December 1 - 31, 2025: Issue 649

Our Youth page is for young people aged 13+ - if you are younger than this we have news for you in the Children's pageNews items and articles run at the top of this page. Information, local resources, events and local organisations, sports groups etc. are at the base of this page. All Previous pages for you are listed in Past Features

 

Summer Break

We're taking a break until Sunday January 24 2026 - we'll still be around, and 'out and about' in the interim, and may even run into you at a Pittwater Swim or on the beach or bush tracks and reserves as we all take a few weeks to spend with family, and take a chance to exhale and catch up on some sleep.

As always, thank you all for your input, suggestions, requests and for being just wonderful and brilliant again this year. We hope you all have a great Christmas, a safe and fun New Years, and also take some time out to exhale and give yourselves a bit of kudos for doing your best all year or trying to - and even having another go when it didn't work out the first time. Been there - done that.

Please take very good care of yourselves, your mates and each other, even if you don't know each other, during the break - remember we're not here to tear each other down but to lift each other up - and please try and curl up with a book or documentary over the break, or even a classic old film - take 5 minutes each day for YOU caring about YOU.

 

 

Young Socceroos 20-Player squad named for SBS Cup in Japan Includes Avalon - Curl Curl Players from Barrenjoey-Narrabeen schools

On Monday December 8 Football Australia confirmed the 20-player squad for the CommBank Young Socceroos’ upcoming SBS Cup in Japan in December.

The squad includes a former member of the Avalon Soccer Club and a Barrenjoey High School Alumni, Mathias Macallister, now with Sydney FC, and two fellow Sydney FC players who previously played with Curl Curl FC, Marin France and Joe Lacey, both Narrabeen Sports High School alumni members. 

Joe scored the match winner helping to defeat Wrexham 2-1 at Allianz Stadium in front of over 40,000 fans in July this year.

"I just put my hands into the air as soon as I heard the crowd, I'm very grateful for the opportunity... yeah, I'm just buzzing." Joe said after the match

Joe Lacey signed his first professional contract in December 2023 and secured his place at Sydney FC for the 2024/25 season for three years onwards. He is a midfielder who has been applying his trade in the NSW NPL and was named as a substitute in opening game of the 2023/24 season.

Lacey shows his delight at scoring the winner. Photo Jaime Castaneda.

Sydney FC signed then 17-year-old attacking midfielder Marin France on a three-year deal – the first professional contract of the academy prospect’s career - in June 2024.

It had always been a dream of his to play in Sky Blue ever since he was a six year old playing his football at Curl Curl FC and it turns out that a team-mate back then is his team mate now.

Joe Lacey was also a member of that U6 Curl Curl side and he has also signed a contract at Sydney FC A-League side. Now, this continues their football journey together.

“Joe and I would go to Sydney FC games together with our dads watching Del Piero and then winning titles,” Marin France said.

“We’ve been in every team and school together since we were six.

“We joined Sydney FC together in under 13’s, played in the same NSW teams and now we are both in the Sydney FC’s A-League Men’s squad, it’s an unbelievable story.”

France stepped up to the Sydney FC’s first team after winning Sydney’s Rising Star Award at the 2024 Sky Blue Ball.

Described as a winger or number 10 who likes to create and excite, reports of France’s performance during the academy’s recent trip to Germany impressed Sydney head coach Ufuk Talay, who has now presented the teenager with the chance to make his mark in the first-team squad.

“It’s hard to put into words how I felt,” said France, describing the moment he signed his first professional contract.

“There was a lot of emotion because you put so much into it and to hear you have got the opportunity to sign with the best club in Australia, it’s something you dream of as a kid.

“I grew up idolising the likes of Del Piero, Brosque, Ninkovic, Luke Brattan, Anthony Caceres when I was younger, and now I’m playing with these sorts of players, it’s really special.

“If you’ve ever played football it’s the sort of things you dream of.”

Marin France on stage after winning his Rising Star Award 2024 at the Sky Blue Ball. Photo: Sydney FC

Mathias Macallister signed a 3-year contract with Sydney FC in July 2025. 

Having been in the Sydney FC system since the age of 12, Macallister has now inked his first professional contract and will link up with Ufuk Talay’s senior squad ahead of the Isuzu UTE A-League 2025-26 season.

The 18-year-old had made headlines over the 2025 Season, first scoring five goals for the Sky Blues’ NPL side in a win over Manly United, before scoring a second-half hat-trick during Sydney FC’s recent 7-0 pre-season win over Hakoah.

“It’s amazing, I’ve worked so hard for this,” said Macallister after inking his first professional contract.

“It’s all I’ve ever wanted, to be playing for my boyhood club. Finally signing the contract feels incredible and I can’t wait to get going.

“The (Isuzu UTE A-League) standard is just on another level. Everything’s sharper, quicker, more intense. I’ve noticed now how the pros do all the small things right.

“I bring goals. That’s what I want to give the club and the fans. And when I score, I’ll celebrate with the fans too.

“I score all kinds. I’ve scored with my head, long range, penalties everything. But I really like one or two-touch finishes in the box. That’s my bread and butter. I can pop one from outside too, top corner if needed.”

As Mathias is the son of former Central Coast, Wellington Phoenix and Melbourne City footballer Dylan Macallister, the 18-year-old has seen his fair share of top players represent Sydney FC during his six-year association with the Sky Blues, some of whom have inspired him, as well as his dad.

“Rhyan Grant has been a standout his whole career for Sydney FC,” said Macallister. “Watching him put on the shirt every week and give everything has been inspiring.

“And my Dad has been there through everything. He tells me what I’m doing well, what I need to work on. I honestly wouldn’t be here without him.

“And last but not least my mum, who has supported me and done everything for me, behind the scenes from day one.”

Head Coach Ufuk Talay believes Macallister has all the attributes to succeed at the top level.

“Mathias is a very talented young striker with a great eye for goal,” said Talay.

“He’s got natural instincts in the box, good pace, and a strong work ethic, which is what we’re looking for in young players.

“We’ve seen what he can do in the NPL and now it’s about helping him take that next step into the A-League and reach his full potential.”

Macallister becomes the latest graduate from Sydney FC’s Academy to earn a professional contract, as the Sky Blues continue their commitment to developing elite young Australian talent.

Sydney FC''s commitment is already paying off as a late Mathias Macallister goal sealed another impressive pre-season performance from Sydney FC as they saw off Wellington Phoenix at Leichhardt Oval in September 2025.

Macallister after signing a three year deal for Sydney FC. Photo: Sydney FC

The CommBank Young Socceroos will kick off their tournament against Spain on December 18, before taking on Japanese domestic side Shizuoka Prefecture on December 20 and wrapping up the trip against Japan on December 21.

Richard Garcia will lead the squad in the role of Head Coach, with usual Head Coach Trevor Morgan unable to attend the tournament due to his commitments as Football Australia’s Interim Technical Director.

The squad, selected by Morgan and Garcia, comprises of only players playing in Australia and Japan, with 13 debutants making the trip with the squad.

Garcia said he was looking forward to getting the squad together again after a successful year which saw victory in the AFC U20 Asian Cup 2025 and some promising performances in the FIFA U20 World Cup 2025.

"The CommBank Young Socceroos have had a hugely successful year, having won the AFC U20 Asian Cup, and we are looking to compete and finish the year strong with the next crop of Young Socceroos in the SBS Cup in Japan. 

"We will be playing some top teams from around the world and it is a completely new squad of players looking to make an impact as they continue their development.

"We will be looking to see how this new group of players can cope with a hectic international schedule and how they adjust to the demands and increased quality at U20 level against some very strong opponents." 

CommBank Young Socceroos Squad for SBS Cup

First Name Last Name    Position         Current Club Player                         Junior Club / MF

Daniel         Graskoski     GK                 Melbourne Victory FC                     Northcote City FC / Football VIC

Jai               Ajanovic       GK                 Central Coast Mariners FC             Gymea United FC/ Football NSW

Nikola    Djurovic DF                  Melbourne City FC                          Springvale White Eagles FC / Football VIC

Lewis          Marinucci     DF                   Melbourne Victory FC                     Bulleen Lions FC / Football VIC

Tyler           Williams       DF                   Sydney FC                                       Castle Hill United FC / Football NSW

Matias        Aloisi            DF                   Melbourne Victory FC                      West Adelaide SC / Football SA 

Richard      Nkomo         DF                   Newcastle Jets FC                           South West Wanderers FC / Football NSW

Harrison    Jablonski      DF                   Central Coast Mariners FC              Surf Coast FC / Football VIC 

Arham       Islam            FW                  Western United FC                            Ballarat City FC / Football VIC 

Harry        Crawford      FW                   Adelaide United FC                           Elizabeth Vale SC / Football SA 

Anderson Back             MF                   Western United FC                            Essendon Royals SC / Football VIC

Jai            Rose            MF                   Western Sydney Wanderers FC        The Entrance Bateau Bay FC / Football NSW

Nickolas   Alfaro           MF                   Sydney FC                                          Nepean FC / Football NSW

Jesse       Mantell         MF                   Central Coast Mariners FC                 Terrigal United FC / Football Northern NSW 

Abdurahman Omer      MF                    Western United FC                             Green Gully SC / Football VIC

Joseph     Lacey           MF                   Sydney FC                                          Curl Curl FC / Football NSW 

Marin       France          FW                   Sydney FC                                         Curl Curl FC / Football NSW 

Alaat   Abdul-Rahman  FW                   Western Sydney Wanderers FC         Enfield Rovers FC / Football NSW

Jordan Graoroski         FW                    Sydney FC                                          Gwawley Bay FC / Football NSW

Mathias Macallister      FW                   Sydney FC                                           Avalon SC / Football NSW 

CommBank Young Socceroos Match Schedule: SBS Cup 

Australia v Spain
Date: Thursday, December 18, 2025 

Venue: Fujieda Complex, Shizuoka
Kick-off: 16:00 local/18:00 AEDT 

Australia v Shizuoka Prefecture
Date: Saturday, December 20, 2025 

Venue: Fujieda Complex, Shizuoka
Kick-off: 11:00 local/13:00 AEDT 

Australia v Japan
Date: Sunday, December 21, 2025 

Venue: Kusanagi Stadium, Shizuoka
Kick-off: 11:00 local/13:00 AEDT 

FA+ Launches: More than a Ballot 

FA+ is the most direct pathway for fans to secure their place at football’s biggest stage. the FIFA World Cup 2026™, while rewarding them with year-round experiences across Football Australia’s events and brands. Fans can now register and purchase their FA+ membership through www.footballaustralia.com.au   

 

2025 ISA World Junior Surfing Championship

Report runs in the Aquatics Feature this Issue - results will be added in as they come in.

Australian Team for 2025 ISA World Junior Surfing Championship

Surfing Australia is proud to announce the 2025 Australian Junior Irukandjis Team, who will represent the nation at the upcoming ISA World Junior Surfing Championship, set for December 5–14, 2025, at Punta Rocas, Peru.

Team Australia returns as the defending champions, following a historic victory at the 2024 ISA World Junior Championships in El Salvador, where Ziggy Mackenzie and Dane Henry both claimed gold in their respective divisions. The Irukandjis will look to defend their crown on the world stage, showcasing the strength, unity, and depth of talent in Australia’s junior surfing pathway.

The ISA World Surfing Games is one of the sport’s most prestigious events for emerging surf talent, and a proven pathway to the Olympic Games, with more than 80% of Olympic surfers having competed at this event.

2025 Australian Junior Irukandjis Team

UNDER 18 BOYS:

Sam Lowe (Thirroul, NSW): The 2024 Australian Champion, Lowe has been a standout in national competition and will look to bring his powerful, consistent surfing onto the world stage in Peru. Sam is co-captain with Milla Brown.

Mitchell Peterson (Noosa, QLD): Leading the 2025 Australian Junior Series, Peterson has built his season on strong results and consistency, making him one of the in-form surfers in the U18 division.

Maverick Wilson (Dunsborough, WA): The 2023 U16 Australian Junior Series winner, Wilson has quickly established himself among the older division and is currently ranked 4th in the U18 standings.

UNDER 18 GIRLS:

Milla Brown (Bungan, NSW): The 2024 Australian Champion, Brown also represented Australia at the Open ISA World Surfing Championships where the team won gold and she finished 11th in the world in September this year. Milla is co-captain again this World Junior Championships.

⁠⁠Sierra Kerr (Bilinga, QLD): A two-time Junior World Champion, including an ISA World Title, Kerr brings proven international experience and a reputation as one of the most talented juniors in the world.

⁠⁠Isla Huppatz (Burleigh, NSW): Runner-up at the 2024 Australian Junior Championships, Huppatz was part of one of the most progressive women’s finals ever seen in junior surfing, pushing innovation with every heat.

UNDER 16 BOYS:

⁠Ocean Lancaster (Merewether, NSW): The 2024 Australian Champion, Lancaster is known for his smooth style and composure under pressure, setting him up as a key contender in the U16 division.

Caden Francis (Coolangatta, QLD): Recognised for his dynamic air game, Francis will carry international experience into Peru after earning a place at Stab High Japan in 2025.

Max McGillivray (Evans Head, NSW): Runner-Up on the 2024 Australian Junior Series rankings, McGillivray had a breakout year with back-to-back wins at Skull Candy and the Rip Curl GromSearch at Phillip Island.

UNDER 16 GIRLS:

⁠Lucy Darragh (Gerringong,NSW): Fresh off a QS6000 win in Nias, Darragh has proven herself on the Qualifying Series and continues to rise as one of Australia’s most promising junior surfers.

⁠⁠Olive Hardy (Gnarabup, WA): The 2024 Australian Champion, Hardy brings consistency and competitive sharpness that will be crucial in the world-class Punta Rocas lineup.

Charli Hately (Burleigh, NSW): Currently ranked among the top surfers on the Australia/Oceania Qualifying Series, Hately’s 2025 season has included a runner-up at the QS6000 in Nias, underlining her world-class form.

Surfing Australia’s National Junior Coach, Pete Duncan, said the calibre of the 2025 Australian Junior Irukandji’s is undeniable.

“The depth of talent in Australia and our rigorous qualification system mean every athlete has truly earned their place. With four athletes returning from last year’s gold medal-winning team, we’ve got the experience and competitive edge to push for back-to-back titles,” Duncan said.

Surfing Australia’s National High Performance Director, Kate Wilcomes, believes the squad embodies the future of Australian surfing and is ready to rise to the challenge on the world stage.

“Returning as defending champions, the Irukandjis now have an opportunity to build on a golden legacy. Each member has earned their place through hard work, dedication, and consistent performances and we’re excited to see them showcase the team spirit and pride that comes with wearing the green and gold.

Luke MacDonald, Surfing Australia Head of Pathway Program, said:

“I am thrilled with the team selected to represent Australia at the ISA World Junior Championships in Peru this December. This group of athletes brings real depth of talent and strong competitive experience, and their skill sets are well suited to the powerful waves at Punta Rocas. With the support of Head Coach Pete Duncan and Team Manager Tegan Cronau, the athletes will have every opportunity to perform at their best. After last year’s success and the Opens Team’s recent gold, we are aiming to carry that momentum and once again bring the title back to Australia.”

The Irukandjis will proudly wear the green and gold, joining 57 national teams and hundreds of athletes in what is set to be one of the most competitive ISA World Junior Surfing Championships yet.

Punta Rocas Welcomes the World as 2025 ISA World Junior Surfing Championship Opens in Peru

Punta Rocas, Peru – Friday December 5, 2025

Today, an incredible 424 of the world’s best junior surfers marched in a Parade of Nations along the boardwalk of the Punta Rocas High Performance Center to join in celebrating the Opening Ceremony of the 2025 ISA World Junior Surfing Championship (WJSC). Held at the iconic break of Punta Rocas, the event will begin competition tomorrow, December 6, and run until December 14.

Representatives from a record 57 national teams make up the massive numbers. Members from each nation joined in the traditional ISA Sands of the World ceremony, pouring sand from their home beaches into one container as a symbol of the peaceful gathering of nations of the world through surfing.

Four teams — Angola, India, Saint Lucia, and Slovenia — are present to compete in the WJSC for the first time. For Saint Lucia, one of the newest ISA member nations, it is their first-ever ISA participation.

The athletes gathered were represented on stage by Australian Team Captain Milla Coco Brown (AUS), who swore an oath of good sportsmanship alongside ISA Judge Jacqueline Silva. Also present on stage were National Director of Recreation and Promotion of Sport for the IPD, Jose Luis Casas, FENTA President, Elfri Alfonso Navarrete Narro, and ISA Vice Presidents, Karin Sierralta and Jean-Luc Arassus.

Photo: Australia Team Captains Milla Coco Brown and Sam Lowe. Photo: ISA/Jersson Barboza

Ten former medallists were amongst the large crowd, including 2024 U/16 World Champions Ziggy Aloha Mackenzie (AUS) and Dylan Donegan (ESP), who will both compete in the U/18 division for the first time. Two-time U/16 medallists Clémence Schorsch (FRA) and Lukas Skinner (ENG) were also present, more determined than ever to claim gold as they debut in the U/18 division.

The WJSC has established itself as a proven pathway to the Olympic Games — of the 72 surfers to have competed at the Olympics so far, 59 previously participated in the event, with 32 earning ISA World Junior medals. This year, the youngest Olympic surfer, Siqi Yang (CHN), will make history as the first current Olympian to return to the WJSC after competing in Paris 2024 at just 15-years-old.

The ceremony closed with a display of the traditional caballitos de totora being ridden in the waves of Punta Rocas, recognizing the long history of surfing in Peru.

ISA President, Fernando Aguerre, said:

“Punta Rocas is a very special and historical place for the ISA. It has hosted ISA World Surfing Championships since 1965, almost from the beginning of our history. I’m very, very happy to see this record amount of countries, a record amount of participants between surfers and their support teams — there’s almost 700 people in Peru. This is amazing. This is a show of the force, the incredible popularity, and the incredible moment of junior surfing around the world.

“I would like to thank our host, FENTA, the Peruvian Institute of Sports, and in general the government of Peru and the people of Peru for such an amazing hosting of this event. Enjoy the waves, reconnect with old friends, and make new ones. That is the true spirit of the ISA World Championships.”

Competition began Saturday, December 6, at 7:00 a.m. PET with U/18 Girls Main Round 1 at Punta Rocas and U/16 Boys Main Round 1 at El Bosque.

