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In brief

Royal VISIT Mary’s green tour Crown Princess Mary set out to tackle the issue of climate change on a fast-moving, six-day Pacific tour, kicking off in Vanuatu and ending in her one-time hometown of Sydney. For more PAGE 20 Women we love Bluming brave Beloved author Judy Blume was honoured at Variety’s Power of Women awards. She used the moment to condemn book bans, saying “It’s history itself that’s under fire”. Shaneice’s Spark Talented teen basketballer Shaneice Swain, 19, has been drafted to the WNBA. The Yupangathi and Gangalidda/Gooreng Gooreng woman will join the LA Sparks. Sailing to glory Australian Olympic medallists Olivia Price and Nina Curtis are recruiting sailors for the first ever Women’s America’s Cup race in Barcelona in 2024. Show STOPPER Blondie is back Sparkling in a hooded cape of mirror shards, Blondie frontwoman and rock legend Debbie Harry, 77, blew…

In brief

Kevin Costner STAR’S SHOCK SPLIT!

Celebrating his 68th birthday on January 18, Kevin Costner was feeling upbeat. “Don’t believe what they say about getting older,” he posted alongside a photo of himself in a cowboy hat and jeans. “Each passing year is a gift, and it gets better and better with time.” Well, Kev? It’s complicated. The actor was reportedly stunned when his wife Christine Baumgartner filed for divorce on May 1 after 18 years of marriage. “It was not anything that he wanted or sought,” a source told People magazine. “If he could change the situation, he would.” A representative for Costner also alluded to the Yellowstone star’s surprise in an official statement: “It is with great sadness that circumstances beyond his control have transpired which have resulted in Mr Costner having to participate in a…

Kevin Costner STAR’S SHOCK SPLIT!
House arrest

House arrest

Finally, I’ve taken control of my domestic patch. Harmony has returned to the frontline of family life. I’m writing to you today not only as a member of a more functional playing group, but as a coach, happy to point the way towards improvement in your own lives. This dramatic action was necessitated by years of abuse, blurred boundaries and instructions that were ignored. No matter what I did, what I said or what I tried to role model, the members of this household refused to yield. Eventually I cracked and found myself at the information desk asking the kindly lass in red and green where chains and locks were located. After congratulating her on the forensic knowledge of product location I headed to aisles nine and 15. Coming home, I went…

Round OF APPLAUSE!

Round OF APPLAUSE!

It’s that time of the year again, when Hollywood’s A-list flock to Cannes’ Boulevard de la Croisette for a two-week whirl of film premieres, champagne-fuelled parties and super yachts. And this year, the glitz and glamour came in spades as stars stepped out for the 76th annual international film festival for some fun and festivities in the French Riviera. While one of the more respected film festivals on the circuit, Cannes has also become known as a bit of a fashion spectacle – often on par with the Oscars and the Met Gala. Along with actors showcasing their latest films, the invitation-only event was attended by the likes of models Gigi Hadid and Naomi Campbell, who used the red carpet like a runway as they sashayed down in designer gowns from…

to the rescue

to the rescue

“Our intentions were always to respect the original cottage’s footprint and maintain its historical importance.” EACH MORNING, CLAIRE TAFFE and her border collie, Doug, stop at the window of her cottage and watch two Shetland ponies munching grass on the neighbouring property. “I often find myself frozen in front of it, completely mesmerised by the view,” she says. “It’s like a piece of art and never ceases to make me smile.” It’s one of many small pleasures she and her husband Kieron Christ, a roof plumber, can now enjoy. They spent one and a half years respectfully restoring the 150-year-old miner’s cottage in Trentham, Central Victoria, home of the Dja Dja Wurrung people. While the cottage is gorgeous and cosy now, its ‘before’ shots tell a sorry tale: rotten carpets; dark, poky…

TRX VS RAPTOR DINO CLASH

TRX VS RAPTOR DINO CLASH

YOU’RE NOT wrong! It’s a bit unfair to front the Ranger Raptor up against the RAM 1500 TRX. On price alone, the TRX costs about twice as much as the Ranger Raptor ($210K vs $90K), its supercharged V8 generates 240 more kilowatts than the Raptor’s V6 can muster, and the TRX monsters the Raptor in both size and style. But the thing is, except perhaps for the recently released Chevrolet Silverado ZR2, the Ranger Raptor is the closest thing we officially have n Australia to the TRX. The fight becomes fairer when you depart suburbia in pursuit of twisty trails and off-road tracks. Both models are flagships of their respective brands, and as such both feature uprated brakes and quality suspension, and both have been designed for the same purpose: to…

The 15-inch MacBook Air will be the perfect mix of portability, price, and performance

The 15-inch MacBook Air will be the perfect mix of portability, price, and performance

Rumors picked up again recently that a new 15-inch MacBook Air will be Apple’s next major Mac release, possibly at the Worldwide Developers conference, according to Mark Gurman’s latest report. But whether we get it before, during, or after WWDC, this much is true: It will instantly become Apple’s perfect laptop. That may seem like a stretch, but hear me out. Assuming the rumors and our own assumptions are true, the 15-inch MacBook Air will be the ideal laptop for nearly every user, with its combination of size, processing power, and value. The MacBook Air is already Apple’s most popular laptop, and a 15-inch model would be the jewel of the lineup. Here’s why. THE RIGHT SIZE Apple offers MacBooks in four different sizes: 13.3 inches (13-inch MacBook Pro), 13.6 inches (M2 MacBook…

BUS CRASH TRAGEDY ‘WE SAW LITTLE TERRIFIED FACES’

BUS CRASH TRAGEDY ‘WE SAW LITTLE TERRIFIED FACES’

Only in woman's Day Billy Chmielewski can still picture the horrifying moment he saw the crash unfold. His tradie colleague Daniel Green was driving their work ute as the truck directly in front of them collided with a bus. “I remember looking up, and in just a split second, truck tyres screeched, smoke went everywhere. The sound of the impact was like a bomb going off,” Billy tells Woman's Day. “The bus almost went airborne [before] landing on the side of the road. “We didn't even think about it – we just looked at each other and ran in.” The 27-year-old plumber says he had no idea there were children inside the bus, which had rolled onto I its side at the intersection of Exford Road and Murphys Road in Eynesbury, 44km west of Melbourne. Daniel…

DEEP FAKING IT

DEEP FAKING IT

Noelle Martin was 18 years old when she first watched herself performing hard-core porn. Sitting idly in front of her laptop one night, the then law student decided to do a reverse image search of herself on Google. She was expecting to unearth an archaic MySpace profile or some old, cringe-worthy social media posts. Instead, Martin was met with hundreds of explicit images and videos of herself, including graphic scenes of her engaging in intercourse and oral sex. Except it wasn’t her. Martin is one of the hundreds of thousands of women who have been targeted by non-consensual sexual deepfakes. Meaning the image of her face was stolen and digitally mapped onto someone else’s body using AI technology. “I felt sick,” recalls Martin, now an award-winning activist and a researcher at…

Kim Kardashian “I CRY MYSELF TO SLEEP”

Celebrating Mother’s Day on May 14, Kim Kardashian shared a video card her four kids – daughters North, 9, and Chicago, 5, plus sons Saint, 7, and Psalm, 4 – made for her with the help of their aunt Khloé. “I’m really grateful for you,” Saint said in his message. “I know I’m rude to you a lot, I say you’re nothing to me, but you mean the world to me. I love you more than anything.” The quirky family moment gives insight into the bittersweet realities of Kardashian’s life as a single mum. “Everyone says the days are long and the years are short, and that couldn’t be like a more true statement,” she opened up on the podcast On Purpose with Jay Shetty. “It’s like full madness. It’s the…

Kim Kardashian “I CRY MYSELF TO SLEEP”

The HEALING POWER OF HOLD MUSIC

This love story starts with two students from Tasmania writing letters to each other in the late 1980s into the 1990s to share their devotion to the sports-comedy radio show, The Coodabeen Champions. Mark Green and Rowanne Brown had grown up in neighbouring suburbs, but it wasn’t until they were both at the University of Tasmania that they became friends. “We played sport together, and we’d just sit and have a chat. There always seemed to be something a little bit special between us,” Mark recalls. Row was studying for an Arts/Law degree, but most importantly she was the type of person who loved to help others, and she did it behind the scenes, without fanfare. “She was always there for those who needed help, but in a very gentle, quiet, understated way,”…

The HEALING POWER OF HOLD MUSIC
The succession of SARAH

The succession of SARAH

People love Shiv. “You lucky bitch,” said my friend when I mentioned I was going to New York to interview Sarah Snook, who plays Shiv in the hit TV series Succession. What’s so lovable about a character described (by one of her creators) as “a flawed, monstrous nightmare”? It’s her strawberry-blonde hair, her razor-sharp retorts, her sidelong looks, her stealth-wealth wardrobe, her strangely expressive face and manipulative ways. She’s “Shiv fucking Roy” and she embodies one of the delightfully unpredictable elements that run through the heart of Succession: the fact that, despite being a woman, she doesn’t have a heart of gold. “I actually think Shiv is an incredibly difficult part to play. In the wrong hands she could seem like a stone-cold bitch,” says co-executive producer Georgia Pritchett, also one…

ROOMS WITH A VIEW

ROOMS WITH A VIEW

HAVING ESTABLISHED HER LANDSCAPE design practice more than 15 years ago, Kathleen Murphy has finely honed her approach to creating beautiful green spaces across Victoria’s Macedon Ranges and beyond. She is known for designing personalised gardens with a strong focus on linking the built and natural environment. “I design a garden from inside the house looking out, taking into account the views from each window,” says the award-winning designer. In 2008, Kathleen, 49, and her husband Robert, 50, purchased a double-brick house on one hectare in Gisborne and moved in with their three children, Conor, Niall, and Niamh (now aged 17, 15, and 14, respectively). The sparsely planted lot on Wurundjeri Woi Wurrung land quickly became a testing ground for the designer’s work. “We commenced the garden way before we did…

