One of .. those days.
Swamp Wallaby relaxing

seen from Germany

seen from Germany

seen from Italy
seen from United States
seen from China

seen from Italy

seen from Italy
seen from China
seen from Hong Kong SAR China
seen from China
seen from China
seen from Germany
seen from United States

seen from Serbia
seen from Hong Kong SAR China
seen from Yemen
seen from United States

seen from Greece
seen from Japan
seen from Germany
One of .. those days.
Swamp Wallaby relaxing
NSW GOTHIC
(This is about a very specific area but I'm not gonna mention it. not doxxing myself. If you do figure out the area, please don't say it!)
The towns nearby are spread out, but somehow together. Everyone’s face is familiar, even if you have no name for them. If someone is wrong, you know. Something will be wrong about their face.
The Port is brown after the rains. It’s just the dirt and tea tree. You don’t swim when the water is brown. It’s too dirty, with soil and other things.
It’s midsummer, and the outward-facing beaches are littered with black feathers. The muttonbirds begin to wash up. Blood trickles from unseen wounds. ‘It’s just the migration.’ say the national park officers. ‘They starve, and fall, and die, and something takes a bite.’ But there ain’t no bite marks.
The seagulls are wary. Their heads jerk back and forth, watching. They aren’t distracted by food. Something’s wrong.
The ants are making trails. The storms are coming.
The wetland is silent, something is happening. Where are the cicadas?
You drive out to the RAAF base, to the airport. You watch the planes. You watch the plane-watchers. Their heads follow the jets, all in sync.
The jets feel like they tear the ground apart.
You go to the Aviation museum, and you are greeted well. They explain the area. They tell you not to take photos of staff. They tell you not to take photos of the RAAF base. They reiterate their points. They leave you to wander. You will find one if you need to question them.
The hangars are quiet, except for the steps of unseen staff. Sometimes you catch a glimpse of them. They stare at you, waiting to be called upon, eyes like a hawk’s.
It’s raining. The clouds are a heavy indigo on the horizon. A storm is coming.
The boats are on the water. The sky is grey. The ants are making trails.
You go home, lock your doors, your windows. You have a view of the port. The boats disappear in a sea mist. The other side of the port disappears into the rain. Was there ever an other side? You aren’t sure.
The rain drenches the sand-soil. It feeds the marsh. The marsh is silent. The mangroves are almost submerged. It still won’t flood.
The next day there is sun. It’s strong. It’s watching you.
Tourist season comes round. Strange faces flood the bays. You watch in annoyance.
Nobody speaks of the missing pets. Nobody talks of the missing people. They won’t be seen. They never existed.
Hands-in-front Straitjacket
Old Dubbo Gaol Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Dubbo_Gaol
90 Macquarie St, Dubbo NSW 2830, Australia
About 100 miles North West of Sydney. Google Maps: https://maps.app.goo.gl/bPxrmeYGpW8vCZELA
Nice sturdy ring re-enforced in front to control the prisoner.
I wonder what the central eyelet is for ?
Photo from denisbin on fliker.
Trans40mers Pt. 3/12: Freebies Are the Right of All Sentient Beings!
Where did that last month go? Probably the same place this post's initial opening paragraphs centering around themed coincidences and free Hasbro-affiliated goodies ended up.
Ah well. No need for long-winded introductions, let's dive right in.
19th March 2016: Hoping to win back the youth crowd, notoriously conservative-pandering media machine Herald Sun release a free set of Transformers-themed Top Trumps trading cards. They're made available to hundreds of participating newsagents in Victoria (& some for NSW).
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For over two centuries Australia has enjoyed mutual cultural ties with the United Kingdom. Many like Cricket, Fish & Chips, Action Man and Gogglebox stood the test of time and became beloved hits. Others not so much. Despite its status as a popular, long-running children's pastime, Aussies were notably late to the Top Trumps party.