About the ISA World Surfing Games 2025

Of the 71 athletes who have competed in surfing’s Olympic debut, 59 were former ISA World Junior competitors — including Olympic medalists Caroline Marks (USA), Tatiana Weston-Webb (BRA), Gabriel Medina (BRA), and Australia’s own Owen Wright. With names like these etched into ISA history, the ISA World Junior Surfing Championships remain a critical stepping stone in the journey to Olympic and World Tour success.

The 2025 edition marks the 21st running of the championship and the second time it will be hosted in Peru. Punta Rocas has long been a historic surf destination, playing host to milestone moments including the Lima 2019 Pan American Games and multiple ISA World Championships.

About the Irukandjis

The Irukandjis name was generously gifted to Surfing Australia by the Yirrganydji people of North Queensland. The team’s tagline — ‘Deadly in the Water’ — comes from the potent Irukandji jellyfish, reflecting both the cultural heritage and fierce competitive spirit of Australian surfers.

All elite Australian surfers, across Olympic, longboard, big wave, adaptive, SUP, junior, and masters disciplines, compete internationally under the Irukandjis banner and colours.

Follow the Irukandjis via:  www.surfingaustralia.com/irukandjis 

Photo: Team, Australia at the Opening Ceremony. Photo: ISA/Sean Evans

 

Pittwater High School student wows BTS at School Spectacular 

Report by Alyssa Terese and Duyen Nguyen, photos supplied

December 12, 2025

Over the weekend of Friday, 28 and Saturday, 29 November, a whopping 6,000 public school students dazzled tens of thousands of people at the world’s largest amateur variety show, School Spectacular at Sydney’s Qudos Bank Arena.

Showtime saw hundreds of students put on amazing dance numbers, singing performances and acrobatic feats. 

Working off stage and behind the scenes were over 150 vocational education and training (VET) students who managed camera operations, audio engineering, lighting, production, styling and costumes, event and stage management and operated the Tiny Café.

Among the students was George from Pittwater High School who is studying a Certificate III in Live Production and Technical Services and worked as a comms specialist at this year's School Spectacular.

George said:

“My role in School Spectacular was to maintain the comms network, which lets everyone in the everyone in the arena communicate and keep the show running on time.

“I really enjoyed meeting people and learning, which I wouldn't get if I was just emailing people or calling them. 

“I want to be in live production, work in arenas, stadiums and tours and really explore my options.

“It is an amazing place to learn so much. I'm doing comms, but I've learned about vision, lighting, audio, and all other aspects that make up School Spectacular.

“The experience can really further your education and jobs and development.”           

   George (right) with his classmate Matthew (left).

The console George was working on

The Years 11 and 12 VET students travelled from across NSW and were supported by VET teachers and industry mentors so they could invaluable career development and training experiences.

Public school students are gaining real-world experience at SpecFest, the outdoor entertainment festival held alongside Schools Spectacular and almost entirely run by VET learners.

More Local Talent

George wasn't the only local student involved. The group of 36 featured vocalists, six featured instrumentalists, nine backing vocalists and two SpecArena Co-Hosts who took to the stage at Sydney’s Qudos Bank Arena, included Felix from Pittwater High School as a Backing Vocalist, Galileo from Davidson High School as a Featured Instrumentalist (Bass), Remington from Northern Beaches Secondary College at the Cromer Campus as a Featured Vocalist and Teagan from the Northern Beaches Secondary College at the Mackellar Girls Campus as a Featured Vocalist.

BTS of rehearsals

Dazzling pyrotechnics, circus acts and costumes by Academy Award–winning designer Tim Chappel were some of the highlights of the 42nd Schools Spectacular. 

Known to be the world’s largest amateur variety show, the Schools Spectacular arena show featured more than 5,500 Kindergarten to Year 12 students from almost 400 schools.

They travelled up to 800 kilometres to come together over four spectacular performances at Qudos Bank Arena on Wangal land.

Marking an impressive six years each with Schools Spectacular, featured vocalists Isabella Laga’ai from Newtown High School of the Performing Arts; and Jazmin Castle from Wagga Wagga High School combined with featured dancer Abigail Flaherty from Elizabeth Macarthur High School,to showcase their ongoing commitment and passion to the annual variety show.

Songs in ‘Remarkable’ included a wide range of genres from Steve’s Lava Chicken from A Minecraft Movie to We're in the Money from the Broadway Musical 42nd Street, Jai Ho from the 2008 hit movie Slumdog Millionaire, Blackbird by The Beatles and Defying Gravity from Wicked the Musical.

Just outside Qudos Bank Arena, the entertainment and activity hub, SpecFest, witnessed a flashmob of more than 500 students dance to Isabella Laga’aia’s original song ‘Remarkable', a track she wrote, composed and performed for this special occasion.

Also on offer were performances by the NSW Public Schools Millennium Marching Band, and solo and ensemble performances; Film By SpecFest viewings in the SpecFest gallery, and rural and remote band competition Surround Sound.

It was an exciting year for the Burton family with Year 5, St Ives North Public School student Xavier Burton, son of Human Nature band member Phil Burton, making his Schools Spectacular debut in the 1146-member Moving Choir.

Known originally as ‘4 Trax’, Human Nature started their careers in the Schools Spectacular in the early 90s. Years before he joined the musical foursome, Phil set the stage for the very first ‘Spec’ with his primary school choir in 1983, making this a full-circle moment.

“Being part of the show does teach you a lot about the discipline of being part of a show … backing off and being quiet and letting other people have their turn when it’s their go … (but) when it’s your moment, it is your moment to shine, so grab it,” Phil said.

Spectacularly original

Original music was another key component of the 2025 production with Triple J Unearthed Indigenous Artist of the Year and Gomeroi featured vocalist Kyla-Belle Roberts from Moree Secondary College performing her song ‘Scars’ for the first time with backing vocals and an orchestral accompaniment.

The 16-year-old expressed her pride in performing her song at Schools Spectacular sharing that it was “more than she could have ever expected and more”.

The arena show’s closing number ‘Remarkable’ was written and composed by featured vocalist and Northmead Creative and Performing Arts High School Year 12 graduate Ocean Lim.

The song was performed by all 5,500 students. Ocean is no stranger to creating music for the show, performing another original ‘Follow your Dreams’ at the 2023 show and for King Charles III and Queen Camilla during their visit to the Sydney Opera House Forecourt in October 2024.

As mentioned above, Isabella Laga’aia’s original song 'Remarkable', was a feature at SpecFest, but it also served as the soundtrack to the arena show’s opening video.

Schools Spectacular Creative Director Sonja Sjolander said this year’s show was focused on student voice more than ever before.

“The 2025 show theme ‘Remarkable’ explored what it means to stand out, speak up, and shine – a fitting motif for the trailblazing students who led the show,” she said.

“Whether it’s a heartfelt solo, a dazzling instrumental, or a choreographed group number, these students blow you away”.

Group photo of all the VET students working in production this year

The 2025 Schools Spectacular was proudly supported by sponsors: Telstra, the NSW Teachers Federation, School Bytes, Smart, Teachers Health, Supporters: Woolworths, Hertz and Steinway Australia and Event Partners: Qudos Bank Arena, Seven Network, Gravity Media and Ticketek.

SpecFest 2025 was proudly supported by the NSW Teachers Federation, ACCO Brands Australia, Teachers Health, A Start in Life, AlphaTheta / Jands, ASI Solutions, Back to the Future: The Musical, Big Red Group, Booktopia, BounceInc, Cancer Council NSW, Eclipse Lighting and Sound, GIANTS Netball, Global Dance Tours, Golf Cart World, GSP Print/JC Decaux, Hertz, Life Education NSW, Monster Skatepark, NRL, NSW Swifts, Office for Youth, Office of Sport - Duke of Edinburgh’s International Award – Australia (NSW), Pan Macmillan Australia, Seven Network, Smart, Spriggy, Spriggy Schools, TeenBreathe, Telstra, Tennis Australia, The School Magazine, Sydney Conservatorium, Taronga Zoo, Unison Designs, URBNSURF and Woolworths.

Surround Sound 2025 was proudly supported by Eclipse Lighting and Sound and Turramurra Music.

Remarkable - SpecFest 2025 Flash Mob

Hottest 100 of 2025

triple j: Posted 8 Dec 2025

Time to cast your mind back over the last 12 months and all the gorgeous music released that you couldn't stop listening to. 

Time to realise you loved around 127 songs and now have to chew your nails and cut it down to a top 10.

That's right, it's time. Time for the Hottest 100 of 2025.

When is the Hottest 100 of 2025?

As always, we'll be celebrating the top 100 tracks of the year that was on the last weekend in January.

In 2026, that lands on Saturday 24 January, with the first songs played out from 12pm AEDT, and aired live around the country. That's bright and early 9am for our west coast mates. Get ready to crack open a cold one (iced latte) with the gang!

How can I listen on the day?

The Hottest 100 of 2025 will be broadcast on triple j! 

There's so many options to tune in; stream online through the triple j website, drop in with your DAB/digital radio, chuck it on the telly, or go the classic route and tune in on your FM radio.

When can I vote?

You can vote right now! Voting is open 8am AEDT Monday 8 December, 2025 until 5pm AEDT on Thursday 15 January, 2026.

Head of over to the official Hottest 100 website to get your lists sorted and submitted.

How do I vote?

Great question! Once you log in (or make an account) you will be able to comb through more than 1000 tracks eligible for voting. You can organise them either by song name or artist name.

Once you pick a song you want to include it will appear in your shortlist. You have 10 spaces to fill with your votes.

Got too many songs and not enough votes? You've got some trimming back to do. Can't hit 10 tracks? No worries, you can submit anything between one and 10 tracks.

It's tough, but you have to be honest, ruthless and decisive. You got this.

Head to the triple j website or app and follow the signs to the Hottest 100 page to get voting!

Is there anything on for Sunday scaries the day after?

We're switching it up a little this year and leaving the important recovery sesh to Double J this year.

They'll be taking it back 20 years to the Hottest 100 of 2005 for you to laze on the couch and reminisce, recover, or have running commentary from your parents and older mates all day.

Hang on, what about the 200?

This time the Hottest 200 of 2025 is being celebrated for nearly a whole week! You'll be able to catch the tracks that nearly made it (but we love dearly regardless) every day from Tuesday 27 January to Friday 30 January. 

At 8am and 4pm we'll be counting down 10 tracks, taking you through numbers 200 to 121.

Then on Saturday 31 January, we'll be running through the whole 200 list in its entirety, bringing you right up to the one that just got away – number 101.

Talk to me about the Hottest Ticket, what's happening this year?

Oh yes, the coveted Hottest Ticket is back for this year's countdown.

Want to get into every triple j-supported gig and festival in 2026? After you've locked in your votes and filled out your details, find the Hottest Ticket entry section on the submit page.

All you have to do is tell us in 25 words or less what was the best Aussie act you saw in 2025 and you'll be in the draw to win one of the best prizes going around.

What's the eligibility for songs to get into the Hottest 100 of 2025?

Any songs released between December 1 2024 and November 30 2025 are eligible for the Hottest 100 of 2025.

That means you can vote for: 

  • The Wombats - 'My Head Is Not My Friend'
  • Wafia - 'Tranquillity' 
  • Kim Kardashian - 'Santa Baby'

However you cannot vote for:

  • Poppy - 'Guardian'
  • REDD. - 'I'm On One'
  • Teenage Dads - 'Alone Again For Christmas'

There's a bunch of stunning tracks in the longlist for you to choose from.

Can't find your fave? You can vote for whichever song you like by manually adding the track to the voting site, as long as it fits in the eligibility criteria.

Is there merch again this year?

You know it! Thanks to our incredible Hottest 100 artist Conor Dewhurst, this year's juicy artwork will be on shirts for you to buy and chuck on your back.

Head on over to our merch store to order your Hottest 100 t-shirt now so it arrives in time for the big day.

Who is the charity partner this year?

triple j has partnered once again with We Are Mobilise, best known for its impactful and innovative work tackling homelessness.

Last year you helped us raise more then $400k for the charity, which directly helped branch out to cover all of Australia and provided around 7000 nights (nearly 20 years!) of housing for those in need.

triple j's Hottest 100 of 2025

  • Voting open: Monday 8 December 2025, 8am AEDT
  • Voting closes: Thursday 15 January 2026, 5pm AEDT
  • Hottest 100 of 2025: Saturday 24 January 2026, 12pm AEDT
  • Hottest 100 of 2005 on Double J: Sunday 25 January 2026
  • Hottest 200 of 2025: Tuesday 27 January - Friday 30 January from 8am and 4pm
  • Hottest 200 of 2025 in full: Saturday 31 January, 10am local time

Fab Four arrive at Taronga Zoo Sydney!

Friday December 12, 2025

Taronga Zoo Sydney is thrilled to introduce the Fab Four at its newly opened Rhino Reserve: Hari, a four-year-old Greater One-horned Rhino, joined by three Asian Water Buffalo—Kahn, Sahasi, and Babu. This dynamic group is settling into their new home, and visitors can look forward to spotting them during their adventure these summer school holidays.

All four animals recently made the journey from Taronga Western Plains Zoo in Dubbo as part of a carefully coordinated convoy and have spent the past couple of weeks getting to know their new home. The Water Buffalo travelled together in a specialised transport unit, while Hari - weighing in at an impressive 1.8 tonnes – followed a few days later in a custom-designed transport crate.

Keepers from Taronga Western Plains Zoo and Taronga Zoo Sydney spent months working together to prepare Hari for his move. They helped him become comfortable with his travel crate and even acclimatised him to the sounds of Sydney by playing recordings of ferry horns and planes. These small but progressive steps ensured Hari’s arrival and settling-in period has been smooth as possible.

Senior Ungulate Keeper, Renae Moss said the team was thrilled with how seamless the move and arrival process for both species were: “Animal moves of this scale take a lot of planning, and we’re very pleased to say all four travelled without a hitch,” Moss shared. “The best time to spot both species is first thing in the morning, as soon as the gates open. Hari already feels very confident in his barn, and he is building his confidence outdoors every day - we’re seeing great progress,” said Renae

While Hari eases into his new surroundings, Kahn, Sahasi and Babu are already becoming familiar faces at the Reserve. The trio are building rapport with their Sydney keepers and making full use of the swimming hole and cascading waterfall in the lower section of their habitat.

Hari’s arrival marks the first time a Greater One-horned Rhino has lived at Taronga Zoo Sydney in more than a decade. Born to Australia’s only breeding pair of this species, he stands as a meaningful ambassador for rhino conservation and the ongoing efforts needed to safeguard their future.

“These new arrivals are extraordinary animals, and together they help bring to life a vibrant habitat that reflects the ecosystems of India and Nepal,” said Nick Boyle, Executive Director of Taronga Zoo Sydney.

Despite a population recovery in recent decades, the Greater One-horned Rhino remains classified as Vulnerable. Hari’s story represents both the progress made and the conservation challenges that still lie ahead.

“Every visit to Taronga supports not only our exceptional wildlife care, but also vital conservation work around the world,” added Mr. Boyle. 

“We’re proud to welcome these remarkable animals to Sydney and look forward to sharing their stories with our community.” Taronga Zoo Sydney’s Rhino Reserve residents have arrived, with the Fab Four beginning the next chapter of their journey just in time for the Summer holidays.

The year’s best meteor shower is about to start – here’s how to see it

Peak of the Geminids in 2017. Dai Jianfeng/IAU OAECC BY
Jonti HornerUniversity of Southern Queensland

Where many other meteor showers are often over-hyped, the Geminids are the real deal: far and away the best shower of the year, peaking on December 14–15 in Australia and Aotearoa New Zealand.

The Geminids – dust and debris left behind by the rock comet Phaethon – put on a fantastic display every year, but 2025 promises to be extra special because the Moon will be out of the way, giving us perfectly dark skies.

So where and when should you look?

Meteors that radiate from the constellation Gemini

The key thing for working out the visibility of a meteor shower is its “radiant”, the single point in the sky from which the meteors seemingly originate. For the Geminids, at their peak, that point lies within the constellation Gemini, near the bright star Castor (α Geminorum).

The radiant is a result of perspective – the dust that causes a given meteor shower is all travelling in the same direction towards Earth, just like the lines in the drawing below.

The higher the radiant is in the sky, the more meteors you will see. When the radiant is below the horizon, you won’t see any meteors from that shower because they are hitting the other side of the planet.

Artwork demonstrating 1-point perspective drawing. Parallel lines diverge from the perspective of the viewer, from a radiant point on the horizon.
The dust that creates a meteor shower is all moving in the same direction. As meteors approach the observer, they appear to radiate from a single point on the horizon – the result of perspective. Braindrain0000/WikipediaCC BY-SA

What time should I look?

The absolute best time to observe is when the radiant is at its highest in the sky, called “culmination”, which happens around 2am or 3am local time on December 15. But any time between midnight through dawn will be a great time to watch the meteor shower in Australia and New Zealand.

The time at which the Geminid radiant rises varies depending on your latitude. The farther south you live, the later the radiant will rise. And the farther north you live, the higher in the sky the radiant will reach, increasing the number of meteors you will see per hour.

The more light-polluted your skies, the fewer meteors you’ll see. Fortunately, the Geminids often produce many bright meteors so it’s worth looking even from inner city locations. Just remember the rates you see will be markedly worse than if you were camping somewhere dark in the countryside.

If the forecast is cloudy for the night of the Geminid maximum, the nights of December 13 and 15 will still offer a decent display, although not as spectacular.

Where should I look?

The Geminids can appear in any part of the night sky, but the best place to look with the unaided eye is usually around 45 degrees to the left or right of the radiant (whichever direction is a darker sky for you).

The easiest way to work this out is to find the constellation Orion, and look so that Orion is about 45 degrees from the centre of your vision.

I’d recommend spending at least an hour out beneath the stars when looking for Geminids, to give your eyes enough time to adapt to the darkness. Don’t look at your phone or any other bright lights during this time. Instead, take some blankets and pillows and lie down.

Ideally, you want to be resting so that the centre of your vision is about 45 degrees above the horizon. Then lie back, and enjoy the show. Remember that meteors come in randomly – you might wait ten minutes and see nothing, then three come along all at once.

Why do meteors look different in photos?

In the days after the Geminid peak, you’ll doubtless see lots of spectacular images on social media. But photos showing dozens of meteors against the background stars are composites of many photographs taken over a period of several hours.

Keen photographers will often set up their cameras pointing at the northern sky, take a lengthy series of exposures, then pick those with meteors in them and stack them together to make a composite image.

If you want to try this yourself, here are a couple of useful tips.

First, to avoid any star trails on your individual images, follow the rule of 500. Find out the focal length of your lens (common wide-angle lenses have focal lengths of 14 to 35mm), and set your exposure time to be less than 500 divided by the focal length of your lens. For example, if you’re using a 50mm lens, you’d have to keep your exposures under 10 seconds.

