logo
Recognise Chad? Reality star's X-rated former life in Perth

Recognise Chad? Reality star's X-rated former life in Perth

Perth Now4 days ago
If you're a product of Perth's 90s club scene and have been watching Seven's new reality series Stranded On Honeymoon Island, there's a fair chance you've already been mesmerised by charming Chad's torso on a night out.
The TV star — who runs an Orthopaedic surgery in Melbourne — has been navigating the show's drama-infested waters as he attempts to forge a romantic relationship with his new wife, Georgia.
But thirty years before flexing his pecs on screen, the confident 47-year-old worked as a stripper at Northbridge's James St Nightclub while studying nursing at Curtin University. Georgia and Chad. Credit: Supplied
On Tuesday night, Chad was forced to face his colourful past when a photo album featuring his days as a 'male stripper' was presented to Georgia.
WATCH RECAP
While it came as a shock to his amused wife, the signs were there from the beginning, with the dancing doctor regularly breaking out into a series of unprompted hip thrusts. One of Chad's outfits as a stripper in Perth. Credit: Seven Network
He told PerthNow that he fell into the profession accidentally at just 18 years of age.
During a night out with rugby mates, he was urged to get his kit off on stage in a bid to win a $100 bar card.
His impressive performance won him free drinks for the evening, and caught the eye of the club's owner, who offered him a regular gig as a 'G-string waiter'. Chad and Georgia nurture their relationship on the series. Credit: Seven Network
'I went back to uni on the Monday and told my uni student study classes, 'This is what happened to me. Do you think I should do it?' And they went, 'No, don't Chad, don't be a stripper!' he said.
Somewhat surprisingly, Chad's mother was much more open to his new vocation and even helped him craft creative outfits to wear for each show.
'My mum and I would go on an adventure, go to the store and pick out materials and patterns, and then we would sew these costumes together,' he added.
'She was very supportive in that sense, and I did it more so for the showman outlet and in terms of entertainment.' Chad revealed a part of his former self to wife Georgia. Credit: Seven Network
Following his studies, the performer relocated to Melbourne to be closer to his mother, and his sister, who was born with special needs when he was 11.
However, leaning further into his charm and physique, the eligible bachelor soon landed a spot on the romantic 2004 reality series Playing it Straight.
Shifting focus to his career as an arthroplasty expert in the years since, the unlucky-in-love single has found his way back to TV in search of love again. Georgie and Chad get cosier. Credit: Heath McKinley
However, he says his island-bound experience alongside wife Georgia has been far from glamorous.
'You're spending every day together, not only spending every day, but you're stressed, in the sense that you're literally without any of your creature comforts,' he said.
'So when she's having a bad hair day, we never had a mirror. We didn't know what each other looked like, so all that stuff you're navigating through, I feel like that was a powerful answer to the emotions.'
To keep up with Chad and Georgia's island romance, watch Stranded on Honeymoon Island on Tuesday, July 22 on 7 and 7plus.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ten's The Project replacement 10 News+ hits new low in latest TV ratings as it plummets to 20th spot
Ten's The Project replacement 10 News+ hits new low in latest TV ratings as it plummets to 20th spot

Sky News AU

time2 days ago

  • Sky News AU

Ten's The Project replacement 10 News+ hits new low in latest TV ratings as it plummets to 20th spot

