
Forget the WiFi. Sit back, relax, disconnect and really enjoy the flight
It's that moment of sweet surrender I treasure.
You've made it to the airport on time, checked in, hustled through the cattle race to security, browsed some duty-free, arrived at the gate, boarded, and made it to your seat. The doors close, the aircraft is pushed back and soon you're airborne.
It's when that seatbelt sign comes on that you finally relax. The airport stress is over. Everything's out of your hands now. Eight hours with no doom loop of news, no social media, no emails, no nagging reminders. Just a good book, perhaps a movie, maybe a doze - above all, respite from the real and troubled world 40,000 feet below you.
It's for that reason I never succumb to temptation to make use of the aircraft's wifi. The hours of disconnection are almost as precious as the tropical holiday ahead.
Switching off has never been more important. Numerous studies show that too much time online can have serious mental and physical health implications.
Disturbed sleep, anxiety, depression, even obesity have been fingered as side effects of the online addiction so many of us struggle with.
The online lure is at its worst during times of crisis, which nowadays seem the rule rather than the exception. Wars, natural disasters, train wrecks. We want to look away but can't and are driven by the fear of missing out on that latest development or tidbit of information that keeps us in the loop.
In a bid to stay relevant in the online environment, the legacy media - especially most commercial free-to-air TV - have become ever more shrill in an attempt to wrest our attention from the screen in our hand to the big screen in the lounge room. That's why they serve a diet of incessant car crash or crime porn.
Is it working? The University of Canberra's 2025 Digital News Report found that while local stories about crime and accidents remain popular up to 69 per cent of Australians actively avoid the news and only 37 per cent get their news via TV.
The Ten Network has noticed this shift and has revamped its 6pm national nightly news offering with a more sober bulletin featuring fewer crashes and meatier stories - viewers can still get their shouty mayhem on the preceding state-based bulletin.
Ten's also running its new national bulletin on Spotify and YouTube, knowing if the big screen can't tempt you, the little one might. This is, after all, another battle for your attention.
It's that never-ending and exhausting contest for my attention, which makes the prospect of a few hours cut off from the internet, in my own little space, so appealing. It's exactly why I will sit back, relax and enjoy the flight.
HAVE YOUR SAY: Do you use the WiFi when on a long flight? Or do you enjoy the break from the online world? Are you among the 69 per cent of Australians who avoid the news? How much of your day do you spend online? Email us: echidna@theechidna.com.au
SHARE THE LOVE: If you enjoy The Echidna, forward it to a friend so they can sign up, too.
IN CASE YOU MISSED IT:
- Qantas has reported a major cyber security breach with data from up to 6 million customers potentially stolen.
- Australians have claimed nearly $2 billion in flood, cyclone and rain insurance in six months but insurers say the bill isn't as bad as had been expected.
- A second man has been charged with sex abuse crimes against children as investigators broaden their probe after allegations of "heinous" offences at childcare centres.
THEY SAID IT: "Good news is rare these days, and every glittering ounce of it should be cherished and hoarded and worshipped and fondled like a priceless diamond." - Hunter S. Thompson
YOU SAID IT: Touchscreen controls in cars are accidents waiting to happen. John wants a return to good old knobs, buttons and switches.
"Yes, the screens are a distraction," writes Ann. "I drive a Mazda sedan and the screen is inactive if the car is moving. There are adequate controls with knobs and buttons for essential things like volume on the radio, tuning etc. Buy a Mazda next time, instead of an MG or a Tesla."
Ian writes: "I love my Tesla Model 3, but am most assuredly not enamoured with Elon Musk nor with the number of essential driving functions that have been relegated to the screen, including heating/cooling control, radio station selection, and turning windscreen wipers and headlights on or off. I agree that having to search for these functions on a screen while under way is downright unsafe." That said, he loves the Tesla's fart button, a 'dog mode', and the navigation system. "I can set the dog mode on a hot day and nip into the supermarket while Tilly lounges in air-conditioned comfort on the car's back seat."
"You have read my mind," writes Elaine. "When I updated my car I spent ages reading the 'Media manual' I then asked my son to assist as he has one in his car. After 'fiddling' with it and reading the manual, he declared it to be 'not user friendly'; therefore, it is not used to its possible potential."
This is a sample of The Echidna newsletter sent out each weekday morning. To sign up for FREE, go to theechidna.com.au
It's that moment of sweet surrender I treasure.
