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Revisiting the music of Vanuatu's Yosh Shing, musician AND Olympian!

Revisiting the music of Vanuatu's Yosh Shing, musician AND Olympian!

For our mid-week session of Nesia Daily, we wake up with a stack of Samoan music to keep the vibes going, as well as some great stories from the Vault.
With Michael and Jacob still in Samoa ahead of launch of Pacific Break for 2025, Sose Fuamoli is back to host the show, checking in with Michael out in Apia.
We revisit chats with phenomenal islander talent including Tahitian comedian, Christopher Pernat; Tongan visual and audio artist, Dr. Sione Faletau; award-winning PNG sports commentator and journalist, Jamie Haro; and Ni-Van Olympian and musician, Yosh Shing!
Shing's music reached a new peak in 2025 with the release of his debut album, Island Life, a perfect record to get us through into the second half of the week.
To get a taste of Shing's vibe, check out one of our fave tracks of his, 'Man Ples'.
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Pacific Break 2025 launches for first time in Samoa!
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Pacific Break 2025 launches for first time in Samoa!

Entries are open for the Pacific's biggest music competition, ABC Radio Australia's Pacific Break which launched in Samoa last weekend with a huge, live concert at Friendship Park, Apia. Thousands of fans enjoyed performances from local Samoan favourites Mr Cowboy and Tofaga Meke as well as Pacific Break past winners Chris Kamu'ana Rohoimae (Solomon Islands), JuBen (Fiji) and Danielle (Papua New Guinea). Samoan hip hop icon Mr Tee also made a surprise appearance, getting the crowds jumping early in the night. On the main stage, ABC Radio Australia's Nesia Daily presenters Jacob McQuire and Michael Chow joined forces to MC with homegrown Samoan hero Young Sefa to keep the crowd laughing through the night. The concert was produced in partnership with the Samoa Tourism Authority and recorded for broadcast on ABC Radio Australia and ABC Australia television. ENTRIES ARE NOW OPEN FOR PACIFIC BREAK 2025 The launch concert in Apia kicks off a two-month search to uncover the Pacific and Timor-Leste's best original talent. Entries are now open until midnight Monday 25 August 2025. Pacific Break's top prize is an all-expenses-paid trip to perform in 2026 at WOMADelaide – Australia's largest international music, arts, and dance festival. The winning artist or group will be revealed on ABC Radio Australia's daily morning program Nesia Daily on Wednesday 16 October 2025. The judging panel for this year sees PNG-born Australian musician Ngaiire rejoin the team with ABC Radio Australia music presenters Hau Lātūkefu ( In The Fale ) and Sose Fuamoli ( Sista Sounds and On The Record ), WOMADelaide Associate director Annette Tripodi, along with new judge Joji Malani, Fijian-born musician and solo artist of Gang of Youths fame. For more information about Pacific Break 2025 judging panel, click here. HOW TO ENTER Submit your original track(s) in one of three ways; 1. Complete the Online Entry Form, available here. 2. Get in touch with our Pacific Break team via WhatsApp (+61 447 310 986) and send through your songs and info. 3. Send an email with all your details to pacificbreak@ including your music files as an attachment. For more information about Pacific Break, including competition details and terms and conditions, visit For all media enquiries, contact: Annalise Ramponi, Marketing and Communications Coordinator, ABC International We acknowledge Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the First Australians and Traditional Custodians of the lands where we live, learn and work.

Katy Perry almost falls out of suspended sphere during concert malfunction at Adelaide show
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These modern mums have taken the tradwife hashtag and made it their own
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Who mops the kitchen floor in your house? Or oversees the grocery shop and meal prep every week? For generations, the burden of household labour often came down to traditional gender roles — dad went to work, while mum stayed home with the kids. Today, many families split these responsibilities or juggle them alongside dual careers. But now some young women are choosing to quit work altogether and stay at home. They call themselves "traditional wives", or "tradwives". The term was made famous by social media influencers like Nara Smith, a model and mother of three young children, with a fourth on the way. She seemingly spends most of her day cooking food from scratch, from the cereal she serves her kids at breakfast to the hundreds and thousands she uses on their ice cream. In highly curated clips posted on their online accounts, self-proclaimed tradwives tend to their gardens, homeschool their children and bake sourdough bread. 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Dixon-Smith found herself reconsidering her daughter's care after a series of "underwhelming" tours of day care centres. But her decision to stop work and become a stay-at-home mum was met with surprise from many. "Queer individuals are assumed to follow a form of feminism that might chastise a woman for deciding not to work," she says. "Being a woman who wants a career but was hesitant about utilising childcare in the first two years of my daughter's life, it became clear that there is no perfect option for women." Stacey Knight describes herself as a modern-day homemaker and regularly posts on social media as Staying Home With Stacey. The Australian-based influencer looks after two young children while her husband works and says her average day consists of tending to her veggie garden and chickens, and cooking food from scratch. Knight worked as a nurse before she had children, but following the arrival of her second child, she "leaned into" being a full-time stay-at-home mum. She says the tradwife lifestyle she's cultivated for herself and her followers online came about for a few reasons. "You can save money gardening, growing your own food and cooking meals from scratch, and obviously there's the health aspect of it," she tells ABC Radio National's Life Matters. But she describes her and her husband as a modern couple who are only traditional in the sense that he works while she remains at home with the kids. "There's still a lot of support, open communication and equal rights, which I think is the most important part," she says. Knight is therefore unsure of the tradwife term and its connotations. "Tradwife doesn't mean to me the same sort of associated terms and views as it does in America … I just have a genuine interest in caring for my family, cooking, gardening, and a simpler way of life without the associated views of it," she says. Much has been made of the far-right ideals that have recently taken root in parts of the tradwife movement, where notions of white womanhood is espoused. But Kristy Campion from Charles Sturt University argues tradwife is an umbrella term. "The tradwife phenomena is not just a right-wing notion. It also exists in the left wing. It exists in religious spaces and in non-political spaces as well," she says. Being a tradwife is also something that many people simply can't afford to be, which partly explains its attraction online. "It becomes more of an individualist fantasy or an escape. The idea of leaving the workforce and becoming a tradwife," says Dr Campion. "Cost of living is so dire right now that many women don't have the choice of staying home with their children. "Some women feel like they're being forced into the workforce in addition to continuing to carry the broader weight of domestic duties and domestic labour. "So this is what we see far-right tradwives talk about … modern society as crushing women, as defeminising women and forcing them into unnatural ways of living." But according to Dr Campion, these beliefs aren't centred on women's welfare but something far more political. "They're seeing it from the perspective of modern society being controlled by feminism or left-wing politics," Dr Campion says. Knight says that women fought not only for the right to work but also for the right to be able to choose. "My choice [is] to stay at home and care for my kids and garden and cook," she says. "People don't ask men why they stay home or why they do things. They only seem to ask the women." Dixon-Smith agrees that mothers and caregivers should have the right to decide how they choose to parent and work. "As most queer people already know, it's possible to inhabit a role or persona that feels most comfortable to you," she says. "But mothers are under constant pressure from all directions to be a certain way … the perfect traditional wife and mother or to hold on to your career and reject traditional norms. None of it is helpful."

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