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westbulldog
25-04-2016, 03:31 PM
This could not go unnoticed, sorry if it is unrelated but I found it a total disrespectful stuff up:-

CHANNEL 7 has come under fire for going to a commercial during the Last Post before last night’s AFL clash between Melbourne and Richmond.


Angry fans, including former AFL star Brendan Fevola and Richmond fan Rhett Bartlett, son of club legend Kevin Bartlett, took to social media to blast the station.

The pair’s posts were among several tweets from fans, labelling Channel 7’s move as “disrespectful & disgraceful”.

After the game network presenter Hamish McLachlan apologised on air, saying it was issuing “an unreserved apology from everyone at Seven”.

bulldogtragic
25-04-2016, 03:36 PM
Channel 7 are obviously playing 'how low can you go' and winning. What arses.

westdog54
25-04-2016, 03:44 PM
Surely there's a producer out there that is now seeking new employment. Not sure how you get around that one.

jeemak
25-04-2016, 03:55 PM
I don't think someone should be sacked for that, seriously.

Hotdog60
25-04-2016, 04:12 PM
I don't think someone should be sacked for that, seriously.

I agree but a kick up the backside is in order. Commercialism at it's finest.

jeemak
25-04-2016, 04:31 PM
Who said it was a mistake?

Sure, with a bit of backlash the network might put it down to an error of judgement, but there's a fair chance the advertising was planned well in advance of the switch being flicked.

ledge
25-04-2016, 04:44 PM
Trying to get the extra adds in because they can ask for more money,that's more important than respecting people who died for all this to happen.

EasternWest
25-04-2016, 05:50 PM
I can't wait for the day when someone at channel 7 looks back at all their match intros and realises "holy shit, these husky deep voice guy things we do every game are cringe worthy. Let's never do them again."

Sedat
25-04-2016, 05:54 PM
Ch 7 have been trolling all footy fans for years so it should surprise nobody that they would trash something as solemn as The Last Post.

Ghost Dog
25-04-2016, 06:04 PM
Can you all show some respect to Essendon please? Frankly I find many posts here disrespectful to the legacy of Kevin Sheedy. His jacket twirling, finger-across-the-throat antics are the high water mark of respect in Australian sportsmanship and I suggest you follow his example.

F'scary
25-04-2016, 07:06 PM
Was the ad for an overseas owned company?

bornadog
25-04-2016, 07:37 PM
was the ad for an overseas owned company?

mkr............

ledge
25-04-2016, 07:43 PM
Oh so an add plugging their own shows .. How appropriate so self indulged.

F'scary
25-04-2016, 10:16 PM
mkr............

So 7 wasn't even pulling in any extra dough. They were trashing ANZAC Day for free!

ledge
25-04-2016, 10:43 PM
Perfect opportunity to plug an add while god knows how many people are tuned in trying to watch the respect of the fallen and they throw up an add to get people to watch MKR .. But will jump at the fact someone might yell out during the minutes silence and mention how disgraceful it is.

always right
25-04-2016, 11:23 PM
Personally I find people marching in the parade wearing footy jumpers or scarves more offensive than a one-off stuff up by channel 7. People need to wake up that the march is not about their footy team allegiances. It's bugged me for years.

Sedat
26-04-2016, 01:29 PM
Personally I find people marching in the parade wearing footy jumpers or scarves more offensive than a one-off stuff up by channel 7. People need to wake up that the march is not about their footy team allegiances. It's bugged me for years.
That's another whole other discussion and one that has plenty of merit. But the last post is something very haunting and solemn, and it should never be trivialised, especially by a grubby TV network trotting out another shitty MKR promo for a millionth time.

