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AE 1123 - INTERVIEW

Ivermectin & Hydroxychloroquine & the Ethics of Leaders & Influencers with Big Audiences | with Dr Dan Wilson

Learn Australian English in each of these episodes of the Aussie English Podcast.

In these Aussie English Interview episodes, I get to chin-wag with different people in and out of Australia!

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In today's episode...

Welcome to this episode of the Aussie English podcast!

We got another man of science in the podcast today!

This guy like me is another science lover – he got his bachelor’s degree in Biotechnology and Molecular Biology from Clarion University and his PhD in Molecular Biology from Carnegie Mellon University.

Meet Dr. Dan Wilson, creator of the YouTube channel Debunk the Funk with Dr. Wilson!

In his channel, he debunks the claims of anti vaxxers, the covid deniers, and various misinformation that’s circling the Internet.

This is part three of a four part series, so if you missed the first two episodes, go back and listen to those first!

Today we talk about the controversial drugs, ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine, and what the science says about whether or not they are effective in the treatment of COVID 19.

We talk about the ethical and moral responsibility of celebrities, with huge audiences hosting controversial figures on their platform who’ve been shown to spread misinformation about COVID in the past.

We also talk about the recent episode with Robert Malone on the Joe Rogan Experience podcast – they talked about so much misinformation about Covid and Covid vaccines that music artists on Spotify protested against their controversial episode!

We talk about Pierre Kory and Peter McCullough turning up on the Dark Horse podcast with Bret Weinstein as well.

We talk about if there’s ever a limit of freedom of speech, particularly when facing something like a pandemic.

Could it be that politicians and other political figures and public figures are intentionally lying to the public in order to try and achieve a good outcome? — Remember when Dr Anthony Fauci of the US claimed that masks didn’t work early in the pandemic so that he could save masks and other PPE for medical workers.

See you in the next episode!

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Transcript of AE 1123 - Interview: Ivermectin & Hydroxychloroquine & the Ethics of Leaders & Influencers with Big Audiences | with Dr Dan Wilson

G'day, you mob. Pete here, from Aussie English. Welcome to this episode of the Aussie English podcast, where I am interviewing Dr Dan Wilson. This is part three of a four-part series, so if you missed the first two episodes, go back and listen to those first. Today we talk about the controversial drugs, ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine, and what the science says about whether or not they are effective in the treatment of COVID 19.

We talk about the ethical and moral responsibility of celebrities with huge audiences hosting controversial figures on their platform who've been shown to spread misinformation about COVID in the past. So, we talk about the recent episode with Robert Malone on the Joe Rogan Experience podcast. We talk about Pierre Kory and Peter McCullough turning up on the Dark Horse podcast with Bret Weinstein as well.

We talk about if there's ever a limit of freedom of speech, particularly when facing something like a pandemic. We talk about the ethics of politicians and other political figures and public figures intentionally lying to the public in order to try and achieve a good outcome. Specifically, the Dr Anthony Fauci claimed that masks didn't work early in the pandemic so that he could save masks and other PPE for medical workers.

And we talk about much more. So, without any further ado, guys, slap the bird and let's get into today's episode. Anyway, so moving on to ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine, do you want to sort of sum up the trajectory of these two COVID treatments and tell us a little bit about what the science says about their efficacy?

Yeah, so it's been so weird to watch honestly, the rise of these two medications. And it's weird because I think they rose to popularity partly- At least in part because it seemed like a really easy solution to a really complicated problem. Because you had two drugs that are cheap, used a lot throughout history and, you know, it just seemed like if it worked, it would be really great.

And there was also a conspiratorial aspect to it that was really attractive to a lot of people where, oh, they're cheap and they're abundant, so Big Pharma can't make money off of them, so it must work against COVID.

Were you constantly referenced a woman called- Her YouTube channel is called "Back to the Science" because she did a really good series. You pointed me there and I went and binge watched her stuff.

Oh, she's great, yeah. But one of her biggest points was like, the pharmaceutical companies can make a lot of money off cheap drugs if they work and they have a use, it's called profit margin. Like they don't need a drug to be, you know, $50,000 a year for them to make money on it. But like, most antidepressants are cheap as chips, but they're ubiquitous throughout populations all over the world, and they're still being made and sold. Right?

Yeah, I mean, imagine it, you know, you- We have this global pandemic, we don't have vaccines available yet. People are going into lockdowns; people are like desperate for solutions. And suddenly hydroxychloroquine comes on the scene, and gear for a big pharmaceutical company with the capabilities to make a ton of hydroxychloroquine really fast and everybody wants it.

You know, if it works, you're going to want to make it, you're going to want to be the sole provider who can meet the demands of that medication. Supply it to everybody and maybe, you know, do some price gouging that Big Pharma has been known to do in the past and reap big profits, you know, that would be a dream for a pharmaceutical company. But Ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine, they don't work against COVID, that's the big issue, you know?

But Merck's- Merck, who is one of the big producers of ivermectin, they still made a lot of money. Ivermectin was hard to get for a while because so many people were buying it, and Merck makes a ton of ivermectin. So, yeah, the conspiratorial aspect doesn't really work, but getting into the science of it- You know, hydroxychloroquine has both been used historically to treat parasitica.

Hydroxychloroquine is a malaria drug, very effective at treating malaria. Not so great at treating COVID. Ivermectin is an antiparasitic, which treats a lot of different parasites, but is most well-known for treating the parasitic disease that causes river blindness.

So, very effective at treating that, not so effective at treating COVID. And you know, there were big efforts early on in the pandemic to try to repurpose drugs, partly for the reasons that pharmaceutical companies would love to do that.

Well, and they're already made, right? So, you have a pathway, the drugs are there you just need to ramp up production, you don't have to worry about investing billions in a vaccine.

Right, right. That's something people also need to understand because the drugs are already made and because it has a safety profile, they don't have to spend the billions of dollars to run clinical trials to make sure that it's safe and effective. They just have to show that it's effective, that it works against COVID, which is a much shorter track for a drug than going through from start to finish, you know, safety and efficacy profile.

So, yeah, people tried. People tried to repurpose lots of different drugs against COVID, but viruses are really tricky to treat traditionally because viruses have typically small genomes, so they only have a few different proteins. And most of the proteins they use to replicate, they hijack from you. Right, they infiltrate cells, they hijack machinery so that they can replicate themselves.

So, if you want to disrupt a virus's replication cycle you have to find a way to target its proteins and not your proteins. And because they have such a small genome, it can be difficult to find a good target, especially if there isn't one, you know, among a small genome, it's- It can be tough. So, that's why it wasn't so easy to repurpose drugs for this, because viruses are just hard to treat.

But, you know, people tried, and people tried hydroxychloroquine and they tried ivermectin, we have clinical trials where these drugs were tested out for among COVID patients. And the best clinical trials that we have, the randomised controlled ones with larger sample sizes show consistently that there is no benefit.

So, what would you be seeing if you were looking at a trial like this where you have a group of people who are being treated with it and a group that aren't, what would you expect to see if it was having no effect?

So- Oh, if it was having no effect?

Yeah, and well, you can talk about having an effect as well.

Oh, well, so in this one ivermectin study that I can think of, they were measuring- They were recruiting patients as they tested positive for COVID and then treating them with ivermectin to see if that kept them out of the hospital. So, they were looking for a difference in people who got ivermectin and people who didn't and who went to the hospital more.

And both groups, the hospitalisations were pretty equal. And in the ivermectin group, the number of people who went on a mechanical ventilator was slightly increased, but not significantly. So, you would- That's the kind of result you would expect to see if there was no effect. If, of course, there is an effect, you would expect that people who got the treatment would be more likely to not go to the hospital, but they didn't see that.

And there are multiple different studies set up to test different aspects, so there are studies to test like, you know, when someone gets hospitalised, does ivermectin or hydroxychloroquine help get them out of the hospital faster? Does it help them- Does it help prevent them from dying? Or going on to- Moving on to the ICU or ventilation?

There have also been studies set up where people try to see like, okay, does it prevent you from getting infected? People take the drugs and they're followed for a period of time to see how likely they are to test positive for COVID. You know, there are all sorts of different aspects that different studies are set up to specifically look at.

And really, at every step, we just see that ivermectin, hydroxychloroquine don't help stop you from getting infected. They don't help stop you from going to the hospital. They don't help stop you from dying. It's just- It just doesn't work.

When, as- As we were talking about earlier about the science, right, there would be a massive incentive for people to be able to do a clean study that showed the efficacy of both these drugs and proved it flat out.

And again, if you were to do the science correctly, and that was the result you found and it was peer reviewed, you'd be published in probably Science now, especially with all of the evidence going against what other studies have done with both of these drugs. Why won't this go away, though? Why does this seem to be constantly touted by people like Pierre Korey and even Bret Weinstein, who's the host of the Dark Horse podcast?

I think...

They should know better as an evolutionary biologist, but they just don't seem to look at the scientific literature as a whole, they pick the studies, right?

Exactly, exactly. Yeah, they don't look at science as a body of literature. They definitely cherry pick. But I mean, I think, one cynical reason that I have when I look at the situation as to why it won't go away is because it's made a lot of people a lot of money. You bring up Bret Weinstein as an example.

He, you know, his subscribers, his followers, they shot up around the time that he became the ivermectin guy, the guy promoting ivermectin. And, you know, that's his livelihood, he makes all of his money off of his podcast and the content he puts out. So, if he is making a lot of money, you know, promoting ivermectin and it's working, that's a big incentive for him to keep doing it, and it's an incentive for copycats to try to do that as well.

I know that's a little bit of a cynical view, but, and there's definitely a lot more to it, as to why...

He's interesting because- We can skip into this section, I wanted to talk to you about sort of authorities and influencers and ethics, but it is one of those things where, like even for me, creating content, I am very conscious of the content that's doing well. And I'm always looking at sort of the morals or the ethics behind, even with English teaching, doing, say, popcorn content.

Right, like the- Setting the bar low and just creating the crap that's going to work on YouTube, but then constantly thinking about; but how do I actually deliver on quality at the end of the day so that I can sleep at night?

And it always blows my mind with people like Bret Weinstein and Joe Rogan and a bunch of other influencers that are very big names, it's like, look, I understand that their defence quite often is, I actually believe this, blah blah blah.

And that it has nothing to do with money or other biases and everything like that. But I'm like, how on earth, like, is Bret Weinstein, who is an evolutionary biologist who understands how to look at scientific literature and worked at a university for, you know, I think, decades as a professor?

How in the case of ivermectin? How have you not, like, when it is so easy to find all of the research and for so many of them to have been pulled from publication because of fraudulence and falsified data? Or just being- Just not finding anything for the people writing the papers to have lied about certain things or have made crazy claims?

How on earth do you not take a step back and look at those things and then think I'm getting a lot of traction from talking about ivermectin, am I leaning into this subconsciously because I know it's going to get views, it's going to grow my income, it's going to grow my audience? And is that a good thing, right?

So, that's- The cynical side of me is always thinking that, especially with someone like Bret Weinstein, where I think his entire audience is tied in with his appearances on Joe Rogan's podcast, and that's effectively been his lift, you know, stratospheric growth in the last few years.

So, yeah, it is one of these things that I find it like, I really like Bret Weinstein, especially when he talks about other things other than ivermectin and his wife. But it just blows my mind where I'm like, yeah, either they're just totally ignorant and really just don't- Haven't thought about these things. Haven't- Don't have the emotional awareness to see their own biases or they're maliciously doing this, which is way worse, obviously.

Yeah, yeah. I- You know, I don't know how- I don't know if I can ascribe maliciousness or ignorance, I don't think I can quite identify what it is. But I think, you know, when I first started my YouTube channel, I- One of my big goals, was actually engaging with people just like how, you know, people back when I was a conspiracy theorist engaged with my comments and took the time. I wanted to do that with my channel.

And so, I took the approach of, you know, anybody who believes that believes in anti-vaccine talking points. I'm going to give them the benefit of the doubt and say that they are earnest, but misguided. And I took that approach as well with a lot of the people that I addressed, like debunked in my videos.

But, you know, as time has gone on and I've learnt a little bit more about why exactly these people do this, because I got that question a lot, why would a PhD, why would a professional go down that route and start making these claims? And I always said, well, I don't know, but they're wrong. You know, that's all I really cared about, but I can't not learn more about these people as I do it.

And I've- There have been a few people who have really stood out to me, and it's been Bret Weinstein and Robert Malone as really interesting, like, back stories as to how I think they might have actually gotten to where they are now.

And what they both actually have in common is they both seem to feel like the academic system that they have spent time in hasn't given them the recognition that they feel like they deserve, and they got really bitter about it. So, Bret has his whole story with the... (both talking)

Yeah. And Robert Malone has his whole story with his PhD adviser. His is, I think, more ridiculous than Bret Weinstein's, you know. But not to get into that. Basically, they both are coming from this place where they feel like they were not appreciated or almost cheated in a way. And now that they are saying the thing is that they are and getting the attention that they are, it's kind of what they always wanted. Right?

