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fazcinatingblog · 9 months ago
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But is a rice pudding thing healthier or unhealthier than a meat pie while watching a footy
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actutrends · 5 years ago
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Pamela Anderson, 52, Recreates Her Iconic ‘Baywatch’ Run For New Ad & She’s Never Looked Better
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January 17, 2020 8: 39PM EST
Pamela Anderson’s still got it! She donned a plunging wetsuit and recreated her famous ‘Baywatch’ run for a new commercial.
Pamela Anderson made the sexy slow-motion run across the beach famous on Baywatch, and it caused her to become a worldwide sensation. And guess what? At 52, Pamela can still do that sexy jog. She hit the beach in Australia for an Ultra Tune car care commercial, and brought back her slow-mo run for the Aussie company’s “Unexpected Situations” 2020 campaign. The commercial was shot along the country’s Gold Coast in late Nov. 2019 and now we’re getting to see the final product.
In the ad that dropped on Jan. 17, Australian Rules Football legend Warwick Capper, 56, is driving his dune buggy down the beach when he first spies the blonde beauty. She’s wearing an extremely low-cut black wetsuit, which shows off her famous cleavage. He then takes off his sunglasses in shock, and asks, “Pamela Anderson?” She then smiles back at him, and he can’t keep his eyes off of her. Soon, the steering wheel breaks, sending his rig into the surf line and it gets stuck in the sand. Pam gives a hearty laugh, then we get a look at her squad of red one-piece swimsuit-wearing lifeguard beauties.
Soon, a giant tidal wave appears and sweeps Warwick out to sea. “Here we go again,” Pam declares, as he calls out her name for help. Then comes the magical moment as Pamela leads her team of lady lifeguards with a slow-motion run towards the water. It’s like time never stopped in the 23 years since she left Baywatch. Her blonde locks float behind her and that plunging wetsuit gives the same visual of her chest that her red swimsuit once did.
The four gorgeous lifeguards get on paddle boards and pull Warwick back onto shore. Soon an Ultra Tune repairman arrives to work on the car, but ends up being the one to give mouth to mouth resuscitation to the sporting legend. “You’re not Pamela!” Warwick exclaims, before smiling and saying, “Ahh, well!” “Avoid unexpected situations. Get your car serviced at Ultra Tune,” Pam says while giving the camera a super sultry look.
The company is so proud of Pam being their 2020 celebrity spokeswoman that they’ve been teasing still photos from the commercial for over a month on their Instagram account, beginning on Dec. 11, 2019.  Their star-studded “Unexpected Situations” campaign in the past has featured the likes of Charlie Sheen, Jean-Claude Van Damme and Mike Tyson.
The post Pamela Anderson, 52, Recreates Her Iconic ‘Baywatch’ Run For New Ad & She’s Never Looked Better appeared first on Actu Trends.
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footyplusau · 8 years ago
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The Greater Western Sydney Giants should embrace all the hatred
This comes to you from the town of Broken Hill, or, as the NRL’s and AFL’s duelling colonisers know it, Greater Greater Western Sydney (GGWS).
Like all of Sydney west of Anzac Parade, GGWS is a battleground between the football codes. The AFL has recently discovered it, while the NRL neglects and forgets it until it remembers to remember it.
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Port Adelaide thump Carlton
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AFL plays of round 4
AFL plays of round 4
Good Friday footy was great, Nat Fyfe is captain courageous, Hopper pops through a ripper, Eddie kicks six including the usual bit of genius and Riewoldt is sublime as Tiges remain unbeaten.
Port Adelaide thump Carlton
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Port Adelaide thump Carlton
Port Adelaide thump Carlton
Port have thumped a hapless Carlton in Adelaide, 20.17.137 to 6.11.47.
Giants bracing for tough Swans battle
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Giants bracing for tough Swans battle
Giants bracing for tough Swans battle
The high-flying Giants have their best chance to record a first win at the SCG against the struggling Swans.
