Alan Jones signs on for another two years at 2GB

Alan Jones has re-signed with Macquarie Media after protracted  contract negotiations that have dragged on for months.

On Tuesday, Macquarie Media announced the Sydney shock jock had been given a two-year contract. Formal contract negotiations kicked-off in late February.

Macquarie Media chairman Russell Tate said in a statement he was pleased that Jones would be staying with the station for at least another two years.

"Over his already extraordinary radio career, Alan has dominated Sydney radio with 218 ratings survey wins, including 15 consecutive years at number one on 2GB," he said. "With Alan's current ratings share of the Sydney radio audience amongst the highest it has ever been, his dominance shows no sign of slowing down. All of us at Macquarie are delighted that we will continue along with the ride with one of Australian media's most outstanding performers."

Advertisement

Macquarie Media is majority owned by Nine, the publisher of this website.

Jones' future at 2GB has been the subject of intense speculation in recent months given the broadcaster's age as well as a string of controversies. In September 2018, Jones was found to have defamed prominent Queensland family, The Wagners, which triggered $3.7 million in damages.

Loading

Replay

Many, including Media Watch host Paul Barry, have suggested the defamation case played a part in the long negotiation period.

Click Here:

Sources close to Macquarie Media have also cited possible succession planning as another issue that had to be worked through. Jones turned 78 last month and has spent long periods away from the microphone in recent years due to complications with his health.

Late last year, Jones was also forced to apologise to listeners after dropping the N-word live on air. Then, in October, the shock's on-air treatment of Opera House chief executive Louise Herron triggered protests and another on-air apology.

Loading

Jones first appeared on Sydney airwaves in a full-time capacity in 1985 as a replacement for longtime 2UE morning host John Laws. He famously left 2UE in 2002, causing the station's ratings to plummet. His new employer, 2GB, quickly cemented itself as Sydney’s most popular station on the AM band.

According to Gerald Stone’s 2002 biography of John Singleton, Singo, Jones was lured to 2GB with a “staggering offer that included a one-fifth share of ownership in 2GB … worth perhaps $12 million, plus a salary of $4 million a year over seven years”.

Jones currently holds a 1.27 per cent stake in Macquarie Media through his private company Hadiac Pty Limited. At today’s valuation, those shares are worth around $4 million. The radio broadcaster’s former contract was due to expire on June 30.

The shock jock has been no stranger to controversy over the years. In 2012, he told a Sydney Young Liberal fundraiser that former prime minister Julia Gillard’s father “died of shame”. In the wake of the comments, 2GB took the unprecedented step of temporarily suspending advertising on Jones's breakfast show after more than 70 sponsors turned their back on the program.

Apart from his long and distinguished radio career, Jones has been a teacher, political candidate, speech writer and a coach of the Australian national rugby team [for which he was awarded an Order of Australia in 1988].

with Karl Quinn

'Witch-hunt': New Zealand rattled by budget 'hacking' claims

Wellington: New Zealand's political opposition has denied hacking the Treasury department to obtain highly secure state budget documents and says the Ardern government is conducting a "witch-hunt".

The country's centre-right National Party on Tuesday released what it said were details from the Labour-led administration's much-anticipated national budget, but refused to say how it got the information.

Treasury Secretary Gabriel Makhlouf later announced the department believed its systems had been "deliberately and systematically hacked" and confirmed there had been 2000 attempts to access budget documents over two days.

The matter had been referred to police, he said.

Advertisement

Opposition leader Simon Bridges said on Wednesday the government had been left embarrassed and was looking for scapegoats.

"There has been no hacking under any definition of that word. There has been entirely appropriate behaviour from the National Party the whole [way] through. There has been nothing illegal and even approaching that," Bridges said.

"They are not in control of what they are doing so they are lashing out and they are having a witch-hunt."

He accused both the Treasury department and the finance minister, Grant Robertson, of misleading the public, but repeatedly refused to say how National had obtain the information it had released.

