24 September 2006

The Glorious Wisdom of the Talking Head: Keith Olbermann's Special Comments

We are living in one of the most fearful times I, and that of any of living relatives and friends, have ever known. Fearful not only as citizens of the world community continually facing a litany of new and ever-more troubling problems within that world, but fearful as Americans. Americans, every one of us, whether we come from new immigration or from generations-long establishment as I have, are at a curious crossroads. The crossroads has landed us, very indecisively, between turning down a road that we are familiar with but will require a great cut in pride in order to follow again, or a turn down a road that is unfamiliar (to us anyway) that allows us to rewrite the rules as we only see fit, since we are currently the only remaining superpower...today, anyways. It's a kind of fear that while strong and justified immediately following the days of 9/11, it's a fear previous generations would have met head on, accepted the challenge, and shown the world the interior grit and eloquence as a nation...a grit and eloquence that brought us forward as a superpower to begin with.

I, for one, am weary of living in fear. But what's worse, I am more weary of the deception that I should be paranoid, distrustful, and/or flat out hate those who don't like my ideals, worship my values, idolize my money or my financial way of life, or look, think, and act like I do. I am one of the millions who harbour these concerns. The United States of America that my parents brought me up in has survived far more sinister Presidents than the current holder, but none as dangerous and unchecked. The United States of America that my relatives fought for, dating back to prior of its existence, is slowly eroding away in front of my eyes, away from my values, away from my way of life, away from my day to day actions.

Good news, though, folks: we do not walk alone. Keith Olbermann, from MSNBC's "Countdown" TV program can do what (it seems) like all three of our governing bodies in Washington and beyond cannot: he 'gets' it. Give this man a bullhorn and let there be great rejoicing throughout the land.

  • Olbermann's Special Comment on Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, 8/30/2006


  • Special Commentary on the Five Year Anniversary of 9/11, 9/11/2006


  • The Blazing "It's Unacceptable to Think" Commentary, 9/18/2006


    The man has been on fire lately. May this wonderful voice become the chorus this country...this Western world even...so desperately needs to hear now. Good night and good luck, indeed.
  • 22 September 2006

    TGIF: Betty Boop®, M.D....REPOST



    [Author's note: reposting this on Nov 21, 2006. I don't know what happened to the original entry and post from Sep 22, 2006. Perhaps it was lost shortly after the transition to Blogger Beta, who knows...it was there when I made the actual switch over.]

    Anywho, gotta love me some Betty Boop® from YouTube...in probably one of the weirdest Betty cartoons ever (and she had some very original classics). Sadly, they don't make cartoons like this great one anymore. And I positively love the scat singing. Enjoy.

    20 September 2006

    Driftlessly Contemplating the Inevitable

    It's been one of those weeks as of late, sort of a rollercoaster of ups and downs, full of all those twists and turns that we all must navigate through. Some days have been jubilant, some have been anti-climatic, and some have just went by a little too easily. All of them, unfortunately, start to blur into one another after a bit...a fact that I am sure that I will ponder when I do not so easily take them for granted.

    First, an apology...but not in the traditional sense that you would normally read and/or hear from me. I've been stuck a bit lately...arguably for the last few months, really...but recently the quicksand has pulled me in harder and with less resistance on my part than usual. It's not that I'm not thankful, I am. It's not that I feel badly again, because I don't but have had a few scares recently. It's instead just a general malaise of spirit, not a depression per se, but more like an apathy, perhaps even a bewildering disdain, for what I do on a daily basis. It's like now that I'm pulling out some of the issues I've shoved under the carpets for years and actually dealing with them...I realize that what I've convinced myself was a good life that I really loved has instead been a bitter, unfulfilled mistress that I've just tolerated all this time rather than leave. In short, I have been my own best/worst snake oil dealer.

    I've been trying to find the words to communicate this here in the blog, but the words don't come exactly. I've been trying to get in touch with these disembodied emotions through music or poetry, but the verses and the rhythm are off meter. I vowed to myself last week sometime that I wouldn't post here again until I could better express myself, be more positive, 'analyze and then empathize' the mantra. Problem is that was a fool's promise...that I could not see the therapy in actually going through the process here, that I could not fathom not having all of the answers is generally not a reason for a humiliating death. I try to think of myself as witty, maybe a bit crude, maybe a bit smart on other days...but never without a plan. Not only do I now fully acknowledge the lack of a plan, but even a good sense of direction. And yes, that scares the holy hell out of me.

