These Australia Posts are BEYOND Interesting...

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  • čas pƙidĂĄn 30. 07. 2024
  • wow look at these..
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Komentáƙe • 278

  • @phillberthsp
    @phillberthsp Pƙed rokem +33

    Bob Hawk was on live TV when Australia won the America's Cup and said "Any boss who sacks someone for not turning up to work today is a bum". He was true blue.

  • @gradystiles7515
    @gradystiles7515 Pƙed rokem +117

    Your watching Auntie Jack one of the all time great shows and if you don't tune in he will jump through your tv set and rip ya bloody arms off

  • @56music64
    @56music64 Pƙed rokem +10

    "If you don't behave, I'll jump through the tv set and I'll rip your bloody arms off". This catch phrase made it into common vernacular said each week by Aunty Jack (the one in the skirt and boxing gloves). The Aunty Jack Show, everybody watched it, starring Graham Bond, Garry MacDonald and the late Rory O'Donoghue. My parents and I loved it. The hail, yes 31st October, 2020. I had a property at Rosewood, west of Ipswich, which was impacted by this storm. It sustained $47k of damage and my neighbour who had a slightly bigger home and a brand new caravan in the driveway, sustained $85k damage. My insurance took care of it immediately, thank goodness. Some families were still waiting a year or so later for repair. The plane was practicing a fly over for Brisbane's "Riverfire" event which is held each year in September. Before the F111 were retired, a couple of them would fly over with their sonic boom and it was the treat of the event. I attended a few times, very exciting

    • @PCFixer
      @PCFixer Pƙed rokem +1

      "... I'll rip yer bloody arms off! And I will, too!"

  • @70chevs
    @70chevs Pƙed rokem +30

    A lot of families didn't have colour TVs so you would see crowds of people gazing into the display windows of stores that had colour TVs playing. Australia shares this planet with all these other countries but when I look at the scenery around this country I feel I'm on another world.

    • @bernadettelanders7306
      @bernadettelanders7306 Pƙed rokem

      I was born here in Aus, and have always known how diverse our country is re land and weather. But watching so much more on CZcams since Covid it’s really bought the realisation of how unbelievably amazing and more beautiful our county’s landscape is.

  • @jenniferharrison8915
    @jenniferharrison8915 Pƙed rokem +24

    The Auntie Jack Show, hilarious! 😁 Only in Australia! đŸ˜”đŸ•·ïž Rainforests are not to be explored alone or unprotected! Southern Aroara, is truly fantastic! Broome is unique! Boat trees with an underworld of lost fish species! Nature definitely rules here! Low flying planes remain unnerving! Bob Hawke, great bloke, great scholar, great drinker! Car dealers "hail damage sale" is prevalent after a storm! 😀👍

  • @veaton77
    @veaton77 Pƙed rokem +16

    I've seen that plane fly through Brisbane multiple times. Its part of the yearly River Fire festival. That video is the test run before hand as it actually happens at night with fireworks and light shows. Its awesome. They used to have F1-11s do fuel dump and burns which were soooooooo good. Lit up the whole city like it was daylight and made such a loud noise. Miss those days :)

    • @Victemℱ
      @Victemℱ Pƙed rokem

      ​@Visitor7474F1-11s were retired.

  • @Sticks31
    @Sticks31 Pƙed rokem +3

    I was in Sydney (from Melbourne) on business a number of years ago and our plane (a 737) was actually on the runway ready to take off. The captain said that radar showed an imminent storm front so he said we'd sit on the tarmac and wait it out. I thought "what a wuss!". Then the hailstorm hit. It sounded like a thousand guys with sledgehammers on the top of the plane. It was deafening. The hailstones were so big that they shattered the roofs of all of the nearby houses. We had to taxi back to the terminal to have the plane checked. They discovered holes in the wings of the plane and so we had to deplane. All flights were grounded as other planes were checked and I had to spend a night at the Airport Hilton. Funnily, the tune I had been listening to on my headphones was "Concierto de Aranjuez" which now, whenever I hear it, associate with "Concierto de A Runway". Honestly! (I'm not making that up).

  • @DomingoDeSantaClara
    @DomingoDeSantaClara Pƙed rokem +6

    I remember being the first house in the street with colour tv, the local kids would stand at our fence watching TV through the lounge window😅

  • @megsybond
    @megsybond Pƙed rokem +3

    I remember seeing a colour TV for the first time in a shop window. There was a crowd of people all marveling at it.

  • @paulhanm7469
    @paulhanm7469 Pƙed rokem +8

    Once in Victoria Australia, It was a warm sunny day. In the sky were tens of thousands of single-strand spider webs from migrating spiders flying in the sky for as far as the eyes could see. They use the wind to move around.