The Project replacement 10 News+ has sunk to a new low in the TV ratings just weeks after its debut. This week's ratings showed 10 News+ has plummeted to the 20th position on a list of Australia's highest rating news programs with a combined national average of just 140,000 viewers. Seven's nightly news led with a combined viewership of 1,318,000 people, with 9News taking second position at 1,215,000. However, in the traditional five metro cities market segment, 9News seemed to race ahead with 863,000 viewers to Seven's 858,000 figure. The ABC's evening show made it to third position, while Nine's A Current Affair finished in fourth and the ABC's 7.30 program hosted by Sarah Ferguson grabbed fifth spot. The July 16 ratings showed 10 News+ floundered in 20th position, while even regional television programs such as Win News performed better. The 6pm news aired for the first time on June 30, but the hard news segment did not seem to appeal to viewer's expectations as a replacement of the more conversation-infused The Project. 10News+ launched with just 291,000 viewers and continued to decline throughout the week, but it seems the broadcast is not ready to let go just yet. The fall in viewership is especially stark when compared to The Project's final episode on June 27, which saw 478,000 people tune in to bid the struggling programme farewell. However 10 News+ inherited the first half of The Project's 6:30pm–7:30pm slot, with the second half hour now freed up for the channel's primetime programming, meaning the two shows cannot be directly compared. Promising "extended context and deeper reporting on the day's biggest stories", the show is anchored by ex-Seven talent Denham Hitchcock and Amelia Brace from Sunday to Thursday, with Ursula Heger and Hugh Riminton hosting on Friday. The network previously said it was keen to see the team's work delivered to audiences across the country, but audiences have so far failed to engage. A spokesperson for Ten previously told the network was 'taking a long-term, multi-platform view of audience development.' 'Building a loyal news audience takes time, and we are prepared for gradual growth as audiences discover and connect with our unique approach to news delivery across many platforms,' the spokesperson said. '10 is fully committed to 10 News+. This is a marathon, not a sprint. "We are investing in building a sustainable, quality multi-platform news service that will grow and evolve with our audience's needs over time.'

Ten to continue to back its struggling 6pm news offering
Ten to continue to back its struggling 6pm news offering