You've made it to the airport on time, checked in, hustled through the cattle race to security, browsed some duty-free, arrived at the gate, boarded, and made it to your seat. The doors close, the aircraft is pushed back and soon you're airborne.
It's when that seatbelt sign comes on that you finally relax. The airport stress is over. Everything's out of your hands now. Eight hours with no doom loop of news, no social media, no emails, no nagging reminders. Just a good book, perhaps a movie, maybe a doze - above all, respite from the real and troubled world 40,000 feet below you.
It's for that reason I never succumb to temptation to make use of the aircraft's wifi. The hours of disconnection are almost as precious as the tropical holiday ahead.
Switching off has never been more important. Numerous studies show that too much time online can have serious mental and physical health implications.
Disturbed sleep, anxiety, depression, even obesity have been fingered as side effects of the online addiction so many of us struggle with.
The online lure is at its worst during times of crisis, which nowadays seem the rule rather than the exception. Wars, natural disasters, train wrecks. We want to look away but can't and are driven by the fear of missing out on that latest development or tidbit of information that keeps us in the loop.
In a bid to stay relevant in the online environment, the legacy media - especially most commercial free-to-air TV - have become ever more shrill in an attempt to wrest our attention from the screen in our hand to the big screen in the lounge room. That's why they serve a diet of incessant car crash or crime porn.
Is it working? The University of Canberra's 2025 Digital News Report found that while local stories about crime and accidents remain popular up to 69 per cent of Australians actively avoid the news and only 37 per cent get their news via TV.
The Ten Network has noticed this shift and has revamped its 6pm national nightly news offering with a more sober bulletin featuring fewer crashes and meatier stories - viewers can still get their shouty mayhem on the preceding state-based bulletin.
Ten's also running its new national bulletin on Spotify and YouTube, knowing if the big screen can't tempt you, the little one might. This is, after all, another battle for your attention.
It's that never-ending and exhausting contest for my attention, which makes the prospect of a few hours cut off from the internet, in my own little space, so appealing. It's exactly why I will sit back, relax and enjoy the flight.
HAVE YOUR SAY: Do you use the WiFi when on a long flight? Or do you enjoy the break from the online world? Are you among the 69 per cent of Australians who avoid the news? How much of your day do you spend online? Email us: echidna@theechidna.com.au
SHARE THE LOVE: If you enjoy The Echidna, forward it to a friend so they can sign up, too.
IN CASE YOU MISSED IT:
- Qantas has reported a major cyber security breach with data from up to 6 million customers potentially stolen.
- Australians have claimed nearly $2 billion in flood, cyclone and rain insurance in six months but insurers say the bill isn't as bad as had been expected.
- A second man has been charged with sex abuse crimes against children as investigators broaden their probe after allegations of "heinous" offences at childcare centres.
THEY SAID IT: "Good news is rare these days, and every glittering ounce of it should be cherished and hoarded and worshipped and fondled like a priceless diamond." - Hunter S. Thompson
YOU SAID IT: Touchscreen controls in cars are accidents waiting to happen. John wants a return to good old knobs, buttons and switches.
"Yes, the screens are a distraction," writes Ann. "I drive a Mazda sedan and the screen is inactive if the car is moving. There are adequate controls with knobs and buttons for essential things like volume on the radio, tuning etc. Buy a Mazda next time, instead of an MG or a Tesla."
Ian writes: "I love my Tesla Model 3, but am most assuredly not enamoured with Elon Musk nor with the number of essential driving functions that have been relegated to the screen, including heating/cooling control, radio station selection, and turning windscreen wipers and headlights on or off. I agree that having to search for these functions on a screen while under way is downright unsafe." That said, he loves the Tesla's fart button, a 'dog mode', and the navigation system. "I can set the dog mode on a hot day and nip into the supermarket while Tilly lounges in air-conditioned comfort on the car's back seat."
"You have read my mind," writes Elaine. "When I updated my car I spent ages reading the 'Media manual' I then asked my son to assist as he has one in his car. After 'fiddling' with it and reading the manual, he declared it to be 'not user friendly'; therefore, it is not used to its possible potential."
This is a sample of The Echidna newsletter sent out each weekday morning. To sign up for FREE, go to theechidna.com.au
It's that moment of sweet surrender I treasure.
You've made it to the airport on time, checked in, hustled through the cattle race to security, browsed some duty-free, arrived at the gate, boarded, and made it to your seat. The doors close, the aircraft is pushed back and soon you're airborne.