  • @BellumCarroll
    @BellumCarroll Pƙed rokem +12

    Driving along in Tasmania, when we noticed what looked like frost or low fog covering the farmers crops. But something about it was so strange we had to stop and get out. Then we noticed it covered everything from the fences, sheds, powerlines etc.
    Blowing in the wind were these long strands of silk... yep millions of tiny spiders were catching a ride on the breeze using their silk. Landing on everything now including us 😂
    Incredible sight

    • @gkky_
      @gkky_ Pƙed rokem +2

      That sounds both beautiful and traumatizing

    • @matthewkeating5963
      @matthewkeating5963 Pƙed rokem +1

      I saw them in the South west of WA. Absolutely stunning ❀

  • @johnwhear9600
    @johnwhear9600 Pƙed rokem +5

    Farewell Auntie Jack, you know you'll be back, though you're ten feet tall, you don't scare us at all...

  • @elizabethscott7660
    @elizabethscott7660 Pƙed rokem +11

    Spider swarms are so much fun😂 Especially when they're all over you and the sheep, and the dogs.

  • @luffyluck
    @luffyluck Pƙed rokem +16

    That Boeing C17 is part of the river festival in Brisbane (there is a PoV from someone high up in a building and you can see how close it gets to the towers). There are also fighter jets and military helicopters showing up.

    • @Reneesillycar74
      @Reneesillycar74 Pƙed rokem +4

      River Festival is epic with the fly pass

    • @weredraco
      @weredraco Pƙed rokem +4

      River Fire is one of my favourite things to watch.

    • @peterbrittain1963
      @peterbrittain1963 Pƙed rokem +2

      yeah,, that guys video was sick,, like looking down on the planes ..

    • @DarkMatter1992
      @DarkMatter1992 Pƙed rokem +14

      Who else misses the F-111 "dump 'n' burn".

    • @chookinathunderstorm3446
      @chookinathunderstorm3446 Pƙed rokem +2

      One of those massive planes flew slowly towards and over me as I was driving along a familiar ordinary street in my coastal suburb. It had just flown a geographical marking mission along the shoreline...I found out later, but still no photo let alone video, .for the Pearce Airforce base a bit further north. I almost felt like my mind was physically slipping. It was so unreal being so massive and heavy looking yet so low and slow. Such a massive heavy craft looked like it needed much more speed and lift and much more noise too...it was eerie. It made me doubt reality for some minutes. It was also a quiet empty area at that time so no witnesses that I met when questioning disbelieving people. So now my husband is going to be the FIRST person I show this to in order to gain back my credibility.

  • @marionthompson3365
    @marionthompson3365 Pƙed rokem +2

    Always remembered seeing Lost in Space in colour the first time and the robot had red claws! Yes, I'm old enough to remember 75 well!

  • @alwynemcintyre2184
    @alwynemcintyre2184 Pƙed rokem +2

    Yeah I remember when colour TV came into Australia, my family didn't get a colour TV until the late '70's.

  • @angiedeans6410
    @angiedeans6410 Pƙed rokem +1

    I watched that show in 1975. It was a wonderful time in my younger days. That show was called Aunty Jack, and the catch phrase was I'll rip ya bloody arms off. Aunty Jack was played by Grahame bond.

  • @Reneesillycar74
    @Reneesillycar74 Pƙed rokem +15

    The spider webs are because of flooding. If you look in the background of the vid there’s muddy water. Millions of spiders head to higher ground when it floods, weave their webs & wait for the water to recede, then go about their lives (with a bit more space to spread out). It actually happens in other places around the world, though it would be cool if this was just an Australian thing 😂 🕾 âœŒđŸŒ
    Edit: yep there’s two. A bit above the one you saw there’s another cross shape. They’re amazing!

  • @Rusty_Gold85
    @Rusty_Gold85 Pƙed rokem +1

    I remember a cricket match along the coast at a School oval . We could see this black roll line of cloud across the sky like a curtain coming across the sky when the wind started howling ahead of the storm. We only just called it off for a bit of rain and ran off the ground when the Hail came down in bucket loads hammering us, shredding leaves off the trees and thumping roofs of buildings. The Cars sounded like saucepans from the thuds

  • @sladflob
    @sladflob Pƙed rokem +1

    I remember staying up late to watch the switch over to colour. I was a pretty young kid at the time and our family had bought a colour TV a few months earlier. It was an exciting night! The Aunty Jack show was hilarious too.

  • @tembafire
    @tembafire Pƙed rokem +15

    The 2010 hail storm in Perth, West Australia caused close to $1.1 billion damage. It stopped the city & caused whole apartment buildings to be evacuated due to damage. My wife's 6 month old car was stuck on the roof carpark of the hospital where she worked for almost 2 months before it could be recovered and scrapped. Definitely a once in a life time event. It was even more intense than my experiences of when we got occasionally bombed by Migs in the SA border war.