News.com.au

time2 days ago

  • News.com.au

Ten to continue to back its struggling 6pm news offering

Ten reckons it will continue to back its struggling 6pm news offering 10 News+ yet with each passing day, the program sinks further in the ratings and the network's evening entertainment schedule becomes more perilously undermined. A ratings document obtained by this column shows 10 News+ this week fell to 20th on a list of the nation's highest rating news programs. The list, extracted from the Top 100 programs on television, shows the array of low-budget virtually identical daytime news bulletins – plus one regional bulletin – are now thrashing Ten's replacement for The Project. On Wednesday, July 16, 37 of the top 100 shows on weekday TV across five broadcast platforms were news programs. At the top of the list were Seven and Nine battling it out for hotly contested and lucrative number one spot. Seven finished 103,000 people ahead of Nine nationally (combined five metro cities plus regions) with 1,318,000 to Nine's 1,215,000. In the traditional five metro cities market segment, the result was reversed by a slim margin with Nine dominating Seven 863,000 to 858,000 viewers. Next, in third position, was the ABC's evening news (national, combined market). Nine's A Current Affair finished in fourth. (The positions of those two programs was reversed for the five capital cities segment.) Fifth position was taken out for the ABC's 7.30. Ten, a network which has never distinguished itself as a producer of news content – the one exception being the comedy-infused panel show The Project – received just three acknowledgments in the list of 37. They were the 5pm 10 News with 326k viewers in ninth place, 10 News+ in 20th position with 140k and 10's Late News in 23rd place with 128k. It's a result that will make it hard for Ten boss Beverley McGarvey to justify the program's reportedly lofty budget. The question for Ten is what to replace it with when it's once predictable 16-39 demographic is abandoning commercial television faster than older demographics. Ten finds feedback 'insulting' and 'rude' though maybe right. Ten's PR department was particularly touchy when this column predicted back in June 10 News+ had 'no hope of winning the (time) slot'. This writer's June 13 column item 'Grim Admission' listed eight reasons the program, hosted by little known TV reporters Denham Hitchcock and Amelia Brace, was bound to fail. These were that the program was 'too bulky with too many unknown reporters' who were white; that Ten didn't historically give its fledgling news programs the time they needed to become established and find an audience; to this point, as evidence, I listed some of the network's failed news programs; that 'an hour is too long' off the back of a one-hour local news bulletin; that the network failed to back its big stars including former The Project star Lisa Wilkinson after she, and Ten, were sued for Bruce Lehrmann for defamation; that the Australian population is too small to sustain another 6pm news bulletin; that the elected producer of the program was inexperienced; and that Ten's recently revised strategy of pursuing an audience older than its traditional 16-39 fanbase seemed at odds but with the program's youthful-looking cast. I should have also added the 6-7pm timeslot is already choking with news programs and that a program produced in Sydney would struggle to win over the nation. To each and every point, bar one, Ten fired off a defensive and robust response which we haven't, until now, published. To point one, a spokeswoman said: 'This is insulting to the experienced team of journalists working on the show and is incorrect.' It claimed it had hired a team of journalists from a 'diverse background including a team member who has proud Indigenous/Irish heritage'. To point two, it said the failure and cancellation of 6pm with George Negus in 2011 was not relevant to our argument the broadcaster didn't stand by programs until they'd had a chance to become established because 'we are now operating in a vastly different landscape'. Here I believe they missed the point. Ten also questioned the 'relevance' of point three concerning its long history of investigative news program fails. To point four, that 10 News+ is too long, it pointed out its retired The Project had also run for an hour long and 'we believe there is a vast amount of engaging, in-depth stories to report on and for viewers to enjoy'. It's just a shame they haven't found any. To point five, regarding Wilkinson, it denied failing to support her. It offered no argument to point six concerning the nation's population being too small to sustain another 6pm news show, so on that we perhaps agree..? Point seven, it said pointedly, was 'insulting' to Dan Sutton, the program's producer, who it added was a 'seasoned producer with 25 years' experience.' Concerning our final point, point eight, it said 'Both Denham and Amelia have extensive experience … they are the ideal duo to lead the 10 News+ team … as the next step in their esteemed careers.' Logies secure says Seven The Seven Network has scotched claims, reported elsewhere, that the TV Week Logie Awards are headed for the scrap heap. The claims surfaced during the week following confirmation this month that the publisher of TV Week, ARE Media, is on the market. On Thursday a Seven spokesman said: 'Seven is committed to the Logies and proud to work with the industry and TV Week to present the awards and showcase a vibrant, creative industry that engages millions of Australians every day of the year. We're looking forward to the Logies on 3 August this year and in the many years to come.' In 2024 the Logies proved their enduring appeal drawing a total national TV audience of 1.44 million. The figure was higher than recorded in 2023, when 1.36 million tuned in, and the biggest Logies audience since 2016. The Logies' audience has increased every year since returning to Seven in 2023 following an almost three-decade-long run on Nine. Nepo baby's bizarre call Digital media company Mamamia's chief operating officer Luca Lavigne last week found himself on the receiving end of some blunt subscriber feedback after proposing a hefty subscription hike to followers of his mamma's podcast. Having now completed a year in the job managing daily operations and monitoring KPIs as chief operating officer at the website founded by his mother Mia Freedman, Lavigne pitched his proposed 'morning market research' idea to subscribers and potential subscribers of the site. His big idea was a proposed 150-plus per cent subscription price rise for followers of the podcast who have expressed a desire to turn off ads. 'The biggest piece of feedback we get is you want 'ad-free' as a subscription benefit. Heard loud and clear,' posted the COO to a Mamamia Outlouders social media group. 'To go ad-free an annual sub would have to be priced at $180-200/yr (currently $69/year though we're well overdue a price rise anyway). 'Does that price point change how you feel about ad-free as a perk? If you're a current sub and you don't care about ad-free, would you cancel?' he queried, in a post he'd tagged 'feeling silly'. While Lavigne's decision to turn off comments on the post confounded some who struggled to understand why their feedback was being declined 'despite not writing anything against the group rules', others were able to find a workaround and managed to share their thoughts and opinions. One woman threatened to 'riot' if she ever heard a ginger beer ad – that must be on high rotation – again. Other respondents were singing from the same songbook: 'Too expensive', 'I would cancel', 'Cancel X', 'Way too expensive', 'Too much for me', they posted overwhelmingly. Freedman's son has been on a fast-track to the top since joining the company as a content producer nine years ago, yet it seems he still has a bit to learn about market research – thought maybe less about giving short shrift to mamma's most loyal fans.