Loading

Earlier, Robertson said he had contacted the opposition to request it not release any further information.

The budget details released prematurely by the opposition on Tuesday included figures of planned funding across a series of government departments.

It came just two days ahead of what the Ardern government has labelled its "wellbeing budget", which it says will shake up government budgets by measuring elements of public welfare, such as mental health and child poverty, alongside the usual economic indicators.

AAP

Click Here:

Australia's greenhouse gas emissions up for four years in a row

Australia's greenhouse gas emissions in 2018 rose for a fourth year in a row, an increase at odds with the country's Paris climate pledge, according to a government submission to the United Nations.

The National Inventory Report to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change showed emissions last year were 537 million tonnes of carbon dioxide-equivalent (which include all greenhouse gases), based on preliminary figures.

Click Here:

That tally, which includes changes to land-use and forestry, was up 0.4 per cent from 2017's 534.7 million tonnes of carbon dioxide-equivalent.

The Morrison government is due to release its full figures for 2018 emissions by the end of this month. The UN report provides an indication of which way the trajectory will be pointed.

Advertisement

The responsibility for emissions will formally fall to Angus Taylor, who has had emissions added to his energy portfolio following the Coalition's election win earlier this month. Comment on the UN report has been sought.

The government's emissions figures would have shown a faster increase if not for land use, land-use change and forestry – known by the acronym LULUCF – serving as a carbon sink for the past four years.

The report noted that Australia's forest area had increased by an estimated 772,000 hectares in 2017, and by 4.6 million hectares since 2010.

Those estimates, though, have been disputed by some environmental groups that point to the Queensland government showing a rapid rise in land-clearing in recent years, while NSW has also loosened its native vegetation laws in the past two years.

Australia pledged at the Paris climate summit in 2015 that it would lower emissions by 26 to 28 per cent from 2005 levels by 2030.

About half that reduction, though, were to come from the use of so-called Kyoto carry-over credits generated during the current climate accord known as the Kyoto Protocol. Labor promised at the elections it would achieve a 45 per cent reduction on 2005 levels without resorting to the Kyoto credits.

In 2005, Australia's greenhouse gas emissions reached 610.6 million tonnes of carbon dioxide-equivalent.

More to come

Getswift issued ASX 'please explain' amid Kuwait fast food deal

Controversial tech group GetSwift has landed in hot water with the stock exchange after an undisclosed 'strategic partnership' in Kuwait appears to have sent its shares soaring by 20 per cent on Tuesday.

The last mile logistics operator faces a shareholder class action and is being sued by ASIC after allegedly misleading the market by not revealing in 2017 that half the customer contracts it had boasted did not generate a cent of revenue. Now, it appears to be in trouble with another corporate regulator for the opposite reason: failing to disclose a 'strategic partnership' in the Middle East nation.

The Australian Securities Exchange (ASX) suspended GetSwift from trading on Tuesday after its shares rocketed as much as 20 per cent on high turnover.

"ASX observed some unusual trading and share price movement in GetSwift Limited (GSW) securities following this morning’s open," said a spokeswoman for the sharemarket regulator. "Trading was suspended at 12.07pm, pending a response by the company to ASX’s price query."

Advertisement

Shares of GetSwift, which was founded by former AFL player Joel Macdonald, were up 19 per cent to 19¢ when trading was suspended. GetSwift has yet to respond to the ASX query.

Loading

Earlier Tuesday morning, a press release distributed on trading terminal Bloomberg announced that GetSwift had firmed up a "strategic partnership" in Kuwait with The Kout Food Group, which operates the local franchises for Pizza Hut, Taco Bell, and Burger King.

Kout, which also has operations in the UK, announced that it will be deploying the GetSwift platform across the delivery segment of these, and other brands it operates.

In the press release, Kout's deputy chief executive Amin Mohamed, described the GetSwift solution as "best in class" and said "we have recommended and suggested GSW solution to partners around the globe and this could be their preferred solution."

GetSwift chief executive Bane Hunter acknowledged the importance of this contract win.