‘I NEEDED my KIDS’

When writer Elise McCredie came to Teresa Palmer with the role of The Kindred cult survivor Freya in The Clearing, the actress took little convincing to take on the part – despite the dark subject matter and the disturbing places it would take her. “I was completely riveted by the world that they set up,” Palmer, 37, tells WHO over Zoom from her home in LA. The opportunity to work back in Australia with a stellar cast and crew of women was also a big drawcard for the podcaster, author, and mother to four young children – Bodhi, 9, Forest, 7, Poet, 4, and Prairie, 1 – with her husband actor and director Mark Webber who has a son Isaac, 15, from a previous relationship. The shoot turned out to be as…

‘I NEEDED my KIDS’

FARM FUSION

“THE WORK ON THIS HOUSE was more of a resurrection than a renovation. We live in a throwaway culture where new and fashionable designer stuff is desirable. I wanted to do the opposite, without being confined by trends,” reflects Dapper De Wet, owner of this 160-year-old house in the hamlet of Philadelphia, near Cape Town in South Africa. He bought the house, part of which was being operated as a general store, on a whim five years ago. The pandemic propelled his plans to relocate from Singapore, presenting an opportunity to transform the building while living in it with plenty of time on his hands. First converting a tractor shed into a rustic, barn-like wing, he drew out the house’s full potential, replacing and repairing heritage features and infusing it with…

FARM FUSION

WINTER favourites

ROAST PUMPKIN SALAD WITH RADICCHIO AND HAZELNUTS Prep: 20 minutes | Cooking: 40 minutes | Serves 4-6 1 tablespoon cumin powder1 teaspoon salt1 tablespoon honey100ml olive oil½ butternut pumpkin, unpeeled, deseeded, cut into 3cm slices⅓ cup (50g) sultanas2 tablespoons red-wine vinegar½ radicchio, thinly sliced⅓ cup (40g) hazelnuts, roasted and roughly choppedSorrel leaves, for garnish 1 Preheat oven to 200˚C (180˚C fan). Place cumin, salt, honey and 2 tablespoons olive oil in a bowl and mix to combine; set aside. 2 Line a large baking tray with baking paper. Place pumpkin on tray. Paste spice mix over, toss to coat, and roast for 40 minutes or until tender and golden. Set aside. 3 Meanwhile, place sultanas, red-wine vinegar and remaining olive oil in a bowl with a little salt and pepper. Allow sultanas to macerate for…

WINTER favourites

JEEPIN’ AROUND

THE JEEP Gladiator arrived on Australian shores in the middle of 2020, and since then has been seen locally as an oddity. While it’s clearly a long wheelbase ute; 298mm longer than a 79 Series Land-Cruiser, its payload is only half that of the Toyota, leaving many to wonder what exactly it’s good for. While Jeep’s marketing department would never be so blunt, the Gladiator is essentially a Wrangler with a wheelbase stretch and a five-foot bed bolted to the back. Thanks to that Wrangler heritage, the Gladiator undoubtedly has the off-road chops for more than just a fun weekend on the beach, and some would even say it doesn’t look half bad. That depends, of course, on which half you happen to be looking at. And while it’s great to have…

JEEPIN’ AROUND
WITH THE PRINCE AND THE DUKE AND DUCHESS OF EDINBURGH THE PRINCESS OF WALES LEADS THE TRUE BLUE ‘SLIMMED-DOWN MONARCHY’ AT BUCKINGHAM PALACE

WITH THE PRINCE AND THE DUKE AND DUCHESS OF EDINBURGH THE PRINCESS OF WALES LEADS THE TRUE BLUE ‘SLIMMED-DOWN MONARCHY’ AT BUCKINGHAM PALACE

‘I’m over the moon to meet Kate and be here. This is a memory of a lifetime’ Pictures of regal elegance, the Princess of Wales and the Duchess of Edinburgh continued their support of the King and Queen last week and teamed up in shades of blue to host a garden party at Buckingham Palace. Joined by their husbands the Prince and the Duke – as well as fellow members of the “slimmed-down” monarchy, the Princess Royal and the Duke and Duchess of Gloucester – the two women spent the afternoon mingling with 8,000 members of the public, who enjoyed tea and sandwiches on the palace’s manicured lawns. Kate, 41, recycled a blue embroidered tulle skirt and matching blouse from Elie Saab with a Philip Treacy hat that she had worn to Royal…

‘I WANT JUSTICE FOR MY SISTER’

‘I WANT JUSTICE FOR MY SISTER’

From the moment she was told her older sister, Gwen Grover, had died by suicide in October 1983, Sue Cole didn't believe it. Sue knew how much Gwen loved her two young sons, that she wasn't depressed and, as she heard more about the circumstances of Gwen's supposed suicide with a shotgun, huge questions arose, throwing Sue into a lifelong fight for the truth. “I tossed it around for years with my family but the police said they had investigated and there was nothing more they could do,” Sue, who lives on the Gold Coast, tells Woman's Day. “I knew if I kicked up a stink while my parents were alive it would compound their grief, so it was more recently, after they passed, that I started really looking into it.” Sue already had…

Facing THE CHANGE

This is not a story about battling ageing or turning back time. After almost 20 years of interviewing skin experts from every corner of the globe I can honestly say, hand on heart, that a fighting attitude does not put you on the path to beauty nirvana (AKA feeling happy in your own skin). For starters, equating youth with beauty is an unrewarding algebra; no lotion or potion can magically erase the past when you’re moving into a new life phase, though it can make the transition feel a little smoother. It’s all a question of balance – we’re not suggesting you should look forward to saggy jowls or crow’s feet, but indulging in too much aesthetic nit-picking is self-defeating for both your self-image and your skin. Too often it…

Facing THE CHANGE
Taken to extremes

Taken to extremes

JEEZ, THAT’S A serious bit of gear!” The booming voice carries across the service station forecourt and as we look up from refuelling the enormous, bright red RAM TRX, we see who it belongs to. Darcy the farmer is tall, with a decent beer belly and a bent nose covered in what looks to be freshly applied Band-Aids. “Hooooweeee, that’s a biggun!” he says and slaps the TRX’s tailgate like you would the rump of a horse. “Is this the V8?” Darcy is a LandCruiser 300 owner and he’s drawn towards the RAM like an eight-year-old at a monster truck show. Not once, during our five-minute exchange – “700hp!? Crikey, that’s a fair wedge!” – did Darcy cast an eye towards the Ford Ranger Raptor parked at the next bowser. Also…

THE BEST wheeels COVERS

FEBRUARY 1977 HIGH FLYING FALCON We love a good jump shot and this is one of our particular favourites. Peter Robinson was present at COTY testing in 1977 and we’ll let him take up the story. “That year Wheels did a TV special on COTY and specifically the testing,” he explains. “The video director helping to produce the show demanded a dramatic shot. This cover photograph was taken – probably by Warwick Kent – at the Castlereagh drag strip using a ramp for the run-up. The photograph was totally legitimate without any fiddling. I don’t remember who was driving, but the Falcon suffered badly upon landing – the sump was smashed – and was trailered to Ford. Luckily for us the Penrith dealer came up with another car.” AUGUST 2008 427 BULLET! There are a…

THE BEST wheeels COVERS
AS HE OPENS UP ABOUT THE DEATH OF HIS DAUGHTER IRIS BEN GOLDSMITH ON THE HEALING POWER OF NATURE AND HIS SEARCH FOR SOLACE

AS HE OPENS UP ABOUT THE DEATH OF HIS DAUGHTER IRIS BEN GOLDSMITH ON THE HEALING POWER OF NATURE AND HIS SEARCH FOR SOLACE

‘You’d have loved Iris. She was academically gifted and morally unimpeachable. She was a special, sparkling girl’ One hot afternoon in July 2019, Ben Goldsmith was playing cricket with a group of friends when his world fell apart. His 15-year-old daughter, Iris, had been driving an all-terrain vehicle on the 300-acre family farm in Somerset when it overturned, trapping her underneath. By the time her father had arrived home and rushed to her side, she had died. It is an unimaginable horror that Ben, 42, is still trying to process as he recalls the beautiful, vibrant girl who was taken so suddenly from him. “You’d have loved Iris,” he says proudly of his red-headed, smiley child. “She was academically gifted, charismatically powerful, morally unimpeachable. “She worried about people and used her own popularity to lift…

“IT WAS LIKE A BOMB HAD EXPLODED"

“IT WAS LIKE A BOMB HAD EXPLODED"

In May 1973 Jarno Saarinen was on his way to winning the 500cc world championship for the first time, and few doubted he would go on to cement his reputation as one of motorcycle racing’s all-time greats. In fact, by then Saarinen had already changed the sport, teaching ‘King’ Kenny Roberts to hang off his motorcycle to improve his lap times, a technique that became universal. If the Finn had lived longer, grand prix racing might have been very different for the rest of the 1970s; Yamaha probably wouldn’t have signed Giacomo Agostini and Barry Sheene would’ve had a harder time winning the 500 world championship with Suzuki. Of course, we will never know because Saarinen lost his life in an horrific accident during the 250cc Italian GP at Monza, on…