    I'm not sure when it happens to other people, but for the past few years I have had an ongoing internal panic about what my life has become. Or rather, what I've let it become. At some point back a few years I woke up in the middle of a winter's night, cold, frightened, heart racing. In one of the most vivid dreams of my life, I had dreamed I was sleeping and then woke up, only to voluntarily go back to sleep 'for a few minutes more' but then die in my sleep. Not something horrific, like a car crash or shark attack, but waking up and then choosing to go back to sleep in some sort of stalling tactic and then dying for real. Psychology degree holder that I am, I searched for weeks afterward for an answer or interpretation of the image; and when I wasn't doing that, I was in denial about the whole issue about death, and specifically, mine. While I'm not particularly religious myself (and actually have many deep issues with several religious 'establishments'), I am the proud offspring of two Southern Baptists. I prefer to think of myself as a deep believer in the overall product, but just loathe the salespeople you have to deal with along the way. At some point, though, after all of my scientific research and temporary evaluation of the religious texts I have somehow escaped all of these years, it hit me and I came to accept it: what we have is now, and one day we won't even have that. Death, dear friends, is inevitable so make sure you've led a life strong enough to help you survive the final trip home.

    So I find myself buckling the seatbelts each and every time now, not so much for fear of a hefty fine, but 'just in case' of an accident. Whereas before as a teen and early independent woman I would work for the love of a job no matter the pay, I now work for the love of the money that will pay off my bills instead. In one of the sickest levels of my adult life, I've taken to planning my day and job goals with a calendar and appointment book for maximum efficiency...because, as we all know, it's vitally important to keep yourself on track when you're doing things you secretly hate very, very much. When contemplating what new skills I want to learn, it's no longer about what I would 'like' to learn, but instead what I 'should' learn for the sake of getting a better job, with better pay, doing something I don't like. I'd change that whole scenario except for one major hitch: I can't say there's a helluva lot of anything I'd like to work at anymore.

    Truly, this is absolutely a horrible state to arrive at: after seeing the light now at the end of the tunnel with my bills (I grew up poor, so there's never been a time before in my life when the bills were paid and the savings account actually growing), I realize I wasn't working because I liked it or even wanted to, but instead only because I had to. As I've cleared some of the brushwood away, I am only now fully understanding the condition of the land beneath. And here's the absolutely shocking part: for whatever reason I cannot fully express into words still, I find myself wanting to replace that brushwork...i.e., return back to my comfortably cluttered challenged state of affairs...rather than do the real hard work now required to clear the land.

    Which brings us to the deeply nagging questions: what else do I/have I done just because I 'had' to and not because I wanted to? When did I start to take the easy way of falling in line with the other lemmings to the sea? When did life ever get that hard for me (and it never has really) that being 'safe' became the answer? And, now, faced with taking on some challenges and meeting them head on somewhat, why am I so fearful of having that old routine pulled away? Or, more importantly, why am I so eager to sabotage myself and the dreams I've never explored?

    There's a fabulous song by Bruce Springsteen called "The River" in which he laments a life unfulfilled due to an untimely teenage pregnancy, complicated further as the couple later just 'settle' for their disappointing outcomes. In perhaps one of the greatest lines ever penned (and Lord knows Bruce has penned several over the years), our lifesick hero asks:
    "...Is a dream a lie if it don't come true?
    ...Or is it something worse?"
    While I've never remotely had a hard life compared to so many and enjoyed the adoration of two great parents from birth, I can't help but feeling some deep connection to the protagonist here. Like so many of Springsteen's songs, it's not their grandiose layers that stick with you, but instead the 'common man' element as you 'know' the characters who populate his songs, and unfortunately, too often frequently, we are those same people. There are so many of us with dreams so vivid and glowing they practically breathe on their own, but yet either intentionally or otherwise, we won't allow ourselves to go for that golden ring or rebound from our previous mistakes. It's not guilt nor ambition nor greed that stops and/or propels us, I think, it's fear. And frankly I'm so very, very tired of living in my own fear-induced state. Problem is, though, I'm like the Cowardly Lion in that I don't know how to find my much-needed courage.

    I have to wonder (and it's driving me wild): when nothing is motivating in and of itself anymore, how do you create the needed inspiration all on your own?

    With one eye on the ever-rapidly dwindling hourglass of my life, and the other down the road at the Kingdom of Oz, how does one find the confidence to actually take a step out on the Yellow Brick Road...especially when it just feels so safe to stay in the woods?

    I've gotta stop waiting for Dorothy to come by and save me from myself.