At least that's kind of how I'm looking at it.

Yeah.

And so, they keep going with it, you know, this...

A big red flag for me has been the lack of counterpoint, the lack of debate, the lack of having other people on that disagree with you and defending your claims in good spirit, but all the same, challenging what you actually believe and having it out with other people.

I've noticed this a lot with the critical race theory stuff in the US, I think it's like Ibram X. Kendi or whatever it is who has, you know- And this is obviously another kettle of fish.

But he published a book, I think it was- I don't know if it was "White Fragility" or it was one of the other ones, but the people who have published a lot of these books effectively are saying that, you know, white people are racist and black people have always been under the boot of the white person. They don't seem to- 1) They don't seem to see nuance, but they also don't ever debate anyone publicly.

They just flat out refuse to ever have a conversation with anyone who disagrees with them. And it's always- That's always a massive red flag to me when- Especially in the scientific community, if you have certain claims or you want to support certain theories or prevent certain things, you have to have question time, right? Like at the end of any presentation, you have to go through the peer review process, you have to be challenged.

And so, that's one of those things that's kind of pissed me off a lot about, say, Bret Weinstein's podcast. He hasn't had someone on who say's a proponent of ivermectin like Pierre Kory, and someone who is not a proponent of it, and to have a open, honest discussion about what the evidence says and the different points.

I guess he- I would imagine he just sees that it's not going to grow my audience, it's probably going to piss people off even more. But whereas with Joe Rogan, Joe Rogan's kind of in this weird position, right, where I think he's a really nice, genuine dude. I don't think he's out there to- I mean, he's richer than God now, so I don't think he gives a shit about making money or getting bigger. He's got the biggest podcast in the world.

I think he follows his curiosity and a lot of the time it ends up having people on who are a bit kooky and have certain things to sell. And I think he's very agreeable, I've sort of seen a breakdown of Joe Rogan. I think he had an interview with someone who was like a CIA operative who worked with, like brainwashing people and everything.

And he was like, man, Joe, you're so, so manipulable. And he's like, yeah, I know. And he's like, see. So, it is interesting that he doesn't- He's not as challenging, right? But I think Joe Rogan's tried to at least have people of opposing points, either on his podcast to talk with him or on with other people to debate it, you know, publicly.

But what do you think the responsibility of people once you get sort of- I mean, I don't know what the threshold is in terms of your audience size. But what is the responsibility of people who have, say, 11 million downloads an episode of their podcast having people on like Pierre Korey or Peter McCullough and you know, Robert Malone on and not having challenged?

Yeah, I mean, I think it's a huge responsibility, especially for Joe Rogan and you know, I can definitely appreciate his efforts to bring just so many different people on his show. Because he has had people like Peter Hotez, who is a vaccinologist and exotic infectious disease specialist down in Houston, Texas. He's a smart guy.

Joe's had him on the show and has talked to him, which is great, and I think at the end of that episode, he said I might go get vaccinated now. But then it's just crushing when you see, like two weeks later, he has some total nut on there and being really agreeable with him. It's so- It's very confusing to watch. It's really hard to know what's going on in his head. I don't know- I don't really get it.

But his responsibility to do at least some vetting, I think, is huge.

I think especially once you're at this size, right, with this amount of funding and money, it's like, dude, surely you can hire someone who's full time it is to just fact check people before they come on, right?

Yeah. I mean, even in the Robert Malone podcast, I think he introduced him as a virologist. Robert Malone is not a virologist. He doesn't even have a PhD. He's a- He got his MD.

Yeah.

You know, that was- It's just really- It's so strange to watch and, I think that Joe Rogan is in this weird space where. You know, he does have a lot of different people on and he does seem to be genuine sometimes. But I think that just, you know, with the ones I've seen with Robert Malone and Peter McCullough and Pierre Korey and Bret Weinstein, people like that where he's so agreeable to them even though their ideas are so out there.

It's really hard for me to have a lot of sympathy for him at this point, honestly. But I hope that he can change, I really do because I think he can...

Well, at what point, though, do you have that excuse not work anymore? If I never asked for this, you know, I have always just followed my curiosity, I'm just enjoying conversations and...

No, I don't think those excuses work at all.

Yeah. At what point does that sort of wear off, right? And it become, look- You still look at the stats and see you're being downloaded billions of times a year, right, like billions of times a year. You're- If you were to get on there and interview someone about, you know, the benefits of getting your children to drink bleach, a significant amount of your listeners, you know, when you've got that many are going to give bleach to their kids.

Right. And so, there's sort of that, you've got to realise that now that you have such a huge audience, what you say, especially in terms of health and safety, is going to trickle down to either really, really positive effects at a population level or very, very detrimental effects at a population level.

And you can- I don't think you can any longer say I'm just, you know, following my curiosity. I didn't ask for this. People just listen because they want to listen, they can make their own decisions. And it's like, they listen to you because they trust you.

They do. Yes. And it's become a pattern at this point where, you know, he will have someone on who spouts all this anti-vaccine stuff, and he gets a lot of backlash and always, it's happened before, it's- The backlash is probably the biggest it's been recently, but it's happened before. And every single time he will say, well, I'm just a big dummy, you know, I don't know. I'm not an expert. People don't take medical advice from me.

But they but they do when you have people who claim to be experts on your show and they're saying these things that you will sit there and agree with.

And they seem to make sense.

They seem to make sense. Yeah. I mean, you brought up the bleach example, like he could- There are definitely people with actual MDS in America. I've watched their videos, it's painful. But there are definitely doctors in America that he could have on his show who will- Who would sit there and talk about what is essentially a bleach treatment and make it sound convincing.

And if he agrees with them that's going to cause a lot of calls to poison control, like it's just- He has that power, he has that influence, you know, he has to have some responsibility. And I don't quite know what the solution is, right. If you ban him, he's so influential that you're probably going to make a dent in his listeners per episode, but the outrage that comes with that is probably not going to help. Right?

So, what do you do? I don't know. I mean...

I don't think silencing- Silencing people never works, right? Even- What you need to do is address their ideas and their claims in good faith and, you know, better evidence and discussion is what gets rid of bad ideas, right. You don't get rid of racism by just banning racists from using the internet. They just go underground, right, so.

Yeah. I mean, yeah, I think it definitely depends. I think there are definitely multiple ways to look at it. Like, for example, Alex Jones was banned completely from a lot of platforms, and that did really hurt his viewership.

But, you know, he is just totally batshit weird. I mean, he's totally like on the fringes, right? But Joe Rogan will present a much more, like, believable conversation instead of, you know, a red-faced midlife crisis guy screaming and pounding on his desk.

Were some of his claims, like, the women taking the pill and then urinating and flushing that down the toilet is turning the frogs gay, you know, those sorts of things. And you're just like...

Turning the frogs gay. Turning the fricking frogs gay, yeah.

Yeah.

So... But so- But like, you know, banning him, I think, was ultimately good if the goal was to reduce his influence. But then at the same time, you know, a lot of other people popped up who kind of took Alex Jones's place, and some of them had the more reasonable approach.

Yeah, which is almost more nefarious, right? Almost more dangerous, when you're not just a complete fruit loop who's 50% of the reason you would watch Alex Jones is just because of the entertainment, right?

Yeah, yeah, pretty much.

And he clearly just leant into that and was just like, I'm going to just go full whack. I probably don't believe 90% of what I say, but it's getting the views.

Yeah. I mean, that's why I- My channel started off covering Del Bigtree so much because he really is the Alex Jones of anti-vaccine world. Like, he'll like- He'll just- He'll do stunts, like he'll take a sack of rice and pour it all out on his desk and just start screaming about like, look at all these pathogens, they want to vaccinate us against all these. And it's like, oh my God, what is this guy doing?

It's funny and sad at the same time, but. Anyway, back to like these people like Joe Rogan, who invite experts on who sound reasonable, and he will come off as a very down to earth dude, you know, an MMA bro. It's something that obviously millions of people can listen to, can feel like they relate to his conversations. Yeah, he has a ton of responsibility. He really needs to start taking more ownership for his mistakes, I think.

And- I mean, better people need to go on a show, I think that...

That's what always blows my mind. I'm like, he's in America, mate. You guys have got 300 million people there, how many of you guys are geniuses? And you also probably have the intellects of the world constantly travelling to the US, like as if their first stop assuming the invitation was there would not be Joe Rogan's podcast. They're going to meet more people than... (both talking) ...You know?

Yeah, but the other thing that's really difficult, I think, too, is that people have lost faith in the mainstream media, both sides and our politicians, right? I wanted to ask you about Fauci Gate, right. So, Dr Anthony Fauci is the- What is he, like the head of the medical response in the US? I don't know his exact position.

But he was controversial because he came...

Yeah, he's head of the...

Sorry, you go.

...He's head of the NIAID, the National Institutes of Allergies and infectious disease, it's a branch of the NIH, the National Institutes of Health.

Yeah. So, he, I think originally, early on in the pandemic was saying, masks don't work, don't worry about them, don't get them.

And it came out later that he flipped and said that they did, but the reason that he was saying they weren't working was because he was worried that nurses and doctors and medical professionals wouldn't have access to PPE, right, the protective gear, which- And this is an argument I have with my sister quite a bit because she works for the government, is quite often like, the average person is a moron.

You can't tell them the truth when you want them to do the right thing. And I'll be like, I'm much more of that libertarian side of things where I'm like, I think that your responsibility, if you can't tell someone the truth and have them act on it, you obviously need to work on how you're telling the truth and delivering that information, right? So, how did you feel about that situation?

Right. Yeah, I mean, looking back, the way I would tell the story is that, you know, at the beginning, Anthony Fauci was arguably right, you know, you could- In hindsight, you could argue, oh, we should have been wearing masks the whole time, but, you know, we didn't know it was going to turn out to be this bad, so- You could definitely make a reasonable argument that he was absolutely right at that time.

Because at the time community transmission wasn't widespread, but, you know, people were mass buying toilet paper, right? So, you can imagine what...

We had that happen here, too.

...To wear a mask, right? Yeah. So, if people are stripping the shelves of toilet paper and they're also told you need to wear a mask, they're going to be buying up all the masks, too. And then you really might have a situation where there's not enough PPE for the hospital staff. And if the hospital staff all get sick, then we're in deep trouble, you know?

So, that was all well and good, but then I think his mistake and the mistake of public health communicators, and it's easy to say this in hindsight, of course.

But I think the mistake was not making it clear that, you know, this is the messaging right now, but it very could easily change, and if it gets to this point, if we start to see COVID spreading really quickly, really fast, then we'll be at a point where everyone should be wearing masks so that we can slow that spread.

If that- I think if that was made clearer at the beginning, then we might not have had so many people freak out about Fauci flipping, you know? Because otherwise they're going to have this very high bar for science, right? It's actually a common characteristic of science deniers, they have this unreasonably high bar where in this case, science should have had it right at the beginning.

They should have known exactly what to do right away. But we didn't know what the right thing to do was for every moment in the pandemic. And because science changed its messaging when new information came out, that was seen as it being wrong. And so, then they lose trust.

Do you want to quickly point out the importance of science being able to adjust, right? I think- I can't remember who tells this story, I think it might be Richard Dawkins or something. But there's a guy who gets up on stage and presents something, and someone in the audience puts his hand up at the end of his lecture and says, what would you say if evidence came out tomorrow completely proving everything you've said is incorrect?

And he'd be like, well, I'd shake your hand and be like, thank you for the new knowledge, sir. You know, I'll change my mind, you know?

Yeah. I mean, learning new things and changing your views is a really integral part of becoming a science, actually. If I could just like- If I could just document like a supercut of all the times during my PhD, you know, during lab meetings, during meetings with my advisor, or talks that I gave.

How many times we were wrong in the course of working through that PhD project and eventually getting to the final answer, which we end up publishing. I mean, it would be like a movie.

It would be so long because really, I mean, you're just like, when you're starting from scratch on a scientific problem, you're trying to figure out how things are working, you hit so many dead ends, you hit so many wrong turns, so many different rabbit holes that you go down that lead nowhere until you finally do the one set of experiments that make you go, oh, that's what's going on.

I mean, that's at least the way it went for my project and- But that happens with so many projects, and now with the pandemic, you know, that's all public, right. We're starting from scratch with a new virus, we need to figure out so many different things about it and we're going to get things wrong along the way.

And that's totally normal for science, that's what science is supposed to do, we're supposed to make predictions and figure out whether or not they are- We're able to falsify them.

But I think communicating that uncertainty is really something that scientists could do better in, and we, including myself, have to figure out how to do that better, how to say this is what we know right now, this is what we're figuring out and this is what it might look like when we have the answers.

I think, too, a lot of it, you would need...

I think that could go a long way.

This is what we would need to know to reject what we currently believe, too, right? So, this is how we would determine if we were wrong. A big issue, I find, is that you end up with public figures like, say, Anthony Fauci or, you know, even Trump or whatever politician you want. Once they get into that position, I think they have the unreasonable expectation that they need to be right all the time.