Contender: 2023 Nissan Z

Contender: 2023 Nissan Z

PROS • Comfortable ride • Approachable handling limits • More power than before CONS • Extra power offset by extra mass • Cabin feels old despite being new • Limited-slip differential only on upper trims VEHICLE LAYOUT Front-engine, RWD, 2-pass, 2-door hatchback ENGINE, TRANSMISSION 3.0L twin-turbo direct-injected DOHC 24-valve 60-degree V-6, 6-speed manual CURB WEIGHT (F/R DIST) 3,519 lb (57/43%) WHEELBASE 100.4 in LENGTH x WIDTH x HEIGHT 172.4 x 72.6 x 51.8 in ON SALE Now What’s old is new again? The 2023 Nissan Z takes that phrase literally, as it represents yet another rehash of a rear-wheel-drive platform dating back to the 2003 350Z. Nissan reanimated those old bones for the 370Z in 2010, and here they are again for the new, numberless Z. Next to its mashup of retro Z styling cues—the nose is pure, original 240Z, while the tail is more…

CIRCUMNAVIGATING LAKE GEORGE

CIRCUMNAVIGATING LAKE GEORGE

"…THERE ARE A COUPLE OF PLACES WHERE YOU CAN PULL OFF THE ROAD AND ADMIRE THE VIEWS…" The flat paddocks you may have noticed beside the Federal Highway north of Canberra are actually Lake George (Weereewa), an endorheic lake, meaning it has no evident natural outflows. Used as paddocks when water is low, the recent heavy rainfalls across New South Wales have filled Lake George, so the wire stock fences now poking out of the water look weirdly out of place. The lake has passed its most recent highs of the mid-1990s and is approaching levels not seen since the mid-1960s. As a Canberra local, a lap of the lake offers and interesting ride. After weaving through the Canberra suburbs to the main roundabout where the Federal Highway enters Canberra, I head…

Vale, Jock Zonfrillo 1976-2023

Like so many, we were shocked and saddened to learn of the death of chef and restaurateur Jock Zonfrillo in May. As a chef, he was instrumental in shaping Australia’s food identity over the past decade, championing the use of native ingredients and educating diners, one brilliant dish at a time. His creativity, passion and precision saw his Adelaide restaurant Orana named Gourmet Traveller’s Restaurant of the Year in 2017. At the time, our judges wrote: “It’s Australian food as we’ve never eaten before – confident, assured and original…. Seeking inspiration and knowledge through interacting with Aboriginal communities is central to Zonfrillo’s mission.” That mission saw Zonfrillo establish the not-for-profit research project The Orana Foundation in 2016, which went on to create the country’s first Indigenous food database, cataloguing more…

Vale, Jock Zonfrillo 1976-2023
DIRTY SECRETS

DIRTY SECRETS

THERE’S A bit of a tradition on social media: He or she who shouts loudest tends to get more eyeballs. It’s true, but it’s also a trap, because the online world is full of wackos spouting absolute rubbish. And if they happen to be loud wackos… well, you can see the problem. The point being, just because you saw it on the internet doesn’t make it a fact. And there’s no better example of that than some of the misinformation going around regarding auxiliary fuel filters on common-rail turbo-diesel engines. WHAT FILTERS ARE WE TALKING ABOUT? THE FILTERS in question are the aftermarket kits that add an extra filter to the vehicle’s fuel system. In the old days, this was a pretty straightforward subject, and an extra filter with a water trap…

BEAUT BAKES

BEAUT BAKES

Baked Moroccan Chicken and Pearl Couscous SERVES 6 PREP & COOK 1 HOUR 750g chicken thigh fillets, trimmed, halved 1½ tblsps Moroccan seasoning 1 large red onion, cut into thin wedges 3 carrots, peeled, coarsely chopped 2 tblsps tomato paste 1½ cups pearl couscous 500ml carton salt-reduced chicken stock 1 tblsp honey ½ cup pitted green olives ½ cup chopped fresh coriander, plus extra to serve 100g feta, crumbled Lemon wedges, to serve 1 Place chicken in a large bowl. Sprinkle over seasoning. Toss to coat. 2 Heat an oiled, large, flameproof casserole dish (14-cup capacity) over medium to high heat. Add chicken. Cook for about 2 minutes on each side, or until browned. Remove. Add onion and carrot. Cook, stirring, until lightly browned. Add tomato paste. Cook, stirring, for a further 1…

Owl & Hare HOLLOW PART 2

Owl & Hare HOLLOW PART 2

We hope you have enjoyed making your first blocks over the past eight weeks! In this issue you will be busy sewing Dresden Plate and Penny Circle blocks, hand stitching the Tea Garden and Queen Bee blocks and appliquéing the Hare and Hexie block. Proudly brought to you by Stitch along with us on our special Facebook group Homespun Block of the Month 2023 – Owl & Hare Hollow Finished size: 194 × 159cm (76½ × 62½in) Stitches used: Backstitch, cross stitch, detached chain (lazy daisy) stitch, French knot, running stitch, satin stitch, stem stitch, straight stitch Note: Materials required for the entire project were listed in Part 1, published in Homespun 24.1 (February/March 2023 issue). They are from the Owl & Hare Hollow, Blume and Grow and Birdhouse Basics ranges designed by Natalie herself. Requirements…

JADE GILLETT & BRENT GOLD

“I love that we’ve created a space that allows us to support incredible artists, designers and brands, and expose them to people who will appreciate their work.” Jade: I grew up in Hertfordshire in the UK, then had stints in Spain, Ibiza and London before I came to Australia. I have always had an interest in fashion, music, art and design and have always expressed myself through these things. I never thought this would be where I am, and I have to pinch myself that we have created something so amazing in such a short amount of time purely just from our individual passions. J: Rainbow Studios is something Goldie and I started talking about during lockdown. We wanted a space to showcase two jewellery brands, Henson & Gold – by Goldie…

JADE GILLETT & BRENT GOLD

BOOB JOB

Not all breasts are created equal, far from it, and even your own may differ in size and shape, and that’s nothing to be embarrassed about. But don’t take them for granted either. Every woman needs to give her boobs, big or small, care and attention. Here’s how. GET TO KNOW YOUR BREASTS HANDS ON Doing a breast check once a month will teach you what’s normal for your breasts and importantly, will help you to pick up any irregularities sooner rather than later. For self-exams, it’s easier to pick up changes when lying down. HERE’S HOW Lie on your back. Put your right hand behind your head. Use the middle fingers on your left hand to gently press down, circling your entire breast. Squeeze your nipple to see if any fluid comes out. Sit…

BOOB JOB

MAN VERSUS MACHINE

IT IS MORE KITCHEN THAN confessional, but that’s where I found myself recently, head bowed in humble contrition, mumbling my confession, pathetically seeking forgiveness and praying for guidance, crippled by the shame of an offence more against myself and my sense of community than against God. And, to complete the despondency of the scene, my hot dog was as cold as a cadaver. Today, I’ll ask you to join with me in the Sacrament of Penance and Reconciliation known to all of us who never bothered to master the microwave and who have suffered the ensuing shame and guilt. The microwave oven was first sold for consumer use around the time I was born. Okay, it wasn’t a plaything for infants, so I’ll allow myself a few years’ grace. Even adults in…

MAN VERSUS MACHINE
IN PIT LANE

IN PIT LANE

“OBVIOUSLY DANGEROUS RIDING NEEDS TO BE CONTROLLED. BUT TOO OFTEN NORMAL RACING ACTION IS CONDEMNED” DORNA’S AIM at making the racing closer has been thrillingly successful. But making it so close can make fools out of heroes. Here are some examples: Honda, Yamaha, Fabio Quartararo and the panel of stewards. Honda is paying the price of having one super-strong rider, who then got hurt. Development concentrated on Marc’s extraordinary abilities has left a machine with shortcomings that only he could ride around. His prolonged and frequent absences since 2020 left the most successful racing marque scrabbling to find technical direction. And failing. There could be no clearer demonstration than the commissioning of a chassis from Moto2 specialist, Kalex. Whether this is admitting its own designers have run out of ideas or conversely a…

“I couldn’t have done it without help”- Maggie Beer

Maggie Beer is a good woman. If you cracked her open like a perfect free-range egg, you would find goodness in her soul.The Weekly’s food director, Fran Abdallaoui, says what she admires most about Maggie is that everything she does – from championing local growers and seasonal produce to developing better food for our elders – is grounded in a sense of kindness, conscience, generosity and care. When I mention this to Maggie, she laughs self-consciously, but when pressed to explain why she is this way, she begins thoughtfully, “I think it comes from life … I think it comes from life and from your parents. Having empathy is really important. Also, I was brought up in an interesting time, when things were … simpler and the ethics were entrenched. The…

“I couldn’t have done it without help”- Maggie Beer
Declining software quality is just one of the many issues bugging Apple users

Declining software quality is just one of the many issues bugging Apple users

I love speaking at user group meetings. There aren’t as many Apple user groups out there as there used to be, and these days the meetings are mostly over Zoom, but as someone who mostly speaks with developers, PR people, and media types, it’s refreshing to speak to people who are much more purely enthusiastic about Apple and its platforms. User groups also tend to do a good job of exposing the concerns and pain points of Apple customers who aren’t doing this for a living. It’s a great perspective shift. Last month, I spoke to a group that made it pretty clear what Apple is doing that is making them unhappy. The particular complaints that floated to the top were, I think, instructive about where Apple needs to make changes…

BEN & J.LO Marriage in crisis?

For her starring role in the action thriller The Mother, Jennifer Lopez had to get her body battle-ready to play an ex-special forces sniper aiming to rescue her kidnapped daughter. “I love to work-out and to try to stay as athletic as I can and that definitely gives you a head start for a big action movie like this. But this was a whole other level,” she tells WHO. “It was every day. It was very challenging to get to that level and learn all the fight choreography.” At the premiere of the Netflix flick, Lopez seemed to have engaged in some combative choreography with her husband, Ben Affleck. Video footage from the event shows the actors looking miserable while they posed on the red carpet together and testily whispering to…

BEN & J.LO Marriage in crisis?