BulldogBelle
26-04-2016, 02:13 PM
I think this is another example of people 'searching' for ways to get offended! If you cared that much for the last post, you should have gone to a service or watched the ABC's coverage. I say this without cheapening the sacrifices/efforts of soldiers. Whether we observe or do not observe certain aspects of the day does not diminish the truth of those sacrifices!

hujsh
26-04-2016, 03:20 PM
I think this is another example of people 'searching' for ways to get offended! If you cared that much for the last post, you should have gone to a service or watched the ABC's coverage. I say this without cheapening the sacrifices/efforts of soldiers. Whether we observe or do not observe certain aspects of the day does not diminish the truth of those sacrifices!

While I kind of agree with you I suspect we'll be on our own. But I'm not particularly sentimental and take a different view of the ANZAC mythology to most people

Ghost Dog
26-04-2016, 03:27 PM
I agree that people just search for ways to get offended.
However on Anzac Day, which is why we have the holiday, if you asked someone ' what is the most important part of the day?' most are going to answer ' last post' or 'morning ceremony'. So it seems odd you would just switch to an ad for MKR during the defining moment of the day.
But commercialism rules! and MKR is essential to the fabric of our society you know.

hujsh
26-04-2016, 03:31 PM
I agree that people just search for ways to get offended.
However on Anzac Day, which is why we have the holiday, if you asked someone ' what is the most important part of the day?' most are going to answer ' last post' or 'morning ceremony'. So it seems odd you would just switch to an ad for MKR during the defining moment of the day.
But commercialism rules.

Capitalism>Patriotism

Ghost Dog
26-04-2016, 03:35 PM
Capitalism>Patriotism

If only our appetite for the Myer stock take sale could be channelled into our military ranks. We would have hordes of suburban mothers armed with bayonets ready to slay anyone in their path, unstoppable and foaming at the mouth.

1eyedog
26-04-2016, 03:36 PM
I agree that people just search for ways to get offended.
However on Anzac Day, which is why we have the holiday, if you asked someone ' what is the most important part of the day?' most are going to answer ' last post' or 'morning ceremony'. So it seems odd you would just switch to an ad for MKR during the defining moment of the day.
But commercialism rules! and MKR is essential to the fabric of our society you know.

I think a large majority of people would say all the hours I don't have to be at work. Let's not beat around the bush, 99% of Australians are asleep at dawn.

Ghost Dog
26-04-2016, 03:39 PM
I think a large majority of people would say all the hours I don't have to be at work. Let's not beat around the bush, 99% of Australians are asleep at dawn.

Point taken! I should have worded it thus. If you asked most Australians as to the most important part of Anzac day for people who care about it.....they would answer 'dawn service, blah blah'

soupman
26-04-2016, 03:43 PM
I think this is another example of people 'searching' for ways to get offended! If you cared that much for the last post, you should have gone to a service or watched the ABC's coverage. I say this without cheapening the sacrifices/efforts of soldiers. Whether we observe or do not observe certain aspects of the day does not diminish the truth of those sacrifices!

I agree with you in a way, if you are looking to pay your respects do it properly.

However, the footballs version should also be respected, and not least by the broadcaster who is all to happy to use the ANZAC name to promote the game and drive up ratings along with ad revenue. If channel 7 are going to preach about the respect and honour of the ANZAC spirit and show the prematch ceremony then they have to do it properly. Either do it to the best of their abilities or not at all.

Bulldog4life
26-04-2016, 04:37 PM
While I kind of agree with you I suspect we'll be on our own. But I'm not particularly sentimental and take a different view of the ANZAC mythology to most people

Could you elaborate on that hujsh.

chef
26-04-2016, 05:18 PM
I think a large majority of people would say all the hours I don't have to be at work. Let's not beat around the bush, 99% of Australians are asleep at dawn.

Some of us are at work:(

ledge
26-04-2016, 05:24 PM
Some of us go to the dawn service and see the footy and still want to see the last post in its entirety not interrupted.
It was a disgrace no matter what spin you put on it.

hujsh
26-04-2016, 05:30 PM
Could you elaborate on that hujsh.

The self mythologizing we do at ANZAC Day. It was the birth of the nation, we were fighting for freedom, everyone soldier was a hero etc.