Next, set the lens focal ratio, or f-number, to be as small as possible. This will ensure the lens is wide open, allowing it to gather as much light as it can during each image.

Finally, set the ISO of your camera to be relatively high, choosing a number of at least 1,600. The higher you set the ISO, the more sensitive your camera will be to light, and the fainter the objects visible in the dark sky images. However, be warned that setting the ISO too high can make your images grainy.

Once all that is done, set up your camera with the field of view you want to image, take a timelapse of the sky, and leave your camera running while you watch the skies. Hopefully over the course of an hour or two under the stars you might just capture some spectacular shots of debris bits burning up high overhead.The Conversation

Jonti Horner, Professor (Astrophysics), University of Southern Queensland

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Comedy Wildlife Photo Awards 2025: Winners - Highly Commended - Australian Finalists

Mark Meth-Cohn's image High Five also won the mammals category section. (Supplied: Nikon Comedy Wildlife Awards/Mark Meth-Cohn)

The Comedy Wildlife Photography Awards are delighted to announce that the Nikon Comedy Wildlife Overall Winner of 2025 is: Mark Meth-Cohn with his fantastic image of a dancing gorilla skipping through a forest clearing.

He wins an incredible once in a lifetime safari, with the fabulous folk at Alex Walker’s Serian plus a unique handmade trophy from the Wonder Workshop in Tanzania.

CONGRATULATIONS Mark!!

And this means the STERNA People’s Choice Award is now open for your vote!!  This means you can pick your absolute favourite finalist from 2025, plus if you vote, you might be picked at random to receive our cash prize of £500, WOW WOW WOW!!  Courtesy of STERNA who are sponsoring this category! 

You will automatically be entered into the prize draw from which a winner will be selected and announced on March 14th 2026. 

To all of you who are asking, The Comedy Wildlife Photography Awards will be open for entries 14 March 2026.

You can find out more about our competition, our mission and our conservation efforts on our website.

2025 Winners

Overall Winner: Mark Meth Cohn (UK) with his picture “High Five”

“We spent four unforgettable days trekking through the misty Virunga Mountains in search of the gorilla families that call them home. On this particular day, we came across a large family group known as the Amahoro family, they were gathered in a forest clearing where the adults were calmly foraging while the youngsters were enthusiastically playing. One young male was especially keen to show off his acrobatic flair: pirouetting, tumbling, and high kicking. Watching his performance was pure joy, and I’m thrilled to have captured his playful spirit in this image. Doing well in any competition shows that the images you are producing are working. The Nikon Comedy Wildlife Awards are one of the major competitions of the year, easy to enter and fun but with a seriously committed underlying ethos and, after reaching the finals last year, I'm absolutely delighted to have gone one step further and win the competition this year”

Category

ThinkTANK Birds Award: Warren Price (UK) with their picture “Headlock”

“These guillemots were nesting on a small rocky cliff ledge where space was at a premium. The nests all crammed in close together which isn’t a good recipe for being good neighbours, as guillemots are fiercely territorial. Aggression and battles are frequent over nesting space and I captured this image of this bemused looking bridled guillemot, its head firmly clamped in his/her neighbours beak. I liked the way the guillemot was looking directly into my lens, its white eye-liner eyes highlighting its predicament! Sometimes you just want to bite your neighbours head off.. literally!”

“Headlock” (Supplied: Nikon Comedy Wildlife Awards/Warren Price)

Fish and Other Aquatic Species Award: Jenny Stock (UK) with her picture “Smiley”

“Whilst on a scuba dive in the Philippines, this little fish kept popping its head out of its home, a hole in the patterned coral. I took a few photos and I loved its cheeky face smiling back at me. What an expressive looking face! This cheerful looking species, the bluestriped fangblenny is around eight centimetres and actually has a rare defence mechanism, where it can bite an attacking predator and inject venom when it is threatened. The venom causes dizziness and disorientation, weakening the predator's ability to pursue and eat the fangblenny. I took the image at 10 meters deep, in the Philippines. I used an underwater housing around my mirrorless camera, and two underwater flash guns to illuminate the subject.”

''Smiley''.(Supplied: Nikon Comedy Wildlife Awards/Jenny Stock)

Reptiles, Amphibian and Insect Award: Grayson Bell (USA) with their picture “Baptism of the Unwilling Convert”

“This photo was taken in early spring of 2023. The male frogs all come out to start establishing territory in the pond. I took my camera and lay on my belly, watching them and taking shots. It wasn’t until I got back to the house and looked at the pictures that I saw this one and realized how much I liked it. I showed it to my parents and they loved it too and it became one of my favourites. We all thought it looked like one frog was trying to baptize the other! I started getting interested in photography about 3 years ago at the age of 10. My favourite subjects are chipmunks because they are so curious and cute. Winning these category awards has been awesome. It's great to be considered along side so many amazing entries and photographers. As a young photographer, it is affirming and inspiring to continue shooting! I really appreciated the opportunity to be a part of this!”

Nikon Junior Category (Under 16) Award: Grayson Bell (USA) with their picture “Baptism of the Unwilling Convert”

''Baptism Of The Unwilling Convert''.(Supplied: Nikon Comedy Wildlife Awards/Grayson Bell)

Nikon Young Photographer Category (Under 25): Paula Rustemeier (Germany) with their picture “Hit the dance floor - foxes in a breakdance battle”

“This shot was taken quite at the beginning of my wildlife photography "journey". I always enjoyed nature, but usually only photographed my dog, until I observed foxes for an essay I wrote for biology lessons in school and decided I want to try to photograph and learn even more about foxes. The photo was taken in a nature reserve. They don't get hunted there and therefore are seen during the day as well. Something I found true with all areas with low hunting pressure that I've been to so far.

I'm not the biggest fan of camouflaging. While I do use it occasionally, the best way I have found to photograph them, especially young ones, is just being present. If you put in the time, I found that the foxes usually get either curious or see you as something natural, not dangerous. Either way, they come close eventually. I had several foxes nipping at my shoes already like this, as well as foxes catching mice just a couple meters away from me!

This was my tactic with these foxes too. Like this, I could follow and document them for several months while they grew up. Their den lied in a sandy valley. Sometimes I found one or two sleeping in that area during the day, but when dawn set, they met up at this spot, got really active and often played a lot together, just like in the image.

The time with them taught me a lot about their social behaviour. I saw them fight, hunt, sleep, groom - and of course play, which is always my favourite to watch! You really have to giggle a lot watching foxes play with their quirky personalities.

Since then, I had been photographing and following fox cubs every spring/summer and had much more amazing encounters with foxes and also other wildlife. :)”

''Hit the dance floor!''(Supplied: Nikon Comedy Wildlife Awards/Paula Rustemeier)

Amazing Internet Portfolio Award: Maggie Hoffman (USA) with their picture “Digging for Gold”

“A young female chimpanzee picking her nose and eating it!”

''Digging for Gold'' (Supplied: Nikon Comedy Wildlife Awards/Maggie Hoffman)

Video Category Winner: Tatjana Epp (Germany) with their video “Surfing heron”

“At first we spotted the heron and didn't notice that it was actually standing on the back of the hippo. A perfect shelter for him, because there were so many crocodiles around. So actually a really smart move! When the hippo started moving , the heron looked a bit irritated. He almost lost his balance. But the way how fast he got his balance back and how he really seemed to enjoy the ride was a once in a lifetime scene to witness! The video ends with the hippo turning its head around. It wanted to get rid of the heron. But it stayed there and the hippo gave up in the end. When we left the place, the heron was still relaxing on the back. The video was filmed in the Kruger National Park in South Africa in March 2025.”

Highly Commended Winners

Alison Tuck (UK) with their picture “Now which direction is my nest”

“Taken on a Nikon School UK Photo Trip to Bempton Cliffs in Yorkshire, England in July 2023 using a Nikon Z6II with the 100-400mm f4.5-5.6 with 2x teleconverter at 460mm, 1/1000s, ISO 360 and f10.4. Bempton Cliffs are well known as a breeding site for Gannets, Razorbills and Puffins and the Nikon School visit was to photograph these birds. The cliffs are on the East coast of England and usually have an offshore wind, but unusually there was a strong onshore breeze making the gannets' take offs and landings more dynamic than usual as the wind hit the cliffs and was pushed straight up into the air. Whilst collecting nesting grass from one spot on the top of the cliffs the wind was blowing the grass across their eyes making take off and direction finding even more challenging, hence ’Now which direction is my nest?’ as the title I picked for my photograph.”

“Now which direction is my nest”(Supplied: Nikon Comedy Wildlife Awards/Alison Tuck)

Annette Kirby (Australia) with their picture “Go away”

“"In February 2025 I flew from my home in South Australia where the summer temperatures ranged from mid 20’s to mid-40 degrees Celsius to the island of Hokkadia in Japan, where temperatures were minus degrees, the coldest day being minus 18 Celsius.

I experienced a winter wonderland so vastly different from my arid hot home environment. A highlight was visiting Rausa on the Shirenhoka Peninsula and Nemuro Straits, where the Steller’s Sea Eagle gather in the winter to fish from drift ice. With fewer than 5000 left in the world they are listed as vulnerable on the International Union for Conservation of Nature’s Red List of threatened species. The female can weigh up to 9.5kg, making it the heaviest eagle in the world. Their wingspan, up to 2.5 metres is of the largest of any living eagle. In Japan they are protected and classified as a national treasure.

They indeed are a national treasure and so entertaining to watch and photograph as they fight to protect their catch. A favourite place for them to perch is on the sea wall protecting the fishing fleet at Rausa. They wait watching the boats come into the harbour hoping for a free feed of fish. I captured this photo of the Steller’s Sea Eagle as it sat in a deep hole in the snow. It had a fish and had flown on the sea wall and found a hole in the deep fresh snow. Other birds were flying above and as they came closer, I captured the look it gave them. There was no way it was parting with its catch. As it had made its intentions clear to other competitors, it stayed alert but managed to enjoy its catch.”

“Go away”(Supplied: Nikon Comedy Wildlife Awards/Annette Kirby)

Christy Grinton (Canada) with their picture “Bad hair day”

“For my image "Bad Hair Day" I was in a local park in downtown Victoria when I saw a grey blur run by. When I looked closer I saw a mother grey squirrel was relocating her babies to a new nest. The grass was dewy that morning so she was getting a wet tail as she ran through the grass. As she entered her new nest her tail was sticking out so when she turned around to leave, for a short second her head was covered by her wet tail. When I saw her it made me smile thinking I know that moment where you have just washed your hair and the doorbell goes! I also loved the textures and colours of the bark of the arbutus tree surrounding her and her "bad hair"”

“Bad hair day” (Supplied: Nikon Comedy Wildlife Awards/Christy Grinton)

Erkko Badermann (Finland) with their picture “Landing gear down”

“This photograph came about as a hard-won victory of patience. I have been photographing Red-throated Loons for several years. I lie on the edge of a bond under a camouflage net and photograph their spring courtship displays from my hide. The ground is wet and cold. That morning, an unseasonable early-spring snowfall caught me by surprise, making photography almost impossible. Lying there on the cold shore of the bond, I found myself thinking there was no sense in being there. I was already about to leave. However, I decided to stay, and the snowfall faded into quiet, beautiful drifting flakes, and a thin mist rose from the surface of the lake.

Another Red-throated Loon on the lake had turned white from the snowfall. From its behaviour I noticed that its mate was arriving at the lake, and I managed to get it in my camera’s focus against the grey sky. I lost it for a moment, but caught it again just before it landed on the water.

The Red-throated Loon is quite a “poor” flier, and its landing is usually very wobbly: it seeks balance with its legs stretched backwards and then belly-lands to glide. I like to say they use the water as their runway. This time the bird came straight towards me and was so steady you might imagine it had taken flying lessons.

The photograph has travelled with me in my exhibitions, and it always elicits a chuckle from viewers. There is something funny about it. I thought it would be perfect for this competition to bring joy to its viewers.”

“Landing gear down”(Supplied: Nikon Comedy Wildlife Awards/Erkko Badermann )

Kalin Botev (Bulgaria) with their picture “Monkey Circus”

“My wife, Nellie and I were on our honeymoon in the Hwange National Park in Zimbabwe, known for its vast landscapes and its huge elephant herds. We were there right in the beginning of the rainy season and witnessed how nature wakes up after the first rains in many months. Although animals had dispersed and were harder to see, we could feel the excitement brought by the rains everywhere. One evening on our way to the camp we bumped into a troop of baboons playing in a huge tree. One of the baboons was sitting on a big brunch and the others were running up and down the tree in circles. Every time they passed by the sitting baboon it was trying to catch them in a funny way. This play continued for more than 15 minutes and the baboons seemed to really enjoy it.”

“Monkey Circus” (Supplied: Nikon Comedy Wildlife Awards/Kalin Botev)

Liliana Luca (Italy) with their picture “Fonzies advertising”

“This moment happened after the tourists had left Nosy Komba (Madagascar). I stopped, letting the silence fall around me, and turned my attention to a group of crowned sifakas (Propithecus deckenii). It was then that he appeared, staring at me with wide, curious eyes, as if questioning my presence... or perhaps my clothing choices.

Then, with the grace of a stage actor and the timing of a comedian, he raised his hand, licked it thoughtfully, and then paused mid-gesture, as if he knew exactly what he was doing.

The photo immediately reminded me of that old snack commercial:

"If you don't lick your fingers... you're only half enjoying it!"

Ultimately, this is why I love nature photography so much: sometimes nature's sense of humour is better than our own; you just have to be ready to catch it..”

“Fonzies advertising”(Supplied: Nikon Comedy Wildlife Awards/Liliana Luca)

Mark Meth Cohn (UK) with their picture “Aaaaawa - mum”

“This photograph was taken during a trip to Rwanda earlier this year, where we spent four unforgettable days trekking through the misty Virunga Mountains in search of the gorilla families that call them home. On this particular day, we came across a large family group gathered in a forest clearing, the adults were calmly foraging while the youngsters were enthusiastically playing. Doing well in any competition shows that the images you are producing are working. The Nikon Comedy Wildlife Awards are one of the major competitions of the year, easy to enter and fun but with a seriously committed underlying ethos and, after reaching the finals last year, I'm absolutely delighted to have gone one step further and win this year.”

“Aaaaawa - mum”(Supplied: Nikon Comedy Wildlife Awards/Mark Meth Cohn)

Meline Ellwanger (USA) with their picture “The choir”

“A hilariously lucky moment I caught of these these three lions yawning at the same time.”

“The choir” (Supplied: Nikon Comedy Wildlife Awards/Meline Ellwanger)

Valtteri Mulkahainen (Finland) with their picture “Smile - you're being photographed ”

“When I was photographing bears, this one year old bear cub saw it and started smiling at me. Apparently he had already had to pose in front of photographers.”

“Smile - you're being photographed ” (Supplied: Nikon Comedy Wildlife Awards/ Valtteri Mulkahainen)

Australian Finalists

Beate Ammer, Queensland ''The Frog Prince of the Grape Vine'' - Supplied: Nikon Comedy Wildlife Awards/Beate Ammer  - a Green Tree Frog

Meet the frog prince of my little garden – he’s been lazing around guarding my grapevine, waiting for a kiss, but I think he is just here for the grapes. This charming amphibian seems to have mistaken the vine for his royal court, lounging among the plump fruit as if he’s the monarch of the orchard.

Andrew Mortimer, Western Australia  ''The Shoulders of Giants'' - Supplied: Nikon Comedy Wildlife Awards/Andrew Mortimer

"If I have seen further, it is by standing on the shoulders of giants" 

''I'm sure Issac Newton didn't mean that literally, but for some of these desert tree frogs around Leonora have taken it to heart!''

About the Comedy Wildlife Photo Awards

While living in East Africa and working as a wildlife photographer, founder Paul Joynson-Hicks MBE was looking through his photographs when he came across several that made him laugh out loud: an eagle looking at me through its back legs and a warthog’s bottom. He realised that the humour of these photographs was both entertaining and a means to engage people with the threats facing these same animals.

A funny animal photo is incredibly effective because there are no barriers to understanding, or taboos that must be negotiated. It taps into the impulse for anthropomorphism (big word!) which is well-documented as one of the most powerful triggers for human empathy. To really understand animals and the issues that affect them, you need to empathise with them as fellow inhabitants of the same planet.

And so, in 2015, The Comedy Wildlife Photography Awards was born from Paul’s small office in Usa River on the slopes of Mt Meru in northern Tanzania. Soon after, Co-Founder and photographer Tom Sullam was bought on board and then Michelle Wood, a couple of years later.

Since then, steered by its founders, the competition has grown and grown into a global competition that’s able to make a meaningful contribution to the amazing world of wildlife.

The deluge of images of animals and habitats in peril can be hard to digest. The Comedy Wildlife Photography Awards’ content accesses our empathy by showing how alike we really are. You don’t need to cover your eyes or look away. We want our viewers to share our enjoyment of nature and take the time to recognise its value.

The Comedy Wildlife Photography Awards has become a fixture on photographer’s competition calendar. Every year, we accept thousands of images from around the world for each category and receive global media coverage.

Novice and expert photographers can enter up to 10 images: 4 portfolio entries and an additional 6 entries for the different categories every year. Entry is free.

This is our mission. Yup, it is certainly ballsy, a bit grandiose, but isn’t that what a mission should be?  Aspirational, otherwise what’s the point.  We want to educate and enlighten, and we want to do this by earning people’s attention by showing them things they don't expect.

Once we have opened their eyes, we can expand their understanding of the natural world and encourage them to share our enjoyment of nature and its value. 

Fundraising is not our primary purpose but, each year, we will choose a small grass-roots conservation organisation to support - you can read more about our conservation mission here.

Every year our reach grows bigger and our conservation message gets a little louder. We are so proud to be a part of it and happy that we can put a smile on your face!

You can find out more about our competition, our mission and our conservation efforts on our website.

Woy Woy The Venice Of Australia in the 1930's

by NFSA

Step back into the mid-1930s and experience a rare cinematic gem that promoted Woy Woy as “The Venice of Australia.” Commissioned by Woy Woy Council in December 1935 and completed by March 1936, this heritage film was directed and narrated by Claude Flemming – a prominent Sydney actor and filmmaker who also directed Peter Finch’s first film The Magic Shoes.