It's when that seatbelt sign comes on that you finally relax. The airport stress is over. Everything's out of your hands now. Eight hours with no doom loop of news, no social media, no emails, no nagging reminders. Just a good book, perhaps a movie, maybe a doze - above all, respite from the real and troubled world 40,000 feet below you.
It's for that reason I never succumb to temptation to make use of the aircraft's wifi. The hours of disconnection are almost as precious as the tropical holiday ahead.
Switching off has never been more important. Numerous studies show that too much time online can have serious mental and physical health implications.
Disturbed sleep, anxiety, depression, even obesity have been fingered as side effects of the online addiction so many of us struggle with.
The online lure is at its worst during times of crisis, which nowadays seem the rule rather than the exception. Wars, natural disasters, train wrecks. We want to look away but can't and are driven by the fear of missing out on that latest development or tidbit of information that keeps us in the loop.
In a bid to stay relevant in the online environment, the legacy media - especially most commercial free-to-air TV - have become ever more shrill in an attempt to wrest our attention from the screen in our hand to the big screen in the lounge room. That's why they serve a diet of incessant car crash or crime porn.
Is it working? The University of Canberra's 2025 Digital News Report found that while local stories about crime and accidents remain popular up to 69 per cent of Australians actively avoid the news and only 37 per cent get their news via TV.
The Ten Network has noticed this shift and has revamped its 6pm national nightly news offering with a more sober bulletin featuring fewer crashes and meatier stories - viewers can still get their shouty mayhem on the preceding state-based bulletin.
Ten's also running its new national bulletin on Spotify and YouTube, knowing if the big screen can't tempt you, the little one might. This is, after all, another battle for your attention.
It's that never-ending and exhausting contest for my attention, which makes the prospect of a few hours cut off from the internet, in my own little space, so appealing. It's exactly why I will sit back, relax and enjoy the flight.
HAVE YOUR SAY: Do you use the WiFi when on a long flight? Or do you enjoy the break from the online world? Are you among the 69 per cent of Australians who avoid the news? How much of your day do you spend online? Email us: echidna@theechidna.com.au
SHARE THE LOVE: If you enjoy The Echidna, forward it to a friend so they can sign up, too.
IN CASE YOU MISSED IT:
- Qantas has reported a major cyber security breach with data from up to 6 million customers potentially stolen.
- Australians have claimed nearly $2 billion in flood, cyclone and rain insurance in six months but insurers say the bill isn't as bad as had been expected.
- A second man has been charged with sex abuse crimes against children as investigators broaden their probe after allegations of "heinous" offences at childcare centres.
THEY SAID IT: "Good news is rare these days, and every glittering ounce of it should be cherished and hoarded and worshipped and fondled like a priceless diamond." - Hunter S. Thompson
YOU SAID IT: Touchscreen controls in cars are accidents waiting to happen. John wants a return to good old knobs, buttons and switches.
"Yes, the screens are a distraction," writes Ann. "I drive a Mazda sedan and the screen is inactive if the car is moving. There are adequate controls with knobs and buttons for essential things like volume on the radio, tuning etc. Buy a Mazda next time, instead of an MG or a Tesla."
Ian writes: "I love my Tesla Model 3, but am most assuredly not enamoured with Elon Musk nor with the number of essential driving functions that have been relegated to the screen, including heating/cooling control, radio station selection, and turning windscreen wipers and headlights on or off. I agree that having to search for these functions on a screen while under way is downright unsafe." That said, he loves the Tesla's fart button, a 'dog mode', and the navigation system. "I can set the dog mode on a hot day and nip into the supermarket while Tilly lounges in air-conditioned comfort on the car's back seat."
"You have read my mind," writes Elaine. "When I updated my car I spent ages reading the 'Media manual' I then asked my son to assist as he has one in his car. After 'fiddling' with it and reading the manual, he declared it to be 'not user friendly'; therefore, it is not used to its possible potential."
This is a sample of The Echidna newsletter sent out each weekday morning. To sign up for FREE, go to theechidna.com.au
It's that moment of sweet surrender I treasure.
You've made it to the airport on time, checked in, hustled through the cattle race to security, browsed some duty-free, arrived at the gate, boarded, and made it to your seat. The doors close, the aircraft is pushed back and soon you're airborne.
It's when that seatbelt sign comes on that you finally relax. The airport stress is over. Everything's out of your hands now. Eight hours with no doom loop of news, no social media, no emails, no nagging reminders. Just a good book, perhaps a movie, maybe a doze - above all, respite from the real and troubled world 40,000 feet below you.
