u/asteriskhyphen

▲ 33 r/aussie

Abbie Chatfield apologises for making video that suggested harming Trump after her boyfriend was denied entry to the US

Claims she has done a lot of “growing” since posting the video.

news.com.au
u/asteriskhyphen — 2 days ago

Why is everyone celebrating a privileged white coloniser man?

He’s been going to countries and stealing opportunities from natives for decades. This must stop right now!

u/asteriskhyphen — 6 days ago
▲ 15 r/auscorp

I work in a team of 4 plus our manager. We all have varying levels of experience and responsibilities but my manager has established a culture of “everyone should be included” for meetings regardless of whether it relates to your role which often ends up with very blurred boundaries between our roles.

We do a lot of cross-department work with stakeholders and teams from different areas. The way he approaches meetings is if someone’s not invited he apologises for the team not including them which then puts pressure on everyone else to include the entire team or have to explain yourself as if you’ve excluded people.

I’m all for transparency but I’d like to think there are some things people take ownership of and share information as needed. This “committee” vibe is really starting to become difficult to deal with.

Is this normal for managers and how do you deal with it?

reddit.com
u/asteriskhyphen — 7 days ago
▲ 144 r/aussie

So a while back I came across a thread in AskAnAustralian sub reddit about what are some of the creepiest places in the country and Woods Point, Victoria came up there a number of times.

Looked the place up on google maps and I have never felt so creeped out just from looking at pictures of a place. It really does look like a place that has an eerie vibe. Apparently has a population of only 33 people.

What’s up with this town? Anyone been there?

u/asteriskhyphen — 9 days ago
▲ 25 r/aussie

I was reading this article and the ABC people were going on about how everyone wants “Australian content” so that’s what they are making on the ABC when it comes to TV shows.

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-05-01/screen-forever-40-gold-coast-industry/106629446

Which made me wonder if that’s actually true. I hardly ever go to Netflix and look for “Australian shows”. In fact if I know a movie or show is local I’m actually hesitant to watch it because how dull Australian movies can be and our TV shows are very hit or miss.

How many people actually go to a streaming service and actually look for something “Australian” to watch?

u/asteriskhyphen — 10 days ago
▲ 218 r/aussie

If anyone was thinking that Labor had any plans to address the mass immigration issue… think again. They are willingly flooding the country with migrants and have no interest in solving any problem that impacts Australians.

u/asteriskhyphen — 12 days ago