And if they're wrong, they have to save face and be right. And the public also have the unrealistic expectation of our politicians and leaders always must be right, and if they get anything wrong or change their minds, they're out. They're done. They're cooked. And it's kind of like...

Yeah, right.

...It's just unforgivable, right, in terms of there's no- You can't come forward as a politician and say, you know what? I changed my mind. I was wrong about this. I apologise. I'm sorry. You know, those two things. I changed my mind, and I'm sorry are almost career killers.

I can't remember hearing that in recent history from any- From, yeah, any politician honestly.

It's the same here. And I think that's the biggest thing, in order to get better politicians and better leaders, you need to- The public needs to be able to forgive people, and also you want to select for people who can change their minds and can show contrition and apologise for things. Like everyone's always like, the politicians we have are bigger dickheads than they've ever been.

And you're like, mate, if it's bullshit in, it's bullshit out, right? Like if the public suck, the politicians we get are going to suck.

Exactly. It really is a feedback loop, right. Because, I mean, with everything being so polarised, at least in the US, it's like- I can totally imagine if Fauci is a leader and he's doing his best to try to communicate and run things and keep people safe.

And then there are all these pieces going around, not just in the public, but through the halls of Congress, where they're just trashing him and- You know, that's got to be really frustrating to be that much in the public eye. I don't envy his job.

It must be really hard to have that balance, because I can sit here right now, being a practical nobody and say like, oh, you know, I think he should be more able to communicate the uncertainties and be... (Inaudible/Static)

But in that position, when you're feeling the pressure and feeling all the hatred that people are giving you for, you know, sometimes not even making mistakes, sometimes just people taking words out of context, that's got to be- It's got to be tough.

Well, I think too, they must get stuck with the whole, if I get voted out or they get turfed, someone else is going to come in and do a shitter job. So, even if I have to lie, even if I have to manipulate the truth or, you know, sometimes speak out of both sides of my mouth, ultimately, I believe that what I'm doing is in the best interest of the public.

And so, that's how I justify doing what I need to do to stay in power at all costs, right? I think that's- That must be a big part of how they end up behaving that way and ending up playing a game that I bet when they entered, they're like, I'm never going to do that. That's fucked. And then they realise the only way for me to be able to get here is to keep playing this game, right.

Right.

Where can people find out more about you and what you're doing if they want to check out your channel and everything like that?

Yeah. So, I'm on YouTube. My YouTube channel is "Debunk the Funk with Dr Wilson". I'm on Twitter "@Debunk_the_Funk". My Facebook page is "Doc Wilson debunks", and I'm on Instagram as well. I think that's also at "debunk.the.funk". But if you want to get in touch with me, I have my contact information for the accounts that I check regularly in the description of all my videos.

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        The post AE 1123 – Interview: Ivermectin & Hydroxychloroquine & the Ethics of Leaders & Influencers with Big Audiences | with Dr Dan Wilson appeared first on Aussie English.

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        AE 964 – Aussie Slang: Give It A Bash https://aussieenglish.com.au/ae-964-aussie-slang-give-it-a-bash/ https://aussieenglish.com.au/ae-964-aussie-slang-give-it-a-bash/#comments Fri, 16 Jul 2021 09:00:00 +0000 https://aussieenglish.com.au/?p=162848 AE 964 – AUSSIE SLANG: Give It A Bash Learn Australian English in each of these episodes of the Aussie…

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        AE 964 - AUSSIE SLANG:

        Give It A Bash

        Learn Australian English in each of these episodes of the Aussie English Podcast.

        This is the Aussie Slang series where I teach you slang that is commonly used Down Under.

        pete smissen, host of aussie english podcast, learn australian english, aussie english pete, learn english with pete, english idiom examples, australian idioms, give it a bash meaning, use give it a bash in a sentence, australian slang, aussie slang

        In today's episode...

        I am going to teach you the Aussie slang phrase “give it a bash”

        Learn what it means and how you can use it in your daily conversations.

        Improve your listening skills today – listen, play, & pause this episode – and start speaking like a native English speaker!

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        Transcript of AE 964 - Aussie Slang: Give It A Bash

        G'day, you mob! Pete here from Aussie English, the number one place for anyone and everyone wanting to learn Australian English. How are you going? Hope you're well. Welcome to this episode of the Slang Series that I'm doing on the podcast and on YouTube. This is one of two episodes that is going to be released this week. If you want the second episode, be sure to check out the Premium podcast up above and you'll get access to that episode as well as nine hundred other episodes from the podcast and bonus videos, interviews, all that sort of stuff. So if you're learning English, check it out.

        Anyway, guys. Today's expression is "to give something a bash". "To give something a bash". I wonder if you know what this expression means in Australian English. Maybe you'll learn this expression and then later on you'll speak with someone and you'll give it a bash.

        Got it. Did you get it? Did you get it? OK, so if you give something a bash, it means that you try something. So you try something out, you give something a go and give something a try. You give it a bash.

        So, for instance, if I get a new PlayStation game, I go to a store. I've been waiting for this game for ages. I lash out my money. I spend my hard earned money on this game. I come home and I'm so excited to give it a bash. I'm not actually going to bash the game. I'm not going to hit the game. I want to try the game. I want to give the game a go. So I put it in the PlayStation or Xbox, if that's your thing and I give it a bash. Maybe I bash the keys or the pad with my thumbs whilst I'm giving it a bash.

        Another example might be that your friend buys a new car. He gets the latest V8 Commodore wagon. Right. A Holden Commodore in Australia or V8 one, right? Loud. A bit of a hoon mobile. Right? So people who drive fast like these cars. So he brings that over one day. And I might say to him, "Do you mind if I give it a bash?" And I don't want to hit his car, I want to try his car out, I want to give his car a go, I would like to drive his car. Maybe he'll give me a bash. Maybe he won't give me a bash. I would probably say he won't. But fingers crossed.

        Anyway, guys, that is it for today. My challenge for you, as always, is to go into the comments below. If you're watching this video, if you're on the podcast, obviously, that's a little hard. Come out onto YouTube, go into the comments and try and use this expression to give something a bash in a comment below. This is something in English that you need to do. As soon as you learn something, try and use it so that it stays in your head. OK, anyway, thanks for joining me. I hope you enjoyed the episode. I'm Pete. This is Aussie English. See you next time!

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              The post AE 964 – Aussie Slang: Give It A Bash appeared first on Aussie English.

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              AE 962 – The Goss: 2 Naked Men Scared By Deer Get Lost In Bush and Fined $1000 https://aussieenglish.com.au/ae-962-the-goss-2-naked-men-scared-by-deer-get-lost-in-bush-and-fined-1000/ https://aussieenglish.com.au/ae-962-the-goss-2-naked-men-scared-by-deer-get-lost-in-bush-and-fined-1000/#respond Wed, 14 Jul 2021 09:00:00 +0000 https://aussieenglish.com.au/?p=162808 AE 962 – THE GOSS: 2 Naked Men Scared By Deer Get Lost In Bush and Fined $1000 Learn Australian…

              The post AE 962 – The Goss: 2 Naked Men Scared By Deer Get Lost In Bush and Fined $1000 appeared first on Aussie English.

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              AE 962 - THE GOSS:

              2 Naked Men Scared By Deer Get Lost In Bush and Fined $1000

              Learn Australian English by listening to this episode of The Goss!

              These are conversations with my old man Ian Smissen for you to learn more about Australian culture, news, and current affairs. 

              pete smissen, host of aussie english podcast, naked men lost in the bush in nsw, the goss, ian smissen, australia news opinion

              In today's episode...

              We are going to talk about two Aussies who got caught naked in the bushes!

              Yes, two buck-naked men recently got lost in the Royal National Park. SES (State Emergency Services) had to called in and search for them. And so they got fined $1000 each for breaching travel restrictions.

              Improve your listening skills today – listen, play, & pause this episode – and start speaking like a native English speaker!

              Watch & listen to the convo!

              Listen to today's episode!

              This is the FREE podcast player. You can fast-forward and rewind easily as well as slow down or speed up the audio to suit your level.

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              Listen to today's episode!

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              You can fast-forward and rewind easily as well as slow down or speed up the audio to suit your level.

              Transcript of AE 936 - The Goss: The World's Most 'Instragrammable Bird' & Australia's Oldest-Ever Person

              G'day, you mob. Pete here, and this is another episode of Aussie English, the number one place for anyone and everyone wanting to learn Australian English. So, today I have a Goss' episode for you where I sit down with my old man, my father, Ian Smissen, and we talk about the week's news, whether locally down under here in Australia or non-locally overseas in other parts of the world.

              Okay, and we sometimes also talk about whatever comes to mind. Right. If we can think of something interesting to share with you guys related to us or Australia, we also talk about that in The Goss'. So, these episodes are specifically designed to try and give you content about many different topics where we're obviously speaking in English and there are multiple people having a natural and spontaneous conversation in English.

              So, it is particularly good to improve your listening skills. In order to complement that, though, I really recommend that you join the podcast membership or the Academy membership at AussieEnglish.com.au, where you will get access to the full transcripts of these episodes, the PDFs, the downloads, and you can also use the online PDF reader to read and listen at the same time.

              Okay, so if you really, really want to improve your listening skills fast, get the transcript, listen and read at the same time, keep practising and that is the quickest way to level up your English. Anyway, I've been rabbiting on a bit. I've been talking a bit. Let's just get into this episode, guys. Smack the bird and let's get into it.

              So, the other day I was walking around, I'm trying to smash out 10,000 steps a day, you know, about 8 kilometres. And the good thing about new development zones like this one in Curlewis is that they put parks everywhere.

              Yeah, there's green corridors everywhere.

              Yeah, things for nature. I mean, and the other thing that I've noticed about Curlewis is because they put banksia plants throughout all these streets, we get heaps of these black cockatoos, yellowtail black cockatoos. You can just hear them constantly and they're just eating the banksia things. I don't know if it's seasonal, but at the moment they're all over the place. It's probably the same group that I see every day.

              ...Also eat the cypress pinecones, which are not native. And so, there's a lot of the old farming land that used cypress because it grew quickly, and it was dense. And you make this effectively tree height hedges.

              Wind wall, right?

              Yeah. And for wind protection, so there's a lot of those around as well. And that is seasonal whenever they've got the new cones coming up.

              Yeah. So anyway, I was going for my walk, and I noticed this huge shadow sitting on the top of a sign when I was wal- It was at night that I was walking through one of these little areas and was like, Jesus Christ, what the hells that? And, you know, sort of move myself around so that I could see what it was in the moonlight, and it was a huge tawny frogmouth, you know. So, yeah.

              Anyway, so I found this article and these guys are just really cool animals. I think they're just the weirdest looking, shocking...

              They are.

              ...Face birds, like just...

              Yeah. They're basically a mouth and eyes with legs.

              That's it. That's it. So, yeah. Pretty much like a snake, right. Except with a mouth and eyes and a bum.

              Yes.

              So, researchers find that the frog mouth is the world's most Instagrammable bird.

              Instagrammable.

              That's a nice word there.

              That's bizarre...

              Able to be Instagrammed.

              Yeah. This is one of these ones where a brand name becomes a noun. It's a proper noun. Then it becomes a noun...

              ...This would be an adjective. Right.

              And then it becomes a verb, the verb to Instagram. And then we turn the verb into an adjective by making it the ability to do something that- So, yeah. It's sort of this Instagram evolution of language where you go from a proper noun to an adjective.

              YouTubable.

              Yeah. YouTubable.

              Googable.

              Well the verb to Google. Let's Google that.

              Yeah, well YouTube it.

              Yeah.

              Facebook it.

              Facebook it.

              So, to read out a little bit here, study of likes on the photo sharing app has perhaps surprisingly deemed the Australian and Southeast Asian native most aesthetically appealing. That's surprising in and of itself, more so than it's this bird.

              Looks like a baby.

              You reckon?

              Yeah. Well...

              It looks like a baby?

              But it's got baby features.

              Yeah. As in huge eyes.

              ...The big, huge eyes and that's, you know, you look at dolls, teddy bears, you know, baby animals. Even the adults just look like the most ridiculous things. But they're- They got the big eyes and the big smile.

              So, if someone were to ask what the most instagrammable bird in the world would be, it's unlikely that the frog mouth, whose main aesthetic goal is to look like a jagged tree branch, would be front of mind. But it seems science says otherwise. The dishevelled looking Australian and...

              Dishevelled.

              Brutal.

              That is brutal. They're not dishevelled.

              ...It's like homeless.

              Look up the meaning of dishevelled. Dishevelled means- Hang on.

              Yeah, like hair everywhere, scruffy.

              I can't do dishevelled now because I don't have long hair anymore.

              Unkempt, right. Messy.

              Yes, messy. But they're not.

              So, the dishevelled looking Australian and Southeast Asian native taking out the top spot in a study from Germany's university hospital Jena. Why on Earth was University Hospital Jena studying this? Which aimed to see which bird species reigned supreme on the photo sharing app. The study, published last week by German researchers, sorry guys, Dr Katja Thömmes and Dr Gregor Hayn-Leichsenring...