“Although this has been a lengthier journey than expected, we are honoured and humbled by the trust and faith our partners at Kout Food Group have given us during a period of time that was challenging for GSW due to external pressures," he said in the press release.

"We look forward to the next chapter in our global story.”

The press release was not disclosed on the ASX, and did not contain any financial details or the length of contract. GetSwift did not respond to requests for clarification from The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age.

GetSwift is trying to convince the market it has a viable business model. Prior to Tuesday's share spike the company had a market value of just $30 million, despite holding $74 million cash and no debt.

Last month the company reported that its revenue for the March quarter exceeded $1 million, up more than 200 per cent compared to the prior March quarter.

Loading

The shareholder class action and ASIC legal action relate to allegedly misleading statements the company made to the market in 2017 about customer contracts with the Fruit Box, Commonwealth Bank and Amazon.

The stock crashed from $2.92 to a low of 98¢ after the company revealed that fewer than half the contracts it had been publicising were actually generating any revenue.

GetSwift had raised $75 million from investors at $4 a share just months prior to the shock announcement.

GetSwift has said it will vigorously defend itself, and its executives, against the actions. ASIC has also taken action against Mr Macdonald and Mr Hunter.

Click Here:

'We lack the rules': Why more climbers are dying on Everest

Namchne, Nepal: Scaling Mount Everest was a dream few realised before Nepal opened its side of the mountain to commercial climbing a half-century ago. This year the government issued a record number of permits, leading to traffic jams on the world's highest peak that likely contributed to the greatest death toll in four years.

As the allure of Everest grows, so have the crowds, with inexperienced climbers faltering on the narrow passageway to the peak and causing deadly delays, veteran climbers said.

After 11 people died this year, Nepal tourism officials have no intention of restricting the number of permits issued, instead encouraging even more tourists and climbers to come "for both pleasure and fame," said Mohan Krishna Sapkota, secretary at the Ministry of Tourism and Civil Aviation.

Nepal, one of the world's poorest countries, relies on the climbing industry to bring in $US300 million ($433 million) each year. It doesn't cap the number of permits it issues or control the pace or timing of the expeditions, leaving that to tour operators and guides who take advantage of brief clear weather conditions whenever they come, leading to pileups near the peak.

Advertisement

On May 22, a climber snapped a photo from a line with dozens of hikers in colorful winter gear that snaked into the sky.

Loading

Climbers were crammed crampon-to-crampon along a sharp-edged ridge above South Col, with a 2000-metre drop on either side, all clipped onto a single line of rope, trudging toward the top of the world and risking death as each minute ticked by.

"There were more people on Everest than there should be," said Kul Bahadur Gurung, general secretary of the Nepal Mountaineering Association, an umbrella group of all expedition operators in Nepal.

"We lack the rules and regulations that say how many people can actually go up and when."

The death toll this season is the highest since 2015. Most of those who died are believed to have suffered from altitude sickness, which is caused by low amounts of oxygen at high elevation and can cause headaches, vomiting, shortness of breath and mental confusion.

Once only accessible to well-heeled elite mountaineers, Nepal's booming climbing market has driven down the cost of an expedition, opening Everest up to hobbyists and adventure-seekers. Nepal requires climbers to have a doctors' note deeming them physically fit, but not to prove their stamina at such extreme heights.

Because of the altitude, climbers have just hours to reach the top before they are at risk of a pulmonary edema, when the lungs fill with liquid. From Camp Four at 8,000 meters (26,240 feet) to the 8,850-meter (29,035-foot) peak, the final push on Everest is known as the "death zone."

The conditions are so intense at such times that when a person dies, no one can afford to expend energy on carrying the body down from the mountain.

"Every minute counts there," said Eric Murphy, a mountain guide from Bellingham, Washington, who climbed Everest for a third time on May 23. He said what should have taken 12 hours took 17 hours because of struggling climbers who were clearly exhausted but had no one to guide or help them.

Loading

Just a handful of inexperienced climbers, he said, is "enough to have a profound effect."