    17 September 2006

    Contributions and updates to Blogcritics, Live365

    Sorry for the absence this week, as I've been swamped with some work activities and also leading a life (or trying to, as last week I was down mentally and I just needed to do a Freddie Mercury and have a "I Want to Break Free" moment).

    First off, a quick update: I have happily been included as a critic over at Blogcritics, and my first post (first seen here in May, but with some additional editorial content changes) "Reflections on the Green Sheet Man Republic" was first published there last Sunday, and then made their Culture Focus page on homelessness a couple of days later. I'm now working on a live concert review, a live 'alternative sports entertainment' review, and a book review for them. Again, I'd like to thank all of you who gave me positive feedback with that piece (and all of my pieces here in general) and invite you to not only read my entries there (which probably will not be the same as the ones here), but also the many other wonderful writers there. I consider myself lucky to 'make the cut', let alone actually have my work published and highlighted there so soon.

    Additionally, in between the massive undertaking I'm doing for work today (we're having our first annual Staff and Family Picnic and yours truly is in charge, including the watermelon-as-pig-carving), I've been busily working on (at long last) the reactivation of my Live365 radio station. It appears I may have stuck with it enough so far...although I'm still adding tracks and am not happy with my limited artist list (but hey, one uploads as they can). (Oh yes, folks, we have much diversity to go before I get happy LOL. Have no fear, 80's, blues, Cajun, Tejano, and country fans: your additions and maybe some faves are coming on board, too.) If you want to take a listen, I certainly encourage you to do so (will play on both dial-up and broadband, available 24/7) and it costs nothing to do so. If you like me...really, really like me...you can even save the station as a 'preset' to find it easier the next time you go listen. And, as always, I always welcome feedback and will consider taking requests. (Once a radio hag, always a radio hag...sorry, folks.) Unfortunately, I'm a poor girl so I can't do anything (yet) about the few ads you'll hear if you're using the free listen option, so please forgive those rare interruptions in the music. Should you ever get bored with mine (which I can't imagine, but oh well, it happens LOL), there are thousands of other stations the world over also available for a listen, all musical and talk formats presented. But give mine a start first at the Tall Poppy Jukebox .

    11 September 2006

    We Remember It All...Especially AA Flight 11

    Today is a holy, solemn day of rememberance. I will not waste any time in dedicating this to all who were effected, as we all were. I was finishing up a wonderful trip to Egypt with co-workers, you know where you were...it makes no matter, we are the survivors and the world we knew before this fateful day five years ago is long gone.

    I am also an ex-employee of American Airlines, and I worked in a reservations call center for a few years. It was an American Airlines flight, Flight 11, that was the first one hijacked and the first to hit the World Trade Center. On that flight was a heroine of great, great calm and courage...Betty Ong...an AA flight attendant. It is because of her that AA, the authorities, and eventually the world learned what happened in those terrible skies. It is to her that this entry today is dedicated.

    It is also dedicated to two of the best reservations representatives AA ever has employed, Nydia Gonzalez and "John". (I use "John" because, even five years later, I have yet to see his full name ever revealed publicly, so it should certainly not be for me to break that trend.) These two wonderful people, professionals at their best at that time, got the initial call from Betty about the hijacking of Flight 11. And these two people I worked with everyday, in fact I spoke to "John" before I left for Egypt and he asked to see all of my pictures upon my return. When I came back, after being stranded for a few stressful and harrowing days in Cairo and London, he was not the same. And neither was Nydia. None of us were. But we had survived...as numb to the whole experience as we were afterwards. Betty Ong, whom Nydia and "John" tried so desperately to help, did not.

    Few people actually watched C-SPAN when the 9/11 investigations took place, but I did. And in that investigation, that courageous phone call that Betty Ong placed to my dedicated co-workers was heard. From Betty Ong's side, they are the calls of a concerned and dedicated and relatively calm professional. From Nydia and "John's" side, they are the calls of professionals hundreds of miles away, scrambling to decipher what was going on and trying to help in any way possible...and being utterly unable to do so. What happened that day was nothing that anyone had ever been prepared for...there existed no manual on how to stop time, how to stop the inevitable, how to stop the fear.

    The following are the recordings played at the 9/11 investigational hearings (with a very small amount edited out, which is acknowledged at the beginning)...listen to them and read the transcript that is included. The first "male voice/operator" is "John". (For clarification, the second "male voice", which appears later, is that of an AA Operations representative who is a troubleshooter for Operations Managers such as Nydia. His whereabouts and his name are unknown to me.) The "female voice" which switches to the correct name in the transcript is Nydia. It was also Nydia who gave testimony to the 9/11 investigators many months later. Obviously, "Betty Ong" is Betty.

