on 22-04-2014 07:27 PM
Watching the Australian Story on Andrew "Boy" Charlton last night it struck me how the newsreaders of the day had a much "plummier"
accent.
Almost but quite quite the "pommy" rrrrrowwnded vowels. Distinctly Orstrelian.
We've relaxed a lot since then and grown into our own accent.
But it's nice to listen to the way the old narrators and newsreaders used to speak in their formal way. God forbid they should use the accent of the broader aussie population
Here's an example:
on 22-04-2014 07:29 PM
and yet it was used as another weapon against a former PM .
on 22-04-2014 07:36 PM
Forget the accent. Thank you, icy, for the film of Melbourne.
on 22-04-2014 07:38 PM
@imastawka wrote:Forget the accent. Thank you, icy, for the film of Melbourne.
Yes I picked it at random but it was interesting wasn't it?
on 22-04-2014 07:41 PM
When I was oversea and talk to other aussies it's interesting how we do talk slightly differently between states. Melbournite accent is a bit more slangish "Dat's fully Sick Mate. Adelaide accent is kinda posh, And QLD accent is more boganish.
22-04-2014 07:43 PM - edited 22-04-2014 07:45 PM
I'll agree with Q-landers being boganish
Living so close to the border, we say stuff like 'it must have been a Q-lander' and inevitably- they are carp drivers 😄
and they do say 'hey' a lot.
lol
on 22-04-2014 08:04 PM
And how about gorgeous "Boy" Charlton?
Andrew Murray Charlton (12 August 1907 – 10 December 1975), known popularly as Boy Charlton, was an Australian freestyle swimmer of the 1920s and 1930s who won a gold medal in the 1500 m freestyle at the 1924 Summer Olympics in Paris.
"Physiologists had become involved in sport at the time of the Paris Olympics and Charlton's lung capacity was tested with a machine, which blew mercury through a set of bent tubes. They could not believe his lung capacity. It was the highest lung capacity of anyone they had rated at that time - only 16 years of age."
He was like the Phar Lap of swimming
He set five world records and also won a further three silver and one bronze medal in his Olympic career.
Yet refused to go professional, instead chose to live his life on the land he loved.
His son, Murray Charlton, said on ABC's Australian Story, "...Probably smoked up until the last five years of his death, but he had emphysema, so really, once he got emphysema, he couldn't even smoke.
Er, that was the irony of it. And he yeah, it was certainly what killed him in the end. I mean, yeah. Which was, I thought, was very sad, coming from a world champion, to die of cigarettes.
It was very sad, I thought. It's like the gods… I mean, if you're a wonderful artist, they usually take your sight away. And I think that's probably what they did with him, in that they took these wonderful lungs away with cigarettes."
Phwoar!
Apparently the movie talent scouts were all after him like Johnny Weissmueller who was the original Tarzan, but he declined. Didn't want to be filmed running around after crocodiles and monkeys lol.
on 22-04-2014 08:04 PM
mmmhhh posh errhhh you have NEVER been to port adelaide have you?
on 22-04-2014 08:06 PM
@kennedia_nigricans wrote:mmmhhh posh errhhh you have NEVER been to port adelaide have you?
no. but visiting Adelaide is on my bucket list
on 22-04-2014 08:09 PM
the accent in port adelaide is so strong that even my hubby (english is his first language) can't understand what they say.
and it's certainly NOT posh PMSL