It's for that reason I never succumb to temptation to make use of the aircraft's wifi. The hours of disconnection are almost as precious as the tropical holiday ahead.
Switching off has never been more important. Numerous studies show that too much time online can have serious mental and physical health implications.
Disturbed sleep, anxiety, depression, even obesity have been fingered as side effects of the online addiction so many of us struggle with.
The online lure is at its worst during times of crisis, which nowadays seem the rule rather than the exception. Wars, natural disasters, train wrecks. We want to look away but can't and are driven by the fear of missing out on that latest development or tidbit of information that keeps us in the loop.
In a bid to stay relevant in the online environment, the legacy media - especially most commercial free-to-air TV - have become ever more shrill in an attempt to wrest our attention from the screen in our hand to the big screen in the lounge room. That's why they serve a diet of incessant car crash or crime porn.
Is it working? The University of Canberra's 2025 Digital News Report found that while local stories about crime and accidents remain popular up to 69 per cent of Australians actively avoid the news and only 37 per cent get their news via TV.
The Ten Network has noticed this shift and has revamped its 6pm national nightly news offering with a more sober bulletin featuring fewer crashes and meatier stories - viewers can still get their shouty mayhem on the preceding state-based bulletin.
Ten's also running its new national bulletin on Spotify and YouTube, knowing if the big screen can't tempt you, the little one might. This is, after all, another battle for your attention.
It's that never-ending and exhausting contest for my attention, which makes the prospect of a few hours cut off from the internet, in my own little space, so appealing. It's exactly why I will sit back, relax and enjoy the flight.
HAVE YOUR SAY: Do you use the WiFi when on a long flight? Or do you enjoy the break from the online world? Are you among the 69 per cent of Australians who avoid the news? How much of your day do you spend online? Email us: echidna@theechidna.com.au
SHARE THE LOVE: If you enjoy The Echidna, forward it to a friend so they can sign up, too.
IN CASE YOU MISSED IT:
- Qantas has reported a major cyber security breach with data from up to 6 million customers potentially stolen.
- Australians have claimed nearly $2 billion in flood, cyclone and rain insurance in six months but insurers say the bill isn't as bad as had been expected.
- A second man has been charged with sex abuse crimes against children as investigators broaden their probe after allegations of "heinous" offences at childcare centres.
THEY SAID IT: "Good news is rare these days, and every glittering ounce of it should be cherished and hoarded and worshipped and fondled like a priceless diamond." - Hunter S. Thompson
YOU SAID IT: Touchscreen controls in cars are accidents waiting to happen. John wants a return to good old knobs, buttons and switches.
"Yes, the screens are a distraction," writes Ann. "I drive a Mazda sedan and the screen is inactive if the car is moving. There are adequate controls with knobs and buttons for essential things like volume on the radio, tuning etc. Buy a Mazda next time, instead of an MG or a Tesla."
Ian writes: "I love my Tesla Model 3, but am most assuredly not enamoured with Elon Musk nor with the number of essential driving functions that have been relegated to the screen, including heating/cooling control, radio station selection, and turning windscreen wipers and headlights on or off. I agree that having to search for these functions on a screen while under way is downright unsafe." That said, he loves the Tesla's fart button, a 'dog mode', and the navigation system. "I can set the dog mode on a hot day and nip into the supermarket while Tilly lounges in air-conditioned comfort on the car's back seat."
"You have read my mind," writes Elaine. "When I updated my car I spent ages reading the 'Media manual' I then asked my son to assist as he has one in his car. After 'fiddling' with it and reading the manual, he declared it to be 'not user friendly'; therefore, it is not used to its possible potential."