    • @Rusty_Gold85
      @Rusty_Gold85 Pƙed rokem +2

      I was with Telstra from Adelaide and 12 of us went over to help with repairing the Telstra network damage. We were there for a month working 12 hour days

    • @tembafire
      @tembafire Pƙed rokem

      @waynecorbett8301 get to love the intellectual here 👍

    • @ReaperNZ666
      @ReaperNZ666 Pƙed rokem

      It hit the west coast & traveled all the way to the east coast leaving a path of devastation.

    • @chookinathunderstorm3446
      @chookinathunderstorm3446 Pƙed rokem +1

      I remember seeing a few of those cars that were rejected for insurance payouts. All because some bright sparks, whose cars were out of the storm, thought they could con the insurance companies with a ballpien hammer.
      A few cars seen still being driven on the road for some years later.
      Nice neat evenly round same sized, same depth dents evenly spaced all over the car...even along both sides. đŸ€­

    • @zane4575
      @zane4575 Pƙed rokem

      I remember this storm. It missed my suburb, and I only ever saw one car dented to hell and back.
      Weird, for me the storm didn't exist.

  • @axle.australian.patriot
    @axle.australian.patriot Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +1

    15:32 yeah, the hail storms are savage across that region. I wish I had taken some photos of some of it.. Not far from here I seen a strip about 500 meters wide completely leveled for several kilometers; Signs, treas, crops, sheds.. just flat ground like someone ran over it with big roller in a straight line.
    You do get about 20 minutes notice from the warning systems, and usually earlier reports to be ware. I remember stacking old cardboard boxes from the workshop over my ute windscreen in desperation one day.. Imagine having to stack 20 customer cars into a small automotive workshop with 20 mins notice :/
    >
    Great video.. I enjoyed very much :)

  • @markthomas7963
    @markthomas7963 Pƙed rokem +3

    The ship turned into an island,is one of a couple of abandoned boom defence vessels from WW2 ,next to Bi Centennial Park in Sydney.There is also a wonderful Mangrove Swamp with boardwalks through it.

  • @rcooper2153
    @rcooper2153 Pƙed rokem +3

    Ian, they were well warned that TV was coming in on that day. As I said below, I was working in a Television transmitting station the night this happened. We'd spent quite a lot of time get prepared for colour TV. On the subject, I spray lawns for a living and and spend most of my time looking at the ground. I walk into cobwebs often. The worst are the fine and really sticky ones you don't see.

  • @top40researcher31
    @top40researcher31 Pƙed rokem +10

    In 1972 it was announced that all stations would move to colour on 1 March 1975, using the European PAL standard mandated in 1968. The slogan used to sell colour television to the Australian public was 'March first into colour'. Australia was to have one of the fastest change-overs to colour television in the world - by 1978 over 64% of households in Sydney and Melbourne had colour television sets.

    • @kathleenmayhorne3183
      @kathleenmayhorne3183 Pƙed rokem

      Not all could afford it. We got a b&w then, my married sister got colour, we got the old one they had.

    • @janemcdonald5372
      @janemcdonald5372 Pƙed rokem

      European PAL colour is so much better than American NTSC. It's a truer colour and the saturation is better.

    • @top40researcher31
      @top40researcher31 Pƙed rokem +1

      @@janemcdonald5372 thats what caused the delay

  • @jimcottee9187
    @jimcottee9187 Pƙed rokem +7

    On the first story about colour TV - our military family had been posted to the USA for 5 years, watching color TV over there. We came back in early 74', back to black & white TV, but we brought our American TV back with us, so yeah - later in the year we saw that Auntie Jack show turn to colour and we spoilt teenagers breathed a sigh of relief.

    • @adoreslaurel
      @adoreslaurel Pƙed rokem +1

      Bet you did not just change the plug and fire it up {literally}.

    • @johnd8892
      @johnd8892 Pƙed rokem +4

      So how did you convert the US colour TV from the US colour standard of NTSC to the Australian PAL standard?

    • @jimcottee9187
      @jimcottee9187 Pƙed rokem +1

      @@johnd8892 Well, not only was my dad a Test Pilot, he was also an electrical engineer & I believe he used English parts to do a conversion. Half his spare time was spent fixing TV's, until computers came along & he taught himself to fix them.

  • @karenlittle8041
    @karenlittle8041 Pƙed rokem +1

    The Auntie Jack show, it's well worth a watch. Comedy at its best.