It's a part of who we are, but we build up the favorable aspects and ignore what's inconvenient. It's a nicer origin story than invading and killing indigenous people, it overlooks the pointlessness of WW1 (a common theme of returning soldiers is disillusion over why they were even fighting) and while there were certainly brave soldiers there were plenty of rapists, murderers and tons of racists in the lot as well (though finding a war where one side did not commit war crimes would be pretty damn hard).

Pretty much every nation has a version or two of this though.

Also it feeds into our habit of supporting troops at war and commemorating the dead but ignoring the living veterans who need help and suffer with mental heath issues.

Anyway that's just how I feel about it. I think I've potentially derailed the thread.

F'scary
26-04-2016, 07:14 PM
The self mythologizing we do at ANZAC Day. It was the birth of the nation, we were fighting for freedom, everyone soldier was a hero etc.

It's a part of who we are, but we build up the favorable aspects and ignore what's inconvenient. It's a nicer origin story than invading and killing indigenous people, it overlooks the pointlessness of WW1 (a common theme of returning soldiers is disillusion over why they were even fighting) and while there were certainly brave soldiers there were plenty of rapists, murderers and tons of racists in the lot as well (though finding a war where one side did not commit war crimes would be pretty damn hard).

Pretty much every nation has a version or two of this though.

Also it feeds into our habit of supporting troops at war and commemorating the dead but ignoring the living veterans who need help and suffer with mental heath issues.

Anyway that's just how I feel about it. I think I've potentially derailed the thread.

When I was younger, I used to hold similar views...until I thought about how the blokes who went to the Kakoda Trail were just blokes like you and me who just walked out of their normal lives to defend our country.

Bulldog4life
26-04-2016, 07:27 PM
When I was younger, I used to hold similar views...until I thought about how the blokes who went to the Kakoda Trail were just blokes like you and me who just walked out of their normal lives to defend our country.

My late father was only 19 years old when he enlisted in the navy at the start of WW11. He was stationed in Darwin.The house he was taking cover under in Darwin was bombed. He survived. His mate next to him didn't.

LostDoggy
26-04-2016, 07:48 PM
An honest conversation about some of these conflicts and our involvement would be much more respectful to the people that died there than the over the top patriotism that passes for coverage in a lot of the media these days.

Ghost Dog
26-04-2016, 08:05 PM
The self mythologizing we do at ANZAC Day. It was the birth of the nation, we were fighting for freedom, everyone soldier was a hero etc.

It's a part of who we are, but we build up the favorable aspects and ignore what's inconvenient. It's a nicer origin story than invading and killing indigenous people, it overlooks the pointlessness of WW1 (a common theme of returning soldiers is disillusion over why they were even fighting) and while there were certainly brave soldiers there were plenty of rapists, murderers and tons of racists in the lot as well (though finding a war where one side did not commit war crimes would be pretty damn hard).

Pretty much every nation has a version or two of this though.

Also it feeds into our habit of supporting troops at war and commemorating the dead but ignoring the living veterans who need help and suffer with mental heath issues.

Anyway that's just how I feel about it. I think I've potentially derailed the thread.

I never heard a Vietnam veteran say we were fighting for freedom. My uncle was a Tank commander in Vietnam and he is quite realistic about the whole thing. I never heard anyone ever in the service claim every soldier was a hero. I think they use the term 'baptism of fire' rather than birth of a nation.

Nevertheless, was it Safeway that got caught out last year using Anzac to spruik something in a crude way?
In rural vic, where I am from, Anzac Day is not jingoistic or blown up. it's usually quiet and reflective.
The only ones I hate are the local members of parliment (Dan Teehan, member for Wanon - idiot ) who use it as a political football.

Ghost Dog
26-04-2016, 08:06 PM
The self mythologizing we do at ANZAC Day. It was the birth of the nation, we were fighting for freedom, everyone soldier was a hero etc.