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Forget the WiFi. Sit back, relax, disconnect and really enjoy the flight
This is a sample of The Echidna newsletter sent out each weekday morning. To sign up for FREE, go to It's that moment of sweet surrender I treasure. You've made it to the airport on time, checked in, hustled through the cattle race to security, browsed some duty-free, arrived at the gate, boarded, and made it to your seat. The doors close, the aircraft is pushed back and soon you're airborne. It's when that seatbelt sign comes on that you finally relax. The airport stress is over. Everything's out of your hands now. Eight hours with no doom loop of news, no social media, no emails, no nagging reminders. Just a good book, perhaps a movie, maybe a doze - above all, respite from the real and troubled world 40,000 feet below you. It's for that reason I never succumb to temptation to make use of the aircraft's wifi. The hours of disconnection are almost as precious as the tropical holiday ahead. Switching off has never been more important. Numerous studies show that too much time online can have serious mental and physical health implications. Disturbed sleep, anxiety, depression, even obesity have been fingered as side effects of the online addiction so many of us struggle with. The online lure is at its worst during times of crisis, which nowadays seem the rule rather than the exception. Wars, natural disasters, train wrecks. We want to look away but can't and are driven by the fear of missing out on that latest development or tidbit of information that keeps us in the loop. In a bid to stay relevant in the online environment, the legacy media - especially most commercial free-to-air TV - have become ever more shrill in an attempt to wrest our attention from the screen in our hand to the big screen in the lounge room. That's why they serve a diet of incessant car crash or crime porn. Is it working? The University of Canberra's 2025 Digital News Report found that while local stories about crime and accidents remain popular up to 69 per cent of Australians actively avoid the news and only 37 per cent get their news via TV. The Ten Network has noticed this shift and has revamped its 6pm national nightly news offering with a more sober bulletin featuring fewer crashes and meatier stories - viewers can still get their shouty mayhem on the preceding state-based bulletin. Ten's also running its new national bulletin on Spotify and YouTube, knowing if the big screen can't tempt you, the little one might. This is, after all, another battle for your attention. It's that never-ending and exhausting contest for my attention, which makes the prospect of a few hours cut off from the internet, in my own little space, so appealing. It's exactly why I will sit back, relax and enjoy the flight. HAVE YOUR SAY: Do you use the WiFi when on a long flight? Or do you enjoy the break from the online world? Are you among the 69 per cent of Australians who avoid the news? How much of your day do you spend online? Email us: echidna@ SHARE THE LOVE: If you enjoy The Echidna, forward it to a friend so they can sign up, too. IN CASE YOU MISSED IT: - Qantas has reported a major cyber security breach with data from up to 6 million customers potentially stolen. - Australians have claimed nearly $2 billion in flood, cyclone and rain insurance in six months but insurers say the bill isn't as bad as had been expected. - A second man has been charged with sex abuse crimes against children as investigators broaden their probe after allegations of "heinous" offences at childcare centres. THEY SAID IT: "Good news is rare these days, and every glittering ounce of it should be cherished and hoarded and worshipped and fondled like a priceless diamond." - Hunter S. Thompson YOU SAID IT: Touchscreen controls in cars are accidents waiting to happen. John wants a return to good old knobs, buttons and switches. "Yes, the screens are a distraction," writes Ann. "I drive a Mazda sedan and the screen is inactive if the car is moving. There are adequate controls with knobs and buttons for essential things like volume on the radio, tuning etc. Buy a Mazda next time, instead of an MG or a Tesla." Ian writes: "I love my Tesla Model 3, but am most assuredly not enamoured with Elon Musk nor with the number of essential driving functions that have been relegated to the screen, including heating/cooling control, radio station selection, and turning windscreen wipers and headlights on or off. I agree that having to search for these functions on a screen while under way is downright unsafe." That said, he loves the Tesla's fart button, a 'dog mode', and the navigation system. "I can set the dog mode on a hot day and nip into the supermarket while Tilly lounges in air-conditioned comfort on the car's back seat." "You have read my mind," writes Elaine. "When I updated my car I spent ages reading the 'Media manual' I then asked my son to assist as he has one in his car. After 'fiddling' with it and reading the manual, he declared it to be 'not user friendly'; therefore, it is not used to its possible potential." This is a sample of The Echidna newsletter sent out each weekday morning. To sign up for FREE, go to It's that moment of sweet surrender I treasure. You've made it to the airport on time, checked in, hustled through the cattle race to security, browsed some duty-free, arrived at the gate, boarded, and made it to your seat. The doors close, the aircraft is pushed back and soon you're airborne. It's when that seatbelt sign comes on that you