The film follows a young girl and her uncle (Flemming himself) on a scenic train journey to Woy Woy, where they explore the attractions of the peninsula. Their itinerary includes the Woy Woy Bowling Club, a cruise on Woy Woy Bay, Ettalong Beach, Ocean Beach, Pearl Beach, a trip through The Rip, Patonga and Staples Lookout. Along the way, viewers are treated to sweeping views of beaches, mountains and waterways, as well as scenes of horse riding, fishing and boating. Flemming appears throughout the film – arriving at the railway station, playing lawn bowls and taking a boat trip – while narrating the area’s history and recommending Woy Woy as an ideal holiday destination.

Released during the lively ‘Back to Woy Woy’ celebrations in October 1937, the film was part of a broader campaign to position Woy Woy and the Central Coast as a premier holiday spot, competing with other regions such as Newcastle, which had already produced promotional films in the 1920s. Its evocative title was chosen to highlight Woy Woy’s picturesque waterways and create excitement around the region’s appeal. The film was privately screened at Newcastle’s Civic Theatre in May 1936 and remains a fascinating glimpse into Australia’s tourism history and the early days of regional film-making.

Term dates for NSW public schools: 2026

2026 school term dates

Term                       First day for students             Last day for students
Term 1 
(Eastern division) Monday 2 February 2026 Thursday 2 April 2026
Term 1 
(Western division) Monday 9 February 2026 Thursday 2 April 2026
Term 2 
(Eastern and Western division) Wednesday 22 April 2026 Friday 3 July 2026
Term 3  
(Eastern and Western division) Tuesday 21 July 2026 Friday 25 September 2026
Term 4 
(Eastern and Western division) Tuesday 13 October 2026 Thursday 17 December 2026

NSW school holiday dates: 2026 school year

Season                    Division
Autumn holidays Eastern and Western divisions
Tuesday 7 April to Friday 17 April 2026
Winter holidays Eastern and Western divisions
Monday 6 July to Friday 17 July 2026
Spring holidays Eastern and Western divisions
Monday 28 September to Friday 9 October 2026
Summer holidays
Eastern division
Friday 18 December to Wednesday 27 January 2027
Western division
Friday 18 December to Wednesday 3 February 2027

Opportunities:

Pittwater Peninsula Netball Club

2026 season - let's go! Registrations are open until early February.


Netball NSW Online Privacy Policy: Don't Post Pictures of Others without asking 


New cadet traineeship program launched to encourage young people to join the NSW Police Force

For the first time in almost 50 years, the NSW Government is establishing a new program to equip young, aspiring police officers with the skills, training and experience to join the NSW Police Force.

The 12-month Cadet Traineeship Program will give school leavers and young adults hands-on experience and early exposure to policing culture, values and expectations. 

Cadets will complete 12 months of field-based learning, rotating through four placements, including six months in general duties, two months with Traffic and Highway Patrol Command, two months with the detectives unit and two months with the crime prevention unit.

At the end of the 12 months, cadets will obtain a Certificate III in business and be able to apply to undertake further study and training at the Goulburn Police Academy. 

Entry requirements include: 
  • The applicant must be 16-years-old to apply, 17-years-old to commence the program.
  • School leavers – must have completed year 10.
  • Must pass physical, medical and psychometric testing and base line vetting.
The first NSW Police Force Cadet Traineeship Program will begin on 7 April 2026 as a pilot in The Hills Police Area Command and Sutherland Shire Police Area Command.

Cadets will also obtain first aid and aquatic sequence rescue training.

They will wear a distinct uniform to differentiate them from other officers and will not have access to weapons. 


If you are interested in applying for the first Cadet Traineeship Program, please submit your full application and required documents by 5:00pm Friday 16 January 2026.

This is part of the Minns Labor Government’s plan to rebuild the NSWPF and create safer communities. 

While there is still more to do, that work includes: 
  • Delivering a once-in-a-generation pay rise for police officers.
  • Establishing an historic scheme to pay recruits to train, resulting in a 70% increase in applications to join the NSWPF.
  • Establishing the Be a Cop In Your Hometown program to give regional recruits the opportunity to serve in or near their hometown after attesting.
  • Establishing the Professional Mobility Program to incentivise experienced officers from interstate and New Zealand to join the NSWPF.
  • Establishing the Health Safety and Wellbeing Command to support officers to have long, healthy and rewarding careers with the NSW Police Force. 
Minister for Police and Counter-terrorism Yasmin Catley said: 

“Policing is one of the toughest jobs in our community. The stakes are high but the reward – the pride of serving your community and making a real difference is unmatched.

“Just as some choose to go to university or pick up a trade, the Cadet Traineeship Program gives young people the chance to experience life in the NSW Police Force.

“These cadets are not just trainees, they are the next generation of NSW Police officers. 

“While there’s more to do, we’re rebuilding the NSW Police Force into a modern organisation that reflects and protects the community it serves. 

NSW Police Force Commissioner Mal Lanyon said: 

“I’m very happy to be able to announce the commencement of the Cadet Traineeship Program for school leavers and young adults,” Commissioner Lanyon said. 

“Cadets will be exposed to policing culture, values, and expectations, by structured mentorship and support to build confidence and resilience resulting in a smoother transition into the NSWSPF.

“We hope the program will attract diverse talent and encourage school leavers to pursue a career filled with opportunity and purpose.” 

Applications Now Open for 2026 NSW Youth Parliament

Member for Manly, James Griffin MP is calling on local students in years 10 to 12 to apply for the 2026 NSW Youth Parliament, with applications now open through the Y NSW. 

Now in its 25th year, Youth Parliament is a hands-on leadership and education initiative that empowers young people from across New South Wales to learn about the parliamentary process, develop policy ideas, and debate real legislation in the NSW Parliament House.

Mr Griffin said the program provides an invaluable opportunity for young people to grow as leaders and community advocates.

“Youth Parliament is an outstanding program that gives young people the chance to develop skills in leadership, communication and public policy, while experiencing first-hand how democracy works,” Mr Griffin said.

“It’s inclusive, inspiring and designed to give every participant the confidence to have their voice heard on issues that matter to them and their community.”

Participants take part in training camps, workshops and mentoring sessions that build leadership, confidence and civic engagement. The Y NSW is seeking Youth Parliamentarians from each of the 93 NSW electorates, with the 2026 program culminating in a Sitting Week from July 13–17 at NSW Parliament House

Mr Griffin said he looks forward to seeing young people from the Manly Electorate representing their community in next year’s program.

“I encourage all interested local students to apply, especially those who are passionate about creating positive change in their community,” Mr Griffin said.

Applications close Sunday 4 January, 2026

Students can apply and find more information at: www.ymcansw.org.au/community-services/youth/youth-parliament

Avalon Bulldogs Announcement: Female Tackle Teams Kicking Off in 2026!

After huge growth in our Girls Tag program, the Doggies are looking at launching our first-ever female tackle teams  and we’re calling for Expressions of Interest now!

Players: U13s, U14s, U15s, U17s & Opens (Possible U11s if we get the numbers)
Staff Needed: Coaches, Managers, League Safe / First Aid
This is your chance to be part of a massive moment for the Bulldogs and help build the future of women’s footy on the Beaches.
Email; info@avalonbulldogs.com.au with heading 'Female Tackle Teams'.

Get involved. Make history. Go the Doggies!

History in the Making: Female Tackle Coming to the Sharks in 2026! 

We’re excited to announce the Narrabeen Sharks’ first-ever female tackle teams for 2026!
After the success of our girls’ tag program, we’re ready to take the next step — creating pathways for female players from grassroots to the NRLW. 

We’re calling for Expressions of Interest for:
Players – U13s, U14s, U15s, U17s & Opens (plus a possible U11s if enough interest)
Coaches, Managers & Trainers (Level 1, League First Aid, League Safe)

This is your chance to be part of club history and help grow the women’s game at the Sharks!
Contact: president.narrabeensharks@gmail.com to register your interest today.

Newport Pool to Peak Kicks Off Pittwater Ocean Swim Series 2026

The annual Pittwater Ocean Swim Series will kick off with the Newport Pool to Peak, ocean swims on Sunday 4 January 2026. The series provides ocean swimmers around the world the opportunity to experience the beautiful scenery and pristine environment of Pittwater.

The Newport Pool to Peak has become one of the biggest ocean swimming events on the annual calendar and has grown from the traditional 2Kms to offer 400m and 800m courses as well. This has enabled swimmers to test their swim skills and gain experience in ocean swimming which is very different to pool swimming, as ocean swimmers will attest.

John Guthrie, chairman of the Pool to Peak, ocean swim organising committee, says the club’s swims feature a strong safety culture with many safety craft in the water and drone surveillance.

“This means swimmers are being observed at all times which helps to build confidence in tackling the surf and currents. Of course, we encourage swimmers to train for their event with a combination of attaining surf skills, lap swimming in addition to general physical training such as weights.

“Ocean swimming can be arduous so swimmers are responsible for their individual fitness. We will have lifesavers in the break to assist any swimmers who are finding it too difficult. Again, entrants are encouraged to put their hand up if they find themselves unable to complete the course,” said John.

The Pool to Peak is known as the friendly affordable swim event and swimmers all go in the draw for a great range of prizes. Medals are also presented to category winners, one of the few ocean swim events to continue the tradition.

“We are proud of the fun atmosphere generated on the day. Swimmers are welcomed back on shore with succulent, fresh fruit, from Harris Farm Markets, our long-term major sponsors, to take away the salty taste in your mouth. Then there is the barbecue, featuring ingredients from Harris Farm Markets, a popular feature with hungry swimmers,” John continued.

Following the prize and medal presentations, swimmers and their families can enjoy a drink at the club’s bar or take advantage of one of the many coffee shops in the Newport shopping centre including The Peak Café a sponsor of the Pool to Peak, Newport has clubs such as the Royal Motor Yacht Club who would like to enjoy lunch with a view of Pittwater.

There is an added incentive for swimmers to enter the Pittwater Ocean Swim Series in 2026. For swimmers who swim at least three of the swims in the series, they will go in the draw for a $250 voucher a male & female swimmer for a fine dining experience at the Basin Restaurant.

The Pittwater swims start at Newport 4 January, then Bilgola on 11 January, Mona Vale  on18 January and the Big Swim on 25 January. This will be the 52nd Big Swim event. 

To complete the Pittwater Ocean Swim Series the Avalon swims will be on Sunday 15 March. That includes their iconic Around the Bends swim from Newport to Avalon.

Pool to Peak swimmers in 2025. Photo: AJG/PON

Street League Skateboarding Announces Return to Sydney To Kick Off 2026 World Championship Tour

On the back of two sold-out events in Sydney in 2023 and 2024, Street League Skateboarding (SLS) has now announced it’s return to the Australian market, with Ken Rosewall Arena playing host to the season opening event of the SLS World Championship Tour for a special two-day event to be held on Saturday, 14 February to Sunday, 15 February 2026. 

Tickets for SLS Sydney 2026 are available for purchase at streetleague.com starting at $29.00.

This marks the first time in SLS’ history that Australia will host the opening event of the sport’s flagship series. Sydney fans will now be able to watch firsthand as the top male and female skaters in the world – including Tokyo and Paris Olympians - compete in premier SLS competition. 

In addition to the Championship Tour stop, Street League Skateboarding will be taking over the city of Sydney, with a host of activations, headlined by the In Your City event, which allows local skateboarders to ride alongside their heroes in the days leading up to the competition. Look for more details on this special event to be announced soon. 

For a preview of the next level action that Sydney fans can look forward to, go here

Headlining the event will be Australian star Chloe Covell (Tweed Heads, NSW), who has dominated the Women’s category at the past two editions of the Sydney event, claiming the title in both appearances. Covell has been in fine form during the 2025 season taking two contest wins in Santa Monica, USA and Cleveland, USA. The young Australian currently leads the women’s standings and is a favorite for the Super Crown World Champion title in Brazil this December.

Covell said, “SLS is the best of the best when it comes to skateboarding. I’ve loved getting to perform and win in front of my hometown crowd and I can’t wait to do it again in February.”   

Chloé Covell, SLS Paris 2025. Photo: Pierre-Antoine Lalaude 

Veteran Australian SLS Pro, Shane O’Neill (Melbourne, VIC), a former Super Crown World Champion (2016) and a national Skateboarder of the Year, also anticipates Street League’s Sydney return.

O’Neill said, “Australia’s skate scene has always been amazing, and it’s home to so many great skaters. So, it only feels right that Street League’s coming back to Sydney. I already know the crowd’s gonna be louder than ever.” 

Street League Skateboarding in Sydney is proudly supported by the NSW Government through its tourism and major events agency Destination NSW.

NSW Minister for Jobs and Tourism and Minister for Sport, Steve Kamper, said: “Hosting the Street League Skateboarding Championship Tour puts our city back in the spotlight, as the world’s best skaters bring their talent and energy to one of Sydney’s premier sporting precincts.

“It’s another major win for Sydney, attracting visitors from across the globe and showcasing our city’s unmatched energy and lifestyle. We can’t wait to welcome competitors and fans next year to our Harbour City for an unforgettable celebration of sport, skill and vibrant culture.”

Established in 2010, SLS is the street skateboarding’s first professional organization and is recognized as the sport’s preeminent global competition. Its events take place on custom-built, one-of-a-kind, SLS-certified plazas with the best in the sport competing for the highest stakes. 

The 2026 edition of the SLS Championship Tour will dial up the fan experience with an exciting, reimagined competition format featuring the very best of the best in street skateboarding, as well as a host of activations across the city and on-site at Ken Rosewall Arena in Homebush. 

The sport’s elite athletes are set to appear in Sydney, with the likes of Rayssa Leal (Imperatriz, Brazil) - the fourth most-followed female athlete on the planet and three-time SLS Super Crown Champion, Nyjah Huston (Laguna Beach, USA) – the seven-time and defending Men’s SLS Super Crown World Champion, and two-time Olympic Gold Medallist, Yuto Horigome (Tokyo, Japan) who is looking to bring is unique and graceful style to Sydney in February. Other competitors will include Tokyo 2020 Gold Medallist, Momiji Nishiya (Osaka, Japan), 2024 Paris Gold Medallist, Coco Yoshizawa (Kanagawa, Japan), and current standings front runners, Cordano Russell (London, Canada) and Chris Joslin (Hawaiian Gardens, USA). 

For more Street League Skateboarding news, including the Championship Tour updates, broadcast information, and more, go to  www.streetleague.com.
Nyjah Huston. Photo:Matt Rodriguez

Financial help for young people

Concessions and financial support for young people.

Includes:

  • You could receive payments and services from Centrelink: Use the payment and services finder to check what support you could receive.
  • Apply for a concession Opal card for students: Receive a reduced fare when travelling on public transport.
  • Financial support for students: Get financial help whilst studying or training.
  • Youth Development Scholarships: Successful applicants will receive $1000 to help with school expenses and support services.
  • Tertiary Access Payment for students: The Tertiary Access Payment can help you with the costs of moving to undertake tertiary study.
  • Relocation scholarship: A once a year payment if you get ABSTUDY or Youth Allowance if you move to or from a regional or remote area for higher education study.
  • Get help finding a place to live and paying your rent: Rent Choice Youth helps young people aged 16 to 24 years to rent a home.

Visit: https://www.nsw.gov.au/living-nsw/young-people/young-people-financial-help

School Leavers Support

Explore the School Leavers Information Kit (SLIK) as your guide to education, training and work options in 2022;
As you prepare to finish your final year of school, the next phase of your journey will be full of interesting and exciting opportunities. You will discover new passions and develop new skills and knowledge.

We know that this transition can sometimes be challenging. With changes to the education and workforce landscape, you might be wondering if your planned decisions are still a good option or what new alternatives are available and how to pursue them.

There are lots of options for education, training and work in 2022 to help you further your career. This information kit has been designed to help you understand what those options might be and assist you to choose the right one for you. Including:
  • Download or explore the SLIK here to help guide Your Career.
  • School Leavers Information Kit (PDF 5.2MB).
  • School Leavers Information Kit (DOCX 0.9MB).
  • The SLIK has also been translated into additional languages.
  • Download our information booklets if you are rural, regional and remote, Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander, or living with disability.
  • Support for Regional, Rural and Remote School Leavers (PDF 2MB).
  • Support for Regional, Rural and Remote School Leavers (DOCX 0.9MB).
  • Support for Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander School Leavers (PDF 2MB).
  • Support for Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander School Leavers (DOCX 1.1MB).
  • Support for School Leavers with Disability (PDF 2MB).
  • Support for School Leavers with Disability (DOCX 0.9MB).
  • Download the Parents and Guardian’s Guide for School Leavers, which summarises the resources and information available to help you explore all the education, training, and work options available to your young person.

School Leavers Information Service

Are you aged between 15 and 24 and looking for career guidance?

Call 1800 CAREER (1800 227 337).

SMS 'SLIS2022' to 0429 009 435.

Our information officers will help you:
  • navigate the School Leavers Information Kit (SLIK),
  • access and use the Your Career website and tools; and
  • find relevant support services if needed.
You may also be referred to a qualified career practitioner for a 45-minute personalised career guidance session. Our career practitioners will provide information, advice and assistance relating to a wide range of matters, such as career planning and management, training and studying, and looking for work.

You can call to book your session on 1800 CAREER (1800 227 337) Monday to Friday, from 9am to 7pm (AEST). Sessions with a career practitioner can be booked from Monday to Friday, 9am to 7pm.

This is a free service, however minimal call/text costs may apply.

Call 1800 CAREER (1800 227 337) or SMS SLIS2022 to 0429 009 435 to start a conversation about how the tools in Your Career can help you or to book a free session with a career practitioner.

All downloads and more available at: www.yourcareer.gov.au/school-leavers-support

Word Of The Week: Party

Word of the Week remains a keynote in 2025, simply to throw some disruption in amongst the 'yeah-nah' mix. 

Noun

1. a social gathering of invited guests, typically involving eating, drinking, and entertainment. 2. a formally constituted political group that contests elections and attempts to form or take part in a government. 3. a person or people forming one side in an agreement or dispute.

Verb

1. enjoy oneself at a party or other lively gathering, typically with drinking and music.

From Middle English (denoting a body of people united in opposition to others, also in party): from Old French partie, based on Latin partiri ‘divide into parts’. party (sense 1 of the noun) dates from the early 18th century.

Adjective (heraldry) 1. divided into parts of different tinctures.

From Middle English (in the sense ‘particoloured’): from Old French parti ‘parted’, based on Latin partitus ‘divided into parts’ (from the verb partiri ).

I’m heading overseas. Do I really need travel vaccines?

Maria Korneeva/Getty
Archana Koirala, University of Sydney; Anthea Katelaris, UNSW Sydney, and Phoebe Williams, University of Sydney

Australia is in its busiest month for short-term overseas travel. And there are so many things to consider when planning your trip. Unfortunately, it’s easy to overlook the importance of pre-travel vaccinations.

