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soul ctrl: You're not getting it. It's not clocking to you.

soul ctrl: You're not getting it. It's not clocking to you.

Tanya chat's Justin Beiber's new record and the cool kid's he collabed with to make it happen and introduces you to some local talent killing it from Emily Wurramara who's showing growth and tenderness on her new record & AMARNI who's baddie energy got her on the support for Saweetie's new tour.
Want to get your track a first play on soul ctrl? Send your music (with a download, artist name & release date) to me here!
bunter.tanya@abc.net.au (Subject: soul ctrl - *Your artist name*)
Wanna keep the good times rolling? Here are all the official playlists for the show:
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How Australia's ‘reverse convict' Ryan Peake went from prison to the Open
How Australia's ‘reverse convict' Ryan Peake went from prison to the Open

News.com.au

time23 minutes ago

  • News.com.au

How Australia's ‘reverse convict' Ryan Peake went from prison to the Open

Of all the ways Ryan Peake has gone from a tiny and crowded prison cell to golf's most historic tournament, who would have thought it would all rest on a British passport? Nearly a few hundred years on, Peake is the reverse convict: an Australian with a criminal record only being able to enter the United Kingdom for its treasured golfing heirloom because of citizenship he's held though his father, Mel. 'My dad was born in England,' Peake says. Whereabouts? 'England,' he laughs, clearly not having taken time to delve too much into the family history. 'I mean, that's the reason I'm here this week.' The Australian left-hander, who earlier this year opened up to News Corp about his journey from a former Rebels bikie who spent five years in prison for a serious assault to top golfer, is speaking in a plush suite on the grounds of Royal Portrush in Northern Ireland before his debut major. He's holding his own press conference away from official R&A briefings because there's been that much interest in his story. A collection of journalists from European publications have been fascinated by his tale, taking out their notebooks at any time to learn more about this interloper who's crashed golf's clean cut elite. But Peake walks through the crowds and there's barely a second glance from punters. Opinion is split in the ravenous Pommy press. Can we write about one of the most incredible sporting tales of the year? Will it glorify violence? Why is he so openly speaking about it when it would have just been easier to trot out the line it was in the past? 'I just like honesty,' Peake says. 'It's me. I guess I got out of the (Rebels) club from being honest as well. It's hard to kick someone that's honest, and it's just my view and it's my life. It's my story. I'm not essentially embarrassed about it. It's something that I've done. I've owned it.' How a Northern Irish crowd besotted with Rory McIlroy react to a heavily tattooed Australian with a dark past he's emerged from is anyone's guess. The R&A clearly have a sense of humour, pairing Peake with LIV Golf disrupter Phil Mickelson for the opening two rounds. If walking onto the first tee of your first major playing alongside Phil is daunting, how about being crammed into a cold and concrete confinement for your crimes? Plucking up the courage to ask the Rebels if you can leave their chapter when you get out because you want to play golf? Figuring out how to actually do shopping again? Pay bills? Trying to hit a little white ball for the first time? 'It was pretty shit,' Peake says of the latter. 'I mean it went forward, but a lot's come since then.' But the reaction from his peers has been far more emphatic this week. Peake, 31, credits Min Woo Lee coach's Ritchie Smith for saving his golfing career when he rang him while he was inside. Lee has spent the majority of the week with Peake learning the nuances of this brutal and beautiful links golf course. On Tuesday (BST), Peake also spent time with his former Australian junior teammate Cameron Smith and veteran Marc Leishman in a practice round. 'People think it's just normal and he's just playing golf, but there must be something that he deals with every day,' Lee says. 'I guess he has this amazing story about him, but he still wants to play good golf. He thinks the story doesn't matter if he doesn't play good golf.' Says Smith: 'It's awesome. He's a great guy. He got himself into strife, but it's good to see him out here playing golf for one, but turning his life around is the main thing.' Where he is allowed to golf is still up in the air. Peake has now hired a manager, Matt Cutler, after his New Zealand Open win earlier this year garnered worldwide attention and helped him earn status on the lucrative DP World and Asian Tour. Cutler has applied for three visas so far, three successes. But bigger logistical hurdles await, particularly in the United States, the epicentre of professional golf, and more sensitive parts of Asia. 'We will help him as much as we can,' Asian Tour boss Cho Minn Thant says. 'There are no issues from a management perspective and I think all the players treat him as a fellow competitor. He's easy to get along with.' Of all the shattering tales he's already told of how his life once unravelled, the most jarring might have been when his mum told him she was relieved the day he stepped foot in prison. It was because she finally knew where he was each night. Peake's fiancée Lee and his parents will arrive at Royal Portrush to watch The Open, safe again in the knowledge he's made it to a place his talent deemed he should be – with the help of a little British passport. 'If I wanted to pull out this week because I didn't feel right or thought, 'this isn't for me', that wouldn't bother (my family) one bit,' Peake says. 'They would just want whatever I want, and they'd be happy with that.'

