The media was again incredibly frustrating at the 4pm covid update yesterday, and in this mornings Herald.
Having Audrey Young doing a grumpy old woman routine asking the same gotcha question a million times ( why are we not told these business now? , and the switcheroo why were this businesses blindsided by releasing their information before informing them? ) was bad enough but her personal annoyance has become the subject of her piece this morning in the paper, where for some vague reason the PM needs to be involved to rev up the MOH over some quibble that Audrey doesn t like.
What is frustrating is ONE WHOLE YEAR after the COVID pandemic began the main media companies are STILL treating the pandemic as primarily a POLITICAL story, using courtier journalists who were excoriated by the public for their addiction to the gotcha dialogue of banter politics and viewing everything through the lens of horse race political analysis. Why was Audrey Young there? Why has the NZ Herald stil
Princess Diana with students at the music college in Melbourne
In fact, Diana s maternal grandmother, Lady Ruth Fermoy, was a pianist and studied under Alfred Cortot at the Paris Conservatoire in the 1920s.
She was also one of the
Queen Mother s ladies-in-waiting and persuaded the royal to become patron of the King s Lynn Festival that she founded.
Charles played the cello during the couple s visit
Charles and Diana made a ten-day visit to Australia during the bicentenary celebrations in 1988, but left their young sons,
Prince Harry, who were five and three at the time, at home.
The couple s marriage broke down in the late 1980s and they announced their separation in 1992, before finalising their divorce four years later.
Room 712: what the film director saw in hotel quarantine
Room 712: what the film director saw in hotel quarantine
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As winter turned to spring this year, filmmaker and photographer Glendyn Ivin marked time by watching the passing of shadow and light during his 14 daysâ quarantine alone on the seventh floor of a central Sydney hotel. âI became aware of how the world turned,â he recalls.
Around 4pm, the soft afternoon sun would bounce from an adjacent building through his window for 15 minutes, starting, of course, a tiny bit later each day. Mornings around 11am, though, were best for catching shadows cast outside.
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