That’s particularly the case for those visiting friends and relatives, who are less likely to get vaccinated before leaving the country. Unfortunately, this is also the group at greater risk compared to other travellers.

That’s because they generally stay longer, are more likely to travel to rural areas, eat or drink local or untreated food and water, and have closer contact with the local population.

Why are travel vaccines important?

Although infectious diseases exist everywhere, in some destinations there is a higher risk of becoming sick.

This can be due to tropical climates, the quality of water and sanitation, and insects or animals that carry diseases. This is alongside declining vaccination rates in children and low vaccine uptake in adults (for instance, for the flu vaccine) globally.

Getting sick overseas can at best, interrupt your holiday plans, or at worst, lead to serious illness and having to navigate foreign health systems.

Which vaccines should I think about?

The first group of vaccines are routine ones, not specific to travel (for example, the measles or flu vaccine).

The next group are specific to the risk of infectious disease where you’re travelling (for example, typhoid vaccine) or related to a person’s health or planned activities.

Finally, some vaccines might be required by law (for example, a yellow fever vaccine, or vaccines for travellers to Mecca). These will require evidence you’ve had them for entry to some countries.

Measles

Measles is a highly infectious virus that can cause severe illness. It can transmit easily in public spaces such as shopping centres or on aeroplanes.

There are outbreaks globally. This includes in Australia, where cases are mainly linked to people returning from overseas, including from popular holiday destinations in Southeast Asia.

So ensure you’re vaccinated with two doses of the measles vaccine. You may not know if you had two doses as a child. So you should check your vaccine records or with your GP. If you’re still unsure, it’s safe to have another dose, particularly if you’re planning to travel overseas.

Measles vaccines are given to children in Australia at one year of age, but young infants are at highest risk of severe disease and death. That is why Australia currently provides an extra, free measles vaccine for infants from six months of age if they are going overseas.

The flu

Flu remains one of the most common causes of infection in travellers. Most people know they should get a flu vaccine during autumn or winter.

However, the vaccine best protects against disease for about three to four months. So another dose is recommended for people heading into the Northern Hemisphere winter.

Hepatitis A

Hepatitis A is a viral infection of the liver. It spreads through contaminated food or water, or through contact with an infected person. It’s common in many parts of the world.

A vaccine is available that can be given from one year of age. Two doses, given at least six months apart, provides lifetime protection against disease.

Typhoid

Typhoid is a bacterial disease that can cause high fevers and abdominal pain. Complications such as brain inflammation occur in 10-15% of people.

It is most commonly acquired in people travelling to Asia and sub-Saharan Africa. Typhoid, like hepatitis A, is spread through contaminated food and water.

There are two types of typhoid vaccines: an injection (which can be given from two years of age and is safe in people who are immunocompromised) and an oral vaccine (for people over six years of age).

Rabies

Rabies is caused by a virus that spreads when an infected animal bites or scratches. Dogs are the main carrier of the virus, but any mammal can be infected, including bats, monkeys and cats. Rabies is almost always fatal.

People who are bitten or scratched by a land mammal overseas or bat anywhere need urgent treatment (called “post-exposure prophylaxis”) to prevent getting rabies.

This treatment needs to given as soon as possible after the bite or scratch. But access overseas can be difficult, particularly in remote areas.

Rabies vaccination before you travel can reduce the need for this post-exposure prophylaxis or can simplify your treatment if you’re bitten or scratched by an infected animal.

So a two- or three-visit vaccination course is recommended before travel.

Other vaccines

Other vaccines include those against:

  • mosquito-borne diseases yellow fever and Japanese encephalitis.

  • cholera, a cause of severe diarrhoea

  • mpox, which is recommended for sexually active gay, bisexual or other men who have sex with men. It is also recommended for anyone (regardless of sexual orientation or gender identity) who is planning overseas travel with the intention of having sex with sex workers or in a country where a type of the virus known as clade I is circulating.

How do I find out more?

See your GP or a travel doctor to find out how to stay healthy on your trip, including which vaccines are recommended for you. This will be based on your travel destinations, planned activities, and baseline health. Many vaccines are also available at pharmacies.

You might have to pay for some pre-travel vaccines. But this is usually a relatively small cost on top of what you’ve already spent on flights, accommodation and activities, and will mean less chance of disrupting your trip.The Conversation

Archana Koirala, Paediatrician and Infectious Diseases Specialist; Clinical Researcher, University of Sydney; Anthea Katelaris, Public Health Physician and Conjoint Senior Lecturer in the School of Population Health, UNSW Sydney, and Phoebe Williams, Paediatrician & Infectious Diseases Physician; Senior Lecturer & NHMRC Fellow, Faculty of Medicine, University of Sydney

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Year 12 results are being released. What if you don’t want to share your ATAR with friends and family?

Cottonbro Studio/ Pexels
Penny Van Bergen, Macquarie University; Amy Bird, University of Waikato, and Kellie Buckley-Walker, University of Wollongong

For the class of 2025, the next week may be particularly nerve wracking, as ATAR or Australian Tertiary Admission Rank results are released online. Victoria is the first state to release results on Thursday.

Some students will be overjoyed with their ATARs and will be happy to share them publicly. Newspapers will inevitably feature stories of students who have achieved the best outcomes in each state.

This can be a tough time for students who are disappointed in their rank, or who simply see this as private information and don’t want to share. How can you think about and approach this time?

What an ATAR can and can’t show

The ATAR gives Year 12 students a rank between 0.00 and 99.95. In simple terms, the ATAR shows students where they sit compared to others in their cohort.

Importantly, the ATAR is not a mark or score. Think of it like a running race. Your initial subject scores are similar to the time you ran – they reflect your own performance and not anyone else’s. Your ATAR, on the other hand, is your place in the race (first, 20th, 100th). The rank is relative to others.

Universities use the ATAR to rank applicants for entry into courses. The higher the ATAR, the more doors (or courses) it can open. But ultimately, you only need to focus on the course you want.

And if you don’t quite get there, there are other options.

The end of school is way more than a number

Keep in mind finishing high school is a time of major change. This can see several transitions happening at once, including:

  • starting work, an apprenticeship or university

  • increasing personal independence, from changing friendships to travel and moving away from home

  • the end of a major chapter of academic learning.

The ATAR result reflects only one of these domains, yet it can come to represent all “achievement” for students and their families. To protect young people’s wellbeing, it’s important to place the ATAR in context and see what’s happening around it.

You don’t have to talk about what you got

For students who would rather not share their ATAR with friends or family, there are plenty of ways to deflect. Consider planning a few lines in advance.

Some might find it easiest to discuss their ATAR in more general terms, without comparing ranks. This may mean sharing an overall sense of satisfaction (“I’m happy enough!”) or disappointment (“it wasn’t as high as I wanted, but I’ll spend some time weighing up different options”).

Or you could say something like – “I’m in a good mood, let’s not talk about that now!”. Give yourself permission to be assertive about what kind of conversation you’d like to have.

Broaden the scope of conversation

If you are chatting with close friends about the end of the school years, it can be helpful to reframe discussions.

Instead of the number, reflect on what you’ve learned most about or enjoyed the most. What new knowledge and skills have been gained across the year? Where can these take you?

Are you a curious relative?

For friends and family who are curious, or simply making small talk, remember there are multiple things which may be important to a young person at the moment. This could include a growing savings account and part-time job, progress in music performance, artistic creativity, or a strong and healthy friendship group.

Helpful end-of-school discussions could also include talking about what the young person is most proud of or excited about.

Disappointment is normal

If your ATAR is less than you hoped, remember disappointment is a normal part of life. Importantly, reflecting on the source of disappointment, stress, or negativity can also be a driver of growth.

For students who received a lower rank because they didn’t work as hard as they could have, what lessons can be taken to support future study or career plans? For those who had a rough year, what personal insights or stories of resilience emerge?

Even if you worked really hard, it’s important not to let a single result define you. Take some time to grieve, then reflect on your positive values (for example, “I never give up” or “I am resourceful”) and next steps.

Much of this reflection and insight is internal, but close friends and family can provide valuable social support. Consider whether there is someone suitable to talk through these reflections with.

There is more than one way forward

Remember there are multiple pathways into universities. You don’t have to rely on your ATAR.

For example, bridging courses offer the opportunity to develop aligned knowledge and skills, while degrees with lower entry requirements may offer the opportunity to study similar subjects and transfer later.

Although you might not want to talk to curious friends and family, do make time to talk to a teacher, a careers advisor, a trusted relative, or a university admissions team. There are lots of people ready to help.The Conversation

Penny Van Bergen, Associate Professor in the Psychology of Education, Macquarie University; Amy Bird, Senior Lecturer in Clinical Psychology, University of Waikato, and Kellie Buckley-Walker, Senior Lecturer, School of Education, University of Wollongong

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

8 ways to drink less during the silly season

Katinka van de Ven, UNSW Sydney and Nicole Lee, Curtin University

“We must have a drink before the end of the year!”

December is a perfect storm for anyone trying to cut back on drinking. Between end-of-year deadlines, work parties, family gatherings and school events, alcohol is suddenly everywhere.

It can make drinking feel not just normal, but expected.

But if you want to drink less (or not at all) this silly season, you don’t have to rely on willpower alone. Having a plan can help.

Some evidence suggests when goals are focused on how you’ll approach something – such as a not-drinking strategy – rather than what you’ll avoid (alcohol), it’s easier to follow through.

So here are some simple strategies, backed by evidence.

1. Make a plan

When making decisions, our brains tend to prioritise immediate goals over long-term ones. Scientists call this “present bias”. This means it’s harder to keep your long-term goal (cutting back on alcohol) in mind when confronted by the chance for immediate gratification (having a drink).

But if you plan when you will and won’t drink in advance, you reduce the need to make this decision in real time – when alcohol is in front of you and your willpower may be lower and you’re more driven by emotion.

Look ahead at your calendar and choose your drinking and non-drinking days deliberately. Committing to the plan ahead of time reduces the chances of opportunistic drinking when social pressure is high.

2. Track your drinks

Tracking when and how much you drink is one of the most effective and well-supported strategies for reducing alcohol use and staying motivated.

You may be surprised how much tracking alone can change your drinking, simply by being more mindful and helping you understand your patterns.

It doesn’t matter how you do it – in an app, a notebook or even on your phone calendar. Writing it down is better than trying to remember. And doing it consistently works best. Aim to record drinks in real time if you can.

There are lots of free, evidence based apps, such Drink Tracker, that can help you track your drinking and drink-free days.

3. Try zero alcohol drinks

For many people, the rise of alcohol-free beer, wine and spirits has made it much easier to enjoy the ritual of drinking at social events, without the intoxication.

But they’re not for everyone – particularly those who find the look, smell and taste of alcohol triggering. Know yourself, see what works, and don’t force it if it’s not helping reach your goals.

4. Slow the pace

If your aim is to cut back, try alternating each alcoholic drink with something non-alcoholic.

Water is best, but zero, low or non-alcoholic drinks can still reduce how much you drink overall – and as a bonus they can also help you stay hydrated, which may reduce the chance of a hangover.

Eating something healthy and filling before and during drinking is also a good idea. It prevents rapid spikes in blood alcohol levels, as well as slowing the absorption of alcohol into your system. This means your body has a better chance of metabolising the alcohol.

Eating well can also help calm the cravings for sugary, fried and salty foods that are often triggered by alcohol.

5. Beware of an all-or-nothing approach

Don’t fall into the “goal violation” trap (sometimes called the abstinence violation effect). That’s when slipping up makes you abandon your plan altogether.

Maybe someone talks you into “just a splash” – or one drink somehow becomes five – and you tell yourself: “Oh well, I’ve blown it now.”

But a slip is just a slip – it doesn’t mean you have to give up on your goals. You can reset straight away, at the next drink or the next day.

6. Set up accountability

Letting a friend or partner know that you are trying to drink less helps you stay accountable and provides support – even better if they join you.

7. Have responses ready

People may notice you’re not drinking or are drinking less. They may offer you a drink. Try a simple “I’m good” or “I’m pacing myself tonight”. Work out what feels OK to you – you don’t need to give long explanations.

8. Be kind to yourself

When you’re making a big change, it won’t always go smoothly. What matters is how you respond if you slip up. Shame and guilt often lead to more drinking, while self-compassion supports longer-term behaviour change.

Instead of seeing a slip as failure, treat it as information: What made it hard to stick to your goals? What could help next time?

December doesn’t have to derail your goals

Change comes from consistent small steps, even during the busiest month of the year. Focus on developing a relationship with alcohol that you are in control of, not the other way around.

If you are trying to make changes to your drinking, talk to your GP or check out free evidence-based resources such as Hello Sunday Morning, SMART Recovery and the Alcohol and Other Drug Hotline.The Conversation

Katinka van de Ven, Alcohol and other drug specialist, UNSW Sydney and Nicole Lee, Adjunct Professor at the National Drug Research Institute (Melbourne based), Curtin University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Family time: how to survive – and even thrive – over the holidays

Photo by Any Lane, Pexels, CC BY
Nicolette V Roman, University of the Western Cape

At the end of the year, many families reunite to enjoy time together. These times can be happy, yet sometimes they reveal tensions, unsatisfied needs and difficult relationships. The reality is that being together does not necessarily mean you are connected. Families can be both joyful and anguished or distressed at the same time.

These contradictions are brought into focus during festive periods. They show just how strong the ties of a family are, and remind us that family life is not just a social structure but a continuous practice of connecting and caring.

In our work at the Centre of Interdisciplinary Studies of Children, Families and Society at the University of the Western Cape in South Africa, we pose what seems on the surface a very simple question: what do families do to not only survive, but thrive together?

We find repeated themes in our research: families thrive (or do well) when trust is fostered, when care is given and when all members feel they belong.

Family cohesion enables individuals to feel safe and connected. It is not about being perfect or agreeing always, but being able to trust and get along with each other.

We’ve found that more unified families can:

  • communicate openly

  • adapt to change

  • support each other in the trials of life.

These virtues are not something to be assumed. An example is trust, which is not automatic. It is constructed gradually, by respecting each other, the consistency of a present caregiver, the fairness of shared tasks, the assurance that a person’s voice is heard.

In cases where trust breaks down, families tend to say that they feel uncertain, or even unsafe, in their own homes. Yet when trust is strong, it creates the invisible thread which helps families to survive change.

Our studies show that disagreement can coexist with closeness, provided families have ways to repair relationships after tension. One parent in our research said it best:

We fight, we cry, but we still sit together for supper.

That small act of sitting together is part of the work of care that holds families intact.

South African families

South African families and households are diverse in their structures: nuclear, single-parent, multigenerational, child-headed or based on emotional connection and choice. That’s the result of cultural richness as well as the heritage of apartheid, which disturbed traditional family life through forced migration, labour relations and systemic marginalisation.

In our qualitative research in urban communities, families mixed both traditional values and contemporary realities. Grandmothers are usually key figures in caregiving and young people contribute meaningfully to family and household life. But families face significant pressures. Many struggle to meet basic needs, like shelter and food, as well as intangible needs like love, respect and understanding. Family cohesion may be eroded when these needs are not met.

Unmet needs also reflect what we call “bad care”. By that we mean not getting care, or getting inadequate care.

The impact of bad care on people is among the most interesting things that we discovered during our research. It occurs when care-giving responsibilities are not shared equally, when intangible needs are not met or when family members can’t talk to each other. The consequences of unmet intangible needs are usually quite powerful.

For example, a grandmother may make sure her grandchildren are fed, dressed and safe every day. But if her desire for love, connection, or relaxation is not met, she may feel like no one cares about her or that she is being taken for granted. As one grandmother described it, being “the glue” that kept the family together meant her personal needs for rest, emotional support, or simply being cared for were overlooked.

Some families expect their younger members (daughters in particular) to take care of other people, even if they are not prepared or haven’t consented. In our study, one interviewee said that since the death of her grandmother, she was supposed to be the one who would keep the family together though she did not consider herself ready. Her personal needs such as being heard, respected and given space to grieve were placed on hold.

A care-giver who feels as though no one is noticing or supporting them might end up feeling depressed, angry, or burned out. They might not ask for help, for fear of being judged or rejected. One woman said she never talked to her family about her concerns since they “have their own problems” and “don’t want to listen”. This silence, which can be caused by pride, fear, or a lack of trust, can hurt relationships and make people feel even more alone.

Bad care also refers to being given care that is not responsive to all the needs of a family member. Families who only consider aspects like food, shelter and money might lose sight of emotional and spiritual needs. And as those are not fulfilled, the emotional fabric of the family starts to fall apart.

During the holidays, these family behaviours tend to get worse. Being back under one roof brings out disparities in money, values, or hopes. Adult children come home with fresh experiences, parents remember the sacrifices they made, and grandparents hope their traditions will live on.

Care becomes the language that connects people of all ages in this mix. It can be said in words, like when people talk, laugh, or say they’re sorry. It often happens softly, like when people share a meal made with love, offer to help, or take a moment to listen.

Care is not seasonal. It is every day and intentional. The family is not a luxury; it is the pillar of wellbeing. Once the decorations are packed away and the noise fades, what remains are the relationships we have tended.The Conversation

Nicolette V Roman, SARChI: Human Capabilities, Social Cohesion and the Family, University of the Western Cape

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

We are hardwired to sing − and it’s good for us, too

Gospel choir director Clyde Lawrence performs at the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival on April 25, 2025. AP Photo/Gerald Herbert
Elinor Harrison, Washington University in St. Louis

On the first Sunday after being named leader of the Catholic Church in May 2025, Pope Leo XIV stood on the balcony of St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome and addressed the tens of thousands of people gathered. Invoking tradition, he led the people in noontime prayer. But rather than reciting it, as his predecessors generally did, he sang.

In chanting the traditional Regina Caeli, the pope inspired what some have called a rebirth of Gregorian chant, a type of monophonic and unaccompanied singing done in Latin that dates back more than a thousand years.

The Vatican has been at the forefront of that push, launching an online initiative to teach Gregorian chant through short educational tutorials called “Let’s Sing with the Pope.” The stated goals of the initiative are to give Catholics worldwide an opportunity to “participate actively in the liturgy” and to “make the rich heritage of Gregorian chant accessible to all.”

These goals resonated with me. As a performing artist and scientist of human movement, I spent the past decade developing therapeutic techniques involving singing and dancing to help people with neurological disorders. Much like the pope’s initiative, these arts-based therapies require active participation, promote connection, and are accessible to anyone. Indeed, not only is singing a deeply ingrained human cultural activity, research increasingly shows how good it is for us.