RESTAURANT NEWS

SYDNEY Kolture is a new Korean-focused hospitality outfit, with three restaurants opening across Sydney. Founder David Bae follows in his father’s footsteps (who was one of the first to bring Korean barbecue restaurants to Sydney in the ’90s) hoping to further establish Korean cuisine in Sydney. Tokki focuses on anju (Korean snacks with drinks) in Surry Hills; while Soot in Barangaroo will level up the Korean barbecue experience. Taking cues from high-end Australian steakhouses and classic Korean barbecue restaurants, self-manned smokeless grills will be ready to sizzle up premium and aged wagyu cuts alongside Australian cuts not typically found on Korean menus. Finally Leemix will open in Circular Quay, and is set to create a chef’s table experience for just eight people per seating. The Korean wave continues with Soul Deli’s relocation,…

RESTAURANT NEWS
Shannon Noll ‘MEET MY ROCK STAR SON!’

Shannon Noll ‘MEET MY ROCK STAR SON!’

Shannon bursts out laughing when asked if his ego took a battering after fans discovered his “heartthrob” son busking with him at the Tamworth Music Festival and clambered for the apprentice builder's autograph. “I think the heartthrob days for me are long gone ” grins the proud dad, whose fans call him Nollsy, in an exclusive interview with Woman's Day. “I'm just trying to hold onto a bit of something. He can take over that mantle for sure. He's just starting out, so he's not expecting big things at the moment, but he obviously has hopes and dreams. I'm really proud of him.” Fans were treated to the father-son duo performing an impromptu gig, busking on the street, at the famed country music festival in January – with Blake, 20, getting his first…

TEXAS BABY KIDNAPPING REUNITED AFTER 51 YEARS

When Texan Melissa Highsmith received a Facebook message last year from a man who suggested he might be her father, she thought it was some sort of scam. Jeffrie Highsmith and his wife Alta Apantenco’s baby daughter had been abducted from their home in Texas five decades ago, and the heartbroken couple had been searching for her ever since. But 51 years later, a DNA match on an ancestry site pointed toward Melissa – then known as Melanie Walden – as being their long-lost child. “She didn’t believe it,” Melissa’s brother, Jeff Highsmith, tells WHO from his home in Fort Worth, Texas. “But then she talked to her husband, and he said, ‘Wait a second, you should look into this.’” “I just started crying”– JEFFRIE HIGHSMITH It was good that she did, because…

TEXAS BABY KIDNAPPING REUNITED AFTER 51 YEARS

Is this the end of MEAN GIRL CULTURE?

It all started with Selena Gomez’s eyebrows. Apparently, she had over-laminated them. She wished they were more like Bella Hadid’s. She shared that very sentiment in late February in a (now deleted) video with her more than 58 million followers on TikTok. A few hours later, Kylie Jenner posted a screenshot of a FaceTime call with BFF Hailey Bieber to her more than 380 million Instagram followers. In the image, both women had zoomed in on their brows, which the internet deduced was a snide attack on Selena. And that is how the war began. Cries of “mean girl vibes” were hurled at Kylie and Hailey, sides were taken, fingers were pointed, a “goodie” and a “baddie’ were determined, and Hailey Bieber was branded the ultimate Regina George. Why Hailey over Kylie,…

Is this the end of MEAN GIRL CULTURE?

ROSES RULE

Roses are the true-blue royals of our gardens with their majestic blooms, evocative scents and superior all-round appearance. And like many that are revered, they can put on a fuss that makes you think they require special treatment. Not so. Put them in a sunny spot, give them seasonal feeds, then a hard prune just before winter (think of the emperor with no clothes) and they’ll come back in summer, regally expecting your adoration. The plus is, that unlike many members of royal families, they don’t attract scandal, just love! CARE FOR ROSES THE JOB • Rose bushes need a prune every autumn/early winter, just before they become dormant. • Cut spindly branches and those that rub against each other, as rubbing makes them open to disease and insect attack. • Create air corridors through…

ROSES RULE

Mike Booth’s flourishing KITCHEN GARDEN

In 2015, I announced to my partner, Steve, that we should buy a farm so I could have a large garden and, also, a place out of the city where we could spend our weekends. Up to that point, we had been living in an apartment, where my passion for growing things was confined to our balcony – I spent most of my weekends tending our tiny patch of green. While I looked for a property for us to buy, I enrolled in a horticulture course at TAFE three nights a week and spent my free evenings reading about and watching YouTube videos on gardening. During that time, I rented a small vacant block of land and started to implement what I was learning. We found Rosedale Farm near Orange, NSW…

Mike Booth’s flourishing KITCHEN GARDEN
STALKED BY A STRANGER

STALKED BY A STRANGER

It started over a sausage sizzle and casual game of cricket on a sweltering Queensland day. Journalist Nicole Madigan was feeling flat. Her marriage was ending, and it had been a bruising few years. But she had tossed her blonde hair up into a bun to take her son to his game and when it was his turn to bat, she perked up and snapped some photos. A woman she didn’t know breezed past. “Are you taking photos of Adam?” “What?” Nicole asked, bemused. She wasn’t sure she had heard the woman correctly. Adam was one of the fathers who coached the team. “An acquaintance at best,” Nicole says. It was a strange interaction that Nicole might have completely forgotten had she not received a Facebook message that night from someone…

MAKEMORE WITH MINCE

MOUSSAKA-STUFFED EGGPLANTS Preparation time 45 mins Cooking time 45 mins Serves 6 4 medium eggplants (375g each)½cup extra virgin olive oilSea-salt flakes and freshly ground black pepper, to season1 medium onion, finely chopped2 cloves garlic, crushed¼tsp ground allspice½tsp ground cinnamon500g lamb mince400g can diced tomatoes2 Tbsp tomato paste⅓cup finely chopped flat-leaf parsley leaves, plus extra sprigs, to serve⅔cup grated mozzarellaSteamed broccolini, to serve TOPPING 1 cup Greek yoghurt250g firm ricottaPinch ground nutmeg1 free-range egg, lightly beaten BABA GHANOUSH 2 Tbsp tahini1 clove garlic, crushed½tsp ground cumin2 Tbsp lemon juice1 Tbsp chopped flat-leaf parsley leaves STEP 1 Preheat oven to 180°C fan-forced (200°C conventional). Halve eggplants lengthways. Scoop out flesh, leaving a 1cm border. Finely chop flesh and put half in a bowl, add 1 tablespoon of the oil, season and toss to coat. Put on a lined oven tray.…

MAKEMORE WITH MINCE

WHERE THE ART IS

Alana Landsberry is a photographer whose images grace the walls of the National Portrait Gallery (NPG) in Canberra. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, former Governor General Quentin Bryce, artist Cressida Campbell and Maggie Tabberer are just a few of the well-known Australians who have passed in front of her lens. (In a serendipitous parallel, Alana’s photographer father, David Marshall, once shot Maggie Tabberer holding baby Alana. More than 30 years later, Alana brought her own son Ziggy, now seven, to set when scheduled to shoot the fashion icon for The Australian Women’s Weekly. “This will most likely be the last time I sit in front of a camera like this, darling,” said Maggie, “so let’s make it count.” They did and the result is in the NPG’s collection.) Today, this talented creative…

WHERE THE ART IS
Entertainer’s DREAM

Entertainer’s DREAM

Entrusted to “make the best of this tired house”, interior designer Fiona Bruzzano pulled out all the stops. The property in question is located in an enviable position near one of Sydney’s northern beaches and had been home to this family of four for nearly 20 years. Custom designed and built in 2004 when the owners, Ramy and Kerry, were starting their family – and consolidating their careers – it was a solid, serviceable home. But with daughters Mia and Bianca now young adults, they felt it was in desperate need of a makeover. Introduced to the owners by builder James Clayton of Four Front Building, Fiona tackled the renovation with relish. “The family loved the home’s closeness to the beach and Kerry wanted a fresh coastal feel with luxury inclusions.…

CATCHING THE ‘KILLER CLOWN’

CATCHING THE ‘KILLER CLOWN’

Sheila Keen-Warren thought she’d got away with murder. In 1990, her now-husband’s then-wife, Marlene Warren, 40, was shot in the face after answering her door. The only witness, Marlene’s 21-year-old son Joseph Ahrens, told how the killer was dressed in a clown costume, holding carnations and balloons – leading media to dub the murderer the “Killer Clown”. The trail ran cold for almost a quarter of a century until 2014 when an advancement in DNA technology led them right to Keen-Warren’s own door. “Sheila Keen-Warren has finally been forced to admit that she was the one who dressed as a clown and took the life of an innocent victim. She will be a convicted murderer for the rest of her days,” Palm Beach County State Attorney Dave Aronberg told media, after…

WHITE at home

WHITE at home

With its grand wedding cake-style facade, generous setback from the road and manicured grounds, this landmark 1885 home in Sydney’s inner west could be dubbed the White House by passers-by. And, if its walls could talk, they would have some equally interesting tales to tell. “Our home’s story is deep-rooted, as it has lived many lives,” says the owner, who lives here with her husband and three sons, aged 16 and under. Now, thanks to interior designer Greg Natale, it embarks on a new chapter unlike any that’s gone before. A chapter that literally began in black and white, it respects the past while embracing the future. Attracted by the large garden and gracious Victorian architecture, the couple bought the two-storey pile in 2017. “The layout and easy flow, with its…