finally relax. The airport stress is over. Everything's out of your hands now. Eight hours with no doom loop of news, no social media, no emails, no nagging reminders. Just a good book, perhaps a movie, maybe a doze - above all, respite from the real and troubled world 40,000 feet below you. It's for that reason I never succumb to temptation to make use of the aircraft's wifi. The hours of disconnection are almost as precious as the tropical holiday ahead. Switching off has never been more important. Numerous studies show that too much time online can have serious mental and physical health implications. Disturbed sleep, anxiety, depression, even obesity have been fingered as side effects of the online addiction so many of us struggle with. The online lure is at its worst during times of crisis, which nowadays seem the rule rather than the exception. Wars, natural disasters, train wrecks. We want to look away but can't and are driven by the fear of missing out on that latest development or tidbit of information that keeps us in the loop. In a bid to stay relevant in the online environment, the legacy media - especially most commercial free-to-air TV - have become ever more shrill in an attempt to wrest our attention from the screen in our hand to the big screen in the lounge room. That's why they serve a diet of incessant car crash or crime porn. Is it working? The University of Canberra's 2025 Digital News Report found that while local stories about crime and accidents remain popular up to 69 per cent of Australians actively avoid the news and only 37 per cent get their news via TV. The Ten Network has noticed this shift and has revamped its 6pm national nightly news offering with a more sober bulletin featuring fewer crashes and meatier stories - viewers can still get their shouty mayhem on the preceding state-based bulletin. Ten's also running its new national bulletin on Spotify and YouTube, knowing if the big screen can't tempt you, the little one might. This is, after all, another battle for your attention. It's that never-ending and exhausting contest for my attention, which makes the prospect of a few hours cut off from the internet, in my own little space, so appealing. It's exactly why I will sit back, relax and enjoy the flight. HAVE YOUR SAY: Do you use the WiFi when on a long flight? Or do you enjoy the break from the online world? Are you among the 69 per cent of Australians who avoid the news? How much of your day do you spend online? Email us: echidna@ SHARE THE LOVE: If you enjoy The Echidna, forward it to a friend so they can sign up, too. IN CASE YOU MISSED IT: - Qantas has reported a major cyber security breach with data from up to 6 million customers potentially stolen. - Australians have claimed nearly $2 billion in flood, cyclone and rain insurance in six months but insurers say the bill isn't as bad as had been expected. - A second man has been charged with sex abuse crimes against children as investigators broaden their probe after allegations of "heinous" offences at childcare centres. THEY SAID IT: "Good news is rare these days, and every glittering ounce of it should be cherished and hoarded and worshipped and fondled like a priceless diamond." - Hunter S. Thompson YOU SAID IT: Touchscreen controls in cars are accidents waiting to happen. John wants a return to good old knobs, buttons and switches. "Yes, the screens are a distraction," writes Ann. "I drive a Mazda sedan and the screen is inactive if the car is moving. There are adequate controls with knobs and buttons for essential things like volume on the radio, tuning etc. Buy a Mazda next time, instead of an MG or a Tesla." Ian writes: "I love my Tesla Model 3, but am most assuredly not enamoured with Elon Musk nor with the number of essential driving functions that have been relegated to the screen, including heating/cooling control, radio station selection, and turning windscreen wipers and headlights on or off. I agree that having to search for these functions on a screen while under way is downright unsafe." That said, he loves the Tesla's fart button, a 'dog mode', and the navigation system. "I can set the dog mode on a hot day and nip into the supermarket while Tilly lounges in air-conditioned comfort on the car's back seat." "You have read my mind," writes Elaine. "When I updated my car I spent ages reading the 'Media manual' I then asked my son to assist as he has one in his car. After 'fiddling' with it and reading the manual, he declared it to be 'not user friendly'; therefore, it is not used to its possible potential." This is a sample of The Echidna newsletter sent out each weekday morning. To sign up for FREE, go to It's that moment of sweet surrender I treasure. You've made it to the airport on time, checked in, hustled through the cattle race to security, browsed some duty-free, arrived at the gate, boarded, and made it to your seat. The doors close, the aircraft is pushed back and soon you're airborne. It's when that seatbelt sign comes on that you finally relax. The airport stress is over. Everything's out of your hands now. Eight hours with no doom loop of news, no social media, no emails, no nagging reminders. Just a good book, perhaps a movie, maybe a doze - above all, respite from the real and troubled world 40,000 feet below you. It's for that reason I never succumb to temptation to make use of the aircraft's wifi. The hours of disconnection are almost as precious as the tropical holiday ahead. Switching off has never been more important. Numerous studies show that too much time online can have serious