It really takes a lot of patience to watch this ABC crime series
It really takes a lot of patience to watch this ABC crime series

The Advertiser

time3 days ago

  • The Advertiser

It really takes a lot of patience to watch this ABC crime series

The titular character here is police archivist Patience Evans, who has been plucked from the bowels of the police station by Detective Inspector Bea Metcalf. Why? Because Patience seems to have the ability to magically solve crimes. She even has the power to look at a dead body and diagnose the cause of death long before the doctor can. She is portrayed as something special, but most of the conclusions she makes would have come to other investigators anyway. The crime series features one of those "odd couple" pairings - in this case with Patience and Metcalf. The script's desperate need for that relationship to develop even sees the frankly unbelievable scenario of Metcalf leaving an interview with a suspect on the verge of confessing because Patience got upset about something. Patience also manages to take away a massive dinosaur bone from a museum where a murder occurred to show Metcalf's dino-obsessed kid. And she receives no punishment for what is an obvious act of theft. It's all very, very unbelievable. While I already knew that the Statue of Liberty was a gift from France to the United States, I wasn't aware of the hurdles that had to be overcome. For starters, building a 46-metre tall statue doesn't come cheap; there was a lot of fundraising going on during construction. Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi was the sculptor behind it and he decided to exhibit the statue in bits and pieces so as to raise some cash. The arm holding the torch was displayed in Philadelphia during the Centennial Exposition in 1876. People were charged an entry fee to go inside and climb up to the torch, and they were also sold photos of themselves with the arm. The head turned up on its own at the 1878 Paris World's Fair, where even more money was raised. It wasn't until 1886 that the statue was in place and officially unveiled - requiring some special construction feats to both carry the weight and create the illusion of Lady Liberty's flowing gown. I also didn't know the star-shaped base was not created for the statue. That was already there, the remnants of a fort that was on the site and the base simply took advantage of it. This series - apparently designed to one-up the MAFS juggernaut - has been a bit of a disaster for Seven. It hooks up couples via a speed date and then immediately sends them off to a deserted island to get to know each other. The series was apparently filmed almost two years ago and has only now seen the light of day. Which causes obvious problems in terms of keeping under wraps whether the couples stayed together. A simple check of social media shows some of them didn't - one has since gotten married to someone who wasn't even on the show. That's a huge problem for a show like this, where the whole "will they or won't they" question is the one that keeps viewers tuned in. The ratings haven't been that great, resulting in the show being pinballed around the schedule. But even if none of that happened it's unlikely the series would have worked. That's because most of the participants are pretty dull. With the possible exception of Amy, who is the closest the series gets to the required villain. Though the person she seems to hurt the most with her anger is herself. The titular character here is police archivist Patience Evans, who has been plucked from the bowels of the police station by Detective Inspector Bea Metcalf. Why? Because Patience seems to have the ability to magically solve crimes. She even has the power to look at a dead body and diagnose the cause of death long before the doctor can. She is portrayed as something special, but most of the conclusions she makes would have come to other investigators anyway. The crime series features one of those "odd couple" pairings - in this case with Patience and Metcalf. The script's desperate need for that relationship to develop even sees the frankly unbelievable scenario of Metcalf leaving an interview with a suspect on the verge of confessing because Patience got upset about something. Patience also manages to take away a massive dinosaur bone from a museum where a murder occurred to show Metcalf's dino-obsessed kid. And she receives no punishment for what is an obvious act of theft. It's all very, very unbelievable. While I already knew that the Statue of Liberty was a gift from France to the United States, I wasn't aware of the hurdles that had to be overcome. For starters, building a 46-metre tall statue doesn't come cheap; there was a lot of fundraising going on during construction. Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi was the sculptor behind it and he decided to exhibit the statue in bits and pieces so as to raise some cash. The arm holding the torch was displayed in Philadelphia during the Centennial Exposition in 1876. People were charged an entry fee to go inside and climb up to the torch, and they were also sold photos of themselves with the arm. The head turned up on its own at the 1878 Paris World's Fair, where even more money was raised. It wasn't until 1886 that the statue was in place and officially unveiled - requiring some special construction feats to both carry the weight and create the illusion of Lady Liberty's flowing gown. I also didn't know the star-shaped base was not created for the statue. That was already there, the remnants of a fort that was on the site and the base simply took advantage of it. This series - apparently designed to one-up the MAFS juggernaut - has been