  • @thatfelladownunder9396
    @thatfelladownunder9396 Pƙed rokem +4

    I remember watching that show, I was 12. There was huge excitement in the town as more of our friends got colour tv. We eventually got one. But yes, we watched that Aunty Jack episode on a black and white tv. You could still see the line go up the tv so it was very exciting. But we had to use our imagination.
    I think one of the first things I saw on a colour tv was Princess Anne’s wedding. Haven’t checked the timeline but that’s my memory.

  • @artistjoh
    @artistjoh Pƙed rokem +3

    Color TV never arrived by a rising water effect. This was a joke in a crazy comedy show called The Aunty Jack Show. Aunty Jack was a guy with a moustache and large size wearing a woman's dress, always wearing a boxing glove and telling viewers that if we didn't watch her show he would reach out the TV set and rip our bl**dy arms off. She thought there was no problem that couldn't be solved by knocking someone unconscious with her golden boxing glove. Her friends were Thin Arthur, Flange Desire, and Narrator Neville. I adored Aunty Jack. Very surreal and very silly. Oh, she also rode a big motorbike with a sidecar.

  • @liammcintosh8466
    @liammcintosh8466 Pƙed rokem +2

    We’ve had bad hail heaps of times around ACT and NSW. Lots of cars even today still have hail damage.

  • @johnwhear9600
    @johnwhear9600 Pƙed rokem +2

    We cut down an overgrown tree in the back yard and it was chock-a-block with orb weavers. It was like that scene from Indian Jones...

  • @noelwebb6843
    @noelwebb6843 Pƙed rokem

    I remember watching this & being amazed at how the colour came up the screen, the first countdown followed & was great for colour TV with the lighting & outfits

  • @clivegilbertson6542
    @clivegilbertson6542 Pƙed rokem +1

    G'day Mate! There is a wrecked ship, similar to the pic, in Homebush Bay inside Sydney Harbour....Originally towed there to be broken up but never was and now is home to a group of mangroves... Cheers!

  • @amandacasey1946
    @amandacasey1946 Pƙed rokem +1

    Good old Aunty Jack show, I was 6. Loved that show. Feel sorry for any Americans that watched the plane footage and were distressed ❀

  • @megsybond
    @megsybond Pƙed rokem +1

    The local car sales place was caught in a hailstorm and it smashed every car on their lot - new and used cars. Now that's ouch!

  • @ClissaT
    @ClissaT Pƙed rokem

    When I left in 1970 to work in the bush we had a black and white TV set that was allowed to be on for the news in the evenings then turned off again. There was no TV in the bush. So it was a few years before I came back to civilization and saw that TV was in colour! Yes it all keeps changing all the time. Every time I move around or do something new, something else changes. But these days not everything changes for good.
    The opal looks like you are looking through a bad storm into the lovely sunlight beyond.
    Yes we have lots of pink lakes and beaches particularly in Western Aus. And that red photo of the guy on the verandah, was probably shot around mid morning or midday! So not only was it red it was the middle of the day!
    My Mother's house was absolutely beaten to a pulp by massive hail stones in Maleny, Qld. All the sunlights in her house were busted open by the hailstones and rain poured in because after the hail came an inch of very heavy rain. The stones were about 7-8inches across, lots bigger than softballs and made from many stones melted together then unceremoniously dumped on the public! Yes those people in Caloundra copped it as well. The insurance bill from that storm was huge. Some cows and a horse were killed near my Mother's place during that storm.

  • @dougcox3990
    @dougcox3990 Pƙed rokem +1

    Colour TVs went on sale some time before colour broadcasts began, so that a lot of people had TVs ready for the change.

  • @MelodyMan69
    @MelodyMan69 Pƙed rokem +1

    Bought Colour TV before transmission. Watched b&w for about 1 week. Went BONKERS when Auntie Jack came on.

  • @phillberthsp
    @phillberthsp Pƙed rokem +2

    Back in 1970s my grand farther was a wellthy family man and bought the second color tv in the south af Tasmania. When the change over to color happend almost the intire neighborhood turned up to watch this new thing.

  • @zXennVS
    @zXennVS Pƙed rokem +1

    In and around Canberra during the hail storm in 2020 over 40,000 cars got damaged. The government had to rent farmers fields (plus more per car) just to store all the cars for a few months cause there wasn't anywhere to put them.