    Remember that beautiful face of Betty's, too, for that was one of the thousands of faces who perished that day. And it's a face, and a voice, we will never forget...nor should we.

    Betty Ong's Call from 9/11 Flight 11

    Contributions can be made in Betty's memory to the Betty Ong Foundation.

    08 September 2006

    Surfing Tonight for a Better Brain Tomorrow

    I hate it when I have insomnia. And actually insomnia for me can be quite the thing, for on average I normally only sleep for 4-5 hours a night anyway, and when insomnia strikes it can last for days with me. (The only other person I've ever heard being this way and still being relatively sane is "Tonight Show" host Jay Leno, but he's got a cushier job than I do, too, LOL.) So, here I am, 2:35 am Friday morning my time, and I can't sleep. I should be able to sleep...I've done the trip back home, the grocery shopping and storage, the laundry, even some minor housekeeping. I've attempted to watch some bad television even...but had to turn it off because the History Channel's got something on about ancient Rome and then I will be awake til dawn. (Love those ancient Roman shows, and don't even think about pulling me away from anything remotely attached to ancient architecture.) Hot showers don't work. Eating doesn't work, and especially so when you've been given the lecture (as I was recently) to cut back on the late night snacks as it is. Can't play music as the headphones are broken and everyone else in the apartment building is snoring logs. While I brought work with me (on my vacation, how sick is that?), that's the last thing I want to do. Friends who should be online due to the time difference are not tonight (buds in Australia...what? you're ALL hard at work on a Friday afternoon there??). So, my idle hands have found the keyboard, and, by extension, that glorious thing that we all share called the Internet.

    And it's positively amazing what you'll be led to if you just choose one link and then, from that original site, keep clicking on other links. So far I have found 14 Spam® recipes to make in less than 30 minutes; discovered the mistakes most American women make when performing oral sex (from a site in Western Australia, no less, where I am positive the Yanks there had no idea 'a test' was being administered); evaluated my closet for the upcoming fall fashions and concluding not only do I not have anything, I don't care that I don't; snickered at some comments regarding a poor Indian bloke who has been born with 2 functioning penises and wants one removed; reupped my coverage for AAA for the mighty Argentio (my Nissan truck...I named it because if you're going to cuss something, which I will, it deserves a name at least); salivated at the Ovation® guitar I would practically kill for; verified once again that half of Hollywood is talentless and almost the other half is extraorbitantly overpaid for their 'services'; and have decided to learn a new language (or two) totally for free from the BBC.

    Yes, that's right, folks. You, too, can learn a multitude of languages from the BBC Languages site for free and from the comfort of your personal computer. So while the rest of the world is starting and/or viewing yet another porn site every three seconds or contributing a clip to (*NOT WORK FRIENDLY, ADULTS ONLY*) VoyeurWeb, you can be learning German or Welsh. (What's odd: I know native speakers from both areas and somehow the 'text' of the BBC tests and the 'actual' spoken words are vastly different.) And, by the way, if you actually do go searching for porn, I also read a very interesting article (and comments) about how internet porn is changing our sex lives, written by a man in the Sydney Morning Herald. Wonders never cease. It's like six degrees from not only Kevin Bacon, but also from profound mental seizure.

    And I bet you didn't know the following were available, too, if you just click hard enough:
  • you can determine an approximate date of your death (God willing) and find out your body mass index (BMI), too, at The Death Clock?
  • learn from a master professional (and a few other important interpersonal skills) in the art of the professional staredown? (And make sure to read the "Director's Manifesto" about what he's trying to accomplish and his attitude on moviemaking...I think I'm in love.)
  • take a tour of your heart, including learning that death by heart disease is a relatively new phenomenon due to modern life?
  • replay the arcade and video games of your lost youth?

    and finally, perhaps my answer of calm to help me snooze...

  • watch webcam sunsets all over the world (more than 200 on any given day, that should hold me for awhile)? Combine that with my beloved surf and beach cams from Australia, and I should be drifting off to LaLaLand anytime soon.

    Let's hope, anyway.
  • 06 September 2006

    A Roundtable of Updates: The Phonys, The Real Money & The Champ

    Well, as I spent a bit too much time online for my hotel bill last night talking with a wayward friend, today's post will have to be a bit abridged compared to my usual style. Instead of posting an entry that I will later find problematic, I'll use this time to follow up on some long overdue updates.