Aitch drops Australian tour dates for his big return down under
Aitch drops Australian tour dates for his big return down under

ABC News

time2 hours ago

  • ABC News

Aitch drops Australian tour dates for his big return down under

Aitch got that itch again, the itch to tour Australia in the new year. So he's gone right ahead an secured the bag a run of shows around the country to crack into 2026. The lad from Manchester is locked and loaded to bring his second album 4 down under for the big tour. It's his first dates in Australia since 2022 where he knocked it out at Splendour In The Grass and stages around the country. Aitch will be kicking off his Australian tour (and new year) in Eora/Sydney on January 3 before sliding down the coast to Naarm/Melbourne and Tarndanya/Adelaide and flicking back up to Meanjin/Brisbane on January 9. He'll be in the gaff for a good time, not a long time. So you better get tickets to this one before they're gone. Tickets are on sale from 12pm local time on Tuesday 22 July, with a couple of cheeky presales in the days beforehand. Clap your eyes on the tour's website for more details. Suss all the dates and details below so you can rally the bruvs and catch Aitch when he's in town. Pure class that, innit? Aitch 4 Australian tour 2026 Saturday 3 July - Hordern Pavilion, Gadigal Land, Sydney NSW Saturday 3 July - Hordern Pavilion, Gadigal Land, Sydney NSW Monday 5 January - Festival Hall, Wurundjeri Land, Melbourne Vic Monday 5 January - Festival Hall, Wurundjeri Land, Melbourne Vic Wednesday 7 January - Hindley St Music Hall, Kaurna Land, Adelaide SA Wednesday 7 January - Hindley St Music Hall, Kaurna Land, Adelaide SA Friday 9 January - Fortitude Music Hall, Turrbal Land, Brisbane Qld

Inside content creator's $2.7m dream home switch
Inside content creator's $2.7m dream home switch

News.com.au

time3 hours ago

  • News.com.au

Inside content creator's $2.7m dream home switch

Controversial online personality Annie Knight splashed $2.7m on a 'forever home' after making $600,000 from an extreme six-hour stunt. The big-ticket purchase of a four-bedroom house with a pool is a big upgrade from her previous most expensive investment, an acreage home bought for $1.37m in August last year. Knight has now listed the earlier purchase, a Gold Coast house she had rented at $1100 a week, for sale. 'I bought the house of my dreams that doesn't need any renovating in a different area,' she said. 'So then I decided to sell the home I bought last year since I'd bought that with the intention of renovating and living in it. 'As an investment property, it just didn't make sense.' The 28-year-old, who was this week ranked in the top 0.01 per cent of creators on an online subscription platform, earlier revealed she had leveraged $600,000 in profit from a one-day filming event involving 583 people. 'When I say this is my dream home I mean it. It is so, so perfect, so much space, huge backyard, a pool.' While her purchase of the new four-bedroom house is yet to settle, Knight has listed her Currumbin Waters property for auction on August 22. The Tierney Drive home has three bedroom and two bathrooms over a 4,388 sqm bushland parcel, and is marketed by Coastal agent Emisha Canning. 'Tucked away at the end of a quiet street, this sun-dappled hideaway feels more like a secret treehouse than a suburban home,' the listing states. Features include high ceilings, timber floors and large windows framing a green outlook. An open-plan kitchen and dining zone flow to outdoor decking, while the main bedroom has an ensuite and there's also a study nook. The home's location was described as 'a quiet, family-friendly pocket where the bush meets the sea, just 10 minutes from Currumbin's surf breaks and rockpools, with local shops and sporting facilities all within easy reach'. Knight said the house had been rented last year, with the tenants since vacating ahead of the sale. PropTrack data shows house prices in Currumbin Waters were up 7.1 per cent over the past 12 months to a median of $1.2m. Knight retains another local investment property.

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