  • @dropbear6740
    @dropbear6740 Pƙed rokem +1

    Ian the show was called Aunty Jack (comedy show) I actually remember watching this the night it happened, funny thing is at the time not everyone had the new colour TV, my family was lucky to have one, thanks for the memory mate, cheers from Hervey Bay Queensland

  • @malcolmrayner3480
    @malcolmrayner3480 Pƙed rokem +2

    I saw colour TV in 1975 at My grandparents house a friend of mine is an entomologist that lives in the Daintree he has classified over 1000 different insect sub species he has a museum there The Daintree bug museum

  • @blythewarland5459
    @blythewarland5459 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +1

    I was so disappointed when Australia switched to colour tv I was 12 and the Aunty Jack Show was an institution in our house - I didn't realise our B&W tv wouldn't change to colour

  • @PetermusPrime
    @PetermusPrime Pƙed rokem +2

    RE: The abandoned ship. Entropy is inevitable! Also the plane flying through the city was part of the Riverfire festival in Brisbane, might be an idea for a video.

  • @jojo1741
    @jojo1741 Pƙed rokem +2

    Thanks again for another great video, I learn so much great stuff about Aus from your channel. 16:24 love what you do !!

  • @redhammer9910
    @redhammer9910 Pƙed rokem +2

    Colour TV was introduced in 3 phases. First was about 1973 maybe earlier. That was when they tried to give an example what it would be like by flashing an Ampol fuel sign from std B/W to white. The effect left your eyes seeing a blue reddish colour, I know a bit strange. Next was the test pattern, now it gets weird. TV channels ( all 2 ) turned off between 11pm and midnight then a test pattern would come on. As the time for colour TV neared those who had purchased a colour TV could wait up and watch the test pattern, . A friend's parents had one so I remember it well. Then the colour came in but only a couple of shows were in colour and it took about a year till around 90% of shows were colour. You're right, very few people had colour as they were very expensive. But then TV wasn't a big thing so it wasn't such a huge topic.

  • @peterbrittain1963
    @peterbrittain1963 Pƙed rokem +1

    that crazy hail , i put my Motocross body armour and helmet on , ran out side and covered my vr statesman with pallets . got a couple small dents but didnt loose any windows on the car . they were golf ball size hail .

  • @travybrown1351
    @travybrown1351 Pƙed rokem +2

    The plane fly threw Brisbane is what we call river fire were we have jets and that beast flying over the river or threw the city and fireworks...just another day

  • @markwaters3050
    @markwaters3050 Pƙed rokem

    I actually saw this show, on this night, and, yes, we were fortunate to have a colour television. My teacher at school did not believe me when I described the show!

  • @karenstrong8887
    @karenstrong8887 Pƙed rokem

    When we finally got a colour TV most of the programs were made black and white. The best thing to watch was the start of Disney on Sunday Nights.
    I was in that red haze of fires for 4 weeks so I remember. We said sorry to New Zealand when the smoke made their Glaciers go brown.
    That plane was what it was like to land and takeoff in Hong Kong. Until they got a new airport.

  • @southron_d1349
    @southron_d1349 Pƙed rokem +1

    They're all tiny harmless spiders spinning silk. This sort of thing happens all over the world.

  • @kookymonsta6566
    @kookymonsta6566 Pƙed rokem +2

    We did have colour TV in 1975 when this aired and I saw it live at the time. I was 10 at the time.

  • @vtbn53
    @vtbn53 Pƙed rokem +1

    No, all colour formats are B&W compatible, so those with B&W wouldn't have seen the colour but there would not have been any picture corruption. The TV programme you see is The Aunty Jack Show, it was hilarious.

  • @Helliconia54
    @Helliconia54 Pƙed rokem +2

    LOL, speaking of walking through a spider web,,, We have a large spider,(the Orb spider) That just loves spinning it's web many metres long, from ,,,say,,,your house to a nearby tree.? at FACE level. It spins at night and removes it again by day break, During the night, it sits right in the middle.

    • @michaelmclachlan1650
      @michaelmclachlan1650 Pƙed rokem

      Oh yes, in my case between two trees straight across the driveway and path to the door - sometimes I forgot to duck 😬

  • @GazGuitarz
    @GazGuitarz Pƙed rokem

    The show is called Aunty Jack. It was an hilarious show with a Monty Pythonesque feel to it. Great songs and music from Rory O'Donoghue and Graham Bond. Garry McDonald who later morphed into Norman Gunston played Kid Eager. There was also a Pythonesque movie made that featured most of the Aunty Jack cast but wasn't officially a part of the Aunty Jack show. If anyone remembers the name of this movie please let me know, I've been looking for it for years!
    Cheers and Beers!

  • @brad9529
    @brad9529 Pƙed rokem

    A lot of people bought colour TV'S in preparation for the broadcast. However, we still used a black n white TV as a spare in the kitchen until 1995

  • @helenh20mo
    @helenh20mo Pƙed rokem +1

    I remember the day we went from black and white to colour.. we only had a black and white tv but raced down to the tv shop to watch the colour change .