  • Our dear blog 'commenter' and my dear friend Amanda was passed over for Best Actress at this year's Phony Awards (previously mentioned in my July 21 entry), but she did win Best Performance By An Actor in a Bit Part (Female) for her work as Miss Metcalf in "Splendour in the Grass".

    I apologize for such a lengthy delay in this good news, but as she and I were unable to get in touch until this past weekend (and then she promptly didn't return my call after I allowed her a potty break, for shame), I wanted to make sure I gave her the proper credit. Once again, I continue to proclaim her talents far and wide...and Montgomery County Theatre is damn lucky, indeed, to have her on their roster of performers. The picture is from that night's festivities (and please forgive the darkness of the photo), with our beguiling Amanda on the left...LOL. (Picture taken from MCT.)

  • Secondly, I've made significant headway getting off the 'hamster wheel of debt' (July 25). As you may recall from that entry, I had several bills I was still paying down towards the overall goal of being debt-free. Now here's the updates, as good and as bad as it is.

    As of September 6, the advancements and the plan :

  • reminders in the wallet for what I need to save for in my case, saving for Australian immigration and visa application procedures, helping me remind a need vs a want

  • weekly budget and goals planning sessions to stay on course

  • all monthly bills, including rent and misc, budgeted for and paid on time since this past January...and starting January 1, 2007, I will live on only 70% of my take home pay, with the remaining 30% split equally between retirement/investment and Aussie move savings

  • two discount store credit cards paid in full, no new charges

  • one auto repair maintenance card paid on full, no new charges

  • clothing store credit card paid in full every month, no new charges

  • gasoline cards paid in full each month

  • one college loan paid, no new charges

  • only one hospital/medical bill remains, and all doctor's remaining balances after insurance paid at time of service rendered

  • one major credit card with an outstanding balance (paying on a schedule to have the debt eliminated by this December), the only other credit card I have was paid in full, with no new charges

  • furniture/electronics card paid in full on August 18, no new charges

  • actively looking for a better credit card option, and I'm also carefully monitoring my credit report and FICO score for correct updates (which is actually far more damn complicated than it should be)

  • a personal loan which I have been paying on devoutly since end of Feb this year will be paid in its entirely by this New Year's Eve, even though some new evidence questions if I should be done by now...but my word is my word, so I'll honour it

  • increased 401k investing, and I've become addicted to CNBC's "Mad Money", "Fast Money" and "The Suze Orman Show" financial advice shows, as totally ridiculous as that sounds

  • pay off the remaining student loan by 31 December 2011 (5 years early with additional monthly payments over time), an adjusted date to allow for some additional Oz savings

    and

  • never allow myself to get into debtor's hell again AMEN

    And, yeah, I still do get a high knowing that I am making some significant elimination of the debt picture. So even though I am very weary of eating leftovers all week long, I can smile easier now when I think about money...and I sleep very well now, too, as the endless worries have almost gone away. I highly recommend making the sacrifice of luxuries to anyone with a money management problem, for it truly is fantastically liberating.

    (Picture from Sitevip.net/Andre Agassi.)
  • Thirdly, my dearly beloved Andre Agassi is ending his glorious career in professional tennis. I've loved Andre since I first saw him on ESPN playing against another then-unknown named Jim Courier, and while I'm not a devout tennis fan, I've suffered watching countless matches of Andre, including a grueling double-ear infection US Open weekend marathon when I was 18 or 19. (And while we're talking about my devotion as a fan, can I just add that I always wanted to be a tennis player, and positively was glued to the set as a child watching Chris Evert? Although I hated Monica Seles' grunting and Ivan Lendl's eyelash-pulling antics. Bet you never figured that from me.)

    While Courier's game at that time was certainly more solid and I just remember Agassi running down countless shots he could have just let go, I was always taken with the brash Las Vegas-based star. He suffered through bad calls, faulty serving games, a marriage to Brooke Shields, and the loss of his once famous locks...but he's been a man about it all and made no apologies for any of it along the way. In a sport that so desperately needs anyone with some distinguishing personality and who is also able to come through in the clutch to win (somebody send this memo to Lleyton Hewitt, stat), the void that Agassi will leave is a mammothly large one. At last, though, he seems genuinely happy off the court and, in consideration of all of the back problems he's been plagued with recently, his departure is a timely one. A class act in a time when we can so rarely say that about any professional athlete.
  • 04 September 2006

