances from The White Tree Band (to help settle that band-versus-DJ argument once and for all). The event is open to all (not just grooms), so round up the troops for a two-hour wedding planning power session. All attendees will score a free goodie bag filled with items from Hunter Lab, a free Hello May magazine and the official Pocket Groom's Guide, written and produced exclusively for the event. Groom Fest will take place from 7.30–9.30pm on Thursday, March 28 at The Standard Bowl. Entry is free but RSVPs are essential — and you can add a donation to Movember at check-out if you wish. To reserve your ticket, head this way. Images: The White Tree.