The same old song and dance

For 15 years, I worked as a professional dancer and singer. In the course of that career, I became convinced that creating art through movement and song was integral to my well-being. Eventually, I decided to shift gears and study the science underpinning my longtime passion by looking at the benefits of dance for people with Parkinson’s disease.

The neurological condition, which affects over 10 million people worldwide, is caused by neuron loss in an area of the brain that is involved in movement and rhythmic processing – the basal ganglia. The disease causes a range of debilitating motor impairments, including walking instability.

An older woman sings from her music sheet.
A woman sings as part of a chorus for Parkinson’s patients and their care partners at a YMCA in Hanover, Mass., on Feb. 13, 2019. David L. Ryan/The Boston Globe via Getty Images

Early on in my training, I suggested that people with Parkinson’s could improve the rhythm of their steps if they sang while they walked. Even as we began publishing our initial feasibility studies, people remained skeptical. Wouldn’t it be too hard for people with motor impairment to do two things at once?

But my own experience of singing and dancing simultaneously since I was a child suggested it could be innate. While Broadway performers do this at an extremely high level of artistry, singing and dancing are not limited to professionals. We teach children nursery rhymes with gestures; we spontaneously nod our heads to a favorite song; we sway to the beat while singing at a baseball game. Although people with Parkinson’s typically struggle to do two tasks at once, perhaps singing and moving were such natural activities that they could reinforce each other rather than distract.

A scientific case for song

Humans are, in effect, hardwired to sing and dance, and we likely evolved to do so. In every known culture, evidence exists of music, singing or chanting. The oldest discovered musical instruments are ivory and bone flutes dating back over 40,000 years. Before people played music, they likely sang. The discovery of a 60,000-year-old hyoid bone shaped like a modern human’s suggests our Neanderthal ancestors could sing.

In “The Descent of Man,” Charles Darwin speculated that a musical protolanguage, analogous to birdsong, was driven by sexual selection. Whatever the reason, singing and chanting have been integral parts of spiritual, cultural and healing practices around the world for thousands of years. Chanting practices, in which repetitive sounds are used to induce altered states of consciousness and connect with the spiritual realm, are ancient and diverse in their roots.

Though the evolutionary reasons remain disputed, modern science is increasingly validating what many traditions have long held: Singing and chanting can have profound benefits to physical, mental and social health, with both immediate and long-term effects.

Physically, the act of producing sound can strengthen the lungs and diaphragm and increase the amount of oxygen in the blood. Singing can also lower heart rate and blood pressure, reducing the risk of cardiovascular diseases.

Vocalizing can even improve your immune system, as active music participation can increase levels of immunoglobulin A, one of the body’s key antibodies to stave off illness.

Singing also improves mood and reduces stress.

Studies have shown that singing lowers cortisol levels, the primary stress hormone, in healthy adults and people with cancer or neurologic disorders. Singing may also rebalance autonomic nervous system activity by stimulating the vagus nerve and improving the body’s ability to respond to environmental stresses. Perhaps this is why singing has been called “the world’s most accessible stress reliever.”

A woman sings from a church podium.
A woman performs a Gregorian chant on Christmas Eve in 2023 in Spain. saac Buj/Europa Press via Getty Images

Moreover, chanting may make you aware of your inner states while connecting to something larger. Repetitive chanting, as is common in rosary recitation and yogic mantras, can induce a meditative state, inducing mindfulness and altered states of consciousness. Neuroimaging studies show that chanting activates brainwaves associated with suspension of self-oriented and stress-related thoughts.

Singing as community

Singing alone is one thing, but singing with others brings about a host of other benefits, as anyone who has sung in a choir can likely attest.

Group singing provides a mood boost and improves overall well-being. Increased levels of neurotransmitters such as dopamine, serotonin and oxytocin during singing may promote feelings of social connection and bonding.

When people sing in unison, they synchronize not just their breath but also their heart rates. Heart rate variability, a measure of the body’s adaptability to stress, also improves during group singing, whether you’re an expert or a novice.

In my own research, singing has proven useful in yet another way: as a cue for movement. Matching footfalls to one’s own singing is an effective tool for improving walking that is better than passive listening. Seemingly, active vocalization requires a level of engagement, attention and effort that can translate into improved motor patterns. For people with Parkinson’s, for example, this simple activity can help them avoid a fall. We have shown that people with the disease, in spite of neural degeneration, activate similar brain regions as healthy controls. And it works even when you sing in your head.

Whether you choose to sing with the pope or not, you don’t need a mellifluous voice like his to raise your voice in song. You can sing in the shower. Join a choir. Chant that “om” at the end of yoga class. Releasing your voice might be easier than you think.

And, besides, it’s good for you.The Conversation

Elinor Harrison, Lecturer, Performing Arts Department, Faculty Affiliate, Philosophy-Neuroscience-Psychology, Washington University in St. Louis

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

An expert’s pick of the best board games to play (and gift) this summer

Pexels / Pavel Danilyuk, CC BY
Matthew Thompson, University of Southern Queensland

In a world that can seem increasingly digitised and isolating, board games offer a unique chance to connect with others. And over the holiday period, the right game can make all the difference while spending time with friends and family.

But board games are part of a multi-billion dollar industry, so it can be hard to decide which games to try out – or which ones to gift. Luckily I have some recommendations.

4,000 years of arguing over a die

Board games have been part of societies for at least 4,000 years. The Royal Game of Ur, which scholars discovered in the tombs of ancient Sumer (now modern-day Iraq), can be dated back to around 2500 BCE.

This not only showed board games as an integral part of ancient homelife, but something people held dear. From what archaeologists can glean from the re-discovered rules, the game involved moving pieces around a board (and probably inspired later games such as backgammon).

Meanwhile, in Mediterranean cultures such as Athens and Rome, dice games were often played at taverns, with people gambling on the results. Indeed, according to historian Karl Galinsky, the Roman Emperor Augustus “loved gaming, literally rolling the dice for hours”.

Today, tabletop games are a massive industry. Some games, such as Kingdom Death: Monster and Frosthaven, were boosted by millions of dollars raised through online crowdfunding campaigns

Modern board games can range from party games that can take about half an hour, to epic war games that can take a whole day. Australia has contributed significantly; one of the most critically-acclaimed board games of the 21st century, Blood on the Clocktower, was designed by Sydney-based Steven Medway.

The gift of gaming

For those prone to decision paralysis, there are a number of resource devoted to covering the vast range of board games available. These include critic channels such as Shut Up and Sit Down, as well as YouTube channels such as No Rolls Barred, where you can see various board games being played.

There are even online digital libraries such as Board Game Arena, where you can try games (including some of the list below) before you buy them.

With that said, here are my seven recommendations for anyone wanting to try out a new board game these holidays.

1. Sushi Go Party

This colourful, fast-paced game] has great art, and a “menu” that can be changed depending on the number of players (up to eight) and their familiarity with the game. Players win the game by creating the best combination of cards, depending on what’s available, by rotating the cards from player to player like a sushi train. It’s easy to learn, and relatively cheap.

2. Wavelength

In this party game, teams have to try and guess the location of a hidden target on a spectrum, using a clue from one “psychic” team member. The ends of the spectrum reflect two binaries, such as hot–cold or optional–mandatory, and the target falls somewhere in between.

The closer the team gets to where the psychic thinks the target should go, the more points they score. Wavelength is one of those games where no matter if your team gets it right or wrong, you can expect people to give their two cents.

3. Mysterium and Mysterium Park

In these team games, players play mediums seeking the counsel of another player – a ghost – who gives them clues to important information about murders in the house, including the ghost’s own murder.

The ghost offers the other players tarot cards with abstract artwork with which they must attempt to discern the murder weapon, location and culprit.

4. The Quacks of Quedlinburg

This game sees players take the role of potion makers at the local fair, who must push their luck by drawing ingredients out of a bag to make the best potions without them blowing up in their face. It’s simple to teach and hilarious when someone else blows up their cauldron (although arguably less when it’s you).

5. Modern Art

This is is one of the most celebrated games from board game designer luminary Reiner Knizia. Players are art dealers auctioning off beautiful paintings done by five professional artists. Players might even forget to play as they get caught up in simply admiring the pieces they are auctioning off.

Modern Art remains a fiendishly clever game that is easy to learn but hard to master.

6. Heat: Pedal to the Metal

This strategic racing game is based on 1960s Formula 1 racing. The base game boasts four tracks on two gorgeous boards, and lovely little cars that pass each other and risk spinning out around corners.

7. Nemesis

By far the most expensive (and complicated) game on this list, Nemesis can best be described as Alien: the board game.

Players have to move through a spaceship, discovering rooms and items as they go, taking care not to alert the horrific extraterrestrials that have managed to get onto the ship – represented by amazingly designed pieces. It’s a truly tense and fun experience for a full afternoon.The Conversation

Matthew Thompson, Lecturer in History and Communications, University of Southern Queensland

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard quit Spotify in protest, only for an AI doppelgänger to step in

Getty/Pedro Gomes/Redferns
Wellett Potter, University of New England

Imagine this: a band removes its entire music catalogue off Spotify in protest, only to discover an AI-generated impersonator has replaced it. The impersonator offers songs that sound much like the band’s originals.

The imposter tops Spotify search results for the band’s music – attracting significant streams – and goes undetected for months.

As incredible as it sounds, this is what has happened to Australian prog-rock band King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard

In July, the band publicly withdrew its music from Spotify in protest at chief executive Daniel Ek’s investments in an AI weapons company.

Within months, outraged fans drew attention to a new account called “King Lizard Wizard”.

It hosted AI-generated songs with identical titles and lyrics, and similar-sounding music, to the original band. (And it isn’t the first case of a fake Spotify account impersonating the band).

A Reddit post with the title 'Spotify now features AI band clones', with more than 3,000 upvotes.
Fans have taken to social media channels to vent their frustration over the King Gizzard imposter. Reddit

The fake account was recommended by Spotify’s algorithms and was reportedly removed after exposure by the media.

This incident raises crucial questions: what happens when artists leave a platform, only to be replaced by AI knockoffs? Is this copyright infringement? And what might it mean for Spotify?

As an Australian band, King Gizzard’s music is automatically protected by Australian copyright law. However, any practical enforcement against Spotify would use US law, so that’s what we’ll focus on here.

Is this copyright infringement?

King Gizzard has a track called Rattlesnake, and there was an AI-generated track with the same title and lyrics.

This constitutes copyright infringement of both title and lyrics. And since the AI-generated music sounds similar, there is also potential infringement of Gizzard’s original sound recording.

A court would question whether the AI track is copyright infringement, or a “sound-alike”. A sound-alike work work may evoke the style, arrangement or “feel” of the original, but the recording is technically new.

Legally, sound-alikes sit in a grey area because the musical expression is new, but the aesthetic impression is copied.

To determine whether there is infringement, a court would examine the alleged copying of the protected musical elements in each recording.

It would then identify whether there is “substantial similarity” between the original and AI-generated tracks. Is the listener hearing a copy of the original Gizzard song, or a copy of the band’s musical style? Style itself can’t be infringed (although it does become relevant when paying damages).

Some might wonder whether the AI-generated tracks could fall under “fair use” as a form of parody. Genuine parody would not constitute infringement. But this seems unlikely in the King Gizzard situation.

A parody must comment on or critique an original work, must be transformative in nature, and only copy what is necessary. Based on the available facts, these criteria have not been met.

False association under trademark law?

Using a near-identical band name creates a likelihood of consumers being confused regarding the source of the AI-generated music. And this confusion would be made worse by Spotify reportedly recommending the AI tracks on its “release radar”.

The US Lanham Act has a section on unfair competition which distils two types of liability. One of these is false association. This might be applicable here; there is a plausible claim if listeners could reasonably be confused into thinking the AI-generated tracks were from King Gizzard.

To establish such a claim, the plaintiff would need to demonstrate prior protectable trademark rights, and then show the use of a similar mark is likely to cause consumer confusion.

The defendant in such a claim would likely be the creator/uploader of the AI tracks (perhaps jointly with Spotify).

What about Spotify?

Copyright actions are enforced by rights-holders, rather than regulators, so the onus would be on King Gizzard to sue. But infringement litigation is expensive and time-consuming – often for little damages.

As Spotify has now taken down the AI-generated account, copyright litigation is unlikely. The streaming platform said no royalties were paid to the fake account creator.

Even if this case was successfully litigated against the creator of the fake account, Spotify is unlikely to face penalties. That’s because it is protected by US “safe harbour” laws, which limit liability in cases where content is removed after a platform is notified.

This example demonstrates the legal and policy tensions between platforms actively promoting AI-generated content through algorithms and being “passive hosts”.

Speaking on the King Lizard incident, a Spotify representative told The Music:

Spotify strictly prohibits any form of artist impersonation. The content in question was removed for violating our policies, and no royalties were paid out for any streams generated.

In September, the platform said it had changed its policy about spam, impersonation and deception to address such issues. However, this recent incident raises questions regarding how these policy amendments have translated into changes to the platform and/or procedures.

This is a cautionary tale for artists – many of whom face the threat of their music being used in training and output of AI models without their consent.

For concerned fans, it’s a reminder to always support your favourite artists through official channels – and ideally direct channels.The Conversation

Wellett Potter, Lecturer in Law, University of New England

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Everything from air fryers to TVs suck up our personal data – here’s how to give gadgets that respect privacy this Xmas

Dana Lungu, University of Bristol

Smart gadgets collect vast amounts of our personal data through their apps. It’s usually unclear why the manufacturers need this information or what they do with it. And I don’t just mean smartphones. All kinds of devices are quietly mining us, and few people have any idea it’s happening.

Some brands of air fryers, for instance, request permission to listen in on conversations. Smart toys can also listen to and record conversations, not to mention the child’s name, age and birthday. Meanwhile, certain TVs insist on seeing all the apps on your phone.

It’s a bit of a barcode lottery: data collection varies from brand to brand and from one operating system to another, making it even harder for consumers to get on top of this situation. For instance, Android phone users who have smart speakers like Amazon Echo or Google Nest have to share much more personal data than those with Apple iOS devices.

Gift-wrapped air fryer
Ding dong merrily on fry. Shutterstock AI

If you think this all sounds worrying, you’re not alone. A 2024 study by the UK Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) found that participants were concerned about the excessive and unnecessary amount of personal information being collected by devices.

Unlike with those air fryers, much data gathering takes place without the user even having to give explicit permission. If you’re wondering how this is legal given the explicit consent requirements of general data protection regulation (GDPR), the answer lies in the lengthy technical policies buried in the fine print of privacy notices. Most consumers skim-read these or find them difficult to understand, leaving them with little sense of the choices they are making.

Privacy nutrition labels

It seems to boil down to two options. We share our personal data with the apps of smart devices and hope they will only collect routine information, or we opt out and usually have to live with limited functionality or none at all.

However, there is a middle ground that most people are unaware of: privacy nutrition labels. These allow you to take some control by understanding what personal data your gadgets are collecting, without struggling through the privacy blurb.

The trouble is they are difficult to find. They are not mentioned by consumer magazine Which? or the ICO, perhaps because they are only “recommended” by the UK government and the Federal Communications Commission in the US. Yet despite not being legally binding on manufacturers, these privacy labels have become the norm when it comes to smartphone apps, while other smart devices are gradually catching up.

Ironically, this solution came from the pioneers of smart gadgets, Apple and Google. They voluntarily adopted the idea after it was proposed by researchers in 2009 as a way of informing users that their data was being collected.

Experts at Rephrain, the UK’s National Research Centre on Privacy, Harm Reduction and Adversarial Influence Online, have developed the following step-by-step guide to help consumers find their privacy labels on iPhones and Android phones (click or zoom to make the image bigger):

Graphic showing how to check privacy nutrition labels on an iPhone.
Rephrain, CC BY-SA
Graphic showing how to check privacy nutrition labels on an Android phone
Rephrain, CC BY-SA

Once you find the relevant privacy label for the device in question, you’ll see practical, concise information about what data the app collects and why. Two sections list the types of data collected: “Data Used to Track You” and “Data Linked to You” for iPhones, and “Data Shared” and “Data Collected” for Android.

By reading the privacy label before making a purchase, consumers can decide if they are comfortable with the data collected and the way it is handled.

For example, I checked the privacy label of the app for the smart toothbrush I planned to get my husband this Christmas. I found out it collects the device ID to track users across apps and websites owned by other companies, and data linked to identity such as location and contact information.

So before purchasing smart devices for your loved ones this Christmas, check the privacy labels of their apps on your smartphone. You may be surprised by what you find. This holiday season, don’t just give someone a lovely present – give them the gift of data control at the same time.The Conversation

Dana Lungu, Research Associate Research Institute for Sociotechnical Cyber Security, University of Bristol

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Friday essay: experts are predicting a stock market crash – what does 1929 have to teach us?

Alexander Howard, University of Sydney

Winston Churchill has just arrived in New York City. It is October 6 1929. Travelling with several members of his family, the British statesman checks into the Plaza Hotel, synonymous with wealth and celebrity – and certainly not cheap. But that’s no concern for Churchill: the cost of his stay – along with his cigars and brandy – are being covered by his old friend, financier Bernard Baruch.

After eight weeks of crisscrossing North America, after being wined and dined by his affluent contacts and business acquaintances, it’s no wonder Churchill became “swept up in stock market fever”, writes journalist Andrew Ross Sorkin in his riveting new book, 1929: The Inside Story of the Greatest Crash in Wall Street History.

The anecdote is an insight into conditions in the US in the weeks leading up to the October 1929 Wall Street Crash. The first day of real panic, October 24 – known as Black Thursday – came just a few weeks after Churchill’s visit. A record 12.9 million shares were traded on the exchange that day, marking the beginning of the Wall Street Crash. Over two trading days, US$30 billion of the market’s US$80 billion value disappeared.


Review: 1929: The Inside Story of the Greatest Crash in Wall Street History – Andrew Ross Sorkin (Allen Lane)


The release of this book seems timely: many are making parallels between 1929 and now. “The 1920s economy boomed while America recovered from a deadly pandemic, the flu of 1918,” wrote William A. Birdthistle, a former director of Investment Management at the US Securities and Exchange Commission, in the New York Times last month. “Automobile and telephone stocks were the high-flying tech investments of their day; Tesla and Apple are two of ours.”

And consider the breathless hype surrounding artificial intelligence. Michael Burry, made famous by The Big Short for making money on the 2008 financial crisis, “announced he was shorting Nvidia and Palantir stock – and warned of an AI bubble – before abruptly winding down his investment company, Scion Asset Management”, the Guardian reported last week.