The deaths this year on Nepal's side of the mountain included Don Cash, a sales executive from Utah, and Christopher Kulish, an attorney from Colorado, who both died on their way down from the peak.

Kulish, 62, had just reached the top with a small group after crowds of climbers congested the peak last week, according to his brother, Mark Kulish.

He described his brother as an attorney who was an "inveterate climber of peaks in Colorado, the West and the world over."

Loading

Just before he died, Kulish made it into the so-called "Seven Summit Club" of mountaineers who have reached the highest peaks on every continent, his brother said.

Cash, 55, collapsed at the summit and was given CPR and massages by his two Sherpa guides. He got up only to fall again in the same way at Hillary Step, the first cliff face down from the summit. His body was left near there.

Click Here:

Cash had said on his LinkedIn page that he left his job as a sales executive to try to join the seven summits club.

Nepal doesn't have any regulations to determine how many permits should be issued, so anyone with a doctor's note can obtain one for an $US11,000 fee, Sapkota said.

This year, permits were issued to 381 people in 44 teams, the highest number ever, according to the government. They were accompanied by an equal number of guides from Nepal's ethnic Sherpa community. Some climbers were originally issued permits in 2014 that were revoked mid-season when 16 Sherpa guides died in an avalanche and other Sherpas, whose support as guides and porters is essential, effectively went on strike.

Another factor was China's limit on the number of permits it issued this year for routes in its territory on the north side of Everest for a clean-up. Both the north and south sides of the mountain are littered with empty oxygen canisters, food packaging and other debris.

Instead of the overcrowding, Sapkota blamed the weather, equipment and inadequate supplemental oxygen for this year's deaths.

"There has been concern about the number of climbers on Mount Everest but it is not because of the traffic jam that there were casualties," Sapkota said in Namche, the town that serves as the staging area for Everest trips.

Still, he said, "In the next season we will work to have double rope in the area below the summit so there is better management of the flow of climbers."

Mirza Ali, a Pakistani mountaineer and tour company owner who reached Everest's peak for the first time this month, on his fourth attempt, said such an approach was flawed.

"Everybody wants to stand on top of the world," but tourists unprepared for the extremes of Everest endanger the entire industry, he said.

"There is not a sufficient check on issuing the permits," Ali said. "The more people come, the more permits, more business. But on the other side it is a lot of risk because it is costing lives."

Indian climber Ameesha Chauhan, soaking her frostbitten toes in medicine at a hospital in Kathmandu, described the agony of turning away from the peak when she realised her supplemental oxygen supply was low.

Two of her team members died on the May 16 ascent.

She returned and scaled the peak a week later.

"If you look at it, the inexperienced climbers do not even know how to tie on the oxygen masks around their face," she said. "Many climbers are too focused on reaching the summit."

AP

Trump's lies about treason and coups must be called out

It is tempting for normal people to ignore our President when he starts ranting about treason and corruption at the FBI. I understand the temptation. I'm the object of many of his rants, and even I try to ignore him.

But we shouldn't, because millions of good people believe what a president of the United States says. In normal times, that's healthy. But not now, when the President is a liar who doesn't care what damage he does to vital institutions. We must call out his lies that the FBI was corrupt and committed treason, that we spied on the Trump campaign, and tried to defeat Donald Trump. We must constantly return to the stubborn facts.

Russia engaged in a massive effort to interfere in the 2016 presidential election. Near as I can tell, there is only one US leader who still denies that fact. The FBI saw the attack starting in mid-June 2016, with the first dumping of stolen emails. In late July, when we were hard at work trying to understand the scope of the effort, we learnt that one of Trump's foreign policy advisers knew about the Russian effort seven weeks before we did.

In April 2016, that adviser talked to a Russian agent in London, learnt that the Russians had obtained "dirt" on Hillary Clinton in the form of thousands of emails, and that the Russians could assist the Trump campaign through the anonymous release of information damaging to Clinton. Of course, nobody from the Trump campaign told us this (nor about later Russian approaches); we had to learn it, months after the fact, from an allied ambassador.