Natural wine is dead

Natural wine is dead

In some ways, the natural wine movement and I grew up together (from afar). It was 2011 and I was just starting out as a sommelier when Tom Shobbrook and the late Sam Hughes (in neon pink hot pants, no less) came bursting through my door with their newest vintage of Natural Selection Theory wines (crafted alongside Anton Von Klopper and James Erskine). Twelve years on, that first meeting still lives in my mind and I hold it dear as I reflect on the impact a group of winemakers in South Australia’s Basket Range had on the entire Australian wine industry, for better and worse. It’s a complicated story to tell but it’s one Tom Keelan, winemaker and ex-president of the Adelaide Hills Wine Region and I have discussed many times…

my country childhood

FOR ARTIST AND CHILDREN’s apparel designer Fleur Harris, fairytales and imaginary play informed much of her childhood and are now a source of inspiration in her work. “We were read to a lot as kids – particularly the Enid Blyton Magic Faraway Tree series. They were in a similar setting to our property, which added that extra layer of magic,” Fleur says. “I genuinely believed that fairies were real and my imagination ran wild. That fantastical thinking was a big part of my childhood play.” Fleur grew up on the Mornington Peninsula in Victoria. When she was six, her family moved to a 21-hectare farm. “My dad and uncle bought the land and they started a vineyard,” she explains. “More than 90 per cent of it was under vine eventually and…

my country childhood

REAR VIEW

30 YEARS AGO – JUNE 1993 Buying secondh- and was the major theme of this issue with an expose on buying a 20 grand LandCruiser or Patrol, which was a bargain back then and would be still today if you could find one. Sticking with that idea of buying cheap, we checked out the pros and cons of buying from a dealer, a private seller or at auction. While today all three of these buying methods are still alternatives, with social media there are a lot more private possibilities to look at. For those wanting to power-up their diesel rig we checked out the marketplace to see who and where the best fitters were when it came to installing a turbo kit. We trekked across the Simpson Desert – more popular now than…

REAR VIEW
MICHAEL DOUGLAS TRIBUTE IS A FAMILY AFFAIR THE 76TH CANNES FILM FESTIVAL THE LEGEND AND HIS LEADING LADIES REIGN ON THE FRENCH RIVIERA

MICHAEL DOUGLAS TRIBUTE IS A FAMILY AFFAIR THE 76TH CANNES FILM FESTIVAL THE LEGEND AND HIS LEADING LADIES REIGN ON THE FRENCH RIVIERA

Flanked by his two leading ladies, Michael Douglas cuts a dashing figure on the red carpet at the Cannes film festival. The veteran of screen and stage was accompanied by his wife Catherine Zeta-Jones and their 20-year-old daughter Carys, who was making her debut at the French movie extravaganza. In a pink Elie Saab gown, the aspiring musician posed with her parents at the opening night gala as she and her equally glamorous mum Catherine – also in a dramatic gown by Elie Saab – planted a kiss on Michael’s cheek before the Fatal Attraction star, 77, received a special award honouring his lifetime in film. “Thank you Cannes!” he later wrote on Instagram. “I am so honoured to receive the honorary Palme d’Or for my career achievements. Catherine, Carys and…

THIS IS THE WAY

THIS IS THE WAY

WHAT’S it like to take on a long-distance pilgrim walk? How do you cope on cold wet days? What’s it like meeting other pilgrims? There are so many questions people ask before they do their first Camino and it would be easy to disappear down an online rabbit hole trying to get some answers. But fear not, Great Walks has spoken to a number of people who have walked a Camino (or in some cases five or six Caminos!) so you may well find many of those questions answered here. Ash Barker (53), Birmingham, UK Ash has walked the Camino Portuguese, completed four St Cuthbert’s Way pilgrimages (Scottish borderlands to Holy Island) and completed the Jesus Trail (Nazareth to Capurniam, Holy Land). How much preparation and training did you did do prior to…

My life in PICTURES Michelle Pfeiffer

My life in PICTURES Michelle Pfeiffer

Before she was one of the most recognisable actresses on the planet – or conquering other realms in Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania – Michelle Pfeiffer was one of four kids born to Richard, an air-conditioning contractor, and his wife, Donna, in Orange County, California. After finishing school, where she was bullied for her big lips, she was working as a cashier in a local grocery store when she won a Miss Orange County beauty pageant. In addition to the title, Pfeiffer scored an agent and, in 1982, landed her first lead role in Grease 2. Next up, her star-making turn as the cocaine-fuelled wife of a crime kingpin in 1983’s Scarface led to a dream run of roles, including 1987’s The Witches of Eastwick, and Oscar-nominated turns in 1988’s Dangerous…

Channelling GLAMOUR!

Channelling GLAMOUR!

There were plenty of pearls, pregnancy reveals and even a pinch of prosthetics at this year’s Met Gala, with stars pulling out all stops for the annual affair. This year’s theme, ‘Karl Lagerfeld: a Line of Beauty’, paid tribute to the late designer’s legacy, with attendees told to “dress à la Lagerfeld” for their run down the red carpet. As the most anticipated event on the fashion calendar, held annually on the first Monday in May, there was plenty of excitement as the red carpet kicked off with a flurry of feathers, courtesy of Gisele Bündchen’s archival Chanel gown and Florence Pugh’s eye-catching headpiece – which also showed off her dramatic hair transformation. While most stars don’t want to put a stiletto-clad foot wrong on the Met carpet, others prefer to take…

GEAR PRODUCT TESTS & NEW STUFF

GEAR PRODUCT TESTS & NEW STUFF

STRANDS LIGHTING LAUNCHES IN AUSTRALIA One of Europe’s leading automotive lighting brands, Strands Lighting, is now available in Australia. The brand’s Siberia range of LED driving lights are available in 7- and 9-inch variants, feature IP67/69K ratings, aluminium housings, tough polycarbonate lenses, and a claimed light output of 1 lux @369m and 1 lux @465m respectively. Customers are able to select from single- and double-row bars and straight and curved bar options, the latter contouring to the shape of a vehicle’s windscreen for roof mounting. Lightbar length options span from 8- to 50-inch. The Siberia range also includes several compact work lamp models. All lights come with wiring and mounting hardware for convenient installation, and are covered by a three-year warranty. RRP: From $279 (7-inch Siberia driving light ea) Website: www.strandslighting.com NARVA…

GEORGE MICHAEL His tragic LOST LOVE

GEORGE MICHAEL His tragic LOST LOVE

For the voracious press in the late 1990s, it was front-page gold – pop superstar George Michael arrested in a public toilet for lewd conduct. As the news broke, a media maelstrom engulfed the singer’s Los Angeles home, paparazzi outside and news choppers overhead. Michael, who had carried the secret of his sexuality since finding fame as one half of Wham! at 19, chose to wrestle control of the narrative. Refusing to be shamed, the British singer appeared on chat shows and news channels to talk with candour and trademark humour about life as a gay man. Now a new documentary, George Michael: Outed, explores how the way he dealt with his outing in April 1998 inspired young men who followed in his footsteps. “He knew he had a voice and people would listen to…

GO ANYWHERE

GO ANYWHERE

Adventure tourers are the most versatile motorcycles you can buy. They can carry one or two people in comfort all day and yet can be faster up a winding road than many a sportsbike, happily kicking up dust if the surface gets loose. These bikes on the market aren't the hard-core adventure bikes that handle like oversized dirtbikes in the desert; rather, they're machines that are aimed at touring across roads and tracks marked on maps. Where hard-core adventure tourers take as little weight as possible to keep the handling of their bike as close to unloaded as possible, these are bikes designed to take everything you need for the long haul. Just a few years ago there was a lot of cross-over from the hard-core adventure machines to the adventure tourers,…

BOB HOPE

BOB HOPE

All good things must come to an end an. After almost six months with Harley’s Fat Bob 114 (affectionately known as Bob) it’s time for the cruiser to head home. I’m sad to see Bob leave AMCN’s long-term garage; we’ve had many adventures together and along the way I’ve had the pleasure of seeing it transform from a stocker into a Screamin’ Eagle-enhanced muscle machine. We’ve put the Fat Bob through the full gamut of riding experiences in that time: commuting, trips away, Saturday night cruises, and running down the quarter mile at Sydney Dragway. And he has proven to be a fun, surprisingly comfortable and hugely reliable bike. The Fat Bob has always been a favourite of mine with its unique looks, decent handling (as far as Harleys go) and reasonable…

The PORN STAR and the PRESIDENT

Stormy Daniels lights a cigarette and takes a sip of Coca-Cola. The former porn star turned director is sitting on the back patio of her house in the US countryside. It’s early April and Daniels has again made headlines after Donald Trump was indicted by a jury for allegedly giving her hush money during the 2016 US presidential election. Daniels had hoped Trump’s indictment would bring with it a kind of catharsis. But when the news broke, “I was just numb,” she says. “It doesn’t feel like I thought it would; it just doesn’t feel like anything. It doesn’t feel like a victory … It was like having sex for hours and not having an orgasm.” It was the Friday after the March 30 indictment announcement and I had travelled from…

The PORN STAR and the PRESIDENT
GOOD NEWS WEEK

GOOD NEWS WEEK

THE Snowies Alpine Walk in Kosciuszko NP just got even more thrilling with the opening of Stage 3. This newly opened section spans 13km between Charlotte Pass and Perisher, and features upgraded trails, including the popular Porcupine walk. The Snowies Alpine Walk will ultimately stretch 55km through the stunning alpine region of Kosciuszko National Park. The final section, Stage 4, is already underway and will take you from Perisher to Bullocks Flat and is set to include 11.4km of new walking tracks, upgraded car parking facilities, and amenities. nationalparks.nsw.gosv.au ANGRY porters blocked the entrance to the Kokoda Track in early May protesting about losing work after the tour operator they work for had its licence to operate on the track revoked. Kokoda Tour Operators Association (KTA) President Mick O’Malley said porters from…