  • @charlesemerson6763
    @charlesemerson6763 Pƙed rokem +1

    Did have a pretty bad hailstorm a few years ago that smashed some windows but it was the noise on the roof. Most homes have tin roof and the noise of the hailstones hitting the roof and the howling from the storm made it a pretty intense 30 minutes. Insurance was fine and the damage was fixed in a couple of weeks.

  • @andrewjames6240
    @andrewjames6240 Pƙed rokem +2

    like you said you needed colour tv,we didn't have one straight away,i had one friend whoes parents had one,so we arranged to go over to see it, the mother said come over when cartoons were on for best effect,we go over a big group of us watched some cartoons it was crazy seeing what colours they were ,then the mother came in and turned the colour down saying we dont want to wear it out before dad comes home from work,we tried explaining it didnt wear out but she said it was time to go ,was about a year after that we got a colour tv.

  • @mygeekspace6912
    @mygeekspace6912 Pƙed rokem +3

    We had one of the biggest hailstorms back in 2010 in Perth. Many cars and some poor motorcyclists was caught out when the hailstorm hit around 4:30pm (peak hour beginning on the freeway).
    You would recognise which cars were hit by the hail by the egg-carton shaped roof tops. Windows smashed, umbrellas ripped to shreds and unfortunately the sad deaths of University of Western Australia’ resident ducklings who were killed by the falling hail. 😱

    • @Ausecko1
      @Ausecko1 Pƙed rokem

      I lived out near the hills then and we didn't get it very bad, but you'd still see the dented cars around for about 6 months afterwards - the panel beaters were busy for about that long before the queues eased up.

    • @sladflob
      @sladflob Pƙed rokem

      My poor car got pummeled by that storm and it was only a couple of years old. The insurance company chose to repair it. I still have it but it's never been quite the same.

  • @DaveWhoa
    @DaveWhoa Pƙed rokem +2

    there are vids on YT of former Prime Minister Bob Hawke sculling beers at the cricket much to the delight of the crowd and amusement of the police 👍

  • @michaelmurphy4360
    @michaelmurphy4360 Pƙed rokem +1

    We sat around as kids watching it was brilliant

  • @Lnch4ALion
    @Lnch4ALion Pƙed rokem +4

    One huge spider made the web

  • @shannonchristsen1235
    @shannonchristsen1235 Pƙed rokem +5

    the tv show was The Aunty Jack Show the guy in the dress was Aunty Jack i was not even born yet i was born 1977

  • @jacintadonadio1208
    @jacintadonadio1208 Pƙed rokem +1

    Awesome video Ian thanks mate 👍🇩đŸ‡ș😊

  • @lillibitjohnson7293
    @lillibitjohnson7293 Pƙed rokem +1

    Hail storms are a great way to get cheap new cars from sales yards lol

  • @SalisburyKarateClub
    @SalisburyKarateClub Pƙed rokem +1

    We came to colour tv fairly late (by world standards) but unlike the US system NTSB we got the German PAL, which was high definition. Made it difficult if you wanted to watch a video tape from America. Those hail storms I was fairly lucky, I was at home but I had a lot of water come into my house, it was fairly extreme, but a mate of mine he'd not long bought a new car, and it was badly damaged. Took him a long time to get it fixed as there was so much damage across the state. They actually used the old Holden plant in Elizabeth to fix the cars.

    • @neumanmachine3781
      @neumanmachine3781 Pƙed rokem

      Australia still had a very small population in the 1960’s so it took longer for new technologies to roll out. We didn’t get cable tv until the late 1990’s. By that time the population had grown enough that new innovations could be rolled out a lot quicker, but 50 years ago it was a lot harder for the country to absorb the costs.

  • @damop4827
    @damop4827 Pƙed rokem

    The C17s flying through Brisbane happen around river fire time (big fireworks show)
    Used to have a couple of f-111's do a dump and burn overhead, untill they replaced them.
    The hail at the end on the car looked like Springfield West of Brisbane.
    Had a cracker go through there a few years back.

  • @BassMatt1972
    @BassMatt1972 Pƙed rokem

    That was Auntie Jack.. An ABC show (National Broadcaster) and was a comedy show based on the comedy of Graeme Bond (Auntie Jack).. Also Gary McDonald (Norman Gunston) in an early appearance.

  • @timjohnun4297
    @timjohnun4297 Pƙed rokem

    I remember watching colour TV for the first time, the whole family all went around to my Nanna's house to watch it, I was devastated to discover Superman was actually blue and red, not black and grey, like I thought đŸ€Ł

  • @matthewsharp9395
    @matthewsharp9395 Pƙed rokem

    Hawk was fantastic. He now has a great beer named after him.
    He also opened up immigration to people from El Salvador for a short time, to help people leaving the war.
    If it wasn't for him I would never have met my wife or have the beautiful baby I have now

  • @seeshel63
    @seeshel63 Pƙed rokem

    Aunty Jack shows Australia's acceptance of men dressing as women; Aunty Jack's catchphrase was "I'll rip your bloody arms off" I saw this live!