Advertisement

But when we finally learnt of it in late July, what should the FBI have done? Let it go? Go tell the Trump campaign? Tell the press? No. Investigate, to see what the facts were. We didn't know what was true. Maybe there was nothing to it, or maybe Americans were actively conspiring with the Russians. To find out, the FBI would live up to its name and investigate.

As director, I was determined that the work would be done carefully, professionally and discretely. We were just starting. If there was nothing to it, we didn't want to smear Americans. If there was something to it, we didn't want to let corrupt Americans know we were on to them. So, we kept it secret. That's how the FBI approaches all counterintelligence cases.

And there's the first problem with Trump's whole "treason" narrative. If we were "deep state" Clinton loyalists bent on stopping him, why would we keep it secret? Why wouldn't the much-maligned FBI supervisor Peter Strzok – the alleged kingpin of the "treasonous" plot to stop Trump – tell anyone? He was one of the very few people who knew what we were investigating.

We investigated. We didn't gather information about the campaign's strategy. We didn't "spy" on anyone's campaign. We investigated to see whether it was true that Americans associated with the campaign had taken the Russians up on any offer of help. By late October, the investigators thought they had probable cause to get a federal court order to conduct electronic surveillance of a former Trump campaign adviser named Carter Page.

Loading

Page was no longer with the campaign, but there was reason to believe he was acting as an agent of the Russian government. We asked a federal judge for permission to surveil him and then we did it, all without revealing our work, despite the fact that it was late October and a leak would have been very harmful to candidate Trump. Worst deep-state conspiracy ever.

But wait, the conspiracy idea gets dumber. On October 28, after agonising deliberation over two terrible options, I concluded I had no choice but to inform Congress that we had reopened the Clinton email investigation. I judged that hiding that fact – after having told Congress repeatedly and under oath that the case was finished – would be worse than telling Congress the truth. It was a decision William Barr praised and Hillary Clinton blamed for her loss 11 days later. Strzok, alleged architect of the treasonous plot to stop Trump, drafted the letter I sent Congress.

Click Here:

And there's still more to the dumbness of the conspiracy allegation. At the centre of the alleged FBI "corruption" we hear so much about was the conclusion that deputy director Andrew McCabe lied to internal investigators about a disclosure to the press in late October 2016. McCabe was fired over it. And what was that disclosure? Some stop-Trump election-eve screed? No. McCabe authorised a disclosure that revealed the FBI was actively investigating the Clinton Foundation, a disclosure that was harmful to Clinton.

There is a reason the non-fringe media doesn't spend much time on this "treason" and "corruption" business. The conspiracy theory makes no sense. The FBI wasn't out to get Donald Trump. It also wasn't out to get Hillary Clinton. It was out to do its best to investigate serious matters while walking through a vicious political minefield.

But go ahead, investigate the investigators, if you must. When those investigations are over, they will find the work was done appropriately and focused only on discerning the truth of very serious allegations. There was no corruption. There was no treason. There was no attempted coup. Those are lies, and dumb lies at that. There were just good people trying to figure out what was true, under unprecedented circumstances.

The Washington Post

James Comey is a former director of the FBI and a former US deputy attorney general.

'Goodbyes are not forever': Demons champion pays tribute to wife Anna Green

The AFL community is reeling following the death of Anna Green, the wife of Demons champion Brad Green.

Ms Green, a mum and lifestyle blogger, died on Monday, leaving behind two young sons, Oliver and Wilba.

Tributes have started pouring in for the former flight attendant, who described herself on Instagram as a “lover of sunshine, palm trees, yoga, beaches, travel, summer, sunsets, cocktails [and] style”.

Her husband made a touching message to his wife on social media.

Advertisement

“Goodbyes are not forever, are not the end. It simply means, I’ll miss you until we meet again. Rest easy my darling #xxx3boys.”

The Green family also released a statement on Tuesday.