    A Good, Friendly, Big-Hearted Bloke Has Died

    I interrupt my somewhat dismal vacation stretch to comment on the untimely death of a great educator and TV personality, 'The Crocodile Hunter' Steve Irwin. I'm sorry to admit I was in his area of Brisbane in January (well stranded would be the more correct term), but never made the short distance onward to Australia Zoo or to see him. As entertaining as he was on TV here thousands of miles and a hemisphere away, I can only imagine now how he must have been in person. Despite the criticisms laid against him as an over-the-top 'wildlife warrior' and for the possible recklessness in his animal-handling, the deluge of condolences and all-around reports of him being a honest man, faithful husband, and dedicated father speak volumes in his defence otherwise. (And, to rub salt into the wound, this fated man died the day after Australians celebrated Father's Day on Sunday...a day apparently he did not celebrate with his children and wife as they were on holiday in Tasmania, and he was working in northern Queensland.) For reasons I don't even know how to explain, my spirit aches at this untimely loss and my heartfelt condolences go to his family.

    I think of all the adults he touched, but especially the children: my dear friend's eldest daughter lived to watch his show, be like him, learn from him, and has dutifully promised for years now that she will take over his job at the Australia Zoo someday. Unfortunately, 'someday' came far too soon for any of us. He was only 44, I'm 36, 'my' beloved Rachel is approximately the age of Steve's daughter (8). (And a girl, too, folks! In the US of A, a girl wants to learn everything she can about animals and be a zoo vet! Just when I had given up every last hope on the American education system...but wait, maybe that's Mr. Irwin's influence, too.) Unexpected death is always tough to explain and accept among the grown-ups; explaining the whys of something so freakish to a child who adored this man is something altogether far more difficult. The challenge now is to keep that desire and drive in her going until her 'someday' does arrive...and until she can truly understand and accomplish all that her hero wanted his viewers so desperately to learn. If it's true God shuts a door only to open a window, it's important for all of us adults help his legion of child devotees find and get through that window. May all of his wonderful training and enthusiasm not go to waste.

    Folks, if I've said it once, I've said it a million times: that man truly represents/represented Australia. I don't care what his job was, or how enthusiastic he was, or even that he appeared invincible. In the end, he was just a regular bloke, like so many of them, believe it or not. Almost to a person, the Australians I have met and come to know are every inch that he was, if not more... always willing or even volunteering to help, friendly to a fault, strong-willed but equally strong-minded, believe your handshake is your word, protective of their women and children, proud of their accomplishments but never rest on their laurels, mentally always two or three steps ahead of everyone else, and with hearts as big as the oceans that surround them. If Mr. Irwin did absolutely nothing else, he showed the world what our Great Southern Land neighbours truly are: gems of this human species, a species of people and tradition far too close to extinction itself.

    While "Waltzing Matilda" is the unofficial theme of Australia and a sentimental favourite of mine on many levels, I have never thought it portrayed its fine citizens in a good light (lyrics and history of "Waltzing Matilda"), and, as a result, will not dedicate it to Mr. Irwin here. Instead, I leave you with the wonderfully penned song by the original "The Boy From Oz" Peter Allen, entitled "I Still Call Australia Home". Nothing sounds quite 'right' as a dedication to the great Croc Hunter...nothing is as proud, nothing is as big, nothing is as exuberant as its intended audience...so unfortunately this will have to do. No matter what, you hate to see the good ones go.

    God Bless, mate, God Bless. Good onya, for you did a fine job while here.
    ___________________________________________________


    (I've chosen to feature a home video from just some regular blokes on the sea...full of sun, surf, wind, friends, good times, catching marlin, and sailing alongside some beautiful dolphins, from YouTube. While Qantas did a more 'upscale' commercial of this song some years back with the Australian Boys and Girls Choirs, this video features Peter Allen's wonderful rendition...and I think speaks more to Mr. Irwin's loves, intentions and memory.)


    "I Still Call Australia Home"

    By Peter Allen

    I've been to cities that never close down
    from New York to Rio and old London town,
    but no matter how far or how wide I roam
    I still call Australia home.

    I'm always traveling, I love being free,
    and so I keep leaving the sun and the sea,
    but my heart lies waiting over the foam.
    I still call Australia home.

    All the sons and daughters spinning 'round the world,
    away from their family and friends,
    but as the world gets older and colder,
    it's good to know where your journey ends.

    But someday we'll all be together once more
    when all of the ships come back to the shore.
    Then I realise something I've always known.
    I still call Australia home.

    Lyrics from Lyriki