It's a part of who we are, but we build up the favorable aspects and ignore what's inconvenient. It's a nicer origin story than invading and killing indigenous people, it overlooks the pointlessness of WW1 (a common theme of returning soldiers is disillusion over why they were even fighting) and while there were certainly brave soldiers there were plenty of rapists, murderers and tons of racists in the lot as well (though finding a war where one side did not commit war crimes would be pretty damn hard).

Pretty much every nation has a version or two of this though.

Also it feeds into our habit of supporting troops at war and commemorating the dead but ignoring the living veterans who need help and suffer with mental heath issues.

Anyway that's just how I feel about it. I think I've potentially derailed the thread.

I never heard a Vietnam veteran say we were fighting for freedom. My uncle was a Tank commander in Vietnam and he is quite realistic about the whole thing. I never heard anyone ever in the service claim every soldier was a hero. I think they use the term 'baptism of fire' rather than birth of a nation.

Nevertheless, was it Safeway that got caught out last year using Anzac to spruik something in a crude way? It's getting out of hand. Even the logo on the jumper is a bit much.

I knew an ex Commando who was a lovely old chap. He hated going to the RSL, and my uncle only just started going to the march in recent years.

In rural vic, where I am from, Anzac Day is not jingoistic or blown up. it's usually quiet and reflective.
The only ones I hate are the local members of politicians who use it as a political football. And yes, bloody Channel 7.

Yankee Hotel Foxtrot
26-04-2016, 08:10 PM
An honest conversation about some of these conflicts and our involvement would be much more respectful to the people that died there than the over the top patriotism that passes for coverage in a lot of the media these days.

Whole-heartedly agree I sometimes wonder whether the old diggers from wars long gone would cringe at the nationalistic jingoism and mythologising that has at times overtaken the original intent of remembering and paying tribute to those who served and those who never returned.
Many old diggers never spoke of the horrors and i tend to think that they would say that the better honour you could pay them for their service is to enjoy the day, enjoy and protect the freedoms and lifestyle we are fortunate to have. And to be hopeful that we should never have to endure such horrors of war. But since the mid 90s there seems to be a changing of the narrative for other purposes.

hujsh
26-04-2016, 08:27 PM
An honest conversation about some of these conflicts and our involvement would be much more respectful to the people that died there than the over the top patriotism that passes for coverage in a lot of the media these days.

Absolutely. And to be honest it's the lack of critical though as much as anything that I suppose unsettles me


When I was younger, I used to hold similar views...until I thought about how the blokes who went to the Kakoda Trail were just blokes like you and me who just walked out of their normal lives to defend our country.

And WW2 is pretty much the only war where you can be proud we participated and feel that some good was achieved. But even then there were probably blokes more concerned about the 'Yellow Peril' than anything else


I never heard a Vietnam veteran say we were fighting for freedom. My uncle was a Tank commander in Vietnam and he is quite realistic about the whole thing. I never heard anyone ever in the service claim every soldier was a hero. I think they use the term 'baptism of fire' rather than birth of a nation.

The only ones I hate are the local members of parliment (Dan Teehan, member for Wanon - idiot ) who use it as a political football

I don't get the impression this is driven by servicemen or the Army. Like you say politicians like to use it for their own gain and John Howard played a huge role in making ANZAC Day what it is today and shaping the public view of it. It's become a page in the history of the 'culture wars' now.

Sedat
26-04-2016, 10:21 PM
I think this is another example of people 'searching' for ways to get offended! If you cared that much for the last post, you should have gone to a service or watched the ABC's coverage. I say this without cheapening the sacrifices/efforts of soldiers. Whether we observe or do not observe certain aspects of the day does not diminish the truth of those sacrifices!
It's not about being offended or otherwise, it's about holding those useless scumbags at Ch 7 to account for their insipid failure to show even the most basic level of respect when The Last Post was played. There is simply no excuse, but I would not expect any better from those pricks.

I'm enjoying the discussion on Anzac Day in this thread. What was once a quiet and respectful day of reflection has recently been turned into something more overt and nationalistic - I'm not particularly comfortable with it but I still treat the day with due circumspection and reflection.