Bulldog stalwart Bob Murphy’s 300th
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Bulldog stalwart Bob Murphy’s 300th
Bulldog stalwart Bob Murphy’s 300th
Western Bulldogs veteran Robert Murphy reflects on his upcoming 300th game this weekend.
FootyFix: Can the Tiges keep it up?
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FootyFix: Can the Tiges keep it up?
FootyFix: Can the Tiges keep it up?
Rohan Connolly previews all the footy action ahead of round 5 in the AFL.
Viney: Criticism of players has impact
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Viney: Criticism of players has impact
Viney: Criticism of players has impact
Richmond and Melbourne captains Trent Cotchin and Jack Viney believe the negative opinion aimed at individual players such as Tyrone Vickery can cause a heavy mental impact.
Gunston: Mitchell will receive plenty of banter
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Gunston: Mitchell will receive plenty of …
Gunston: Mitchell will receive plenty of banter
Jack Gunston knows if Sam Mitchell is right to play for West Coast his ex-teammates will make sure he remembers where he came from.
AFL plays of round 4
Good Friday footy was great, Nat Fyfe is captain courageous, Hopper pops through a ripper, Eddie kicks six including the usual bit of genius and Riewoldt is sublime as Tiges remain unbeaten.
Phil Gould is, on that point, as right as ever: the Penrith-Parramatta derby should be played twice a year, a bigger showdown than even those legendary Good Friday, Anzac Day and Queen’s Birthday traditions that we would cherish so fondly if we could recall who played in them. “How The West Was Won” ought to be league’s marquee feature. Unfortunately, one of the reasons the Eels-Panthers match is shunted onto Saturday afternoon is that the Nine Network has turned Friday Night Football into a permanent outreach program for the Broncos.
Here in Broken Hill, the battle of the codes was decided long before a Brisbane rugby league team was a twinkle in Porky Morgan’s eye and Rupert Murdoch’s chequebook. Like much of GGWS, Broken Hill has been an Aussie rules town since day dot, for its own historical and geographic reasons. Since its earliest mining days it has been considered a northern suburb of Adelaide, and its current favourite son is the Crows’ captain Tex Walker, who has inherited the mantle of songbird June Bronhill, painter Pro Hart, crooked magistrate Murray Farquhar, comedian Steve “Sandman” Abbott, zinc, lead and silver as the Hill’s greatest export.
On the right track: The GWS Giants are bound for premiership success. Photo: Getty Images
Which is not to say that every kiddie is walking around the slag heap in a number 13 Adelaide guernsey, because, typically of GGWS, it is importation that brings allegiance. People from “Away” (anywhere not Broken Hill) bring their teams with them. So you are as likely to see a Richmond, Essendon or St Kilda guernsey as any other, and if it’s a leaguie stumbling out of the Palace Hotel, it would be no surprise to see him in a North Sydney Bears get-up. Footie jerseys are completely disconnected from location, I realise on Argent Street when I run into Nick, a Broken Hill local, the only man bold enough to wear a Manly Sea Eagles jersey west of Dee Why.
Why? “I f—en hate Manly,” Nick explains. “But I went to a fancy dress party as Fatty Vautin because I look a bit like him, I bought this Manly jersey for the night, and now I have to keep wearing it around because they’re too expensive to wear once. But I really hate Manly.” Who does Nick support? “Cowboys.” Of course. “I used to live in Brisbane. I really hate the Broncos. So I follow the Cowboys.”
For all the random reasons (mostly centred around hate) that people follow teams, what you are least likely to see here is a Sydney Swan or a GWS Giant, both of whom are equally loathed in Broken Hill, because if there’s one thing that unites the folk of GGWS, it is their shared hatred of the S. And this is the rub with the AFL’s crusade to manufacture fandom around certain teams, focused on Saturday night’s derby between the Swans and the Giants. Hatred – the most powerful force in football – takes time to brew.