              Leichsenring.

              ...Leichsenring set out to analyse nearly 30,000 bird photos from nine popular avian photography Instagram accounts, using an algorithm to record which photos comparatively attracted the most likes on the photo sharing platform. And there you go, the tawny frogmouth won.

              Yeah, they don't- What they don't say is how they did the numbers.

              I guess they would have just worked out...

              Yeah. Is it proportional?

              Yeah.

              But if there was one...

              How many likes? Which got the most likes? Total likes or was it one photo that just got all those likes?

              ...One photo gets a million likes or there were 10,000 photos of tawny frogmouths and they all got one like each, but there were no other photographs.

              So, are tawny frogmouths owls, Dad?

              No, they are not.

              But they look like owls, and they hunt at night.

              Well, in fact their scientific name...

              This was pretty cool.

              ...It comes from- Yeah. I...

              You got it in front of you?

              I do. Podargus strigoides. Strigoides actually means, looks like an owl and podargus comes from a Greek word meaning Gout and...

              Brutal.

              Gout, for those of you who don't know the word in English, it's a disease typically used to be thought of as a fat old rich man's disease because it's basically where uric acid crystals form in the joints of particularly the feet, you know, big toes and so on. So, it's very difficult to walk if you've got really painful feet. And so, their called that because they actually don't walk very well.

              They very rarely walk; they fly and then land on a branch and hold on.

              Because people with gout.

              People with gout, yeah. People with gout with wings, no.

              That's it. People with gout, they just- They can't walk so they fly.

              ...End up looking like tawny frogmouths. No, so tawny frogmouths don't walk very well. So, I think the original person who obviously looked at it walking went, oh, its, you know, its bumbling along...

              Dudes got gout.

              ...gout. Yeah.

              Oh, man. Yeah. They're awesome birds, though. They are really cute. Look these guys up if you haven't already guys.

              They are really good. So, yeah, they look like owls but they're not.

              So, what does it say here? They got an IAA score, works by taking the absolute number of likes from a post and then factoring in the size of the account and the time the post has been public. It then produces an expected number of likes the post should receive and scores it based on the percentage of likes it received over or under this. And the tawny frogmouth averaged nineteen leaving with a respectable margin.

              The IAA score.

              What is it? While on the other hand, the Sandpiper was given a negative twenty-three. Brutal.

              Sandpipers, are cute.

              This is almost like, you know, face dating apps where you judge people based on their appearance, but for birds.

              I'm surprised like, yeah, I think twenty frogmouths are great, but I'm surprised it's not a parrot.

              You don't reckon?

              Yeah.

              Just too many parrots, Dad. I think the tawny frogmouth, though, probably also is just a weird looking bird. So, people see that and their like, well, Jesus. Give that a like.

              Yeah.

              Whereas they see a parrot and they're like, oh, yeah. It's a parrot.

              Exactly.

              So, what would you do then if you got to vote on Australia's most, you know, cute or attractive or Instagrammable birds, what bird would you be most likely to share a photo of on Instagram?

              If I wanted the most likes?

              Meh, what about pelicans?

              Pelican I...

              They are fricking weird looking birds.

              ...Not that I'm trying to get people to look at my Instagram account. Look at my Instagram account, and I probably got more photographs of pelicans than any other bird on there.

              Well, they're big and they're freaky looking and they've got these big eyes that are just, you know, don't...

              But that big bill, well, it's just a basically a, you know...

              Paddle.

              ...Pouch of skin.

              Especially when they catch something, and they try and eat it and they just look so uncoordinated. I saw a bunch down at the Queenscliff boat ramp a while back and I think...

              ...Hang around there for the fishermen.

              Yeah, some- A fishermen came in with his boat and tossed over a fish that obviously, for whatever reason, he didn't want and it was too big for any of the pelicans, so they just kept fighting over it and trying to swallow it and then having to, you know, just puke it up or whatever, because it was like one of these ones that was like flat, but really sort of tall, the fish.

              So, it was like just it couldn't obviously fit in its throat. Yeah, but- Yeah, they're weird looking birds. So, what would you pick?

              A pelican.

              Yeah. You reckon.

              Yeah. I reckon their pretty good. Well, that and a parrot. I, you know, they're a- but, yeah, you know, you're right, there are so many Australian parrots, but I think sulphur-crested cockatoos, they're the funniest birds.

              Why is that?

              Because they're idiots, but they're intelligent idiots. Because they're just smart arses.

              What do you reckon makes parrots so clever, especially cockatoos? What is it that underlies that?

              ...Evolutionary trigger...

              Yeah.

              ...Decided that an entire order of birds was going to be smart. Now, you could argue that corvids as a family, totally unrelated family, are smart as well.

              But it's almost like corvids don't have a sense of humour.

              No.

              It seems like parrots have a sense of humour...

              Corvids are clever like a fox.

              Yeah.

              Parrots are clever like a stand-up comedian.

              Yeah. And they know it.

              They know it, exactly.

              Like, that's the thing that blows my mind, I think about a lot of these parrots.

              ...Cockatoos and African parrots, African greys and things like that.

              Yeah. Just how it seems like they're really switched on.

              ...Sense of humour.

              Yeah. And you wonder what selected for- I guess, sociality in these animals...

              Well, they're social, yeah. Cockatoos are very social. You get very large groups of...

              Yeah.

              ...Of them and who knows. But you get very large groups of starlings, but starlings aren't particularly smart. I had no idea, that's one of those mysteries of sort of avian evolution as to what was that little trigger that somewhere in, you know- Particularly the Cockatoo family, but the, you know, the just the whole order of birds...

              See what we find here on Google.

              What was the trigger to make them so smart.

              I love this. When you type this sort of stuff in. Why are cockatoos so, and then it says loud, crazy, expensive, funny, cuddly, needy, dirty, pink, loud?

              But if you want to- Do yourself a favour, if you want to look up stupid parrots, there are several, in fact, there are a lots of YouTube videos of Australian cockatoos, sulphur-crested cockatoos dancing. Just Google or YouTube the verb, to YouTube, sulphur- Cockatoo dancing. They are ridiculous.

              Yeah. I'd love to get one as a pet, but I know it would out live me.

              A long way.

              Yeah.

              Yeah. Well, one of our local wildlife rescue places has cockatoos there that have, you know, just been donated to them by, you know, estates after people have died.

              Yeah.

              These people who've lived into their 80s and got a cockatoo as a pet when they were kids and the cockatoos still alive and they're not. Just- They can live for 100 years. It's just crazy. And again, what's the evolutionary thing to- You know, these are big birds. Your average little budgerigars, if you get 10 years out of a budgerigar, you've done very well.

              What have we got here? We've got a whole bunch. Yeah, same with galahs. So, white cockatoos 40 to 60 years, galahs are 40 years, sulphur-crested cockatoos 20 to 40 years, Carnaby's black cockatoos 25 to 50 years ago...

              This is just the average lifespan in the wild. Yeah.

              Yeah, exactly. Yeah. That's crazy. Sydney's old croc of a cockie was a legend at 120.

              Yeah.

              A cockatoo lived to 120 years. Jesus. Well, I guess that leads us on to the last part of this story, we could talk about...

              Yeah.

              ...The oldest ever Australian.

              The oldest ever Australian.

              That's a good segway. Good job, Pete.

              Good job. Well done.

              Yeah. This is crazy...

              Thanks to Kruger. Good on ya, Dexter. Happy Birthday a while ago. He's gone past his 111th birthday, three months into his 112 year.

              Jesus. So, he was born in 1910. I think we've spoken about him on the podcast before, actually. Yeah, we have.

              Yeah. I think maybe, yeah, when he turned 111. Yeah. In January. So...

              Insane.

              But yeah, he's still going on. And look, the one takeaway which wasn't in the thing...

              ...Was doing yoga, I think.

              There's two takeaways, he does his daily exercise, which is a bit of yoga, and he goes for a walk and the manager of the old people's home that lives in says he's a lot fitter and brighter than most of our 80- and 90-year old's...

              Jesus. You wonder if they just look at him and they're just like, God damn.

              Yeah. And look, there's a couple of ones that I think his son, his 74-year-old son said his father's simple lifestyle and balanced diet, complete with plenty of salt, sugar and fat and a lot to do with his age.

              Yeah.

              But I also love the one line about his weekly delicacy he credits to his longevity, chicken brains.

              Jesus.

              So...

              They always say that and then it turns out it's genetic and they have the genes that allow them.

              You know, chickens have a head and that in...

              Their brains.

              ...Is some brains and they are delicious little things. There's only one bite. So, chicken brains is the secret to long life, if you believe Dexter. What do you think it would be like getting to 111 years? Do you reckon you'd be able to remember much of what actually happened when you were, say, a 10-year-old, a 20 year, 30-year-old?

              ...Clearly, Dexter's still got his wits about him, he's not suffering from any forms of dementia or something.

              He's 80 years older than me.

              Yeah.

              Like, that's- It's insane. I highly, highly doubt that I will be 111.

              ...Become an old person at 80. Yeah, so. Well, that would be me at what? So, if that was 80 years from now, it would be 2101. Right. So, that's I've got to get to 111, or 110 to get into the next century. Now I've got to do it, all right. There's a target. There's a target. What do you think his-?

              I always wondered, and I worry about sort of talking to my grandparents about this, although ironically, I think Nana and Grandpa, my mother's parents are a lot more open about death and age and being old than they were when I was younger.

              Yeah. Well...

              When they were younger.

              ...Well, you know, every day anybody lives you're a day closer to dying. And I think when you live a long time- If you get into the 90s, you've got to realise that, you know, there's no long-term plans here. I'm not going to go out and get a 30-year loan to buy another house, you know, this is- So, I think people are much more open to that and accepting that, you know, the inevitable It's probably just a reality of things, but...

              It just...

              ...Doesn't mean you want to die, it's just that...

              No, for sure.

              ...You just accept that there's a fair chance that I'm going to die in the next few years.

              Well...

              Which is different until you get- I'm sure until you get into your 70s or 80s, you don't think like that. No. Well, how do you think about it?

              I don't think like that.

              But as in like, I'm going to die soon.

              Well, you don't think you're going to die soon. I don't, you know, have a real- I don't want to die, but I don't have a fear of death.

              Yeah.

              I don't have a fear of being dead because I don't...

              I don't think many people have a fear of being dead, unless they're worried about going to hell.

              Yeah, well, I have no religious beliefs at all. So, in fact, my religious beliefs are anti-religious. But that's- It's...

              The transition between living and death that I freak out about and I just hope it's quick and painless.

              ...Dying process is the- And again, it's not a fear, it's just that, you know, you don't want to go through something that is going to be long and painful. Yeah, exactly. So, but yeah, somebody like Dexter- Yeah, imagine what he can remember, the things that he's seen, and they mention it here...

              ...He's lived through the First World War...

              ...Lived through the First World War, the Second World War, the Korean War, the Vietnam War, the Middle Eastern Wars...

              The Cold War.

              ...Involved in, the Cold War.

              Well, he was alive before we had planes right or around the time the very, very first planes were, you know, just flying a few hundred metres? Yeah, he was around before cars or at least, you know, combustion engine cars right on the roads...

              There were a few around.

              But that wouldn't have been widespread. That would not have been...

              Your average person didn't own them until the 1930s.

              And he was a cattle grazier. Right. So, it's crazy to think...

              ...Horse around and...

              He was living a pretty rough life as well, you would imagine. It wouldn't have been a kettle of fish, just- I mean, kettle of fish. Something easy where it would have been a completely different kettle of fish to someone who, like myself, is just living by working in a studio, chilling out.

              Well, his son, he says he lived through a period that it was a lot less stressful than what we as a society face today.

              Yeah.

              And so, you look at that and go, it's probably true. And even, you know, Dexter himself talks about, you know, computer age and, you know, technology and he says just makes life more stressful because it's just quicker and you don't get time to relax.

              Yeah. Do you ever get nostalgic about the past in Australia and wish, you know, for instance, would it been really cool to have been a cattle grazier 100 years ago where you just get to hang out with your animals, with your horse, with your nearest family?

              Bloody hard work, though.

              Physically.

              Physical Work.

              Yeah, but it's simpler in terms of...

              Yeah. Not a lot of stress other than drought and flood and fire, you know, natural disasters are about the only stress that you have.

              Well, Indigenous people that you're potentially encroaching on the land of theirs...

              Well, if you go back far enough, yeah.

              Bush rangers.

              Bushrangers.

              Yeah. But yeah, congratulations, Dexter. That's absolutely insane. I can't imagine getting to 111...

              And 124 days.

              Yeah, and 124 days. I guess you count it at that point. Do you get another letter from the queen at 110?

              I don't know. I don't know. Well, you had to, I wonder whether the queen will send herself a congratulatory letter on a 100th birthday.

              If she makes it.

              Well, I think she'll live till she's, you know, she'll outlive her children, I reckon.