1eyedog
26-04-2016, 11:40 PM
When I was younger, I used to hold similar views...until I thought about how the blokes who went to the Kakoda Trail were just blokes like you and me who just walked out of their normal lives to defend our country.

Yeah man too right. There wasn't much between the Japanese and mainland Australia if Kokoda was taken. Undermanned, under resourced and outgunned they held on. Those blokes are bloody real legends.

BulldogBelle
27-04-2016, 08:47 AM
Yeah man too right. There wasn't much between the Japanese and mainland Australia if Kokoda was taken. Undermanned, under resourced and outgunned they held on. Those blokes are bloody real legends.

The Choco's, they were supposed to melt in the sun, while holding back the Japanese until the AIF arrived.
For untrained soldiers who were there to prepare for the AIF they did their country proud.

Twodogs
27-04-2016, 09:14 AM
Yeah man too right. There wasn't much between the Japanese and mainland Australia if Kokoda was taken. Undermanned, under resourced and outgunned they held on. Those blokes are bloody real legends.

Sometimes you can surprise yourself but I don't think I could have done what those blokes did.

bornadog
27-04-2016, 10:03 AM
Titus O'Reily ‏@TitusOReily (https://twitter.com/TitusOReily) 11 hours ago (https://twitter.com/TitusOReily/status/724930155991470087)
I want to congratulate Channel Seven for not interrupting My Kitchen Rules with the Last Post.

hujsh
27-04-2016, 10:52 AM
Titus O'Reily ‏@TitusOReily (https://twitter.com/TitusOReily) 11 hours ago (https://twitter.com/TitusOReily/status/724930155991470087)
I want to congratulate Channel Seven for not interrupting My Kitchen Rules with the Last Post.

Well THAT would be a travesty

1eyedog
27-04-2016, 11:00 AM
Sometimes you can surprise yourself but I don't think I could have done what those blokes did.

I'd have a better chance of doing that than holding 3 feet of steel standing on a mound while heavy horse ran over me at Hastings! Blow that.

Twodogs
27-04-2016, 12:59 PM
I'd have a better chance of doing that than holding 3 feet of steel standing on a mound while heavy horse ran over me at Hastings! Blow that.

Now I know I couldn't have done that. I'd have freaked out at the first hoofbeat.

Daughter of the West
29-04-2016, 02:13 PM
I was listening to the Stupidly Small podcast the other day, and they touched on these themes. One of the presenters grandfather and grandmother both served New Zealand in WW1, and it changed the course of their lives and almost broke them as people as a result of the trauma. They had zero interested in being "celebrated" as a part of ANZAC Day, saw the war as a great big, bloody mess (literally) and never wished to speak of it again. They also thought the "birth of a nation" narrative was rubbish too. Perhaps the only thing they wanted was for people to learn and be reminded not to do it again - stupid waste of lives in both deaths and mental illness, particularly cruising into other countries conflict. That lesson doesn't appear to have been heeded...

I think this was the podcast http://www.stupidlybig.com/episodes/2016/4/25/349-awction-results

F'scary
30-04-2016, 12:22 AM
I was listening to the Stupidly Small podcast the other day, and they touched on these themes. One of the presenters grandfather and grandmother both served New Zealand in WW1, and it changed the course of their lives and almost broke them as people as a result of the trauma. They had zero interested in being "celebrated" as a part of ANZAC Day, saw the war as a great big, bloody mess (literally) and never wished to speak of it again. They also thought the "birth of a nation" narrative was rubbish too. Perhaps the only thing they wanted was for people to learn and be reminded not to do it again - stupid waste of lives in both deaths and mental illness, particularly cruising into other countries conflict. That lesson doesn't appear to have been heeded...

I think this was the podcast http://www.stupidlybig.com/episodes/2016/4/25/349-awction-results

And that was the old wars. Today it is 100 kilo tonnes of TNT in a single nuclear warhead. We are stuffed if we don't have any friends with nuclear warheads.