Jamie Dimon, chair and chief executive of giant Wall Street bank JPMorgan Chase, has recently predicted a serious market correction in the next six months to two years. In the meantime, those at the top continue to fill their coffers and carry on as if nothing is amiss.

Prosperity to poverty

Back in October 1929, “Churchill saw moneymaking opportunities in Canada and the United States seemingly everywhere he turned,” writes Sorkin. A cable Churchill sent to his wife bears this out. His message home describes “a stock exchange in every big hotel. You go and sit and watch the figures being marked up on the slates every few minutes.”

Stock market speculation had wormed its way into everyday life. Finance was no longer the fiercely guarded preserve of bankers and brokers; it had become something close to a national pastime.

Ticker tapes clattered away in hotel lobbies and kitchens. Easy, fast and seemingly endless credit was available at the stroke of the pen. Buying and selling stock had become almost routine – a cheeky flutter here, a hopeful punt there – as ordinary Americans bought into the idea that the market’s dizzying ascent would continue forever; that the good times of the Roaring Twenties would roll effortlessly over into an equally dazzling thirties. Onward and upward.

But within weeks of Churchill’s visit, the collective fantasy of what we would now characterise as irrational exuberance would collapse like a house of cards. The bright and buoyant world that so enamoured him would give way to years of mass unemployment, snaking breadlines and tinpot shantytowns known as Hoovervilles.

Winston Churchill, pictured with Charlie Chaplin in 1929, lost ‘a small fortune’ in the stock market crash that year.

Churchill, a dabbler in the market, lost a small fortune. Born into wealth and privilege, he was able to weather the subsequent storm. But countless ordinary Americans, who had basically been tricked into believing the boom could only continue, weren’t so fortunate. Swathes of the population were left totally destitute.

America went from a nation drunk on the dream of perpetual prosperity to one struggling through the nightmare of the worst economic crisis in history, its ramifications felt across the globe.

It is impossible to engage with Sorkin’s painstaking reconstruction of those final, feverish weeks without thinking of our own times.

How did the stock market crash play out?

1929 brings to life the furious disputes between brokers and policymakers, the frantic attempts to keep the economic ship on an even keel and the blunders that helped tip the entire financial system into freefall.

“Gradually and then suddenly.” That is how Ernest Hemingway famously described the process of going broke. This line can easily be repurposed to speak to the events of 1929.

Stock prices had been driven to ludicrous heights by unchecked speculation, mountains of borrowed money and underhand banking practices that actively encouraged people to overextend on credit. Once confidence faltered, margin loans (loans that allow investors to buy shares with borrowed money, using the shares themselves as collateral) were called in, precipitating even more selling and triggering a vicious downward spiral – one that could not be stopped.

What emerges is a picture that feels uncannily familiar: a financial and political elite convinced the Federal Reserve was being too cautious, too meddlesome and far too willing to spoil the party.

Crowds gathering outside New York Stock Exchange on Black Thursday. Picryl

The Federal Reserve plays a crucial role in Sorkin’s narrative, much as it does today. In 1929, its leaders were caught between competing pressures: on the one side, financiers urging them to loosen control over credit and keep speculation humming along; on the other, mounting signs the market was dangerously overheated.

Sorkin points to the warning delivered on September 2 1929 by economist Roger Babson, who argued several key indicators were suggesting the American economy was beginning to soften, even as share prices hit new heights. He noted that production and freight figures had started to dip and the numbers of declining stocks were quietly rising – a sure sign the market’s apparent strength masked growing fragility.

That tension, it seems, has never really been resolved.

Reading this, I immediately thought about the pressure being placed on the Federal Reserve by Donald Trump. He has repeatedly urged the Fed to slash interest rates, accused its leadership of deliberately stymieing growth and expressed a desire to bring the system more directly under his control.

And it was hard not to notice the symbolism when, mere hours before millions of Americans in need had their food benefits stripped away from them, Trump hosted a Great Gatsby-themed Halloween party at Mar-a-Lago. It was a lavish tribute to the very era of excess, delusion and speculative mania that contributed to the catastrophe of October 1929.

Records public for the first time

In 2009, Sorkin published Too Big to Fail, a book built on first-hand testimony from key figures inside the major banking institutions and the regulatory authorities at the heart of the 2008 financial crisis.

In Sorkin’s own words, that study was “a chronicle of failure – a failure that brought the world to its knees and raised questions about the very nature of capitalism.”

Similar questions animate 1929, though this time, the story is based on extensive archival research. During a visit to Harvard’s Baker Library, Sorkin discovered a trove of papers belonging to Thomas Lamont, a leading partner at J.P. Morgan. That afternoon in the archive, he says, convinced him he might write for 1929 what he had for 2008: “a fly-on-the-wall narrative that immerses readers in the moment”.

The project well and truly took off when Sorkin secured unprecedented access to the minutes of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. One of 12 regional banks established under the Federal Reserve Act of 1913, the New York Fed originally served as a sort of nationwide operational hub, executing monetary policy through open market operations and acting as a key conduit between Wall Street and Washington.

In 1929, its influence was even greater than it is today. This means its minutes hold an outsized significance in helping us understand how the crisis unfolded.

Stock brokers at the stock exchange on October 25 1929, as panic selling continues from the previous day. Picryl

These records, covering the most critical months of 1929, had never before been made public. After providing a set of redacted versions, the Fed – prompted by Sorkin’s request – ultimately chose to release the full documents.

The insights they offered proved invaluable, confirming “the internal tempo of the moment” and becoming “one of the clearest anchors for telling this story”. They “added time stamps to key decisions, and provided a grounding that helped verify or challenge the public record”.

If this all sounds a bit dry and dense, rest assured: it is anything but.

This storm is ‘progress’

Much like the financiers of 1929, today’s tech barons and cheerleaders insist the AI boom represents a once-in-a-lifetime leap forward: an innovation so important and transformative it simply must be classed as (again) too big to fail.

These hucksters and hustlers, blowhards and boosters, are always on hand and quick to reassure. Don’t worry, they say. And don’t ask too many questions. This storm is what we call progress.

All this brings to mind the old Marx adage about history repeating itself: tragedy, then farce. However, when I stop to think, it doesn’t feel quite right, given how often these cycles recur. Instead, 1929’s epigraph seems much closer to the mark:

The ordinary human being does not live long enough to draw any substantial benefit from his own experience. And no one, it seems, can benefit by the experiences of others. Being both a father and teacher, I know we can teach our children nothing. We can transmit to them neither our knowledge of life nor mathematics. Each must learn its lesson anew.

Those words belong to Albert Einstein, taken from an interview he gave to The Saturday Evening Post. Einstein was talking about parenthood and mathematics, not financial markets.

Yet the interview appeared in print on October 26 1929, just two days after Black Thursday. Read today, his words carry an unmistakable air of prophecy.

He is right. As a species, we seem wholly unable to learn from our mistakes, let alone the mistakes of others. And it is hard to escape the feeling that we may be reminded of this again before long.The Conversation

Alexander Howard, Senior Lecturer, Discipline of English and Writing, University of Sydney

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Nnena Kalu has won the 2025 Turner prize – working with her has inspired my work and academic research

Lisa Slominski, Kingston University

The 2025 Turner prize has been won by Nnena Kalu. It’s a historic win and a groundbreaking moment in the prestigious prize’s history.

Kalu is the first learning-disabled artist, the first artist with limited verbal communication, and the first artist whose practice is facilitated through a specialised studio (ActionSpace, established to support artists with learning disabilities) to win the prize. Her win is both extraordinary and overdue – a pivotal moment for inclusivity in British art and for the visibility of learning-disabled artists.

Kalu’s practice is defined by repetition, rhythm, and layering. She builds sculptural forms by tightly wrapping materials into pulsing, tactile structures, and her drawings accumulate depth through swirling, vortex-like motions.

After more than two decades of working, her recognition has accelerated. There have been acquisitions by Tate and the Arts Council Collection. She secured representation with gallerist Arcadia Missa.

She also presented to wide acclaim at Barcelona’s Manifesta 15 gallery in 2024 and Liverpool’s Walker Art Gallery in 2024 to 2025. These accomplishments have all contributed towards her Turner prize win.

I first met Kalu in 2018 when I curated her work in a group exhibition in North London. I worked with her longtime ActionSpace facilitator, Charlotte Hollinshead who helped Kalu to develop her individual arts practice and deliver an extensive range of commissions, projects, events and exhibitions.

Learning of Kalu’s interest in responding to existing architecture, we set aside a structural pillar in the gallery. When they arrived on site, Kalu began wrapping it with tape, film and string. I watched as the form accumulated colour, tension and movement. I was completely hooked.

Over the years, I continued to curate her work – including her first American exhibition in 2020 – and wrote about her practice in my book Nonconformers: A New History of Self-Taught Artists. As I spent more time with her, one question began to preoccupy me: how should curators address Kalu’s position as a learning-disabled artist when she cannot narrate her practice or its relationship to her identity in conventional communication terms?

This question has since become the centre of my PhD research at Kingston University. I now work closely with Kalu and ActionSpace to explore new, more expansive forms of curatorial and interpretive practice – including approaches that acknowledge facilitation, and support structures without diminishing artistic agency.

Kalu’s nomination in April unexpectedly became a critical case study for my research. Watching how the prize, its partners, and the media represented her offered a rare and highly visible window into how institutions handle practices that do not fit standard models of authorship or communication.

Some of the most promising work came from Tate’s Body in Rhythm, Line in Motion film – a short artist video that accompanies each Turner nominee. What stood out was how clearly and transparently it acknowledged the supportive ecosystem around Kalu.

Named contributors spoke from their specific positions – facilitators, curators, and long-time supporters – describing what they observe in her process rather than speculating about intention. The video foregrounded the sounds of her making, the rhythm of her gestures, and the material build-up of the work as legitimate ways of understanding her practice.

If the Tate film offered examples of progress, excerpts of wider media responses revealed how much work remains. Some commentary simply misunderstood the context. A high-profile columnist dismissed the shortlist as “the soppiest ever” and described Kalu’s work as “academic” – an odd accusation for an artist who works entirely through processes developed instinctively at ActionSpace, which were not informed by an art historical discourse.

More troubling were moments when journalists framed Kalu’s disability as a reason to lower artistic expectations. One critic, speaking on BBC Front Row, remarked: “As an art critic, I found it very disappointing; as a human being, I feel I have to support it.”

This kind of response strips learning-disabled artists of agency. It assumes they cannot be both disabled and ambitious, disabled and professional, disabled and excellent. It conflates access with charity, facilitation with compromise, and disability with lack.

Kalu’s career, and now her Turner Prize success, demonstrate precisely the opposite.

Her win is an extraordinary milestone, but it is not an endpoint. The structures surrounding learning-disabled artists remain precarious. Supported studios like ActionSpace are essential cultural infrastructures, yet they operate with limited resources. Curators and institutions are still learning how to communicate about practices that do not fit familiar narratives of artistic intention or authorship.

The Turner Prize has cracked something open. It has made visible what many of us working in this field have long argued: that excellence emerges in many forms, that facilitation can be a creative engine rather than an obstacle, and that disabled artists are central, not peripheral, to contemporary art.

What comes next, how we talk about this win, how institutions respond, and which structures are resourced, will determine whether this moment becomes symbolic or genuinely transformative.

This article features references to books that have been included for editorial reasons, and may contain links to bookshop.org. If you click on one of the links and go on to buy something from bookshop.org The Conversation UK may earn a commission.


Looking for something good? Cut through the noise with a carefully curated selection of the latest releases, live events and exhibitions, straight to your inbox every fortnight, on Fridays. Sign up here.The Conversation


Lisa Slominski, PhD with the Department of Historical and Critical Studies, Kingston University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

A 2,000-year-old building site reveals the raw ingredients for ancient Roman self-healing concrete

A detail of the neatly aligned ceramic roof tiles and tuff blocks in a newly excavated site in Pompeii, documenting the storage of building materials during renovation. Archaeological Park of Pompeii
Ray Laurence, Macquarie University

Roman concrete is pretty amazing stuff. It’s among the main reasons we know so much about Roman architecture today. So many structures built by the Romans still survive, in some form, thanks to their ingenious concrete and construction techniques.

However, there’s a lot we still don’t understand about exactly how the Romans made such strong concrete or built all those impressive buildings, houses, public baths, bridges and roads.

Scholars have long yearned for more physical evidence from Roman worksites to provide clues.

Now, a new study – led by researchers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and published in the journal Nature Communications – sheds new light on Roman concrete and construction techniques.

That’s thanks to details sifted from partially constructed rooms in Pompeii – a worksite abandoned by workers as Mount Vesuvius erupted in 79 CE.

Neatly aligned ceramic roof tiles and tuff blocks at a newly excavated site in Pompeii, documenting the organised storage of building materials ready for reuse during renovation.
Neatly aligned ceramic roof tiles and tuff blocks at a newly excavated site in Pompeii, documenting the organised storage of building materials ready for reuse during renovation. Archaeological Park of Pompeii

New clues about concrete making

The discovery of this particular building site hit the news early last year.

The builders were quite literally repairing a house in the middle of the city, when Mount Vesuvius blew up in the first century CE.

This unique find included tiles sorted for recycling and wine containers known as amphorae that had been re-used for transporting building materials.

Most importantly, though, it also included evidence of dry material being prepared ahead of mixing to produce concrete.

It is this dry material that is the focus of the new study. Having access to the actual materials ahead of mixing represents a unique opportunity to understand the process of concrete making and how these materials reacted when water was added.

This has re-written our understanding of Roman concrete manufacture.

Self-healing concrete

The researchers behind this new paper studied the chemical composition of materials found at the site and defined some key elements: incredibly tiny pieces of quicklime that change our understanding of how the concrete was made.

Quicklime is calcium oxide, which is created by heating high-purity limestone (calcium carbonate).

The process of mixing concrete, the authors of this study explain, took place in the atrium of this house. The workers mixed dry lime (ground up lime) with pozzolana (a volcanic ash).

When water was added, the chemical reaction produced heat. In other words, it was an exothermic reaction. This is known as “hot-mixing” and results in a very different type of concrete than what you get from a hardware store.

Adding water to the quicklime forms something called slaked lime, along with generating heat. Within the slaked lime, the researchers identified tiny undissolved “lime clasts” that retained the reactive properties of quicklime. If this concrete forms cracks, the lime clasts react with water to heal the crack.

In other words, this form of Roman concrete can quite literally heal itself.

Pompeii Archeological Park site map, with showing where the ancient building site is located, with colour coded piles of raw construction materials (right): purple: debris; green: piles of dry pre-mixed materials; blue: piles of tuff blocks.
Pompeii Archeological Park site map, with showing where the ancient building site is located, with colour coded piles of raw construction materials (right): purple: debris; green: piles of dry pre-mixed materials; blue: piles of tuff blocks. Masic et al, Nature Communications (2025)

Techniques old and new

However, it is hard to tell how widespread this method was in ancient Rome.

Much of our understanding of Roman concrete is based on the writings of the ancient Roman architect Vitruvius.

He had advised to use pozzolana mixed with lime, but it had been assumed that this text did not refer to hot-mixing.

Yet, if we look at another Roman author, Pliny the Elder, we find a clear account of the reaction of quicklime with water that is the basis for the exothermic reaction involved in hot-mixing concrete.

So the ancients had knowledge of hot-mixing but we know less about how widespread the technique was.

Maybe more important is the detail in the texts of experimentation with different blends of sand, pozzolana and lime, leading to the mix used by the builders in Pompeii.

The MIT research team had previously found lime clasts (those tiny little bits of quicklime) in Roman remains at Privernum, about 43 kilometres north of Pompeii.

It’s also worth noting the healing of cracks has been observed in the concrete of the tomb of noblewoman Caecilia Metella outside Rome on the Via Appia (a famous Roman road).

Now this new Pompeii study has established hot-mixing happened and how it helped improve Roman concrete, scholars can look for instances in which concrete cracks have been healed this way.

Questions remain

All in all, this new study is exciting – but we must resist the assumption all Roman construction was made to a high standard.

The ancient Romans could make exceptional concrete mortars but as Pliny the Elder notes, poor mortar was the cause of the collapse of buildings in Rome. So just because they could make good mortar, doesn’t mean they always did.

Questions, of course, remain.

Can we generalise from this new study’s single example from 79 CE Pompeii to interpret all forms of Roman concrete?

Does it show progression from Vitruvius, who wrote some time earlier?

Was the use of quicklime to make a stronger concrete in this 79 CE Pompeii house a reaction to the presence of earthquakes in the region and an expectation cracking would occur in the future?

To answer any of these questions, further research is needed to see how prevalent lime clasts are in Roman concrete more generally, and to identify where Roman concrete has healed itself.The Conversation

Ray Laurence, Professor of Ancient History, Macquarie University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

How self-taught, self-made mavericks Vivienne Westwood and Rei Kawakubo redefined punk

Installation view of Westwood | Kawakubo on display from December 7 2025 to April 19 2026, at NGV International, Melbourne. Photo: Sean Fennessy
Sasha Grishin, Australian National University

Vivienne Westwood and Rei Kawakubo are two fashion designers who redefined “the look” of fashion on the street from the 1970s onwards.

They were born a year apart in the early 1940s, one in Derbyshire in England, the other in Tokyo in Japan. They were both largely self-taught, self-made mavericks who contributed to, and redefined, the punk scene in the 60s and 70s. Their use of unconventional materials and designs shocked the fashion establishment and helped to establish alternative realities of accepted dress codes.

The great achievement of many revolutionary National Gallery of Victoria exhibitions is the strategy of juxtaposing two vibrant artistic personalities, whereby a new and unexpected reality is created that allows us to establish a fresh perspective.

A model in a white dress with blue figures on it.
World’s End, London (fashion house), Vivienne Westwood (designer), Malcolm McLaren (designer), outfit from the Savage collection, spring–summer 1982. Pillar Hall, Olympia, October 22 1981. Photo © Robyn Beeche

Westwood and Kawakubo are household names in the fashion industry. But by bringing them together and clustering their works under five thematic categories, new insights appear.

It is a spectacular selection of over 140 key and signature pieces drawn from the growing holdings of the NGV supplemented with strategic loans from the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; The Victoria & Albert Museum, London; Palais Galliera, Paris; the Vivienne Westwood archive; and the National Gallery of Australia, among others.

Punk and provocation

Westwood, subsequently Dame Vivienne Isabel Westwood, initially in collaboration with Malcolm McLaren of Sex Pistols fame, helped to mould and dress the London punk scene.