              Prince Charles is just like, God damn it.

              Too bloody stubborn to die like her mother.

              All right. Well, I guess we're finishing there, guys. But thanks for joining us. See you next time.

              Bye.

              Peace.

              Alrighty, you mob. Thank you so much for listening to or watching this episode of The Goss'. If you would like to watch the video, if you're currently listening to it and not watching it, you can do so on the Aussie English Channel on YouTube. You'll be able to subscribe to that, just search "Aussie English" on YouTube.

              And if you're watching this and not listening to it, you can check this episode out also on the Aussie English podcast, which you can find via my free Aussie English podcast application on both Android and iPhone. You can download that for free or you can find it via any other good podcast app that you've got on your phone. Spotify, podcast from iTunes, Stitcher, whatever it is.

              I'm your host, Pete. Thank you so much for joining me. I hope you have a ripper of a day, and I will see you next time. Peace.

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                    AE 959 – The Goss: Which Dead Aussie Would You Like To Invite To Dinner and Why https://aussieenglish.com.au/ae-959-the-goss-which-dead-aussie-would-you-like-to-invite-to-dinner-and-why/ https://aussieenglish.com.au/ae-959-the-goss-which-dead-aussie-would-you-like-to-invite-to-dinner-and-why/#respond Sat, 10 Jul 2021 09:00:00 +0000 https://aussieenglish.com.au/?p=162533 AE 959 – THE GOSS: Which Dead Aussie Would You Like To Invite To Dinner and Why Learn Australian English by…

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                    AE 959 - THE GOSS:

                    Which Dead Aussie Would You Like To Invite To Dinner and Why

                    Learn Australian English by listening to this episode of The Goss!

                    These are conversations with my old man Ian Smissen for you to learn more about Australian culture, news, and current affairs. 

                    pete smissen, host of aussie english podcast, learn english australia, learn australian english, learn english online free, the goss, ian smissen, australia opinion

                    In today's episode...

                    We are going to talk about dad’s choice of a dead Aussie to be invited to dinner.

                    My dad Ian, my chin-wagging buddy here in The Goss series, wants Admiral Arthur Phillip with him on the dinner table.

                    Arthur Phillip is a British admiral who founded the first permanent European colony on the Australian continent.

                    Watch or listen in today why we think Admiral Phillip is a deserving dinner table guest.

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                    Transcript of AE 959 - The Goss: Which Dead Aussie Would You Like To Invite To Dinner and Why

                    G'day, you mob. Pete here, and this is another episode of Aussie English, the number one place for anyone and everyone wanting to learn Australian English. So, today I have a Goss' episode for you where I sit down with my old man, my father, Ian Smissen, and we talk about the week's news, whether locally down under here in Australia or non-locally overseas in other parts of the world.

                    Okay, and we sometimes also talk about whatever comes to mind. Right. If we can think of something interesting to share with you guys related to us or Australia, we also talk about that in The Goss'. So, these episodes are specifically designed to try and give you content about many different topics where we're obviously speaking in English and there are multiple people having a natural and spontaneous conversation in English.

                    So, it is particularly good to improve your listening skills. In order to complement that, though, I really recommend that you join the podcast membership or the Academy membership at AussieEnglish.com.au, where you will get access to the full transcripts of these episodes, the PDFs, the downloads, and you can also use the online PDF reader to read and listen at the same time.

                    Okay, so if you really, really want to improve your listening skills fast, get the transcript, listen and read at the same time, keep practising and that is the quickest way to level up your English. Anyway, I've been rabbiting on a bit. I've been talking a bit. Let's just get into this episode, guys. Smack the bird and let's get into it.

                    So, what are we doing, Dad? We're doing, who you'd invited-

                    Dinner party guests.

                    So, these are obviously guests that you have a different dinner party with each time, or you have them all at once?

                    This is- There's- This is an old- This is an old parlour game, you know, sort of ironically, it's a dinner party game.

                    Yeah.

                    The- You know, who would you invite to dinner? And there's two versions of it. One is, who would you invite to a dinner party, you know, pick 4 people and you and your partner have got to sit down with these four people and so that you've either got to make them compatible or incompatible or argumentative or whatever.

                    Yeah.

                    The other one is, who would you like to have dinner with? And basically, it's who would you like to meet and have a conversation with? So, it's one offs. So, I thought it'd be a really interesting thing to do with living Australians and no longer living Australians, sort of you and I pick a person and you can interview me about why I think this person would be interesting to talk to and I can do the same thing for you.

                    And we might- It might be useful to do this as a sort of series of short episodes rather than having a half an hour talking about the one person or a bunch of people, because we'd either get tedious or it would be too quick, so we can do a 5 or 10 minute go at, you know, each person, so.

                    Yeah. Well, do you want to start with dead Australians?

                    Dead Australians. Yeah. So, I could give you my list. I just started with a- Sorry, got to face ID this. I started with a handful of people of living and dead and thought you can choose one to...

                    Yeah. Alright. Okay.

                    So, there you go. And then I'll ask you, you've got to have one up in your head...

                    So, I just choose one and don't actually tell you who it is, and you have to guess or?

                    Well you'd have to know who they were to give me clues...

                    Well we can start from the top, Arthur Phillip because that was probably one of mine...

                    Well he's cheap. Yeah. He gets the honorary Australian award because he was the first- Other than our indigenous. I've got a number of indigenous people on there as well, but other than our indigenous people, he was really the first Australian. You could argue that Matthew Flinders was the first Australian because he came up with the idea of calling the country Australia, but. And he's not on the list.

                    But he was, you know, he got an honorary mention or non-mention is the...

                    He would be a good one, but we can talk about that guy another time.

                    Yeah, he would. So, yeah, I put Arthur Phillip on the list because I think he's one of those really interesting characters that- If you went out and asked a hundred Australians from the age of 5 to 105, who was the most significant person in the formation of the colony of New South Wales or what became Australia...?

                    Cook, Cook, Cook.

                    You would- I reckon a hundred of them would say James Cook where you might be- You'd might have one smart arse like me who would say Arthur Phillip, but. But if you went and asked those same hundred people who Arthur Phillip was, I reckon 50 of them would have no idea. And so, I think he's the sort of-.

                    Silent hero.

                    The silent hero, the least understood of the significant characters in Australian history, certainly European Australian history, and, you know, it's actually a bit silly now to call it European, because obviously we now have people from, you know, Asia, Africa, the Middle East, the Americas and everything who live...

                    In their time, at least.

                    At the time we were, you know, the continent was colonised by Europeans, you know, British Europeans mostly.

                    Though we had- Sorry to pause you here. We had a few interesting characters. There was an ex-black slave from the Americas called Black Caesar.

                    Yes, Black Caesar.

                    Do you remember hearing about him?

                    Yeah.

                    So, he was a bit of a handful who used to keep escaping and, you know, lived as a bushranger, I think, for a while. So, we had this African Americans ex-slave that was too much for them that obviously somehow got to Great Britain and then got sent out on the first fleet to Australia and then was too much of a handful here and was living in the bush.

                    He just buggered off and nobodies- Just don't go and get him, we don't want him.

                    I think he ends up dying in a fight with either the indigenous people or with- I have to look this up again, it's been a while, but either the indigenous people or with the colonists at the time. But yeah, he would have had an interesting life.

                    Yeah so, I thought with this sort of exercise of the dinner party guest, is that, not to necessarily give a potted history, don't want to turn the dead people into a history lesson about who they were, but more talk about why they would be interesting to talk to.

                    Yeah.

                    And for me, Arthur Phillip would be really interesting to talk to because, and, you know, putting a little bit of history in there, that he was- Not only is he the sort of forgotten person in Australian history, but he was the unlikely hero as well.

                    He was somebody that you never would have picked out as, you know, that somebody in either the Admiralty or the government in Britain would have said this is the right person to put in charge of the First Fleet to go and create a colony on Mars effectively, the other side of the world.

                    Because he had a kind of mediocre career, right?

                    He did. Yeah, he was...

                    He wasn't a failure, but he...

                    He wasn't a failure. But he wasn't the, you know, the rapidly elevated to vice admiral and, you know, in the Navy and got to be- He was a captain in the British Navy. He then went ironically and worked for connection with your background- Language background. He went and worked for the Portuguese Navy.

                    He spoke Portuguese pretty well.

                    ...Portuguese, yeah. He was effectively a consultant with the Portuguese Navy for a long time. And then he married a woman who was- She was a widow. She'd inherited a farm from her previous husband. He married her and he became a farmer.

                    He retired from the Navy, became a farmer and then sort of got dragged, not quite kicking and screaming, but sort of from obscurity into planning and executing what has to be, I think, the single greatest migration story in the history of the world. We're going to give you a thousand people's lives and it's going to take you 9 or ten months to sail around the world and put you in charge of these people to create a new colony...

                    Well, the next thing we would see closest to this, paralleling this kind of, you know, story would be the colonisation of Mars. If it happened, though...

                    It's never happened before him and it's never happened since him, that there was a deliberate colonisation of a place in the world because colonisation up until then and even passed then by, you know, mostly Europeans had always been sort of incremental. They had just been, well, you know...

                    Set up a port...

                    We'll set up port...

                    ...And then we'll expand out...

                    ...We'll have a little village and then, you know, we'll set up a government and whatever. But whereas this was just we'll go from, you know, 0 to 100 in...

                    With one shot.

                    With one shot. Yeah. So...

                    But do you think that's part of the reason they ended up choosing him? Because no big name was like...

                    No, they didn't know. Exactly. I think that is absolutely true. There was limited chance that any of the big wigs...

                    Anyone wanna put their hand up?

                    And effectively this was a, you know, without putting too many things on, now He didn't die, but- Well he did, but not in Australia.

                    He's still here?

                    He's still here. That's worth talking to him about.

                    ...He shouldn't be on this list, Dad.

                    No, he's not on the dead... It was a suicide mission. It was effectively a professional suicide mission, if nothing else, this was the end of career job for somebody. This was the, well, you got nothing better to do. Why don't you have a crack at this for a few years and see what happens?

                    And but, the things that I really, and having read a lot about him, the things that I really find interesting, were how much he pushed back against the Admiralty and the government who they basically wanted to do this as a cheap shot.

                    And it would have failed, right? He pushed back...

                    Absolutely would have failed without him.

                    Because they wanted to under-resource it...

                    They under-resourced- Not only under-resourced what they would look like when they got there, but he kept pushing back, going, no, no, no. I want all the ships rebuilt. I want this done. I want these stores. I want this and I want- And he just kept pushing back. And it...

                    He wasn't in a rush to die.

                    He wasn't in a rush to die, and he wasn't in a rush to succeed.

                    Yeah.

                    And I think that's one of the key aspects of, you know, having been handed this job you got to go, you know, the, you know, if he'd been half his age, take him back to, you know, early in his career and they'd given him this job, he wouldn't have handled it the same way, I'm sure. It would have been, whoa, here's an opportunity. Let's go and see how I can screw this up.

                    Dead.

                    Yeah, exactly...

                    A thousand people dead.

                    ...He really spent a lot of time saying, what am I going to need to get this number of people across the world in a condition, and the irony is that the people in the first fleet, he lost far fewer people to illness and death in that- Just the transportation process, the actual being shipped from England to what is now Sydney. He lost far fewer people than certainly the second- The second fleet was just a disaster.

                    But then many of the others, you know, per capita...

                    How many did we lose? 48 deaths on the first fleet.

                    Yeah.

                    There you go. Most of them men.

                    Yeah. So...

                    One child.

                    4.5%

                    Five children, sorry. Yeah. One marine's child.

                    Yeah. And so, he had really spent a lot of time saying, firstly, I need to get healthy people. I need to get people on there who are healthy, this is not just a- This was not a police exercise. This is not just saying let's take a whole bunch of convicts and that we are- All the worst people that we can possibly imagine, throw them on the other side of the world.

                    This was an opportunity to say, let's get the right people. And it wasn't just skill sets that he was looking for, it was he wanted healthy people to go. And so, then he said, we have to have food, we got to have to have food to last us two years.

                    Yeah.

                    And because there was this assumption that it appears, and we'll never know because I haven't read any of the original documentation and I'm sure there is some available in what the Admiralty in the government in Britain was saying at the time. But my understanding is that they were basically, well, yeah, we'll give you six months' supply, when you get there you can just grow your own food.

                    And he looked at- yes, he had the background, obviously, having been a farmer for the latter part of his career as well. But he also looked at it and just said, we're going to fail. We need to be able to have food, two years' worth of food. Oh well, we'll send another fleet out. That's fine, but what if they fail? And so, he pushed really hard to get that.

                    The other thing that I'd be really interested in talking to him about is, how did you manage the- Because for all we read, he actually had quite a different attitude towards indigenous people from what the Admiralty and the government and everything else had, in that he was very much along the lines of I'm going to have to live or we are going to have to live alongside these people. We do not want to create conflict.

                    This is one of the really interesting things- Excuse me. That's worth talking about, because I think a lot of people don't- They see it as black and white, but they were European colonisers so clearly they wanted to commit genocide on the indigenous population.

