lifestyle

Open post of the week + life at MMHQ

I’m having a great week. Feeling grateful that my kids are better after 10 days of sickness, enjoying spending time with them in the school holidays and work is firing me up in a good way. How’s your week going?

Welcome to our regular Wednesday re-cap of what’s going on behind-the-scenes at Mamamia, where you can comment about anything at all you like – ask a question, confess a problem, make an observation about anything. At all.

So my week…….

I’ve been gearing up for the second season of Mamamia TV on Sky News and I’ll be honest with you here, I’ve been a bit…uncertain about it. The format we gave a whirl the first time – me and three guests sitting in a line on the Sky News set –  just didn’t work for me.

I thought I’d love it and I hoped I’d be great at it but I didn’t and I wasn’t!

I wasn’t good at all those linking bits (so clunky) and I found it a bit too newsy, not intimate enough to embody Mamamia and what we do around here.

Sky News have been fantastic and very keen to work with us to find the right format. And this week, I think we have found it.

I got busy with iMovie and made a little sizzle reel – a mash up of a bunch of different interviews I’d done with various people – funny, sad, political, girly…..lots of light and shade which to me, is what Mamamia is all about.

I showed this (a bit shyly) to Sky News and they loved it and got it and came back to me with some great ideas for the new format of the show.

I’m going to do one interview per show and we’re going to have some behind-the-scenes footage of Mamamia and what goes on in the office during our often bizarre editorial meetings.

There will also be some panel stuff but not sitting in a line like on a bus, actually sitting around a table. No doubt eating some sugary baked good and drinking tea. Because come on, I’m involved and I can’t do anything without tea.

Finally, I’m really excited about it. It’s clicked in my brain. I can see it now and I couldn’t before.

So that’s been a big thing this week.

First show will be Friday August 5th and you’ll also be able to see it on the site.

Watch this space – more to come.

 

News Of The World saga rolls on…

As it emerged that News International Executive Rebekah Brooks called the former UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown to tell him her newspaper (The Sun) had obtained confidential medical information (believed to have come from hacking) that his son had cystic fibrosis and was about to splash it across the front page, I read this beautiful piece in The Guardian from journalist Dea Birkett whose daughter is disabled and who brands the phonecall – and the publication – unforgiveable.

She writes so poignantly about what it’s like to learn your child has a disability:

Gordon Brown and family

I can imagine what it felt like to get that call – that horrendous, invasive, unforgiveable call Rebekah Brooks made to the Browns to say their baby’s diagnosis would be splashed across the Sun. My daughter is disabled. In that first year of her birth and my coming to accept her disability, my family was so tender, fragile and confused that such a call could have crushed us.

I now know the greatest challenge in having a child with a disability is confronting the world’s assumptions about her and us as a family. But I didn’t know that in those early days. I only knew my family was branded different, that other mothers shunned me as if my daughter were infectious, that no one bent down and tickled my baby’s chin.

Brooks invaded that world of learning and sorrow. She should be ashamed.

Yes, she should.

 

Random thought of the week

Michelle Duggar – mother of 19 – hasn’t been pregnant in the longest time – at least a year. Did having a premature baby with serious health problems finally convince the Duggars that it was time to use contraception and not just ‘leave it to God’? Or did her poor uterus get long service leave?

There was some pretty heated debate last year when I wrote a post reacting to the People magazine interview Michelle and Jim-Bob did where they said they wanted more kids. I said I believed it was irresponsible. At the time, their 19th child – who was born at 25 weeks – was still in intensive care, fighting for life after Michelle suffered from the life-threatening condition pre-eclampsia and went into early labour.

Baby Josie has since gone home – her condition is unknown because the Duggars (understandably) have been lying low since then and not done any press that I have seen.

 

At the time, I wrote:

.

When the whole fuss was made about Octomum, I did find myself wondering how the Duggars had always managed to escape scrutiny about their choices to have such a large family. As many MM readers have pointed out in, they are debt-free and manage to raise their children and do charity work without any government assistance (before you ask) and seem outwardly like a very lovely family.

But how many children is too many? I know many women with dozens less children than the Duggars who weigh up the consequences very carefully about the impact of a future child on their current family. What affect would Michelle’s death or the death of a baby or the responsibility of a child with severe health problems have on the other Duggar kids?

I find it difficult to understand (is it a faith thing?) what could make anyone risk that when they must already be pretty stretched emotionally, mentally, financially and PHYSICALLY.