From the eyrie of corporate headquarters, the AFL has done everything right with these two clubs. Rivers of money, salary cap concessions, strong management and on-field success. But what they are still working on is mobilising everyone else’s hatred.
It helps that the Swans and Giants are both located in Sydney, but as the Swans’ experience shows, hatred is not manufactured overnight. The Swans’ large fan base breaks down into distinct geological strata:
Old South Melbourne Fans. Literally rusted on, and out in force whenever the Swans go back “home” to play in Melbourne. Still wear knitted pure-wool South scarves. Favourite player: Bobby Skilton. More hugged than hated.
Edelsten-era Blow-ins. Drawn by the “Sydney glamour” years of the mid-eighties when the Swans could suddenly afford pink helicopters, Gerard Healy and Greg Williams. Favourite player: Warwick Capper. Mocked but not hated.
Early Nineties Masochists. Can remember details of each of the Swans’ 26 consecutive losses in 1993 and 1994. Boast that only what doesn’t kill you can make you stronger. Favourite player: Troy Luff. Genuinely respected for their chops, not hated at all.
Hatred – the most powerful force in football – takes time to brew.
Rocket-Lockett Revivalists. Mounted the bandwagon when, after the AFL realised something serious had to be done, the Swans were reinflated under the coaching of Rodney Eade, the captaincy of Paul Kelly and the goalkicking prowess of Tony Lockett. Nearly won a grand final. Favourite player: Mickey O. Almost hated.
Glory Years. Under Paul Roos and John Longmire, two premierships were won and the Swans finally earned the national hatred they merited by coming from Sydney. Favourite player: Adam Goodes. Now we’re cooking.
That’s a long history with all the ebbs and flows on which allegiance is built and stories are told, but it’s only in the last 10 years that the rest of the country has felt liberated to really hate the Swans. They were pitied, they were derided, but it took three decades in Sydney before they earned that badge of honour.
Against that, the Giants have everything going for them except the textures of time. Already they have built a narrative around their hapless first few seasons from 2012, but really, when there are clubs such as St Kilda (one premiership in 144 years), Richmond (none since Kevin Bartlett was a superstar), the Bulldogs (one since 1955) and Fremantle (none ever), you can’t out-Cinderella Cinderella.
Notwithstanding the twin handicaps of a mealy mouthed name and an American mascot, the GWS Giants are proceeding along a well-articulated track towards premiership success. In how they have been put together, they have proven the adage that it is better to build on a greenfields site than to remediate an old one.
The one piece that is missing for the Giants is widespread hatred and its corollary, widespread support. On-field success alone won’t build it. Look at the Melbourne Storm: in many ways the perfectly constructed rugby league club, nurtured by strong leadership and a steady stream of success, it still battled to muster an audible quorum at its seventh grand final appearance in 2016, where its most visible supporter was Salim Mehajer.
Passion needs time and space, random stories like Nick’s “How I Became A Fan” to percolate through the furthest reaches of Great, Greater, all the way out to Greatest Western Sydney. It never happens overnight, but already, thanks to the resentment of GWS that even Swans fans feel, there will be plenty of loathing at the SCG on Saturday night. That’s a very good thing.
If the GWS fans feel outnumbered and despised and ridiculed and beleaguered, then they should embrace that, because hatred is one passion that the AFL cannot deliberately manufacture, and hatred is the first step to someone wearing your colours in the Greater Greater West. Even if he’s doing it for fancy dress.
The post The Greater Western Sydney Giants should embrace all the hatred appeared first on Footy Plus.
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fazcinatingblog · 2 years ago
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Warwick capper opened a brothel in Oakleigh????? Ummm why am I just sitting at home Jesus let's go
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fazcinatingblog · 7 years ago
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the speculation for who’s going in the jungle is soooo boring compared to last year, i think mostly b/c last year had DANE SWAN and now this year it’s like idk??? tomic??? warwick capper??? other boring people???
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