mental and physical health implications. Disturbed sleep, anxiety, depression, even obesity have been fingered as side effects of the online addiction so many of us struggle with. The online lure is at its worst during times of crisis, which nowadays seem the rule rather than the exception. Wars, natural disasters, train wrecks. We want to look away but can't and are driven by the fear of missing out on that latest development or tidbit of information that keeps us in the loop. In a bid to stay relevant in the online environment, the legacy media - especially most commercial free-to-air TV - have become ever more shrill in an attempt to wrest our attention from the screen in our hand to the big screen in the lounge room. That's why they serve a diet of incessant car crash or crime porn. Is it working? The University of Canberra's 2025 Digital News Report found that while local stories about crime and accidents remain popular up to 69 per cent of Australians actively avoid the news and only 37 per cent get their news via TV. The Ten Network has noticed this shift and has revamped its 6pm national nightly news offering with a more sober bulletin featuring fewer crashes and meatier stories - viewers can still get their shouty mayhem on the preceding state-based bulletin. Ten's also running its new national bulletin on Spotify and YouTube, knowing if the big screen can't tempt you, the little one might. This is, after all, another battle for your attention. It's that never-ending and exhausting contest for my attention, which makes the prospect of a few hours cut off from the internet, in my own little space, so appealing. It's exactly why I will sit back, relax and enjoy the flight. HAVE YOUR SAY: Do you use the WiFi when on a long flight? Or do you enjoy the break from the online world? Are you among the 69 per cent of Australians who avoid the news? How much of your day do you spend online? Email us: echidna@ SHARE THE LOVE: If you enjoy The Echidna, forward it to a friend so they can sign up, too. IN CASE YOU MISSED IT: - Qantas has reported a major cyber security breach with data from up to 6 million customers potentially stolen. - Australians have claimed nearly $2 billion in flood, cyclone and rain insurance in six months but insurers say the bill isn't as bad as had been expected. - A second man has been charged with sex abuse crimes against children as investigators broaden their probe after allegations of "heinous" offences at childcare centres. THEY SAID IT: "Good news is rare these days, and every glittering ounce of it should be cherished and hoarded and worshipped and fondled like a priceless diamond." - Hunter S. Thompson YOU SAID IT: Touchscreen controls in cars are accidents waiting to happen. John wants a return to good old knobs, buttons and switches. "Yes, the screens are a distraction," writes Ann. "I drive a Mazda sedan and the screen is inactive if the car is moving. There are adequate controls with knobs and buttons for essential things like volume on the radio, tuning etc. Buy a Mazda next time, instead of an MG or a Tesla." Ian writes: "I love my Tesla Model 3, but am most assuredly not enamoured with Elon Musk nor with the number of essential driving functions that have been relegated to the screen, including heating/cooling control, radio station selection, and turning windscreen wipers and headlights on or off. I agree that having to search for these functions on a screen while under way is downright unsafe." That said, he loves the Tesla's fart button, a 'dog mode', and the navigation system. "I can set the dog mode on a hot day and nip into the supermarket while Tilly lounges in air-conditioned comfort on the car's back seat." "You have read my mind," writes Elaine. "When I updated my car I spent ages reading the 'Media manual' I then asked my son to assist as he has one in his car. After 'fiddling' with it and reading the manual, he declared it to be 'not user friendly'; therefore, it is not used to its possible potential." This is a sample of The Echidna newsletter sent out each weekday morning. To sign up for FREE, go to It's that moment of sweet surrender I treasure. You've made it to the airport on time, checked in, hustled through the cattle race to security, browsed some duty-free, arrived at the gate, boarded, and made it to your seat. The doors close, the aircraft is pushed back and soon you're airborne. It's when that seatbelt sign comes on that you finally relax. The airport stress is over. Everything's out of your hands now. Eight hours with no doom loop of news, no social media, no emails, no nagging reminders. Just a good book, perhaps a movie, maybe a doze - above all, respite from the real and troubled world 40,000 feet below you. It's for that reason I never succumb to temptation to make use of the aircraft's wifi. The hours of disconnection are almost as precious as the tropical holiday ahead. Switching off has never been more important. Numerous studies show that too much time online can have serious mental and physical health implications. Disturbed sleep, anxiety, depression, even obesity have been fingered as side effects of the online addiction so many of us struggle with. The online lure is at its worst during times of crisis, which nowadays seem the rule rather than the exception. Wars, natural disasters, train wrecks. We want to look away but can't and are driven by the fear of missing out on that latest development or tidbit of information that keeps us in the loop. In a bid to stay relevant in the online environment, the legacy media - especially