Their first 'major' publicity push came in the April 2004 edition of K-Zone magazine, who devoted a half-page "exclusive" article boasting how it "already has a cult following in the UK" and won said Toy Fair's 2002 Game of the Year. Elsewhere this issue featured a splash page promoting various decks including Marvel Comic Heroes, Buffy, Star Wars, Dinosaurs, and The Simpsons.
But 2004 was a tough year for cards. Spurred on by Pokémon and Dragon Ball Z, competition was fierce among companies over who could win the quadrangle. Against new Yu-Gi-Oh!, Duel Masters, Neopets, plus Croftminster's Genio or Myths & Legends cards, Top Trumps faced an uphill struggle living up to its "most addictive card game you're ever likely to play!" claim.
When 2016 rolled along, Transformers scored their first 'retro' deck. Presenting a cutout token earned newspaper readers one of four free packs; Shopkins and Adventure Time over the previous weekend, while Transformers united with My Little Pony. Some 919 newsagents participated in this event, but a paltry 40 were located in New South Wales (6 from Broken Hill alone) and a lone 1 represented Canberra.
Fans already put off supporting Rupert Murdock's racist rag found further disappointment when opening its plastic wrap. The box paraded a mighty montage of Marvel era illustrations, yet each card used reproduced 1984-5 toy packaging art on white backdrops likely sourced, as many did at the time, from Botch the Crab's excellent archive. Tech Specs faced creative liberties, character choices bizarre, plus an overwhelming number of Autobots left budding players bewildered.
"How do you do fellow kids?" indeed.
21st March 2003: Australia scored its first ever official Happy Meal promotion. McDonald's import and repackage all 8 USA Transformers Armada characters slated for sale over 4 weeks, until Megatron and Demolishor are recalled when real-world events label them "war toys".
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After the half-hearted, half-a-toyline that was Robots in Disguise, Hasbro Australia were banking on Armada giving the brand a big boost of confidence.
First out the gate were Big W, stocking shelves with the second wave of toys just in time for Christmas 2002. Other retailers joined in by late January, by which point Hasbro went hard with cross-promotions. Those scallywags Jade and Ryan gave a glowing review in Cheez TV's toy testing segment. The 2nd anniversary edition of Mania magazine devoted two pages covering the series' history and introduced fans to new favourites like Alexa, Bureshock and Star Scream. Warner Vision scored the DVD rights, and with a Melbourne-produced video game in the pipeline, 2003 was shaping up to be Year of the Transformers.
But when Dreamwave's spinoff comic was skipped by newsagents, nor space to air the anime on Cartoon Network or Channel Ten until July and August respectively, they needed material to maintain momentum and fast. In stepped McDonald's who, in a first for its time, brought over all 6 toys from their 2002 USA campaign. Swapping out Hello Kitty for Ohio Art's Betty Spaghetty, young fans guzzled cheap fast food, saved their $5 Toys R Us voucher, then logging onto the Happy Meal website for a chance to win over $300 worth of toys.
Wait. All 6?
One day before this promotion began, Australia's Government ordered SAS troops in the Persian Gulf to join a US-led 'Coalition of the Willing' and launch mass strikes on Baghdad. "Countdown to Conflict!" blared across the news. Disney Adventures magazine's feedback column filled with letters from readers who "feel scared and sometimes unsafe". The War in Iraq had begun, and after witnessing mass anti-war protests across our cities, McDonald's ordered Megatron and Demolishor with their controversy-causing tank modes be swiftly scrubbed from stores.
Yet again Transformers were embroiled in real-world conflict, and yet again Australia banned a Megatron toy for being too realistic.
25th March 1996: Speculation mounted among locals at alt.toys.transformers over whether or not Hasbro Australia would import Kenner's brand new Beast Wars toyline. This soon hit a peak when Melbourne fan David Golding logged on to proclaim the series had been discontinued.
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"Transformers DISCONTINUED?" may sound like yet another buzzword-boasting, self-aggrandizing social media effluencer's conspiracy theory video, but for fans pondering the fate of Cybertron's finest nearly 30 years ago, a message title like that meant nothing short of serious business.
