Confession number one. I have never seen a single episode of “McLeod’s Daughters”. OK, so any cred I might have had, even vicarious, Saint Thomas Aquinas cred, is now evaporated.
Or so you might immediately think.
But hasty conclusions are like custard tarts: it’s not the filling that makes them, or the pastry casing, it crucially depends on the ambience of the first bite. All by way of saying, that when it comes to “McLeod’s Daughters”, I have mega-cred.
I am a good friend of Jack McLeod’s girlfriend!
Now, as I’m sure you must understand, I must talk in vague generalities, to some great degree, as they don’t want the media pack descending on their doormat, but I can reveal that Jack likes fishing, though he tends not to catch very much, even when he gets up at 4:30 in the morning and drags his girlfriend “Janice” (discretion is essential) with him on the boat.
“Janice” and Jack have a puppy, who turned one year old a couple of weeks ago, and they held a puppy birthday party. The puppy, who I’ll name “Nestor”, (I must keep his breed a secret, in case he might be recognised on walks in public), is already a veteran chewer of anything and everything, and hole digger. “Janice”’s sister’s designer shoes are no longer, post “Nestor”, what they once were. No need for any doggie DNA to be taken, there is only one suspect.
My lips, for the sake of my friendship with “Janice” must remain sealed, and not divulge any more goss. But may Our Good Lord strike me down and microwave my boxer shorts until they burn to a cinder, what you have just read is the truth.
But enough quotation marks around names. Back to True Confessions. There is one TV show that, if I miss it for a single weekday, I curl up in the foetal position, and, inconsolable, won’t even visualise a chocolate bar to cheer me up.
I’m referring to ABC News Breakfast (and that’s Australian Broadcasting Corporation), which has as one of its news presenters the woman who, had Shakespeare not been much chop, he would have penned sonnets with lines like “O sweet sadness of my soul, my heart longs” and “O, as I yearn, thou art as unattainable as the morning dew” and so on and so on to serenade her with.
Virginia Trioli |
What more could a man ask for? Her phone number perhaps? But we poets are wise. Let dearest Virginia stay two-dimensional for me. Let her be perpetually unattainable, for it is in the act of attaining that one is lost.
Actually, I snuck that last, wise-sounding bit, in from Saint Thomas Aquinas. He was wise. He would have made a good TV Australian football pundit...
5 comments:
Jack never really makes an appearance in the show - there are a few photos on the wall and one episode that goes back in time to when Jack and his brother are fighting over Pru, who ends up marrying Jack... in the movie McLeod's Daughter's Jack is on-screen for part of the movie and then dies.
??? Am I forgetting some episode where he appears?
Enquiring minds want to know! :)
Sorry Billie! I'm too preoccupied with drooling over the photo of Virginia that Dawn has so kindly added to my post to tell you anything useful...
I have to say, I saw the first episode of McLeod's Daughters and I was hooked! Great drama.
@ Michael, maybe he was the model used for Jack? My Google fingers are ready to go.
Thanks again for doing this wonderful insight of life down under. I've gotten great comments on the site.
As a "newcomer" I find it fascinating to discover the Land Down Under all over again through Michael's readings! May have to go and get McLeods Daughters from the video shop as I haven't seen it yet and now my curiosity is getting the better of me.
Martha---get the TV series of McLeod's daughters. You won't be disappointed.
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