Or is it really just nobody’s business?

There were 192 comments on this post with a pretty mixed spectrum of opinions. I don’t think I’ve changed my mind. And with no pregnancy announcements this past year (the longest I can remember without a Duggar pregnancy), here’s hoping Michelle and Jim Bob have decided Josie will be their swansong.

The Simon Baker Ad

I got into a mock-fight on Twitter with a couple of male mates about Simon Baker’s ANZ ad and the fact he has an American accent in it. Some find it odd. I find it….who cares, it’s Simon Baker.

 

The Original Ad:

The Australian Accent Version:

Frankly, he could be speaking Swahili and that would be AOK with me.

The Crocheted Bits

What every self-respecting person needs: some crocheted reproductive parts: sperm, penis and uterus.  What a terrific gift for a new mother – in case she ever forgets how she became one.

The Flowers

A beautiful delivery of flowers came this week – a thank you from Zoe for writing and raving about Amazing Face. Which I have and will continue to do with or without floral tributes. The best part is that they arrived in their own vase. That’s so chic. Especially because we have no vases in the office and I would have had to somehow stuff them into a giant tea cup.

The Slippers

These arrived from Lifeline – they are slippers which were only big enough for my feet (score) to promote their Stress Down Day. Lifeline only do one fundraising drive per year to fund their brilliant free service and this is it: on Friday 22nd July, wear something silly, comfy or really anything that will help you ‘stress less’. A batman costume perhaps.  Find out more about it here:

 

Finally, if you have just a couple of minutes, could I ask you to pop over HERE and take our first Mamamia Body Image survey? We’re really really interested to know what you think about body image, the media, your own body and the pressure you may or may not feel to look a certain way. We’ll be sharing the results as soon as we have them……..

 

So how was your week? Any comments on what you’ve just read? Anything you’d like to discuss or get off your chest? Speak up…..

Related Stories

Recommended

Top Comments

JAB 13 years ago

Loved your Nanny article in 'Sunday LiIfe'. I've never seen the Nanny as the problem. I also don't see the parents who employ the Nanny as the problem. It is actually connected to plastic surgery and body image - it's the deviation from the truth that annoys me. I don't care if people choose/can afford to have nannies, botox, plastic surgery or models who choose to undereat and over-exercise for their profession. You just need to be honest about it. So if you and your husband both choose to work, and employ a nanny, good luck to you. You just can't make out that you do it all on your own! Like the celeb who's been nip, tucked and botox to within an inch of their life - but insist they are COMPLETELY NATURAL. Or the skinny supermodel who insists they love cheeseburgers and eat chocolate everyday. SJP I think does proclaim a bit loudly she's hands-on. I don't really know they source of the recent articles about her, or if she said it. However I have read in article from an interview with her. It was a reputable article/photo shoot for vogue or vanity fair or the like. IT was when she was spruiking STC2 and talking about her twins. She talked about being "hands on", and she made all hers kids food. Great! Later she talks about skyping the babies at night, for weeks at a time while she was shooting in the middle east! WTF! What did she do, Fedex their food to them??? Again, I am not judging her decision to work, and I'm sure she ensured the best possible care was taken of her kids. But really - it can leave the rest of us mere mortals feeling bad that we can't 'have it all'. have also read an article with Desperate Housewife Marcia Cross. She talks about the pressure to be thin on TV after having her twins, and how she spends her life starving. And how she does use botox. Great. Now I don't think I should be able to look like her! So - employ nannies, supermodels - deprive yourself of life's pleasures, even have pics photoshopped - we just need a bit of honesty and disclosure! And models etc should stop tweeting themselves eating hamburgers or that they've just eaten chocolate. Really People!!!!


loopylol27 13 years ago

My 2 cents worth for the survey was the limit of answers for why I buy less magazines now. I added in my comments the "baby bump" images seen in every magazine of nearly every female celebrity (and they almost always are not pregnant), and also the "how I lost my baby weight stories".

These two issues are definitely related to female body image (and have been discussed on Mamamia on many occasions) and I think they should be included as options among all of the retouching/skinny model options because I think they bug a LOT of women, not just me. These stories appear just as frequently as retouched images and skinny models in magazines these days. I felt the options provided were more geared towards fashion magazines (high amount of skinny models and retouched images), but a lot of people by the weekly magazines and these ones are more saturated with everyone being pregnant when they actually aren't or losing baby weight.

Thanks!