politics

Online Insights on FIVEaa Sunday July 03 2011

This month we prepare for an indoors winter with tips for making better home movies, things to do with your store of pumpkins, ways to find public toilets when the cold conditions prompt an unplanned call of nature, and one of the most obvious cases of political messaging captured on film. Meanwhile, on the Web 2.0 front, it has been a busy time with Google rolling out their newest attack on the Social Networking market with Google+ and Facebook poised to strike back this coming week with an announcement of integrated video chat within Facebook using the Skype service. But for now, on with the sites.

How to make a movie at home

Blue Seduction Movie Set by Redvette via Flickr

Unlock your inner Kubrick (Blue Seduction Movie Set by Redvette via Flickr)

With winter upon us it is likely that you will be needing to entertain families at home and inside. With a video camera, a computer and some creativity, you could work as a team and create a celluloid masterpiece.

Here are some wise tips that will lead you through the process.

  • Think about the genre or style of movie you wish to make first
  • Go and rent some movies in that genre/style
  • Decide on a narrative movie (story-telling), documentary style, or a compilation (editing together bits of footage you already have) Continue reading

Easy cuts will hurt South Australia for long time

Orange Slice

The knife has been planted

South Australian Premier, Mike Rann, Treasurer, Kevin Foley, and Small Business Minister, Tom Koutsantonis, have given their blessing to some savage, short-sighted budget cuts that will gut the Department of Trade and Economic Development and destroy the network of Business Enterprise Centres.

So what?

Well, for starters, it is the Business Enterprise Centres that deal with all the little businesses, you know, ones that begin small, expand with the help of family members and then start employing other community members, paying for other suppliers, funding families, schools, attractions, and ultimately spawning new consumers who start the cycle all over again.

Despite that fact that such small, family companies grow into beloved household names that politicians love to be associated with, like Coopers, Villis, Spring Gully, Haighs, etc, during their early phases they are unsexy, helpless, awkward things and so disparate as a sector that they lack any real election day punch and so can be sweetly ignored.

That is why the support that had developed for this branch of important, everyday small business was so precious and exceptional and why these latest cuts are so disappointing but obvious.

Rachel Hodson is a young, South Australian woman who has started a company called Buckle With Care. I met her during a small business workshop I was running recently. Continue reading

Online Insights on FIVEaa Sunday August 01 2010

This month in Online Insights I combine one part election with one part masterchef and two parts history, unveil a tool to help you maintain a secret journal, give you a political voice, and give you front row seats to as many local jazz concerts as you wish right from your computer.

History Chef

Hardtacks - staple and enemy of civil war soldiers

Hardtacks - staple and enemy of civil war soldiers

Recently, our Prime Minister and the leader of the opposition held a contrived, plastic debate on live, Sunday night television. It marked the beginning of another federal election period with all the smear, puffery, deceit and staging one sadly has come to expect. What drew most coverage before the event was the fact that this excruciatingly tedious program was scheduled at the same time as the grand finale of yet another stale reality show, MasterChef. It was feared the masses would rather watch formulaic reality programming with cooking-show flavour than formulaic political debate with, well, no flavour.

It irks me that both television and our political landscape have descended from nutritious staples to artificially-flavoured poison. But that is for another article. What I have stumbled across is a website that ties politics and the culinary arts together in a much more appetising way – History Chef.

This delightful, albeit American, site is worth a meandering visit. Suzy Evans, who got her Ph.D in History, has woven a whimsical collection of food-based anecdotes involving US presidents and historical figures and their dietary preferences. Probably doesn’t sound that interesting at first, but I urge you to take a look. What I loved about this site was the way its stories gave is easily digestible tid bits of daily life. As you read and picture the people and the food they were consuming you really do feel like you have been transported back in time and given a truly authentic taste of life in another era. Some of my favourites include: Continue reading

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Please note that all opinions expressed as part of the official voice of this site are mine, Steve Davis, and are not representative of any parties I represent, unless specifically noted. Furthermore, I encourage your feedback through the comments fields, whether or not you are taking a position with or against me, as long as the language is family-friendly and the discussion is constructive. I reserve the right to not publish any comments if I deem them to be unsuitable.