"It is with the heaviest of hearts that we confirm the passing of beloved mother, wife, daughter, sister and friend, Anna Green," it reads.

"Anna suffered a cardiac arrest last week and passed away peacefully at lunch time yesterday surrounded by her immediate family.

"The family would like to thank the committed medical team at the Intensive Care Unit at Melbourne's Alfred Hospital and would now ask for privacy as they come to terms with their loss."

Fashion label J’Aton Couture founders Jacob Luppino and Anthony Pittorino remembered “Divine Anna” as an incredible woman who will always remain “with us”.

“Til well all reunite with our beautiful sister Audrey [Anna] in our hearts forever J&Axx,” the pair wrote on Instagram.

Fan page DeeBrief posted on Facebook it was “devastated” by the news of Ms Green’s death and urged her husband, former Dees captain, to “stay strong”.

“Anna leaves behind two sons, a husband and distraught family and friends. Our sincerest condolences are with Brad, his children and everyone affected by this horrible news.”

Ms Green has in recent years worked in the fashion industry, including launching online women’s boutique Wilo Green in 2012, and starting an Instagram blog.

Her social media is filled with sun-kissed photos of her, her sons and lifestyle images.

Click Here:

Let's banish 'that low-level feeling our bodies are not good enough'

It can be hard to like your body. Even in the years when I've dieted and felt "thin", I've hated trying on swimwear in a tiny changing room, every flaw spotlit in a full-length mirror.

It seems being unhappy in our bodies is the norm. The theme of this year's UK Mental Health Week is body image; a foundation survey of UK adults found that one in five felt shame, 34 per cent felt down or low, and 19 per cent felt disgusted because of their body image in the last year.

I get the impression that, like me, most women have a constant low-level feeling of our bodies not being good enough. Friends of mine are always happy to talk about their hang-ups. One, a great runner, calls her thighs "huge". Another apologises that she's "got no tits". We have ugly names for the parts we point out to each other: cankles, spare tyre, bingo wings.

My body shame started in puberty. I remember being on a beach in Egypt aged 14, looking down and for the first time, seeing my body through the eyes of a critic rather than as the person living in it. I saw that my stomach stuck out, my breasts were too big.

Click Here: Advertisement

In academia, this lack of body-mind connection, seeing the body not as yours but from the outside, is one of the defining features of negative body image. "It is viewing our bodies as objects, as a collection of parts to be critiqued and scrutinised and monitored," says Nadia Craddock, of the Centre for Appearance Research, UWE Bristol, whose PhD is on what industry can do to foster positive body image. This leads to us seeing our bodies as a project to fix, to fit with society's strict and slim beauty norms.

So, until the past few years, going on a diet, for me, was a normal part of this. I did my first diet aged 13; boiled eggs, grapefruit and cardboard crispbread. Aged 22, March to July, all I consumed per day was one slice of ham, two pieces of toast and 10 Marlboro Lights. I spent three, joy-free years of my 30s eating zero carbs.

Loading

But in the past few years, the rise of the Body Positivity movement, especially on Instagram, has made us rethink. I smile at @bodyposipanda dancing in her underwear. I've cheered on Bryony Gordon running in her underwear. I love Stephanie Yeboah’s fashion shots. I have begun to see the beauty in women of every shape and size.

Body Positivity hasn't given me all the answers, though. While it started as a political movement for bodies that didn't fit the ideal, it has been co-opted as a marketing tool to sell products to women who aren't a size 10, so the message has increasingly become commercial. That explains the size six #fitspo Instagram influencers hashtagging their posts as #BP. And spending time and energy thinking about your body's appearance still puts the focus on what your body looks like.

The anti-diet dietitian Laura Thomas, author of Just Eat It, told me about a new way of looking at the body that might suit me, Body Neutrality. "It's what's called rational self-acceptance in body image literature," she says. "It's knowing that I don't have a perfect body or it doesn't align with societal ideals, but it's my body and it allows me to move through the world. It functions for me. It's being accepting of the fact that this is your body, your home."