                    And I think a lot of people forget that Arthur Phillip wasn't moving there, he was working to establish a colony that may persist into the future but had no real understanding of what was actually going to happen in the future. But not only that, he was just doing a certain shift effectively, right, of 4, 5 years and then went back to England.

                    And so, his goal wasn't, how do I turn the indigenous population, you know, into slaves or bend them to my will and everything? He had a deep understanding of the fact that he was going to have to rely on the indigenous people in that area if he wanted to live.

                    And didn't want to create conflict. The last thing he wanted to do was have them kill each other.

                    Because he knew he would lose.

                    Yeah. Exactly.

                    Yeah.

                    Yeah, so how you manage the attitudes of not just the convicts, but, you know, he's taking a lot of military people with him...

                    Yeah.

                    ...And a lot of Marines and Army with him. And how do you manage their attitudes and their behaviours in order to facilitate that? And he seemed to do it pretty well.

                    Well, did he hang people who killed Indigenous people?

                    He did. He did.

                    Probably not because they killed indigenous people, but because they put the colony at risk.

                    Yes.

                    I would imagine.

                    Yeah, exactly. But, you know, he was speared by an indigenous person.

                    Yeah. Was that Bennelong or was that someone else?

                    No, it was somebody else. But he deliberately said, no, I don't want retribution for this. I don't want you going out and killing this person. That's not what it is about, so.

                    So, who speared Arthur Phillip? So, it was Willemering.

                    Yeah.

                    Yeah, so. Yeah, but that's right. So, they- Well the reason he got speared too, to let people know is that the- And this is the interesting thing with Arthur Phillip trying to manage these relationships with the indigenous people, in order to try and build a bridge of communication he had to kidnap indigenous people like Willemering, I think, and Bennelong in particular.

                    And Willemering in this famous incident that I think took place in Sydney Cove, didn't it? He ends up escaping because, you know, Phillip- Arthur Phillip would catch these two and like lock them up and try and teach them English effectively and then be like, okay, now you can go but we want to be able to communicate with you and your people.

                    I think Willemering disappeared, and they went and found him. And Arthur was like, oh, there's Willemering and they were having a corroboree or something, a party. And he went over there and Willemering was like, fuck you dude and stabbed him. But I think the evidence is that he didn't do it in a way to kill Arthur Phillip, it was a this is retribution, this is payback for kidnapping me, you son of a bitch.

                    Pretty much.

                    So...

                    Yeah. It was indigenous law that was- It wasn't a fear of, you know, being captured again or whatever it was just, oh, yeah. I'll treat you as equals and the way I would treat one of my colleagues who had done this is I would stab him with a spear.

                    Which is pretty amazing to think about the amount of foresight that he had and, you know, restraint that he had as well, because I would imagine that many other leaders of that time or Marines under his command would have been like, kill the lot...

                    Just kill the lot of them.

                    Yeah, this is too much pain and not realise that, no, well, that's actually putting everyone in jeopardy. Not just danger of being killed by, you know, retribution in retribution. But also, we then no longer have people here who know how to use the land, food and yeah.

                    Exactly. So, the other thing, too, that I find really interesting is that he- The way he had to treat both his staff and convicts from a food point of view, he was rationing people from the day they got there and there was a huge amount of resentment for that. And the first person hanged in Australia was hanged because they stole food from the stores, not for murder or for raping people or for running off and killing indigenous people...

                    But again, putting the colony...

                    ...Put the colony in jeopardy. And it's that- Having that oversight of the whole picture and understanding that stealing food is the worst thing you can possibly do...

                    Yeah.

                    ...Because it's the only thing that's going to keep us alive through a winter, you know, that's...

                    I had a feeling when I was learning a limited amount about him and I haven't read his specific biographies yet, but I've read a lot of books that have mentioned and talked about what he's done, that he was somewhat resentful- Not resentful, but didn't want to have to do those kinds of things.

                    He was very kind of like, hard place and a rock and not a bloodthirsty kind of leader, which we seem to have gotten later on in a lot of these places, especially the Penal colonies or the Penal jails seem to...

                    Yes.

                    ...End up with psychopaths running them.

                    And I think that was one of the successes, is that we had somebody who was compassionate both inwardly within the colony, but outwardly with the indigenous people. But he was also- Happy is the wrong word. Able to overcome his compassion and take the hard decisions of, you know, hanging somebody for doing something that at home would of been a relatively trivial crime.

                    Stealing food while starving, right?

                    Yeah, exactly. And yet but he had that capacity to do that. And I think that was one of those successes, so. The other thing that I'd be really interested in having is the retrospective with him of doing the, well, you know, you came out here in 1788 and...

                    Look at us now bro.

                    230 years later.

                    Barnaby Joyce, just got fined for not wearing a face mask.

                    Hang 'em.

                    What do you reckon?

                    Yeah. So, you know, what do you think? How did we screw up? It'd be really interesting to look at that and go, what were you thinking when you went back to England after nearly 5 years here of being governor of New South Wales? What did you think was going to happen? And obviously he lived for some time afterwards and he would have heard and, you know, about progress and so on.

                    But, you know, 50, 150, 300 years later, not that we're 300, but 230 years later now. Could you have foreseen this?

                    Well, of course not.

                    Of course not. But it's more that, you know, now- You know, the modern world now is so, yeah. When and how we were colonised is sort of irrelevant, but if you take him forward, you know, even to, say, the- You know, a hundred years to the late 19th century.

                    Yeah.

                    After we'd gone through convicts and started to develop. You know, how would he have seen that? And what advice could he have given people as to, you know, how they could improve the country? It'd be really interesting to have those sort of conversations with someone who was the start of it all, so.

                    It'd be incredible to understand what Australia was like back then, too, from his point of view and the colonies point of view. You know, what it was like in their psyche of we have just taken, stolen, acquired this very small parcel of land in Sydney Cove. And there is this unknown amount of country that stretches out before us with, you know, unknown threats, unknown animals, completely new species.

                    You know, they see kangaroos and they're just like, what the fuck is this thing? You can eat it? And then just the...

                    ...Hear possums and koalas at night.

                    Yeah, exactly. I couldn't imagine what it would have been like. It'd be really cool to be able to do some sort of time travel tourism where you could spend the night on both sides, you know, in the indigenous side as well, but in the colony and hear and understand what their fears were, what they were worried about, what their day-to-day li-

                    Like, you wonder- The colonists often get demonised, but- As being these, you know, people who ended up taking this land, but I doubt that was on their minds, at least for the majority of them. They were probably so...

                    How do I survive?

                    Exactly. What do I have to do to eat?

                    ...The first fleet was, how do I survive? Until we get another, you know, fleet of ships bringing food to us, that's I'm sure the, almost the only thing they were thinking of.

                    Well, and a lot of the- It would have been interesting to see Arthur Phillip with the ability to go home at any time effectively and be like I have- How do you feel being here knowing that you've got a go home ticket? Whereas- And the Marines have the go home ticket. Whereas the convicts...

                    ...Came, there for 7 to 14 years...

                    Which is effectively life.

                    Because they were- Yeah, well, there was...

                    Who's going to be able to afford to go home?

                    ...Enough money to buy their way home again. But ironically, that very few of them wanted to, even the ones who were successful.

                    Oh, man, England was a shithole.

                    Yeah, exactly.

                    Which was why they probably stolen or, you know, gone into crime.

                    The life they had come from.

                    Exactly. They were probably like, man, I get farmland, I get to, you know.

                    And those- The First Fleeters were not, mostly they were petty criminals, but they were not the- Some of the later ones were political criminals, particularly the Irish and the Scottish, the Irish in particular. But where it was just, you know, get these people out of here. Yeah. They were- They- Very quickly became productive members of society because a lot of them were...

                    Literate.

                    ...Literate, skilled, professional.

                    Lawyers, scholars.

                    Yeah. It's one of the guys who apparently was one of the first architects and artists who came to Australia, was a convicted- He wasn't a political prisoner.

                    Was he a forger?

                    He was a forger. Yeah, clearly a very clever draftsperson.

                    Just not clever enough not to be caught.

                    Exactly. But yeah, he became a very successful architect.

                    What was his name?

                    I can't remember.

                    Yeah, I think I have a feeling I was reading about him recently.

                    But those sort of stories of, you know, how do you choose who to put on the boat? Well, clearly you don't choose the worst of the worst.

                    Yeah, exactly.

                    That's a pretty quick way to just turn everything to shit.

                    Rapists and murderers, you can stay home.

                    And they're dead. Yeah, everyone's dead, you know. Well, anything else to add?

                    No, no, no, I think...

                    What other questions would you have for him?

                    Do you have any regrets? What would you have done differently? That's always a good question to ask somebody who's done something monumental and for what we perceive 230 years later, you know, relatively indigenous aspects aside, and that's not downplaying them. But relatively successfully. What would you have done differently? What-? Yeah. Where did you screw up?

                    It's always a really interesting question to ask somebody, who for all intents and purposes, has been successful.

                    I would love to know what he thought of indigenous people prior to meeting them, after meeting them, and then after the 5 years or the... ...Because he had spent a lot of time with Willemering and Bennelong. Bennelong, I think- I don't know if Willemering went, but Bennelong definitely went to Great Britain with him.

                    Yes.

                    So, it would have been really interesting to see how his view of these people would have changed over that time. You know, and to have heard about what Bennelong's stay in England would have been like, because I can imagine that would have been pretty interesting.

                    Yeah.

                    Yeah. Anyway, all right. Well, we'll have to do this next time.

                    We will...

                    Another one my turn.

                    ...Next time.

                    All right. Cheers.

                    Thanks, everyone.

                    See ya, guys.

                    Alrighty, you mob. Thank you so much for listening to or watching this episode of The Goss'. If you would like to watch the video, if you're currently listening to it and not watching it, you can do so on the Aussie English Channel on YouTube. You'll be able to subscribe to that, just search "Aussie English" on YouTube.

                    And if you're watching this and not listening to it, you can check this episode out also on the Aussie English podcast, which you can find via my free Aussie English podcast application on both Android and iPhone. You can download that for free or you can find it via any other good podcast app that you've got on your phone. Spotify, podcast from iTunes, Stitcher, whatever it is.

                    I'm your host, Pete. Thank you so much for joining me. I hope you have a ripper of a day, and I will see you next time. Peace.

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                          AE 957 – Aussie Slang: Banged Up https://aussieenglish.com.au/ae-957-aussie-slang-banged-up/ https://aussieenglish.com.au/ae-957-aussie-slang-banged-up/#respond Fri, 09 Jul 2021 09:00:00 +0000 https://aussieenglish.com.au/?p=162325 AE 957 – AUSSIE SLANG: Banged Up Learn Australian English in each of these episodes of the Aussie English Podcast.…

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                          AE 957 - AUSSIE SLANG:

                          Banged Up

                          Learn Australian English in each of these episodes of the Aussie English Podcast.

                          This is the Aussie Slang series where I teach you slang that is commonly used Down Under.

                          pete smissen, host of aussie english podcast, aussie slang, australian slang, learn english online free, learn english australia, banged up meaning, what is banged up, slang for pregnant, preggo

                          In today's episode...

                          I am going to teach you the Aussie slang phrase 
                          “banged up”.

                          Learn what it means and how you can use it in your daily conversations.

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                          Transcript of AE 957 - Aussie Slang: Banged Up

                          G'day, you mob. Welcome to this episode of Aussie English, the number one place for anyone and everyone wanting to learn Australian English. Today is another free episode of the slang series that I am doing on the podcast and on the YouTube channel. If you want the extra episode, the second episode that comes out each week, make sure that you sign up to the premium podcast, which you can check out above. Anyway, let's get into today's episode.

                          So, today is a little bit of an informal expression. "Banged up, banged up". Before I tell you what it means, I wonder if you can work it out. Okay, so when I married my wife Kel, she was already "banged up" and only five months after we were married, she gave birth to my son Noah. So, my wife had been "banged up" before the wedding. She was "banged up" and she gave birth to Noah only five months after we were married.

                          So, I think you get the idea now, if you are "banged up", this is a somewhat informal Aussie slang way of saying that you are pregnant, that you are with child, that you are carrying a child. Okay. And we also have the other expression "preggers" or maybe even "preggo" in Australian English. I tend to avoid using these, especially around women that I don't know because it is very, very, very informal.

                          But if you got a sense of humour and you know the person you're speaking with really well, you can probably say that they are "preggers" or that they're "banged up", or you could even say that they're "up the duff". That's another one for you, "up the duff". Australians obviously obsess over pregnant women and creating slang terms for them. So, some example sentences.

                          My sister was "banged up" twice and she had two children, as was my wife. She was "banged up" in 2019 by me, I hope. Kidding Kel, kidding, kidding. And then she was "banged up" again last year and we had our daughter this year in March. So, there you go, guys, that's about all there is to the expression "banged up". You can obviously use "preggers and up the duff" as well.