  • @6226superhurricane
    @6226superhurricane Pƙed rokem

    we had a chrysler black and white tv until the early 80's, we bought my uncles colour tv when he got a bigger one. i still remember my dad hiring a vhs player and the movies, not long term hire purchase literally hire the vhs player and the movie for a night. he did that a few times before buying one and it was such a big deal to be able to watch movies at home we reviewed every movie gave it some notes and a star rating in a little notebook.

  • @janemcdonald5372
    @janemcdonald5372 Pƙed rokem

    The Globemaster, (from the Amberley Air Base), is doing low flyover was for the 100th Anniversary of the RAAF (Royal Australia Air Force, which was established in 1921 only 3 years after first Air Force was founded (RAF - Royal Air Force of Great Britain).
    The angle and the building mask the fact that the aircraft are actually following the course of the Brisbane River.
    Here's some more info from one of the photographers:
    To achieve these images, I have found an ideal perch upon the railing of the 39th floor of Riparian Plaza in Brisbane. For two years pre-COVID, I have hosted the RAAF media teams with me to ensure they can make the most of this vantage point.
    From the vantage point of Riparian Plaza's 39th-floor balcony, the jets pass about 30-80ft below the balcony. The balcony, with its 360-degree views, allows for coverage of the air display from above most of the central business district buildings. This year's images were shot on a Nikon D850 with a Nikkor 200-500mm telephoto lens so the close passes meant I was stuck with close-up crops of the C-17 Globemasters.
    The general flight path of the display was known from previous years and had only been slightly altered for 2021. What was known for certain was that the pilots from RAAF Amberley Base had flown many hours in the simulator to prepare for the low-level passes (250-300ft above ground level) over the river and bridges. Despite many publications pushing alarmist rhetoric about "dangerous display flights" being too much like 9/11... they hide that the aircraft have a very broad river below their low-level passes and that at no point is any building occupant at any risk of harm.
    Here are more seriously cool photos taken on the day by the photographer:
    www.thedrive.com/the-war-zone/42637/these-images-of-aussie-c-17s-flying-among-skyscrapers-in-brisbane-are-the-best-weve-ever-seen
    .

  • @zwieseler
    @zwieseler Pƙed rokem +1

    The color TV was a sketch on the fantastic Aunty Jack Show. They did a sight gag on the introduction of color. we couldn't see color unless we had a color TV.

  • @leecox7814
    @leecox7814 Pƙed rokem

    The globemaster was flown down the Brisbane River as part of the Riverfire celebrations. They used to use F1-11s to do a dump and burn. When they left service they used F18s but since they were on deployment they used the Globemaster.

  • @uknowispeaksense7056
    @uknowispeaksense7056 Pƙed rokem

    I remember the change to colour tv and I remember it was the Aunty Jack show. I was quite young but I also remember there was a lot of talk in our household and nagging from we kids to buy a colour tv before the change over so I guess the ABC and other stations were flagging it for a few months maybe.

  • @jayemes1552
    @jayemes1552 Pƙed rokem +1

    That Aunty Jack episode would have been awesome if you had a colour TV at the time. Not many would have. I'm guessing at most double digits.

  • @kerrydoutch5104
    @kerrydoutch5104 Pƙed rokem +1

    Aunty Jack show. Very funny in its time. Going colour was built in as part of the shows story. If your TV waS black and white it didnt show up. The change over date and time was advertised so colour TV sales spiralled.

  • @whymeeveryone
    @whymeeveryone Pƙed rokem

    I remember when Don Lane was on and they did it too. Yet because many had black and white tv the complain to the television stations not knowing they need a colour tv

  • @raymondsvensson4667
    @raymondsvensson4667 Pƙed rokem

    That Globe master was flying through Brisbane for our river fire festival held every September.

  • @suelynch
    @suelynch Pƙed rokem +1

    Switching to colour: The show was the Auntie Jack Show.. . There was a joke going around at the time "What's the difference between Uncle Sam and Auntie Jack"? A: While Uncle Sam makes your armpits smell good, Auntie Jack will rip your bloody arms off"
    I also remember a commentator of a program called "pot black" (Snooker). He was calling the shot of a player and said something like "He is going for the Blue ball. For those of you watching in black and white it the one behind the Red ball".
    Cricket ball sized hail is scary. There was a wild hailstorm pass through a section of my city around 1990. It caused millions of dollars damage to businesses and private homes. Homes with terracotta tiled roof's were the worst and car yards lost a lot of stock. I had a cricket ball sized chunk of hail smash a bedroom window and another took out the front indicator on my 1970 2 door Valiant Regal. My mother had the side mirror smashed off. Even golf ball sized hail can do a crap ton of damage.