For her, dress was never ideologically neutral but a lightning rod for social change.

Black and white photo of three women in front of a London telephone booth.
Vivienne Westwood (right) with the model Jordan (Pamela Rooke) and another punk, London, 12 April 1977. Photo © Tim Jenkins / WWD / Penske Media via Getty Images

Pornographic slogans, emblems anchored in fetish practices and sadomasochism, and dresses made of plastics and supplemented with safety pins and chains subverted the comfortable status quo and allowed her fashion sense to penetrate into the middle classes.

What was once outrageous became something daringly respectable.

Kawakubo was born into an academic family and came to fashion design when making her own clothing in the 1960s under the label Comme des Garçons (“like the boys”) in Tokyo.

Conceived as anti-fashion, sober and severe, she made largely monochrome garments – black, dark grey and white – for women, with frayed, unfinished edges, holes and asymmetric shapes.

A men’s line was added in 1978. The number of outlets in Japan grew into the hundreds. Later, her designs established a strong presence in Paris.

The themes that bring the two fashion designers together in this exhibition include the opening section, Punk and Provocation. Both designers drew on the ethos of punk with its desire for change and the rejection of old ways.

Breaking orthodoxies

A second section is termed Rupture for the conscious desire to break with convention, whether it be Westwood’s Nostalgia of Mud collection of 1983 or Kawakubo’s Not Making Clothes collection of 2014.

There is a strongly expressed desire to break with the prevailing orthodoxies.

A model in a brown dress.
World’s End, London (fashion house), Vivienne Westwood (designer), Malcolm McLaren (designer) Outfit from the Nostalgia of Mud collection, autumn–winter 1982–83. Pillar Hall, Olympia, London, 24 March 1982. Photo © Robyn Beeche

A third section, Reinvention, hints at a postmodernist predilection of both artists to delve into traditions of art history and from unexpected sources, such as Rococo paintings, revive elements from tailoring traditions, ruffles and frills.

Although both artists are rule breakers, they do not act from a position of ignorance. It is from a detailed, and at times pedantic, knowledge of garments from the past.

A model in a red hat and a structural grey coat.
Comme des Garçons, Tokyo (fashion house), Rei Kawakubo (designer) Look 2, from the Smaller is Stronger collection, autumn–winter 2025. Paris, 8 March 2025. Image © Comme des Garçons. Model: Mirre Sonders

In the late 1980s, Westwood revived English tweeds and Scottish tartans. Kawakubo drew on the basics of traditional tailoring in menswear and applied it to unorthodox patterns and materials in her garments for women.

The ‘ideal’ body

A fourth section, The Body: Freedom and Restraints, perhaps most problematically challenges the conventions of idealised female beauty and the objectification of the female body.

It is argued in the exhibition that Westwood’s Erotic Zones collection (1995), and Kawakubo’s The Future of Silhouette (2017–18), may be viewed as attempts to redefine the female body.

Parker in a wedding dress.
Sarah Jessica Parker wearing a Vivienne Westwood wedding gown on the set of Sex and the City: The Movie, New York City, October 12 2007. Photo © James Devaney / WireImage via Getty Images

Kawakubo’s Body meets dress-Dress meets body collection, presented in 1996, systematically interrogates boundaries between bodies and garments. Westwood, at a similar time, played with padding and compression in her designs to question the ideals of a sexual, “ideal” body.

The final section of the exhibition is appropriately termed The Power of Clothes. This returns us to the recurring theme of employing fashion to make a statement concerning social change, whether this be the punk revolution or protests connected with climate change.

Mannequins in various outfits.
Installation view of Westwood | Kawakubo on display from 7 December 2025 to 19 April 2026, at NGV International, Melbourne. Vivienne Westwood Look 19, Jacket, shirt, knickers, bum pad, leggings, hat, crop, boots, 1994 and Look 34 Cape, shirt, corset, and boots and hat 1994 and Look 78, Dress, bum pad and shoes, 1994 from the On Liberty collection, 1994-1995. Courtesy of Vivienne Westwood Heritage. Photo: Sean Fennessy

Through their work, both Westwood and Kawakubo argue fashion is a political act and make broader social statements through their garments, particularly women’s wear.

Both fashion designers were prominent polemicists. As quoted in the exhibition, Westwood in 2011 declared,

I can use fashion as a medium to express my ideas to fight for a better world.

Kawakubo is quoted as saying in 2016,

Society needs something new, something with the power to provide stimulus and the drive to move us forward […] Maybe fashion alone is not enough to change our world, but I consider it my mission to keep pushing and to continue to propose new ideas.

This exhibition will be seen as historically significant and it is accompanied with a weighty catalogue. The NGV has established major collections of over 400 pieces of Westwood’s and Kawakubo’s work that lays the foundation for any further serious exploration of fashion from this period anywhere in the world.

Westwood | Kawakubo is at the National Gallery of Victoria until April 19.The Conversation

Sasha Grishin, Adjunct Professor of Art History, Australian National University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

The world at your finger tips: Online

With current advice to stay at home and self-isolate, when you come in out of the garden, have had your fill of watching movies and want to explore something new, there's a whole world of books you can download, films you can watch and art galleries you can stroll through - all from at home and via the internet. This week a few suggestions of some of the resources available for you to explore and enjoy. For those who have a passion for Art - this month's Artist of the Month is the Online Australian Art Galleries and State Libraries where you can see great works of art from all over the world  and here - both older works and contemporary works.

Also remember the Project Gutenberg Australia - link here- has heaps of great books, not just focused on Australian subjects but fiction works by popular authors as well. Well worth a look at.

Short Stories for Teenagers you can read for free online

StoryStar is an online resource where you can access and read short stories for teenagers

About

Storystar is a totally FREE short stories site featuring some of the best short stories online, written by/for kids, teens, and adults of all ages around the world, where short story writers are the stars, and everyone is free to shine! Storystar is dedicated to providing a free place where everyone can share their stories. Stories can entertain us, enlighten us, and change us. Our lives are full of stories; stories of joy and sorrow, triumph and tragedy, success and failure. The stories of our lives matter. Share them. Sharing stories with each other can bring us closer together and help us get to know one another better. Please invite your friends and family to visit Storystar to read, rate and share all the short stories that have been published here, and to tell their stories too.

StoryStar headquarters are located on the central Oregon coast.

NFSA - National Film and Sound Archive of Australia

The doors may be temporarily closed but when it comes to the NFSA, we are always open online. We have content for Kids, Animal Lovers, Music fans, Film buffs & lots more.

You can explore what’s available online at the NFSA, see more in the link below.

https://bit.ly/2U8ORjH


NLA Ebooks - Free To Download

The National Library of Australia provides access to thousands of ebooks through its website, catalogue and eResources service. These include our own publications and digitised historical books from our collections as well as subscriptions to collections such as Chinese eResources, Early English Books Online and Ebsco ebooks.

What are ebooks?
Ebooks are books published in an electronic format. They can be read by using a personal computer or an ebook reader.

This guide will help you find and view different types of ebooks in the National Library collections.

Peruse the NLA's online ebooks, ready to download - HERE

The Internet Archive and Digital Library

The Internet Archive is an American digital library with the stated mission of "universal access to all knowledge." It provides free public access to collections of digitised materials, including websites, software applications/games, music, movies, videos, moving images, and millions of public-domain books. There's lots of Australian materials amongst the millions of works on offer.

Visit:  https://archive.org/


Avalon Youth Hub: More Meditation Spots

Due to popular demand our meditation evenings have EXPANDED. Two sessions will now be run every Wednesday evening at the Hub. Both sessions will be facilitated by Merryn at Soul Safaris.

6-7pm - 12 - 15 year olds welcome
7-8pm - 16 - 25 year olds welcome

No experience needed. Learn and develop your mindfulness and practice meditation in a group setting.

For all enquires, message us via facebook or email help@avalonyouthhub.org.au

BIG THANKS The Burdekin Association for funding these sessions!

Green Team Beach Cleans 

Hosted by The Green Team
It has been estimated that we will have more plastic than fish in the ocean by 2050...These beach cleans are aimed at reducing the vast amounts of plastic from entering our oceans before they harm marine life. 

Anyone and everyone is welcome! If you would like to come along, please bring a bucket, gloves and hat. Kids of all ages are also welcome! 

We will meet in front of the surf club. 
Hope to see you there!

The Green Team is a Youth-run, volunteer-based environment initiative from Avalon, Sydney. Keeping our area green and clean.

 The Project Gutenberg Library of Australiana

Australian writers, works about Australia and works which may be of interest to Australians.This Australiana page boasts many ebooks by Australian writers, or books about Australia. There is a diverse range; from the journals of the land and sea explorers; to the early accounts of white settlement in Australia; to the fiction of 'Banjo' Paterson, Henry Lawson and many other Australian writers.

The list of titles form part of the huge collection of ebooks freely downloadable from Project Gutenberg Australia. Follow the links to read more about the authors and titles and to read and/or download the ebooks. 

Profile: Ingleside Riders Group

Ingleside Riders Group Inc. (IRG) is a not for profit incorporated association and is run solely by volunteers. It was formed in 2003 and provides a facility known as “Ingleside Equestrian Park” which is approximately 9 acres of land between Wattle St and McLean St, Ingleside. IRG has a licence agreement with the Minister of Education to use this land. This facility is very valuable as it is the only designated area solely for equestrian use in the Pittwater District.  IRG promotes equal rights and the respect of one another and our list of rules that all members must sign reflect this.

Cyberbullying

Research shows that one in five Australian children aged 8 to 17 has been the target of cyberbullying in the past year. The Office of the Children’s eSafety Commissioner can help you make a complaint, find someone to talk to and provide advice and strategies for dealing with these issues.

Make a Complaint 

The Enhancing Online Safety for Children Act 2015 gives the power to provide assistance in relation to serious cyberbullying material. That is, material that is directed at a particular child with the intention to seriously embarrass, harass, threaten or humiliate.

IMPORTANT INFORMATION 

Before you make a complaint you need to have:

  • copies of the cyberbullying material to upload (eg screenshots or photos)
  • reported the material to the social media service (if possible) at least 48 hours ago
  • at hand as much information as possible about where the material is located
  • 15-20 minutes to complete the form

Visit: esafety.gov.au/complaints-and-reporting/cyberbullying

Our mission

The Office of the Children’s eSafety Commissioner is Australia's leader in online safety. The Office is committed to helping young people have safe, positive experiences online and encouraging behavioural change, where a generation of Australian children act responsibly online—just as they would offline.

We provide online safety education for Australian children and young people, a complaints service for young Australians who experience serious cyberbullying, and address illegal online content through the Online Content Scheme.

Our goal is to empower all Australians to explore the online world—safely.

Visit: esafety.gov.au/about-the-office 

The Green Team

Profile
This Youth-run, volunteer-based environment initiative has been attracting high praise from the founders of Living Ocean as much as other local environment groups recently. 
Creating Beach Cleans events, starting their own, sustainability days - ‘action speaks louder than words’ ethos is at the core of this group. 

National Training Complaints Hotline – 13 38 73

The National Training Complaints Hotline is accessible on 13 38 73 (Monday to Friday from 8am to 6pm nationally) or via email at skilling@education.gov.au.

Sync Your Breathing with this - to help you Relax

Send In Your Stuff

Pittwater Online News is not only For and About you, it is also BY you.  
We will not publish swearing or the gossip about others. BUT: If you have a poem, story or something you want to see addressed, let us know or send to: pittwateronlinenews@live.com.au

All Are Welcome, All Belong!

Youth Source: Northern Sydney Region

A directory of services and resources relevant to young people and those who work, play and live alongside them.

The YouthSource directory has listings from the following types of service providers: Aboriginal, Accommodation, Alcohol & Other Drugs, Community Service, Counselling, Disability, Education & Training, Emergency Information, Employment, Financial, Gambling,  General Health & Wellbeing, Government Agency, Hospital & GP, Legal & Justice, Library, Mental Health, Multicultural, Nutrition & Eating Disorders, Parenting, Relationships, Sexual Health, University, Youth Centre

Driver Knowledge Test (DKT) Practice run Online

Did you know you can do a practice run of the DKT online on the RMS site? - check out the base of this page, and the rest on the webpage, it's loaded with information for you!

The DKT Practice test is designed to help you become familiar with the test, and decide if you’re ready to attempt the test for real.  Experienced drivers can also take the practice test to check their knowledge of the road rules. Unlike the real test, the practice DKT allows you to finish all 45 questions, regardless of how many you get wrong. At the end of the practice test, you’ll be advised whether you passed or failed.

Fined Out: Practical guide for people having problems with fines

Legal Aid NSW has just published an updated version of its 'Fined Out' booklet, produced in collaboration with Inner City Legal Centre and Redfern Legal Centre.

Fined Out is a practical guide to the NSW fines system. It provides information about how to deal with fines and contact information for services that can help people with their fines.

A fine is a financial penalty for breaking the law. The Fines Act 1996 (NSW) and Regulations sets out the rules about fines.

The 5th edition of 'Fined Out' includes information on the different types of fines and chapters on the various options to deal with fines at different stages of the fine lifecycle, including court options and pathways to seek a review, a 50% reduction, a write-off, plan, or a Work and Development Order (WDO).

The resource features links to self-help legal tools for people with NSW fines, traffic offence fines and court attendance notices (CANs) and also explains the role of Revenue NSW in administering and enforcing fines.

Other sections of the booklet include information specific to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, young people and driving offences, as well as a series of template letters to assist people to self-advocate.

Hard copies will soon be available to be ordered online through the Publications tab on the Legal Aid NSW website.

Hard copies will also be made available in all public and prison libraries throughout NSW.

Read the resource online, or download the PDF.

Apprenticeships and traineeships info

Are you going to leave school this year?
Looking for an apprenticeship or traineeship to get you started?
This website, Training Services NSW, has stacks of info for you;

It lists the group training organisations (GTOs) that are currently registered in NSW under the Apprenticeship and Traineeship Act 2001. These GTOs have been audited by independent auditors and are compliant with the National Standards for Group Training Organisations.

If you are interested in using the services of a registered GTO, please contact any of the organisations listed here: https://www.training.nsw.gov.au/gto/contacts.html

There are also some great websites, like 1300apprentice, which list what kind of apprenticeships and traineeships they can guide you to securing as well as listing work available right now.

Profile Bayview Yacht Racing Association (BYRA)
1842 Pittwater Rd, Bayview
Website: www.byra.org.au

BYRA has a passion for sharing the great waters of Pittwater and a love of sailing with everyone aged 8 to 80 or over!

 headspace Brookvale

headspace Brookvale provides services to young people aged 12-25. If you are a young person looking for health advice, support and/or information,headspace Brookvale can help you with:

• Mental health • Physical/sexual health • Alcohol and other drug services • Education and employment services

If you ever feel that you are:

• Alone and confused • Down, depressed or anxious • Worried about your use of alcohol and/or other drugs • Not coping at home, school or work • Being bullied, hurt or harassed • Wanting to hurt yourself • Concerned about your sexual health • Struggling with housing or accommodation • Having relationship problems • Finding it hard to get a job

Or if you just need someone to talk to… headspace Brookvale can help! The best part is our service is free, confidential and youth friendly.

headspace Brookvale is open from Monday to Friday 9:00am-5:30pm so if you want to talk or make an appointment give us a call on (02) 9937 6500. If you're not feeling up to contacting us yourself, feel free to ask your family, friend, teacher, doctor or someone close to you to make a referral on your behalf.

When you first come to headspace Brookvale you will be greeted by one of our friendly staff. You will then talk with a member of our headspace Brookvale Youth Access Team. The headspace Brookvale Youth Access Team consists of three workers, who will work with you around whatever problems you are facing. Depending on what's happening for you, you may meet with your Youth Access Worker a number of times or you may be referred on to a more appropriate service provider.

A number of service providers are operating out of headspace Brookvale including Psychologists, Drug & Alcohol Workers, Sexual Health Workers, Employment Services and more! If we can't find a service operating withinheadspace Brookvale that best suits you, the Youth Access Team can also refer you to other services in the Sydney area.

eheadspace provides online and telephone support for young people aged 12-25. It is a confidential, free, secure space where you can chat, email or talk on the phone to qualified youth mental health professionals.

Click here to go to eheadspace

For urgent mental health assistance or if you are in a crisis please call the Northern Sydney 24 hour Mental Health Access Line on 1800 011 511

Need Help Right NOW??

kids help line: 1800 55 1800 - www.kidshelpline.com.au

lifeline australia - 13 11 14 - www.lifeline.org.au

headspace Brookvale is located at Level 2 Brookvale House, 1A Cross Street Brookvale NSW 2100 (Old Medical Centre at Warringah Mall). We are nearby Brookvale Westfield's bus stop on Pittwater road, and have plenty of parking under the building opposite Bunnings. More at: www.headspace.org.au/headspace-centres/headspace-brookvale

Profile: Avalon Soccer Club
Avalon Soccer Club is an amateur club situated at the northern end of Sydney’s Northern Beaches. As a club we pride ourselves on our friendly, family club environment. The club is comprised of over a thousand players aged from 5 to 70 who enjoy playing the beautiful game at a variety of levels and is entirely run by a group of dedicated volunteers. 
Profile: Pittwater Baseball Club

Their Mission: Share a community spirit through the joy of our children engaging in baseball.

Year 13

Year13 is an online resource for post school options that specialises in providing information and services on Apprenticeships, Gap Year Programs, Job Vacancies, Studying, Money Advice, Internships and the fun of life after school. Partnering with leading companies across Australia Year13 helps facilitate positive choices for young Australians when finishing school.

NCYLC is a community legal centre dedicated to providing advice to children and young people. NCYLC has developed a Cyber Project called Lawmail, which allows young people to easily access free legal advice from anywhere in Australia, at any time.

NCYLC was set up to ensure children’s rights are not marginalised or ignored. NCYLC helps children across Australia with their problems, including abuse and neglect. The AGD, UNSW, KWM, Telstra and ASIC collaborate by providing financial, in-kind and/or pro bono volunteer resources to NCYLC to operate Lawmail and/or Lawstuff.

Kids Helpline

If you’re aged 5-25 the Kids Helpline provides free and confidential online and phone counselling 24 hours a day, seven days a week on 1800 55 1800. You can chat with us about anything… What’s going on at home, stuff with friends. Something at school or feeling sad, angry or worried. You don’t have to tell us your name if you don’t want to.

You can Webchat, email or phone. Always remember - Everyone deserves to be safe and happy. You’re important and we are here to help you. Visit: https://kidshelpline.com.au/kids/