The art of… being a better tourist

The art of… being a better tourist

I’m a travel writer specialising in sustainable tourism and I wince every time I say the word “sustainability”. I wince because I can’t believe we’re still saying it as if it’s something unusual. All the stuff we describe under a “sustainability” banner should now be commonplace. I thought I’d have written myself out of a speciality by now, because any decent hotel or tour operator would be sorted on single-use plastics, water management, energy usage and food waste. And any decent traveller wouldn’t support a business that hadn’t addressed these basic priorities. I hoped humankind would only have to bang on about recycling for a few years before we sorted it out, and then we could move on to sophisticated conversations about the pleasures of travelling, eating and drinking. Sadly we’re…

GRAND VISION

GRAND VISION

If it is possible to conjure the perfect blend of historic and contemporary, then this house on Victoria’s Mornington Peninsula is just that. An 1860s property on an expansive cliffside site with beach access, it was purchased by the current owners in 2015. They approached interiors firm Mim Design, having worked with the team previously, to reimagine the look and feel of the old house and link it with its dramatic new extension conceived by Neil Architecture. Entranced by the four-bedroom home’s vaulted ceilings, double-hung leadlight windows, ornate timber fretwork and French doors opening to the verandah, the owners were keen to maintain these features while creating a calm and welcoming family home with contemporary appeal. The rambling garden – originally designed by influential landscape architect Edna Walling – was a…

Some things change, others stay the same.

This, Stereophile’s June 2023 issue, is the 50th I’ve produced as editor. That seems like a lot—yet the four-plus years it took have flown by; it seems impossible that I’ve done this 50 times already. Still, the main thing it makes me think is how inexperienced I remain: It will take another 28 years to match JA1’s record. That’s unlikely to happen: I’m not sure when I’ll retire, but I hope it will be before I turn 87. What have I learned? I’ve learned a lot about producing this magazine, and I’ve gained a lot of detailed knowledge, especially about specific hi-fi components. I’ve gained some broader knowledge, too, including a deeper appreciation for the crucial importance of the time domain in hi-fi—of the fact that music happens in the time…

THE NEW EXORCISTS

THE NEW EXORCISTS

The evening shadows are creeping over the colonnades and piazzas of Rome as an elderly, white-haired priest leaves the comforts of his home and heads through the streets towards a room in an apartment block where others are waiting. He walks slowly, carrying a small, black case filled with the essential paraphernalia of the ritual he is about to perform. The room has been prepared to his precise instructions – cleaned, sprinkled with holy water, and stripped of moveable objects. Of those now gathered inside it, only the priest – his face drawn and solemn – has any idea of what to expect. Or rather, who to expect. The night ahead is likely to be long and exhausting, but time has taught the priest to recognise the natures of the demons he pursues. They…

WEAVING A SPELL

“It’s very private up here and we feel like we’re tucked away among the trees.” WHEN FACED WITH THE DILEMMA of outgrowing their near-original 1930s cottage, Kate and Paul Hoye had a decision to make. “We needed more space for our growing family, so we either had to move to something bigger or extend what we had. We love our home and area, so we decided to stay and extend,” says Kate. The result is their marvellous home in Mittagong, in the Southern Highlands of New South Wales, which has been lovingly restored and expanded. They’ve turned it into their dream home now, but originally, they never even planned to move in. The couple was living in Sydney’s Inner West – Kate working as a lawyer and Paul in construction – while…

WEAVING A SPELL
THE REAL MORNING WARS

THE REAL MORNING WARS

Amazing on-screen chemistry that covers up the off-screen backstabbing and feuds of its primetime hosts. While this might sound like the plot from an episode of hit drama series Morning Wars, these are just some of the shock scenes that have played out in real life this month on British screens. After more than a decade as the UK’s reigning king and queen of breakfast TV, Holly Willoughby has emerged as the sole survivor of ITV’s This Morning after sidekick Phillip Schofield was given the boot after the relationship of the once-close pair became “unworkable”. “I have agreed to step down from This Morning with immediate effect,” the veteran star, 61, who had been at the helm of the show for 21 years, said in a statement on May 20. Willoughby became…

THE CORONATION of KING CHARLES III and QUEEN CAMILLA LONG LIVE THE KING!

There was a moment at the heart of his Coronation service when King Charles III almost teared up. His eldest son, Prince William, had just knelt in front of the newly-crowned sovereign and pledged his allegiance as “your liege man of life and limb” – which literally means William is promising to be there for his father no matter what, obligated before God to honour and serve. Then, after Charles gently whispered “Thank you, William”, the heir to the throne lent forward and kissed his 74-year-old King on the cheek. After everything that has led up to this day – the grief of losing both parents within 17 months of each other, the painfully public battles with his “dear boy”, Prince Harry, at the most important time in his royal career,…

THE CORONATION of KING CHARLES III and QUEEN CAMILLA LONG LIVE THE KING!
CHEAPER SIX-CYLINDER AMAROK COULD BE COMING TO AUSTRALIA

CHEAPER SIX-CYLINDER AMAROK COULD BE COMING TO AUSTRALIA

THE NEWVW AMAROK HAS JUST GONE ON SALE IN AUSTRALIAcand heapestV6 version is currently the mid-spec Style variant, meaning you’ll need at least $70,990 before on-road costs to get the 184kW/600Nm 3.0-litre FordV6 diesel. However, VW Australia’s director of commercial vehicles, Ryan Davies, said it’s possible that the engine could be fitted to less expensive trim levels, perhaps as soon as early next year. When asked ifVW could offer more affordable AmarokV6 models, Davies replied: “That’s a good question and one that we have considered. And once we get over the hump of this launch period we will definitely be going back to the factory to see if there’s any opportunity to expand that engine into the Life range, for example.” IN STYLE The cheapest way to get a new Amarok V6 is the…

woven with love

MANY OF US HAVE SPECIAL memories of our grandmothers. Anna Brand, who lives near Caramut in Victoria, recalls her grandmothers were always knitting. “As they aged and their hands deteriorated, the knits changed, but it didn’t alter the love that went into every stitch,” she says. “I’ll never forget an outfit that one of my grandmas made for my doll for my birthday – a little cardigan, dress, singlet, underwear and booties. I recently found it, and now my girls dress their doll and bunny in some of the pieces.” Growing up on a farm with mixed merino sheep, in the Riverina region of NSW, Anna and her three siblings always got “stuck in” to help. “We were often picked up from the school bus stop and went straight onto our…

woven with love

NEXT GEN ROYALS

Although the newly-minted monarchs took pride of place at the ceremony, those born to rule in the future managed to steal the spotlight on several occasions. The Prince and Princess of Wales were standouts on the day, with their three children – Prince George, 9, Princess Charlotte, 8, and Prince Louis, 5 – melting hearts across the globe. Kate looked positively regal in an ivory Alexander McQueen silk crepe gown, embroidered with the national flora of the United Kingdom. The 41-year-old opted not to wear a tiara for the historic occasion, instead donning a silver bullion and crystal headpiece by British milliner Jess Collett. Charlotte coordinated with her mum in a matching dress and headpiece. And although George played a key role in the Coronation – as a Page of Honour to…

NEXT GEN ROYALS
JAMIE OLIVER “I’ve realised I’m a massive feminist!”

JAMIE OLIVER “I’ve realised I’m a massive feminist!”

Jamie Oliver doesn’t have happy memories of school. “Cooking saved me when I was struggling with the writing stuff at school,” he says with a gentle sigh. “The life I was living at school was one of just being s*** at everything and then [being sidelined as] special needs, getting taken out of classes and stuck in an attic with three dudes, having a very analogue approach to our problems.” Jamie’s “problem” was that he was dyslexic, although at the time it wasn’t diagnosed or understood. When he looked at a collection of words in sentences they would dance around the page and mess with his brain. Jamie’s teachers assumed he was simply not very bright and his immediate response was to attempt to focus his mind by tapping on the desk,…

BARRY HUMPHRIES 1934-2023 The man behind Edna

The women of Australia are flying our Hills Hoists at half-mast. Why? Because we have lost our most formidable ally; an icon who spoke up for us for 70 years. We sympathised when her son, Kenny, came out as a “practising homo” ... as in homeopath. We empathised when her daughter Valmai’s supermarket shoplifting brought shame on the family: “I mean, couldn’t it have been Harrods?”. We’ve even shared a few conspiratorial chuckles about her husband Norm’s silicone chip prostate. “Norm’s prostate murmur turned into a rumbling so loud it woke the neighbours. They asked me if I could keep the noise down – I said there is a knob but I’m not touching that.” Yes, I’m talking about our cherished and most beloved megastar, Dame Edna Everage, who died last…

BARRY HUMPHRIES 1934-2023 The man behind Edna
THE SMART NINJA

THE SMART NINJA

Kawasaki's Ninja ZX-10R could stimulate the senses in a way just short of sticking scissors into an electrical socket. I should know — I've owned a couple of recent models. Incredible, awesome, seriously fast. Despite this (and like the rest of its ilk), it could be sub-optimal in a world of speed limits and potholes. Kawasaki has addressed this weakness with a variation of the 1000cc sports bike theme… the Ninja 1000SX. It's a track-capable bike with a public road focus. Although designed to be more civilised than the ZX10R, the 1000SX is, counterintuitively, faster in some situations. We found it's a machine of fine margins. When all the small design choices come together, the compound effect gives it an almost unique set of strengths as we'll explain later, but first we'll…