Better people on better sites have waffled philosophically how The Transformers were in terminal decline. Those glory days of being crowned Toy of the Year had long passed, and not even a nation like Australia who enjoyed ten unbroken years of plastic robot action were immune. They survived He-Man. They survived Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. They survived The Simpsons. But stiff competition from superheroes, Matchbox Action System and the Mighty Morphin' Power Rangers looked to be their undoing.
Easter and a potential sales spike was two weeks away. If Hasbro hoped Cheez TV's 7am repeat run of Generation Two would elevate interest, they were quashed days later when Power Rangers introduced Australia's own Katherine "Kat" Hillard to the team. Ninjor powered heroes were in, while unsold Laser Rods, Rotor Force and Classics Combiners languished in discount bins.
Speculation on the brand's future flooded from emails over to then-juggernaut watering hole alt.toys.transformers. Eyebrows were raised when one user delivered "bad news for Australian Tf fans, it looks like we AREN'T getting Beast Wars down here. I ran hasbro today and they said they weren't carrying TFs this year.", but Golding's later proclamation drew the most discourse.
"I live in Melbourne, Australia, and at a toyshop recently I was told that the Transformers line had been discontinued. I would like to know if this was errant b******t on the part of the toyshop owner, or if this is really true?"
The comment was evaluated, dissected and criticized by fans both local or overseas. And while Beast Wars did eventually arrive in time for Christmas, those next 9 months would prove an ultimate challenge for diehard Aussie fans.
31st March 2023: Taronga Zoo Sydney and Western Plains Zoo Dubbo culminate their Hasbro partnership with the official Rise of the Beasts Roar & Snore Experience. Over five nights, a select few lucky fans (and celebrities) are treated to a beastly Base Camp under the stars.
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Is it truly a Transformers movie without heavy emphasis on promotional contests? Be it humble days of free posters and toys in late-1986, Civic Video's colouring page for free toys come 2007, right up to an Oliver Brown sponsored New York trip complete with… free toys. This may be a series built on change, but as Airazor once proclaimed, "The more things change, the more they stay the same."
Not since the long-forgotten Transformers stage show at Louisville Zoo had fans witnessed their favourite robots duke it out among nature. Unusual for the time, but after two generations plus a new film built on 90's eco messages and character nostalgia looming over the horizon, promoting the brand at two wildlife sanctuaries were simultaneous strokes of creative and obvious genius.
The contest began on 9th January and focused on zoogoers wandering around to complete their free Beast Power character map. Dubbo's visitors were assigned to locate and decode a message among each Maximals' signature animal; Siamang, Ostrich, White Rhinoceros, Cheetah and African Wild Dog. Sydney on the other hand received their own set of beasts in the forms of Western Lowland Gorilla, Andean Condor, Asian Elephant, Sumatran Tiger and Corroboree Frog. Once complete, the decoded message was submitted online and in with the chance to win.
Quite the generous contest in itself, but Taronga were only getting started. A week later, obnoxious stickers slapped on by underpaid workers littered figures across every Big W. They boasted more prizes; 10 guided zoo tours, 100 free entries, 100 movie tickets plus another round of overnight stays at the newly-branded Beasts Base Camp.
Parents, celebrities and social influenza fans who believe the brand revolved around them flocked at the chance to attend. And thus those nights soon came to pass; drinks, cheese patters, twilight tours, selfies and more free toys awaited them, all under the watchful gazes of life-sized Optimus Prime and Optimus Primal statues.
Have you been to Dubbo, New South Wales, Australia?
Yes, I’ve lived here
Yes, I’ve been here
No
No, and I haven’t heard of this city before
Dubbo - Wikipedia
Population: 43,516
Newcombe Street, Dubbo, New South Wales.
Dubbo NSW, 2021 website / instagram / blog
40 Young St, Dubbo.