Waking up to a tasteless Taser at 2SM. On Monday morning at 5am listeners of Grant Goldman’s 2SM Sydney talk back radio show heard this:
“[sound of rooster] WAKE UP! Or I’ll have to zap you [sound of electricity and someone screaming].” (listen to the audio here)
This of course came on the morning after the death of 21-year-old Brazilian student Roberto Laudisio Curti whose death is being investigated after NSW police used a Taser and capsicum spray to subdue him. The next day on The Goldman Show’s 2SM Facebook page the question was asked: “who would you like to Taser?”
Oh the hilarity. Goldman would be known to Crikey readers for being a Wankley Award recipient in 2008 for these comments about former NAB CEO and current managing director and CEO of Australia Post Ahmed Fahour:
“NAB’s Australian head, Achmed Fahour [sic] – really? that’s a great Australian name — Ahmed Fahour, says today’s rise reflects sustained increases …”
There’s a certain radio show we can think of that could do with a spark or two of taste.
Front page of the day. Mexico’s La Jornada newspaper covers that country’s 7.8 earthquake yesterday:
The Department of Corrections. In Tuesday’s Canadian newspaper The Globe and Mail a headline would have caught the eye of its readers — not only had former North Korean despot Kim Jong-il changed his tune on the monitoring of North Korea’s nuclear program but the famed cinefile and murderous dictator had risen from the grave after dying in December 2011:
The Globe and Mail ran this correction yesterday:
Weatherman hits out at ‘unprofessional claptrap’
“Earlier this week WIN TV weatherman Peter Byrne let rip at weather reports from the ‘southern media’ after a breakfast TV forecast of 200km winds for northern Queensland.” — TV Tonight
Sunrise cash winner drops f-bomb
“A Victorian mum says she’s not embarrassed to have dropped a F-bomb live on national TV after winning $10,000 on Sunrise.” — Herald Sun
Free TV to lose 300 sport exclusives
“The number of sporting events reserved for free-to-air television will be cut by about 300 under the new anti-siphoning legislation, which could give Communications Minister Stephen Conroy power to decide which football matches should be shown.” — The Australian
A Current Affair blocked from screening Menulog story
“A New South Wales Supreme Court judge has blocked the Nine Network from airing a story which described home-delivery service Menulog as a ‘food con’.” — Media Spy
Twitter says it has 140 million users
“Twitter celebrated its sixth birthday on Wednesday by dropping an impressive stat: The network now claims 140 million active users.” — Mashable
Crikey is committed to hosting lively discussions. Help us keep the conversation useful, interesting and welcoming. We aim to publish comments quickly in the interest of promoting robust conversation, but we’re a small team and we deploy filters to protect against legal risk. Occasionally your comment may be held up while we review, but we’re working as fast as we can to keep the conversation rolling.
The Crikey comment section is members-only content. Please subscribe to leave a comment.
The Crikey comment section is members-only content. Please login to leave a comment.