YOUR BEST SHOT

YOUR BEST SHOT

MANIPULATION This month, we wanted to see your favourite images that explored a world beyond what the camera sees. From unique travel shots to curious Ps creations, these were our picks. KATHERINE DILLON Travel EDITOR’S COMMENT Katherine Dillon’s mind-bending image Travel is a great example of how with a bit of Photoshop magic you can transform something ordinary into something unique. The initial image was shot handheld on a boat on a cloud free day. The vastness of the ocean enabled a composition featuring only the ocean. She tells us that with Photoshop she copied the image onto a new layer, before rotating this layer 90 degrees clockwise, shifting it downwards over the original image until the “bend” in the water was sharp, and then reduced the size of the rotated layer. “Lastly, minor brush work was required…

BIG FISH

BIG FISH

THEY SAY adversity breeds innovation. For all of human history, the harder the situation, the more we fire up the grey matter to come up with a solution. In famine we build smarter farming practices, in war we build smarter communication equipment, and you best believe that rainy England is all over umbrellas compared to us here in sunny Australia. It might seem like a long bow to draw, but that innovation through adversity is also why we’re so bloody good at designing and building cars in Australia, and the engines that drive them. A world away from any of the traditional manufacturing powerhouses, we’re a land of limited population, wide open expanses, and very different needs to any of our neighbours. The Ford ‘Barra’ engine is the culmination of that…

CLEO SMITH SURVIVING A NIGHTMARE

Her kidnapper is behind bars and will be for the foreseeable future, but 5-year-old Cleo Smith is still suffering from the lingering trauma that she experienced during her harrowing 18-day ordeal back in October 2021. “She still has her sad nights, her nightmare nights,” Cleo’s mother Ellie Smith told 60 Minutes on May 14. “She doesn’t have the words to explain what she’s sad about, she just knows that’s how she feels, so they’re just sad nights. Her nightmare nights are the worst nights.” It’s been over 18 months since Cleo was snatched in the dead of night as she slept next to her parents and little sister, Isla, on a camping trip in Western Australia. Upon discovering their little girl was missing Ellie and Jake Gliddon, Cleo’s stepdad, frantically searched the…

CLEO SMITH SURVIVING A NIGHTMARE
MARY QUANT The woman who made the sixties swing

MARY QUANT The woman who made the sixties swing

When the fashion revolution came, it was young, fun and six inches above the knee. With parrot-green tights and rubber shoes the colour of poppies, it emancipated women’s legs and spirits. The visionary who unleashed this era of liberation was Mary Quant, a slip of a woman with a geometric haircut that slashed daringly across her eyebrows and bared her neck. Shy of public attention, Mary nevertheless had a resolute self-belief and a vision so clear and unique she has been named alongside Coco Chanel and Christian Dior as one of the most significant designers of the 20th century. “I think the point of fashion is to not get bored looking at somebody,” Mary says in her characteristically soft voice in new documentary Quant. “I didn’t like clothes the way they…

Is anxiety making you sick?

When I was 10 I watched Poltergeist at a friend’s birthday sleepover. That night I feared every rustle or hum of the house was the psycho clown making a move to strangle me. Would anyone hear me scream? Would I be able to fend him off? Should I wake the others? I lay frozen, heart pounding and breathing in shallow bursts, fervently wishing I had devoted more time to acrobatics than books so I could deftly manoeuvre to the door without risking suffocation by a demonic stuffed toy. You could not have convinced me that my life was not in danger that night (or, to be honest, for quite a few sleepless nights thereafter). It might seem a giggle now, but that kind of catastrophising isn’t confined to childhood – it’s…

Is anxiety making you sick?

Into the blue

For this month’s global issue, we shed light on American artisan cheese. Contrary to the stereotype of wildly orange cheese slices and sprayable cheese in a can, the US has a thriving resurgence of artisan producers who are redefining American cheese. Standouts available in Australia include Uplands Cheese, Vella Cheese Company, Jasper Hill Farm and Rogue Creamery. For our recipe, we’ve used American blue cheese from Rogue Creamery, from the Rogue Valley in Southern Oregon. Led by our dear friend David Gremmels, Rogue makes a stunning selection of hand-crafted, organic cheeses that truly represent a taste of place. Gremmels’ life mantra is to ‘make a positive impact in all that you do’ and he practices what he preaches, with Rogue being awarded certified B Corp status. Our three favourite Rogue blues…

Into the blue

HARRY’S 28-HOUR VISIT TO THE U THE DUKE OF SUSSEX WHIRLWIND TRIP FOR CORONATION AS SON ARCHIE TURNS FOUR

Prince Harry was still wearing his suit and medals when he arrived at Heathrow As flying visits go, the Duke of Sussex’s whirlwind stopover for the coronation of his father must have been one of the briefest royal round-trips in history. In a journey that spanned two continents, crossed numerous time zones and covered more than 5,000 miles each way, Prince Harry’s whistle-stop stay was planned so that he could return home in time to celebrate another special occasion: his son Prince Archie’s fourth birthday, which fell on 6 May, the same day His Majesty was crowned. His wife the Duchess stayed behind with Archie and 23-month-old Princess Lilibet, so Harry’s solo trip began when he waved his family goodbye at their Montecito mansion on Thursday afternoon. MAD DASH He was driven 100 miles to…

HARRY’S 28-HOUR VISIT TO THE U THE DUKE OF SUSSEX WHIRLWIND TRIP FOR CORONATION AS SON ARCHIE TURNS FOUR
TRIUMPH'S TOURER

TRIUMPH'S TOURER

On Triumph's website, there are no touring bikes listed: modern classics, roadsters, even a section devoted to the Rocket 3, but not tourers — however there are lots of bikes listed in the adventure section. Like many manufacturers, Triumph has responded to the rise in popularity of adventure bikes while dropping traditional touring motorcycles from its line-up, and the result is that the Tiger 1200 GT Pro is effectively the company’s offering to anyone looking for a touring machine. With more power, more torque, a lot less weight and a comprehensive redesign for this new generation, Triumph believes it has built the best shaft-driven big-bore machines around. For potential buyers, the knowledge it can not only eat miles on freeways comfortably but also take on gravel roads while offering excellent weather protection really…

MIDDLE CLASS

MIDDLE CLASS

I PARTICULARLY LIKE THE SIMPLICITY OF ONE SOLID COLOUR AND THE ABSENCE OF GARISH GRAPHICS Suzuki has a long history of producing affordable and fun naked middleweight bikes. In fact, for many riders over 40, Suzuki’s 1996 Bandit 600 will be remembered as the original and possibly the best entry-level middleweight of them all. It was handsome, easy to ride, enormous fun and cheap – and a huge sales success across the world. In 1999 Suzuki, seemingly with a golden touch for nailing this budget market, introduced the SV650 V-twin. Like the Bandit, it was offered naked or faired and was as undemanding as it was satisfying to own and ride. In time, the SV morphed into the Gladius then, by popular demand, back to the SV – and it is still…

GOLDEN REVIVAL

GOLDEN REVIVAL

The ongoing revival of Britain’s historic motorcycle brands has saved the biggest, and in some ways the best, until last. Triumph, Norton, Ariel, Métisse, Brough Superior, Matchless, Hesketh and DOT are just some of the formerly defunct brands from all of Britain’s two-wheeled yesterdays which have already been resurrected at various times over the past three decades to join Royal Enfield, which never actually went away, in the born-again biking section of British motorcycling’s history store. But now it’s the turn of the biggest of them all back in the day, as for the first time in half a century, a BSA motorcycle is now once again available for customer purchase. Once the world’s largest motorcycle manufacturer, and erstwhile owner of its smaller Triumph subsidiary, BSA went under 50 years ago…

Owl & Hare HOLLOW PART 1

Owl & Hare HOLLOW PART 1

Welcome to the gorgeous 2023 Block of the Month designed by Natalie Bird. The design features 48, 8in blocks presenting a collection of pieced, appliqué and stitchery blocks —&from sweet little hexagons to Dresden Plates, Coff in Wheel blocks and lots of delightful elements. Each part will include a collection of the diff erent techniques to keep you engaged and challenged! This issue includes the full materials list for the entire project. The fabrics used are from Natalie's most recent fabric collection — Owl & Hare Hollow —and two previous ranges — Blume and Grow and Birdhouse Basics. You can make this quilt from your stash or perhaps some new purchases — whatever pleases you. If you wish to make it in the same fabrics that Natalie has used, including the…

Skirting the ISSUE

Skirting the ISSUE

MARY QUANT In the early ’60s, London designer Mary Quant began experimenting with hemlines. While thigh-baring garments had been seen before, such as Josephine Baker’s 1926 banana skirt, Quant is credited with bringing the look to the high street. She was said to have named the mini after her favourite car – and it was an instant hit. While young women embraced the daring style, others were appalled, among them Coco Chanel, who reportedly said in a New York Times interview, “Have they all gone mad?” The meteoric rise of hemlines coincided with a burgeoning second-wave feminist movement. As a result, the mini became an enduring symbol of women’s liberation. Quant died in April this year, aged 93, but she has forever made her mark on fashion and feminism. JEAN SHRIMPTON It was…

Harry’s BIGGEST BATTLE

He did two tours of Afghanistan during his decade-long stint in the British army, but Prince Harry is now embroiled in a war of a different kind. The Duke of Sussex, 38, is one of a group of celebrities that filed a lawsuit back in 2019 against the Mirror Group Newspapers (MGN) over allegations of phone hacking, with the case only recently making it to court. Harry and the other claimants are accusing MGN titles of habitually engaging in widespread phone hacking, deception and other illicit means to access private information between 1991 and 2011. It’s said that senior executives had full knowledge of the unlawful behaviour at the Daily Mirror, Sunday Mirror and Sunday People, with the claimants saying they not only failed to stop it but had actively covered…