most commercial free-to-air TV - have become ever more shrill in an attempt to wrest our attention from the screen in our hand to the big screen in the lounge room. That's why they serve a diet of incessant car crash or crime porn. Is it working? The University of Canberra's 2025 Digital News Report found that while local stories about crime and accidents remain popular up to 69 per cent of Australians actively avoid the news and only 37 per cent get their news via TV. The Ten Network has noticed this shift and has revamped its 6pm national nightly news offering with a more sober bulletin featuring fewer crashes and meatier stories - viewers can still get their shouty mayhem on the preceding state-based bulletin. Ten's also running its new national bulletin on Spotify and YouTube, knowing if the big screen can't tempt you, the little one might. This is, after all, another battle for your attention. It's that never-ending and exhausting contest for my attention, which makes the prospect of a few hours cut off from the internet, in my own little space, so appealing. It's exactly why I will sit back, relax and enjoy the flight. HAVE YOUR SAY: Do you use the WiFi when on a long flight? Or do you enjoy the break from the online world? Are you among the 69 per cent of Australians who avoid the news? How much of your day do you spend online? Email us: echidna@ SHARE THE LOVE: If you enjoy The Echidna, forward it to a friend so they can sign up, too. IN CASE YOU MISSED IT: - Qantas has reported a major cyber security breach with data from up to 6 million customers potentially stolen. - Australians have claimed nearly $2 billion in flood, cyclone and rain insurance in six months but insurers say the bill isn't as bad as had been expected. - A second man has been charged with sex abuse crimes against children as investigators broaden their probe after allegations of "heinous" offences at childcare centres. THEY SAID IT: "Good news is rare these days, and every glittering ounce of it should be cherished and hoarded and worshipped and fondled like a priceless diamond." - Hunter S. Thompson YOU SAID IT: Touchscreen controls in cars are accidents waiting to happen. John wants a return to good old knobs, buttons and switches. "Yes, the screens are a distraction," writes Ann. "I drive a Mazda sedan and the screen is inactive if the car is moving. There are adequate controls with knobs and buttons for essential things like volume on the radio, tuning etc. Buy a Mazda next time, instead of an MG or a Tesla." Ian writes: "I love my Tesla Model 3, but am most assuredly not enamoured with Elon Musk nor with the number of essential driving functions that have been relegated to the screen, including heating/cooling control, radio station selection, and turning windscreen wipers and headlights on or off. I agree that having to search for these functions on a screen while under way is downright unsafe." That said, he loves the Tesla's fart button, a 'dog mode', and the navigation system. "I can set the dog mode on a hot day and nip into the supermarket while Tilly lounges in air-conditioned comfort on the car's back seat." "You have read my mind," writes Elaine. "When I updated my car I spent ages reading the 'Media manual' I then asked my son to assist as he has one in his car. After 'fiddling' with it and reading the manual, he declared it to be 'not user friendly'; therefore, it is not used to its possible potential."


Perth Now
2 days ago
- Perth Now
Former Ellen star told to ‘forget the bikinis' for Aus trip
Rosie McClelland is planning on packing multiple pairs of bikinis for her trip to Australia this month, despite our country being in the middle of winter. The 18-year-old singer took to social media on Tuesday, where she revealed in a video the five essential items she would be bringing on her travels. Among the list, which included a portable makeup bag, of a water bottle, backpack and new bank card, were 10 bikinis she planned on bringing. 'I'm going to be using them a lot, I've got 10 different ones, loads of you said you spent the whole time in bikinis, so I'm taking a lot. I'm going surfing, by a beach, kayaking, and all of them are tie up so they don't fall down,' she said. McClelland said that she had 24 hours of travel ahead of her and asked her followers what she should pack for a long-haul flight. If you'd like to view this content, please adjust your . To find out more about how we use cookies, please see our Cookie Guide. However, her fans instead were quick to tell her that Australia was currently experiencing winter with weather conditions less than ideal for swimming. 'Swap the bikinis for Ugg boots! It's damn freezing and wet as over here currently,' one Instagram fan said. Another said: 'Girl, forget the Bikinis, we are in winter.' 'Make sure you also have some warm winter clothes as we are in the middle of winter at the moment and it's very cold,' a third added. Another fan commented: 'Lol defo won't be needing bikinis! It's freezing here right now!' Rosie McClelland is all grown up. Credit: Supplied 'It's winter in Australia hun you won't be using the bikinis is most of the country,' someone else said. McClelland rose to fame on YouTube as her older cousin Sophia Grace's sidekick who went viral for singing Super Bass by Nicki Minaj. The adorable duo, who were five and eight-years-old at the time, were sought after by Ellen DeGeneres for her talk show where they were regular guests for several years. McClelland has since amassed a huge following of her own and has been releasing teen songs since 2018.