                          All three of these slang expressions that are used in Australian English are relatively specific to Australia. I don't think Americans or Brits would use these terms. Guys, if you're American or you're British, comment below and let me know. But they're also very informal. Okay. So, if you go to the doctor, you may want to just use the word pregnant in saying-

                          Instead of saying, I'm "banged up" or, you know, oh, no, doctor, I've been "banged up, I'm up the duff, I'm preggers". Okay. Anyway, hope you enjoyed this episode, guys. I'm Pete, this is Aussie English and I'll see you next time. Peace.

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                                AE 952 – Expression: Scaredy Cat https://aussieenglish.com.au/ae-952-expression-scaredy-cat/ https://aussieenglish.com.au/ae-952-expression-scaredy-cat/#respond Sun, 27 Jun 2021 03:30:00 +0000 https://aussieenglish.com.au/?p=161515 AE 952 – EXPRESSION: Scaredy Cat Learn Australian English in this expression episode of the Aussie English Podcast. These episodes aim to teach you…

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                                AE 952 - EXPRESSION:

                                Scaredy Cat

                                Learn Australian English in this expression episode of the Aussie English Podcast.

                                These episodes aim to teach you common English expressions as well as give you a fair dinkum true-blue dose of Aussie culture, history, and news and current affairs.

                                pete smissen, host of aussie english podcast, english expression, what is scaredy cat, scaredy cat meaning,

                                In today's episode...

                                I am going teach you all about the English expression “scaredy cat”.

                                Listen in and watch as I tell you the origin of the expression, give examples on how to use the expression, and run by a pronunciation exercise.

                                Also, learn the story of a lost Maremmano-Abruzzese Sheepdog or Maremma.

                                And lastly, I give you cat facts about Australia!

                                Improve your listening skills today – listen, play, & pause this episode – and start speaking like a native English speaker!

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                                Listen to today's episode!

                                This is the FREE podcast player. You can fast-forward and rewind easily as well as slow down or speed up the audio to suit your level.

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                                Transcript of AE 952 - Expression: Scaredy Cat

                                G'day, you mob, and welcome to Aussie English. I am your host, Pete, and my objective here is to teach you guys the English spoken down under. So, whether you want to sound like a fair dinkum Aussie or you just want to understand what the flipping hell we're on about when we're having a yarn, you've come to the right place. So, sit back, grab a cuppa and enjoy Aussie English. Let's go.

                                G'day, you mob. Pete here, from Aussie English. How you going? Welcome to this episode, another expression episode of the Aussie English podcast, which is the number one place for anyone and everyone wanting to learn Australian English. Man, I'm glad to be recording again because for the last few weeks my voice has been cactus, it has been kaput, it has been non-existent because Noah brought some ungodly disease back from day care yet again.

                                And it has been hanging around like a bad smell. Right. It has been in the house for weeks now and I've just had this cough. It's been horrible. I had to postpone interviews. I lost my voice. It was just- Yeah. It's been unpleasant, to say the least.

                                And as a result, I haven't really been able to record many episodes like the one that you're currently watching because, yeah, I imagine it would be distracting to try and learn English whilst listening to someone with a very croaky, croaky, croaky voice.

                                Anyway, before we get into today's news story, guys, don't forget, if you would like access to all of the transcripts, all the downloads, all of the lesson videos for these podcast episodes, you can get access to them at Aussie English when you become a premium podcast member. So, just head over to AussieEnglish.com.au/podcast, sign up and you will have instant access. Anyway, let's get into today's weekly story.

                                So, a family is celebrating with their three-year-old scaredy cat, Maremma, named Xena, after the dog got scared during a hailstorm and ran off into the Australian bush in the Lockyer Valley, west of Brisbane. For six long months, the dog disappeared and was on its own in the bush. Xena's owners didn't think that the dog would survive, let alone return home after such a long stint in the outback.

                                However, after six long months, the dog showed up on her owners' doorsteps. And despite her ordeal, Xena was in great condition, albeit a little dog tired. Although the normally white Maremma needed a bath or two to get the matted reddish grey fur back to its original colour. Though exhausted and a little on the thin side, her owners made sure that she had a full belly of food and a little TLC and hugs that she desired after her miraculous return.

                                This has been a lesson for poor Xena's owners, who said they never gave up hope after the dog was lost. Xena, on the other hand, probably never wants to talk about the ordeal again. She'd rather let sleeping dogs lie. All right, guys, so as usual, let's get into today's joke, okay. Smack that kookaburra and let's make you laugh. All right, so today's joke is, what does the cat say after making a joke? Right.

                                So, you've got a cat and the cat for some reason is able to speak English. It's telling someone a joke, after it's told the joke, what does the cat say? What does the cat say after it's told a joke? Just kitten. You get it? Just kitten. It's a play on the word kidding to be joking, to be mucking around. Right. So, if I tell you a joke, I might say afterwards I'm only joking, I'm only kidding, just kidding. Look, just kidding.

                                And the word kitten, right. A baby cat. A kitten. A kitten. Kidding and kitten. So, what did the cat say after making a joke? Just kitten. Gosh. All right, so today's expression is "scaredy cat". I wonder if you've heard this one before, "scaredy cat", to be a "scaredy cat". Before we get into the expression, what it means, where it came from and some examples, though, let's break down the words in the expression "scaredy cat".

                                There are only two words here. "Scaredy", and this is kind of like baby talk that we would use informally to talk about someone who's afraid of something, someone who's frightened, who's scared. Right. They are a little "scaredy". Right. They're a little "scaredy". But it's only really used in the collocation "scaredy cat".

                                We don't really use it outside of that and adults don't tend to use this unless they're kind of making fun of or belittling someone for being afraid. Right. We'll get into that shortly. A "cat". I'm sure you guys know what a "cat" is. Our feline friends, it is a small, domesticated carnivorous mammal with soft fur, a short snout and retractable claws. It is widely kept as a pet or for catching mice and many breeds have been developed.

                                And did you know, I think the only "cat" that can't retract its claws, that is to pull those sharp nails back into its paws, are cheetahs. Go figure, right? The reason is they have to be able to run really, really quickly and grip onto the ground. And so, I believe as a result, their claws are always poking out. What's the opposite of retracted? It's not contracted. Yeah, they're always bare. Right.

                                So, it's kind of like- It'd be like being Wolverine, except that your claws are always out. All right. So, a "scaredy cat" and you may hear this sometimes as a "fraidy cat". This is someone, especially a child, who is easily frightened, so they can be a "fraidy cat". They can be a "scaredy cat". And it has a bit of an interesting origin. Right. So, the phrase "scaredy cat" likely originates from the way that cats are so easily frightened at times.

                                And I'm sure that you guys, if you have access to YouTube, will have seen the numerous videos with cats shitting themselves. Right. Usually someone puts a cucumber behind the cat, the cat suddenly turns around and thinks that it's a snake, it might jump in the air. Or if someone comes in and, you know, drops something and scares the cat, it might jump up.

                                But the saying "fraidy cat" is the original one and it first appears in a newspaper called The Chronicle all the way back in May of 1897. In the following passage, I shan't tell you what's his name, when we want to play a game always thinks that he'll be hurt. Soil his jacket in the dirt, tear his trousers, spoil his hat. Fraidy cat. Fraidy cat.

                                "Scaredy cat" appeared some nine years later in a book called Billy Bounce in the following passage, that is a "scaredy cat" and she will never come back. All right, so as usual, let's go through three examples of how I would use the expression "scaredy cat" or "fraidy cat" in English, but before we do that. Did you know that reading whilst listening to English is the best way to learn new vocabulary?

                                Research shows that this is much more effective than just reading material or just listening to material in English. It's the best way to learn and remember vocab, read and listen at the same time. That's why every single episode of the Aussie English podcast comes with a full transcript, so you can do exactly that, read whilst you listen. In fact, there's over 900 episodes and transcripts to go with them.

                                You can download the PDF, you can print it, you can write notes on it, you can highlight new vocabulary and most importantly, you can read whilst you listen to each episode. Also, members get access to the premium podcast player that shows the text and moves it up the screen whilst you are reading and listening on your phone, your tablet or your computer.

                                So, if your goal is to learn and remember more vocabulary, to expand your vocab in English, make sure that you sign up to become a premium podcast member today at AussieEnglish.com.au/podcast. Let's get back to the episode. All right. So, example number one. So, my parents have a cat called Max. And the funny story is my mum found this cat at the university that she was working at, so there was a wildcat there that gave birth to a bunch of kittens.

                                The kittens were sort of roaming around walking around the gardens and, you know, it wasn't going to be much of a life for them, so mum and a bunch of other workers at the university decided to adopt them. So, mum adopted this little cat. We called it Max, and he turned into this really big cat. Yeah. He grew up, he was obviously from good stock. His parents were feral cats, and he grew up to be a really big cat.

                                Anyway, he was brought into the house, and I already had a cat called Merlin, which was a Burmese cat and Merlin was top dog or top cat. He was the boss in this example. Anyway, Merlin ends up dying, you know, ten or so years later and Max, the entire time that Merlin was alive was always a "scaredy cat". He was always a "fraidy cat". He would disappear under the bed if someone showed up.

                                You know, new people would come over and they would just never know we had a cat called Max. They would think we only had Merlin because Max was such a "fraidy cat". Anyway, after Merlin died, all of a sudden Max, you know, found his balls and although he had them removed, he was desexed. And became the top dog or the top cat and was no longer scared. So, it was a really interesting story.

                                Example number two. So, my son, Noah, is- He's now a fan of Slide's, but a few weeks ago he used to be terrified of slides. So, he would go out to child's playgrounds, you know, we were in a COVID lockdown, we would try and take him out, though, and play a little bit on these playgrounds to give him a bit of exercise. He'd always climb up, be climbing around and love it. But he was a bit of a "scaredy cat" when it came to the slides.

                                You know, I guess he felt a bit of, you know, lack of control, he couldn't control the speed with which he would go down these slides. He was afraid. He was a bit of a "fraidy cat". He was a bit of a "scaredy cat". But now all of a sudden, he actually really, really likes slides. So, yeah, good on ya, Noah, for not being a "fraidy cat" or a "scaredy cat" anymore.

                                Example number three. So, I remember being a bit of a "scaredy cat" or a "fraidy cat" when I was a young kid, probably a few years older than Noah, in fact, quite a few years older than Noah, because it was when we had moved down to Ocean Grove. So, I would have been about 9 or 10. We were living in Ocean Grove right near the ocean. Go figure. Ocean Grove, right. The name of the suburb kind of tells you that.

                                And my dad would take me to the beach, and he would want to go bodyboarding, so he would, you know, put his wetsuit on, his wetty and take his bodyboard out and he would encourage me to come out into the waves with him. But I used to sort of only like the depth of the water where I could still feel the ground. I was a bit of a "scaredy cat" when I couldn't touch the ground with my feet inside the- Or insi- In the surf, right, in the water.

                                I was a little afraid. I was a little bit of a "fraidy cat". I was a little bit of a "scaredy cat". So, I didn't like going out the back where my dad would go and catch the big waves. So, there you go, guys. Now I'm sure you understand how to use the expression "scaredy cat or fraidy cat". It is just used to refer to someone, usually a child who is easily frightened, who's a little bit afraid of things, who's scared of things.

                                So, as usual, let's go through a little pronunciation exercise where you guys can practise your pronunciation, listen and repeat after me. Okay, let's go. "To. To be. To be a. To be a scaredy. To be a scaredy cat. To be a scaredy cat. To be a scaredy cat. To be a scaredy cat. To be a scaredy cat. I'm a bit of a scaredy cat. You're a bit of a scaredy cat. He's a bit of a scaredy cat. She's a bit of a scaredy cat.

                                We're scaredy cats. They're scaredy cats. It's a bit of a scaredy cat." Good job, guys. Now, the reason I've had to use "we're scaredy cats, they're scared cats" is because it doesn't really make sense for those plural pronouns to be used with "a bit of a", right. If you said we're a bit of a scaredy cat, just sounds weird because you've got "we", which is plural and "scaredy cat", which is singular.

                                Same for they're a bit of a scaredy cat, you would just say "they're scaredy cats, we're scaredy cats." So, guys, finishing up, I thought I would go through some cat facts about Australia. So, in Australia, around 30% of households are home to a cat, there the second most common pet after dogs, despite only being found in around a third of houses, though, the average house has 1.4 Cats.

                                So, clearly, there are a lot of crazy old cat ladies out there doing their bit to own a bunch of cats and skew the statistics. Cats first arrived in Australia around the year 1804 and by the time of 1820 there were feral cats roaming the bushland around Sydney. Unfortunately, Australian wildlife was caught blindsided by the arrival of cats as they hadn't evolved in their presence and therefore became easy targets for hungry cats.

                                As a result, cats proved to be a great deal more environmentally destructive in Australia than elsewhere in the world. In the early nineteen hundreds, the pervasiveness of the cat problem was starting to cause public concern. Both domestic and feral cats predate on native Australian animals and have played a huge role in the extinction of numerous Australian species.