On a practical level, the idea is simply to have fewer thoughts about your body's appearance – both criticisms and positive ones, to not let the way you look define how you feel.

This is the thinking behind Jameela Jamil's brilliant I Weigh campaign on Instagram too – that appearance is a tiny drop in the wonderful mix of your qualities, accomplishments and reasons to feel worthy.

If body neutrality sounds like a comfortable place to be, how do we get there? What I've found helps is focusing on what my body can do, on the fact I am able and healthy, on yoga and swimming and walking. "It doesn't have to be about being able to achieve impressive sporting accomplishments, like running a marathon," says Craddock. It can include things as everyday as housework, as creative as craft, as emotional as hugging.

Loading

Anuschka Rees, another body neutrality advocate and author of new book Beyond Beautiful, stopped wearing any tight or uncomfortable clothes, bras that dig in, high heels. "Every time you wear uncomfortable clothes, you're telling yourself your wellbeing is less important than what you look like to others," she says.

This year, I have promised myself, no more diets.

I am still not looking forward to trying on swimwear, but then we are all just our own work in progress, right?

The Telegraph, London

Despite Trump's 'exoneration', podcast Mueller She Wrote is on a rise

It has been two months since US Attorney General Barr released his summary of Robert Mueller’s investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 US election, and just over a month since the redacted report was made public. President Trump, of course, claims the report “fully exonerated” him, and replies with the sound bites “no collusion, no obstruction” whenever the subject comes up.

The initial coverage of The Mueller Report seemed to spell an end to the cottage industry of Trump related podcasts that sprung up looking into the President’s Russian connections and ongoing investigations. The most vulnerable seemed the show named after the man himself, Mueller, She Wrote.

Hosted by three San Diego based comedians, Jordan Coburn, A.G. and Jaleesa Johnson, Mueller, She Wrote has followed the investigation in minute detail, with a weekly breakdown of investigations, and a playable fantasy Indictment League. Host AG says the show copped a wave of abuse following Barr’s summary letter.

“We got a lot of responses, tweets and messages [laughing and saying] mud on your face? Or don't you feel stupid for having this podcast for a year and a half that's dedicated to this farce witch hunt hoax?”

Advertisement

But since then, the podcast has only grown in popularity and authority. The show is picking up subscribers to the free show, as well as paid subscribers to a new spin-off daily podcast. Recent guests have included former FBI director Andrew McCabe and Michael McFall, former ambassador to Russia under President Obama.

“I hate to use the word vindication because it indicates like a victory, and this country is in a very, very precarious and terrible position. And I hate to be seeming victorious when we're in such perilous times. But I feel like this administration and Trump supporters and press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders have been gaslighting us for a really long time. And now we have written proof in 450 pages that we weren't crazy. And so it's kind of like we've put the gas light out. And we’re now in a position where America is catching up …”

Despite comedians at the helm, the podcast goes into incredible detail on the investigation and its many characters. Responding to the news that just three per cent of Americans have read The Mueller Report, the podcast has just released the first episode of a chapter-by-chapter breakdown of the report.

“In 40 years when they do a documentary on the Mueller investigation, I wanted to be a part of that, because I just consider this so historical and so important. But how can I possibly do that? I'm not a journalist, I can't just go on MSNBC and get a show. I'm a comedian but I’m not known for political humour, so I can just go on stage and go around and be like Bill Maher.”

“But podcasting, that's accessible to anyone. Anyone who wants to start a podcast can start a podcast. So that's what we did. We had zero marketing budget, we just started with 50 bucks in my kitchen and went from there.”

Click Here:

McKay haunted by ghosts of Labor past

There’s nothing quite like state politics to show how skin deep civility can really be.

And with NSW Labor leadership contenders Jodi McKay and Chris Minns assuring supporters they intended to have a clean contest, it’s fallen to others to take up the incessant sledging.

As best as CBD can tell, there is no clear frontrunner as yet.