  • @miniveedub
    @miniveedub Pƙed rokem

    Quite apart from the well camouflaged spiders you wouldn’t go touching random trees in the Daintree Rainforest anyway, it’s home to the Gympie Gympie tree, also known as the suicide plant, with leaves covered in tiny fibres that pierce the skin and cause excruciating pain that can last for a couple of years.

  • @heidicross7255
    @heidicross7255 Pƙed rokem

    The show is Auntie Jack, a very funny, kinda amateur show which was on every week. I loved the show and still know all the words to the theme song to this day.
    The spider web "sheets" usually appear after a lot of rain or actual flooding. It is the spider's way of protecting themselves.

  • @kennethdodemaide8678
    @kennethdodemaide8678 Pƙed rokem

    The Southern Lights are real. We get them here in southern Victoria. The pink and green colours are amazing.

  • @onigvd77
    @onigvd77 Pƙed rokem +1

    that plane flying thru the city looked spun out, gee i wished they turned their phone sideways so we could see it better!
    if you ever use your phone for photos or videos, turn your phone!

  • @Goatcha_M
    @Goatcha_M Pƙed rokem

    My dad loves to tell the story of how when he was young and regularly raced bicycles, he won a race once because there was a hail storm and 90% of the competitors dropped out to take shelter.
    I'm not sure if they were full tennis ball sized hail though.

  • @petethebastard
    @petethebastard Pƙed rokem +2

    Hail... our Bureau of Meteorology issues warnings for "small hail" and Severe Hail!
    Great vids, Ian! Good viewing, bloke!

  • @jemor2143
    @jemor2143 Pƙed rokem

    About the hail.... My car was written off a couple of weeks ago from hail that big and bigger where I live in Lake Macquarie. I just go into my car to go for a family lunch when the hail started... the noise was excruciating and I couldn't get out to go inside because it would've killed me I'm sure, plus the whole ground was covered in it, so no way of walking on it and staying upright. I have never seen hail that size in my 70 years. Very scary to be in.

  • @suzannedarby4836
    @suzannedarby4836 Pƙed rokem

    The spider webs, looks like it's at Longford near Sale Victoria.. I was there and took photos.. was amazing..

  • @chrisrumble2665
    @chrisrumble2665 Pƙed rokem +1

    You know we have bird-eating spiders over here😂

  • @MonstaAU
    @MonstaAU Pƙed rokem +2

    More mailtime please Ian!!

  • @michaelmayo9048
    @michaelmayo9048 Pƙed rokem

    When l was a kid in the 60s in a country town in Victoria Australia ..this nice house we walked past everyone knew that the Americans that lived their had a color TV but it didn't work in color for many years later.

  • @kellygarsed2561
    @kellygarsed2561 Pƙed rokem

    That ship wreck is magnetic Island in Townsville its beautiful and at night sometimes they put coloured fairy lights in the trees!!

  • @axle.australian.patriot
    @axle.australian.patriot Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci

    6:03 There is 2 directly in line with each other, one above the 2 notches and one below.. I must admit I didn't see the top one in the first pic, but I picked the bottom one straight away. They are rare to see, I have only ever seen a few back in the 70s as a younger.

  • @Jus7aguy
    @Jus7aguy Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci

    You should see what those spider webs look like when they catch fire.
    The plane one I think is the River-Fire festival. An annual event in Brisbane, which usually has a plane flyby at extremely low altitude. It used to be an F1-11 flying by low enough you could probably hit it with a good tennis shot.

  • @kcbrown4993
    @kcbrown4993 Pƙed rokem +1

    If you get a chance look up the blue lake in Mount Gambier south Australia it changes colour it's truly a beautiful thing to see

  • @mikeythehat6693
    @mikeythehat6693 Pƙed rokem

    The t.v. show was the Auntie Jack show. (Not sure that was the correct title but if you google "Auntie Jack" you should find it)
    The spider webs are made by baby spiders. It's baby spider season. I don't know what brand of spiders they are but this happens every year when this type of spider breeds. You can see the size of them on the fence post, all those little black dots are baby spiders.

  • @phillipkennedy508
    @phillipkennedy508 Pƙed rokem

    1st clip was from ABC Australia production called 'Auntie Jack' from the 70's

  • @iancremmins4727
    @iancremmins4727 Pƙed rokem

    i bought my house a little over 20 yrs ago and i got up on the roof to hose it down before i painted it and found it littered with dents from a hailstorm in the 1970's, where was an aluminium window screen in the shed that was wrecked from that same storm, its not common but its not unusual either