                                For example, cats are estimated to have significantly contributed to the extinction of at least 22 endemic Australian mammals since the arrivals of the first Europeans. This is included species like the rusty numbat, the desert bandicoot, the broad-faced potoroo and the Crescent Nail-Tail Wallaby. Research over the last ten years now estimates that a single feral cat kills 740 wild animals every year, about two a day.

                                So if, like me, you're a cat lover who loves having their furry friends around them at home, but you also have a soft spot for native wildlife and the Australian environment, be sure to put a bell on your cat's neck and keep it indoors at all times, if possible. That way, it's a win-win for both you, the cat and Australia's fauna.

                                Anyway, guys, I hope you enjoyed this episode. I hope that with regards to your English, you are no longer a little bit of a scaredy cat or a fraidy cat and you can go out there and speak confidently after learning this expression. I'm Pete, this is Aussie English. Thanks for joining me and I'll see you next time. Peace.

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                                Cats facts in Australia!

                                • Around 30% of Australia’s households are home to a cat.
                                • They’re the second most common pet after dogs.
                                • Despite only being found in around ⅓ of houses, the average house has 1.4 cats. So, clearly there’re a lot of crazy old cat ladies doing their bit to skew the statistics.
                                • Cats first arrived in Australia around the year 1804, and by the time of 1820, they were feral cats roaming the bushland around Sydney.
                                • Unfortunately, Australian wildlife was caught blindsided by the arrival of cats as they hadn’t evolved in their presence and therefore became easy targets for hungry cats.
                                • As a result, cats proved to be a great deal more environmentally destructive in Australia than elsewhere in the world.
                                • In the early 1900s, the pervasiveness of the cat problem was starting to cause public concern.
                                • Both domestic and feral cats predate on native Australian animals and have played a huge role in the extinction of many species.
                                • For example, cats are estimated to have significantly contributed to the extinction of at least 22 endemic Aussie mammals since the arrival of Europeans.
                                • This has included species like: the rusty numbat, the desert bandicoot, the broad-faced potoroo and the crescent nailtail wallaby.
                                • Research over the last 10 years now estimates that a single feral cat kills 740 wild animals every year.
                                • So if like me, you’re a cat lover who loves having their furry friends around them at home, but you also have a soft spot for the native wildlife and Australian environment, be sure to put a bell on your cat and keep it indoors at all times if possible.
                                • That way, it’s a win-win for both you and Australia’s fauna.

                                Further reading / viewing

                                Today's Vocab:

                                Here is a glossary of all the important vocabulary from today’s lesson.

                                Don’t forget, you’ll be able to see when and where the vocabulary was used in the transcript PDF for this episode, which you can download above.

                                • Cactus – (Aussie slang) Dead; broken.
                                • Hang around like a bad smell – Linger; not go away.
                                • Croaky – (Of a person’s voice) deep and hoarse.
                                • Give birth – Bear a child or young.
                                • Adopt something – Keep an animal as a pet.
                                • From good stock – Having parents with good genetics, wealth, or other favourable characteristics.
                                • Top dog – Someone or something in a position of authority; the boss.
                                • Find your balls – Discover your courage; become brave.
                                • Go figure – Said to express amazement; used here sarcastically because it’s obvious Ocean Grove is near the ocean.
                                • Bodyboarding – The water sport where you catch waves using a foam board that you lie on.
                                • In the surf – In the waves at the beach.
                                • Out the back – Far out in the surf where the waves are breaking.
                                • Crazy old cat ladies – An older woman who lives alone with a large number of cats, to which she is thought to be obsessively devoted.
                                • Skew something – Make something biased or distorted in a way that is regarded as inaccurate, unfair, or misleading.
                                • A feral cat – A once domesticated cat that is now living wild.
                                • Catch someone blindsided – For someone to be caught unaware of off-guard by something.
                                • Pervasiveness – The degree to which something is widespread.
                                • Play a role in something – Be involved in something; have an effect on something.
                                • Endemic – (Of a plant or animal) Native and restricted to a certain place.
                                • Have a soft spot for something – Have a sentimental weakness for something; have a strong liking of something.
                                • A win-win – A situation where each party benefits.

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                                      AE 944 – Aussie Slang: Bad News https://aussieenglish.com.au/ae-944-aussie-slang-bad-news/ https://aussieenglish.com.au/ae-944-aussie-slang-bad-news/#respond Fri, 18 Jun 2021 03:30:49 +0000 https://aussieenglish.com.au/?p=160073 AE 938 – AUSSIE SLANG: Bad News Learn Australian English in each of these episodes of the Aussie English Podcast.…

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                                      AE 938 - AUSSIE SLANG:

                                      Bad News

                                      Learn Australian English in each of these episodes of the Aussie English Podcast.

                                      This is the Aussie Slang series where I teach you slang that is commonly used Down Under.

                                      pete smissen, host of aussie english, aussie slang, australian slang, what is bad news, bad news meaning, learn australian english, learn aussie english

                                      In today's episode...

                                      I teach you the Aussie slang phrase “bad news”

                                      Learn what it means and how you can use it in your daily conversations.

                                      Improve your listening skills today – listen, play, & pause this episode – and start speaking like a native English speaker!

                                      Watch & listen to the convo!

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                                      Transcript of AE 944 - Aussie Slang: Bad News

                                      G'day, you mob, how's it going? Pete here from Aussie English, the number one place for anyone and everyone wanting to learn Australian English. And welcome, welcome, welcome to the next instalment of the Aussie Slang series.

                                      Now, today, I'm going to be teaching you the slang term "bad news". Someone who is "bad news". Now, "bad news" can be used by all English speakers to be talking about information that you have just received that is obviously not good, right? So if you go to a hospital, you talk to your doctor and the doctor says, I've got some bad news for you. That is obviously not good, right? You would imagine that that is not good news. It's bad news. It is information that is likely to not be good.

                                      You know, I think you know what bad news is, but we can use this in Australian English when describing someone. And it means that they are a troublesome person. Maybe they're a bit dodgy. They are not to be trusted. They are troublesome person. They are "bad news". So maybe you have a friend who comes to a party and you tell your other mates there, you know, he's a friend, but he's a bit troublesome. He's a bit dangerous. He's bad news sometimes. That guy's bad news.

                                      Or maybe you're in town and you see this crazy woman walking through town. You know, she's a total nut job and just a loon, completely crazy. And you say, "Quick, get your family!" You say, "Quick, everyone! Let's get to the other side of the road. This woman is bad news. She's troublesome. She's dangerous. She's bad news."

                                      So thanks for joining me, guys. Hopefully you understood this expression. If someone is bad news, they are troublesome. They are dangerous. Use it in a comment below and show me that you've understood it, right? Make your own sentence using this expression. You know, have you ever come across someone who is "bad news"? Do people think you are "bad news"? Who knows? Right. I'm sure that someone out there thinks I'm "bad news". You just, you know, statistically, there's got to be someone.

                                      Besides that guys, don't forget, I release another episode in the Aussie Slang series every single week for members of the Premium Podcast membership or the Academy. If you would like to learn more about the Premium Podcast and Academy, go up here or check out the links below. And for everything Australian English go to www.aussieenglish.com.au. I'm your host. Pete, this is Aussie English. See you next time!

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                                            AE 931 – The Goss: The Melbourne vs Sydney Rivalry & How Melbourne is About to Outgrow Sydney [Members Only] https://aussieenglish.com.au/ae-931-the-goss-the-melbourne-vs-sydney-rivalry-how-melbourne-is-about-to-outgrow-sydney-members-only/ https://aussieenglish.com.au/ae-931-the-goss-the-melbourne-vs-sydney-rivalry-how-melbourne-is-about-to-outgrow-sydney-members-only/#respond Thu, 03 Jun 2021 03:30:04 +0000 https://aussieenglish.com.au/?p=159232 Hey, mate. Looks like you're out of free views or you need to sign into your account! If you want…

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                                            AE 926 – The Goss: Scientists Discover Crazy New Facts About the Most Fearsome Dinosaur, T. Rex [Members Only] https://aussieenglish.com.au/ae-926-the-goss-scientists-discover-crazy-new-facts-about-the-most-fearsome-dinosaur-t-rex-members-only/ https://aussieenglish.com.au/ae-926-the-goss-scientists-discover-crazy-new-facts-about-the-most-fearsome-dinosaur-t-rex-members-only/#respond Thu, 27 May 2021 03:30:00 +0000 https://aussieenglish.com.au/?p=159020 Hey, mate. Looks like you're out of free views or you need to sign into your account! If you want…

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                                            AE 924 – WWP: eBay, Photography, and Penguins https://aussieenglish.com.au/ae-924-wwp-ebay-photography-and-penguins/ https://aussieenglish.com.au/ae-924-wwp-ebay-photography-and-penguins/#respond Sun, 23 May 2021 03:30:16 +0000 https://aussieenglish.com.au/?p=158934 The post AE 924 – WWP: eBay, Photography, and Penguins appeared first on Aussie English.

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                                            Learn Australian English by listening to this latest episode of the Aussie English podcast!

                                            Finally! It’s been awhile since I actually “walked” while recording this new “Walking With Pete” episode.

                                            I got a rush of outdoors this day and tell you about these special lenses that I’ve been looking for.

                                            Have you checked the episodes with the new studio? Let me know what you think!

                                            Improve your listening skills today – listen, play & pause this episode – and start speaking like a native English speaker!


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                                              AE 921 – The Goss: 3 Awesome Shark Stories in the News Recently [Members Only] https://aussieenglish.com.au/ae-921-the-goss-3-awesome-shark-stories-in-the-news-recently-members-only/ https://aussieenglish.com.au/ae-921-the-goss-3-awesome-shark-stories-in-the-news-recently-members-only/#respond Thu, 20 May 2021 03:30:16 +0000 https://aussieenglish.com.au/?p=158864 Hey, mate. Looks like you're out of free views or you need to sign into your account! If you want…

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                                              AE 918 – Interview: Fake Natties, Juiced Up Celebrities, & Male Body Image Issues with Marcus Kain https://aussieenglish.com.au/ae-918-interview-fake-natties-juiced-up-celebrities-male-body-image-issues-with-marcus-kain/ https://aussieenglish.com.au/ae-918-interview-fake-natties-juiced-up-celebrities-male-body-image-issues-with-marcus-kain/#comments Sat, 15 May 2021 03:30:17 +0000 https://aussieenglish.com.au/?p=158756 The post AE 918 – Interview: Fake Natties, Juiced Up Celebrities, & Male Body Image Issues with Marcus Kain appeared first on Aussie English.

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                                              Learn Australian English in this new series of interviews with my fitness buddy Marcus Kain!

                                              Hey there, you mob! Meet Marcus Kain, or Muzz as I know him, is a certified nutrition, strength & conditioning coach. He’s been helping me with my work out and I got him here on the podcast to talk about health and fitness topics.

                                              In this third episode (of three), we talk about fake natties. Yep, sounds like patties, the food! But actually a fake natty (plural = fake natties) is short for “fake natural”. This is a term for bodybuilders who don’t tell other people that they use steroids or performance-enhancing drugs. I mean, that’s fine if they’re ashamed of doing so but they claim that they’re clean, that they don’t use steroids at all, so that’s where we draw the line.

                                              Improve your listening skills today – listen, play & pause this episode – and start speaking like a native English speaker!


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                                                AE 914 – Aussie Slang: At The Drop Of A Hat https://aussieenglish.com.au/ae-914-aussie-slang-at-the-drop-of-a-hat/ https://aussieenglish.com.au/ae-914-aussie-slang-at-the-drop-of-a-hat/#respond Fri, 07 May 2021 03:30:44 +0000 https://aussieenglish.com.au/?p=158690 The post AE 914 – Aussie Slang: At The Drop Of A Hat appeared first on Aussie English.

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                                                Learn Australian English in this episode of the Aussie Slang series where I teach you how to use Australian slang – like a fair dinkum Australian!

                                                In this episode, we talk about the Aussie slang phrase “at the drop of a hat”. Learn what it means and how you can use it in your daily conversations.

                                                Improve your listening skills today – listen, play & pause this episode – and start speaking like a native English speaker!


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                                                  AE 911 – Aussie Slang: At Any Tick Of The Clock https://aussieenglish.com.au/ae-911-aussie-slang-at-any-tick-of-the-clock/ https://aussieenglish.com.au/ae-911-aussie-slang-at-any-tick-of-the-clock/#respond Fri, 30 Apr 2021 03:30:03 +0000 https://aussieenglish.com.au/?p=158554 The post AE 911 – Aussie Slang: At Any Tick Of The Clock appeared first on Aussie English.

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                                                  Learn Australian English in this episode of the Aussie Slang series where I teach you how to use Australian slang – like a fair dinkum Australian!

                                                  In this episode, we talk about the Aussie slang phrase “at any tick of the clock”. Learn what it means and how you can use it in your daily conversations.

                                                  Improve your listening skills today – listen, play & pause this episode – and start speaking like a native English speaker!


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