With Minns having alienated key unions with his inaugural speech — saying they had too much influence in party affairs and prompting the meat workers to suggest they would be sharpening their knives — we thought McKay would be a sure thing to secure their backing.

Advertisement

But an oddly worded missive from McKay seems to have put more than a few noses out of joint.

In the Friday email, McKay asked party members for their support because she was not a "career politician", never being in Young Labor or working as a staffer or union official.

(She may, according to O’Farrell-era energy minister Chris Hartcher, have even canvassed the possibility of running as a Liberal candidate in the seat of Port Stephens.)

But in an online ventilation worthy even of “devastatingly experienced” barrister Bridie Nolan, former Iemma government minister Cherie Burton took particular umbrage with McKay’s commentary about her past Labor involvement (or lack thereof).

“Like all of the rank and file I felt my contribution to the Labor movement was an important one, one I could be proud of,” Burton, a one-time Bob Carr staffer, wrote in Sunday night Facebook post.

“It is something I am supposed to now be ashamed of … I can no longer stand by and watch someone who has no history with the party attack and degrade the people who are a large part of the heartbeat of the Labor movement.”

And who should rush to agree but her former boss: Iemma himself.

“Ironic isn’t it … a vote in which branch members get to vote and she makes a pitch to them on the basis that she has no branch culture or history," he responded.

As one-time Labor powerbroker John Della Bosca put it: “Isn’t it a bit absurd that the (Labor HQ-backed) candidate is running an anti-party campaign presumably on advice from Sussex St.”

On the other hand, as one McKay supporter told us: “For a campaign pitching new leadership, there sure is a lot of bloody old faces lining up behind him”.

OPEN GOVERNMENT

Having been hit with a temporary exodus of staff before the federal election, Liberal faction man and PremierState lobbyist Michael Photios has been quick to find replacements.

(The outfit, most recently working for consumer credit outfit Zip Co and AMP Capital, lost former Labor advisor Sabina Husic and a number of other staff earlier this year.)

Now, Photios has recruited Arts Minister Don Harwin’s deputy chief of staff Mark Jones — who was also his senior resources advisor when he was energy minister — to his influential lobby shop.

We hear Jones, who having worked for one of the Berejiklian government’s most senior ministers is exceedingly well-connected, decided to jump ship early last week.

But awkwardly, he’s yet to walk from the 52 Martin Place offices where he remains.

He wasn’t due to leave until later this week, despite chiefs-of-staff being informed on Monday, but that was fast-tracked to last night after our calls.

Click Here:

The move has apparently left Harwin and his chief-of-staff Andrew Kirk fuming.

We presume Photios will take longer to replace Husic, given recent state and federal losses haven’t exactly created a pressing need for a new Labor-aligned spinner.

LOCAL MATTERS

It was with a wry smile we recalled former Labor MP Matt Brown was only last year trying to play kingmaker in his old seat of Kiama, boasting to colleagues that he was “playing the chess pieces” in his attempt to install a mate to run against Families Minister Gareth Ward.

Brown’s rise in Macquarie Street came to an abrupt halt three days after his elevation to police minister in 2008 when he was allegedly caught simulating a sex act on then Labor MP Noreen Hay.

Things haven’t gone well for Brown, who now sits on Kiama Council, since then.

He was arrested at the Townsville casino in November and pleaded guilty to possession of a glass pipe and a packet of ice, which he claimed to have found “on the floor”.

Now we can report Kiama Council has, unsurprisingly, found his conduct “inappropriate” and barred him from attending any further council conferences (the reason he was in Townsville).

But the Office of Local Government — now in the realm of Ward’s close friend Local Government Minister Shelley Hancock — is reviewing the evidence to determine whether he should face further penalties, including losing his stipend or even being suspended.

TAKING A BAUER?

Bauer Australia boss Paul Dykzeul has held the top job at the magazine house since 2017. With the struggling Women’s Weekly publisher due to make a major announcement today, could speculation Dykzeul will leave be right? Bauer was not forthcoming last night.