Harry’s BIGGEST BATTLE
Everything you should know a WILL bout… YOUR

Everything you should know a WILL bout… YOUR

Be well with Woman's Day YOUR ULTIMATE GUIDE TO BEING THE BEST YOU Of all the subjects we try to avoid, two of the biggest are money and our own mortality. So it's easy to see why many of us put off making a will. Given that 52 per cent of Australians die without this important piece of paper, it's something we all need for our own peace of mind, and for that of our family. Laura Vickers, principal lawyer from Nest Legal, says that creating a will can be a positive experience. In her work, she is often touched by the amount of thought people put into their wills as a lasting act of love for those who are left behind. “People really think about the legacy they want to leave, and the…

SMALL WONDER

SMALL WONDER

Having downsized from the family home, the owner of this 1848 cottage in Sydney’s inner east upsized her new spaces with some smart design moves, the first of which was engaging interiors firm Tom Mark Henry (TMH). With thoughtful craftsmanship and contemporary detailing, what was once a humble and cramped abode is now a desirable and commodious urban retreat. The owner bought the one-bedroom home, one of a row of heritage workers’ cottages, in 2020 and hired the studio soon after. “The cottage had been a rental for years, so it was tired and in need of care and attention,” says TMH lead designer Jed Murphy. “And, with a very small footprint of 44 square metres – including the courtyard – it was cramped and dark.” Luckily, for such an old…

JOCK ZONFRILLO 1976-2023 “HE WAS SO EXCITED”

As family, friends and fans continue to mourn the sudden loss of MasterChef Australia judge Jock Zonfrillo, a picture is emerging of how the talented chef spent his last days – and it’s one that would give many comfort. Back in Melbourne briefly to promote the cooking show’s new season, Zonfrillo enjoyed a long and large lunch with his close mate and fellow judge Andy Allen on Saturday, April 29, during which they shared their excitement about the premiere and what the future held for them both. “It was a three hour catch-up about what we’d been up to, about the show, about the future,” shared an emotional Allen on a special edition of The Project paying tribute to the 46-year-old Scot. “We just talked each other’s ears off. It was so…

JOCK ZONFRILLO 1976-2023 “HE WAS SO EXCITED”

BHA BENEFITS

What is salicylic acid and how can it help my skin? WHAT IS IT? Salicylic acid is a beta hydroxy acid, well-known for its benefits in reducing acne and keeping pores clear. Daniel Isaacs, director of research at Medik8, explains, “It’s considered the gold standard for blemish prevention as it is able to penetrate deep into oily pores and break down clogged skin cells and sebum to clear blockages.” He adds, “It is also closely related to aspirin and has similar anti-inflammatory properties – it can not only help to stop formation of blemishes, but also take down any red, inflamed imperfections. WHO SHOULDN’T USE IT? “Exceptionally sensitive skins should be careful with stronger salicylic acid products, as they may cause irritation,” warns Daniel. “It’s a good idea with any skin type to ease…

BHA BENEFITS
MAKE YOUR MAC MINI A MAMMOTH PERFORMER

MAKE YOUR MAC MINI A MAMMOTH PERFORMER

The Mac mini now boasts an incredibly fast M2 or M2 Pro processor, and rivals even Apple’s most pro computers despite costing significantly less. However, as great as it is, there is a problem with the Mac mini—the upgrades are pricey, and after you buy one, it’s impossible to upgrade its internal components. However, we’re here to help. Apple doesn’t let you upgrade the Mac mini with inexpensive third-party components such as RAM or internal storage, and it prices its custom-build options at the very high end of affordability. Like the rest of the Apple silicon Macs, the Mac mini, Apple has fixed the RAM to the processor and the SSDs to the logic board, so they can’t be swapped out after you buy one. ADDING MEMORY Apple integrated the RAM right into…

ELECTRIFIED STREAMLINER OUT TO STEAMROLL TESLA’S MODEL3

THIS OR a Tesla Model 3? That’s the question you want answered about the Hyundai Ioniq 6, isn’t it? Like most such questions, it’s usually the case that you’ve already made your mind up already and are looking for confirmation, but this one is a little more nuanced. We’ve waited a very long time for a drive in the Ioniq 6 on Aussie roads. The car was first teased as the Prophecy concept back in March 2020. That car was due to be the highlight of Hyundai’s Geneva Show stand that year before a certain global inconvenience intervened. The productionised version was trialled in June of 2022, dubbed the ‘electrified streamliner’. Hyundai’s design guru SangYup Lee described the interior as “a mindful cocoon”, contrasting with the airiness of the Ioniq 5…

ELECTRIFIED STREAMLINER OUT TO STEAMROLL TESLA’S MODEL3
Making Dowel Hinges

Making Dowel Hinges

Facing retirement and an accumulation of off-cuts from many years as an amateur woodworker, it was time to make a plan for using all that wood up. My back was also telling me that I needed to reduce the scale of the pieces I wanted to make. The solution was to concentrate on boxmaking – but there would be two rules. The first was to use only my own designs, and the second was to make those designs as individual as possible – without being different just for the sake of being different. From that starting point I feel my work has developed in both quality and direction, to the point where it is starting to have some consistency of style and features. One feature in particular is the use of wooden…

JAY LENO

As much as I enjoy such English delicacies as my Jaguar XK120 or Lotus 26R, sometimes you just get a hankering for some good old American red meat. Just like I did the other day when I pulled my 1968 Dodge Dart GTS 383 out of the garage. When the Dart was introduced it was sold as a compact, usually with a six-cylinder engine and an automatic transmission. It’s about the same size as a Ford Falcon or a Chevy Nova. But once the muscle-car craze of the mid-1960s began they added a V8, starting with a 273, a 340, then a 318 and up to 383 cubic inches. Even a 440ci was available by special order. The hot cars from Chrysler that year were the Plymouth Road Runner and the…

JAY LENO
crafted comfort

crafted comfort

Sleep well, dream big… the Beautyrest® Comforpedic West 28 Medium Queen Mattress is the secret to a good night’s sleep. Layers of Australian Made Memory Foam Plus conform to your body’s shape, providing excellent support, even weight distribution and essential pressure relief – exactly where you need it most. Advanced cooling technology – KulKote® Carbon – transfers excess heat away from the body so you have a cool and comfortable sleep. refreshing rest Rise and shine after a restful night on the SleepMaker® Botticelli Medium Queen Mattress. With advanced cooling technologies, this luxurious mattress is perfect for Australia’s climate. Fusion Gel Titanium is a Gel Infused Foam that helps regulate temperature as the gel particles disperse heat away from the body. Silk within the top panels makes the mattress deliciously soft yet…

OWC MINISTACK STX: BIG STORAGE AND EXPANDABILITY IN A TINY PACKAGE

OWC MINISTACK STX: BIG STORAGE AND EXPANDABILITY IN A TINY PACKAGE

You get faster ports and two drive bays in the OWC miniStack STX hub for Mac mini or Mac Studio. The miniStack STX matches the Mac’s own Thunderbolt 4 bandwidth and its SSD drive bay will support the fastest NVMe M.2 SSDs. By comparison, Satechi’s rival Stand & Hub for Mac mini features 5Gbps USB-C and USB-A ports and slower SATA M.2 SSDs. Combined with the Mac mini’s own roster of ports, with the ministack STX you will have six fast Thunderbolt 4 ports and two USB-A ports, plus the mini’s own ethernet and HDMI ports. The OWC miniStack has one upstream Thunderbolt port that connects to the Mac, and three downstream Thunderbolt 4 ports. With Thunderbolt 4, you can create three independent daisy chains with up to five total Thunderbolt…

WITH WINDSOR CASTLE AS THE BACKDROP THE CORONATION CONCERT LIONEL RICHIE AND KATY PERRY HELP ROCK THE CELEBRATIONS

WITH WINDSOR CASTLE AS THE BACKDROP THE CORONATION CONCERT LIONEL RICHIE AND KATY PERRY HELP ROCK THE CELEBRATIONS

After being officially crowned Charles III a day earlier, His Majesty picked up another title during last week’s Coronation Concert: Dancing King. The 74-year-old monarch was seen waving a Union flag and swaying to the beat during an exuberant set by US singer Lionel Richie in the grounds of Windsor Castle, which was watched by millions of people around the world. As the sounds of Lionel’s 1983 hit All Night Long took to the air, the King and his loved ones couldn’t help but begin to dance and sing along. His Majesty wasn’t the only one to get swept away by the music. The Duchess of Edinburgh, looking stylish in a coral dress by Beulah, showed she was a Lionel fan, throwing her hands into the air alongside Mike and Zara Tindall during…

Who Killed Baby Holly’s Parents?

Who Killed Baby Holly’s Parents?

IN 1980 A PAIR OF WOMEN—barefoot and dressed in white robes—walked into an Arizona church with a baby girl. They handed the infant to an astonished congregant and said they were part of a traveling religious sect, then walked out as mysteriously as they had appeared, leaving the child behind. More than 2,100 miles away in New Smyrna Beach, Fla., members of the Clouse family were trying to find 21-year-old Dean Clouse, his 17-year-old wife, Tina, and their year-old daughter Holly Marie. Soon after the young family’s move to Lewisville, Texas, Dean and Tina’s letters home stopped abruptly. “It was nerve-racking,” says Dean’s mother, Donna Casasanta. “I would jump out of my skin every time the phone rang. If they found a body around my son’s age, or around Tina’s age,…