a bit of a disaster for Seven. It hooks up couples via a speed date and then immediately sends them off to a deserted island to get to know each other. The series was apparently filmed almost two years ago and has only now seen the light of day. Which causes obvious problems in terms of keeping under wraps whether the couples stayed together. A simple check of social media shows some of them didn't - one has since gotten married to someone who wasn't even on the show. That's a huge problem for a show like this, where the whole "will they or won't they" question is the one that keeps viewers tuned in. The ratings haven't been that great, resulting in the show being pinballed around the schedule. But even if none of that happened it's unlikely the series would have worked. That's because most of the participants are pretty dull. With the possible exception of Amy, who is the closest the series gets to the required villain. Though the person she seems to hurt the most with her anger is herself. The titular character here is police archivist Patience Evans, who has been plucked from the bowels of the police station by Detective Inspector Bea Metcalf. Why? Because Patience seems to have the ability to magically solve crimes. She even has the power to look at a dead body and diagnose the cause of death long before the doctor can. She is portrayed as something special, but most of the conclusions she makes would have come to other investigators anyway. The crime series features one of those "odd couple" pairings - in this case with Patience and Metcalf. The script's desperate need for that relationship to develop even sees the frankly unbelievable scenario of Metcalf leaving an interview with a suspect on the verge of confessing because Patience got upset about something. Patience also manages to take away a massive dinosaur bone from a museum where a murder occurred to show Metcalf's dino-obsessed kid. And she receives no punishment for what is an obvious act of theft. It's all very, very unbelievable. While I already knew that the Statue of Liberty was a gift from France to the United States, I wasn't aware of the hurdles that had to be overcome. For starters, building a 46-metre tall statue doesn't come cheap; there was a lot of fundraising going on during construction. Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi was the sculptor behind it and he decided to exhibit the statue in bits and pieces so as to raise some cash. The arm holding the torch was displayed in Philadelphia during the Centennial Exposition in 1876. People were charged an entry fee to go inside and climb up to the torch, and they were also sold photos of themselves with the arm. The head turned up on its own at the 1878 Paris World's Fair, where even more money was raised. It wasn't until 1886 that the statue was in place and officially unveiled - requiring some special construction feats to both carry the weight and create the illusion of Lady Liberty's flowing gown. I also didn't know the star-shaped base was not created for the statue. That was already there, the remnants of a fort that was on the site and the base simply took advantage of it. This series - apparently designed to one-up the MAFS juggernaut - has been a bit of a disaster for Seven. It hooks up couples via a speed date and then immediately sends them off to a deserted island to get to know each other. The series was apparently filmed almost two years ago and has only now seen the light of day. Which causes obvious problems in terms of keeping under wraps whether the couples stayed together. A simple check of social media shows some of them didn't - one has since gotten married to someone who wasn't even on the show. That's a huge problem for a show like this, where the whole "will they or won't they" question is the one that keeps viewers tuned in. The ratings haven't been that great, resulting in the show being pinballed around the schedule. But even if none of that happened it's unlikely the series would have worked. That's because most of the participants are pretty dull. With the possible exception of Amy, who is the closest the series gets to the required villain. Though the person she seems to hurt the most with her anger is herself. The titular character here is police archivist Patience Evans, who has been plucked from the bowels of the police station by Detective Inspector Bea Metcalf. Why? Because Patience seems to have the ability to magically solve crimes. She even has the power to look at a dead body and diagnose the cause of death long before the doctor can. She is portrayed as something special, but most of the conclusions she makes would have come to other investigators anyway. The crime series features one of those "odd couple" pairings - in this case with Patience and Metcalf. The script's desperate need for that relationship to develop even sees the frankly unbelievable scenario of Metcalf leaving an interview with a suspect on the verge of confessing because Patience got upset about something. Patience also manages to take away a massive dinosaur bone from a museum where a murder occurred to show Metcalf's dino-obsessed kid. And she receives no punishment for what is an obvious act of theft. It's all very, very unbelievable. While I already knew that the Statue of Liberty was a gift from France to the United States, I wasn't aware of the hurdles that had to be overcome. For starters, building a 46-metre tall statue doesn't come cheap; there was a lot of fundraising going on during construction. Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi was the sculptor behind it and he decided to exhibit the statue in bits and pieces so as to raise some cash. The arm holding the torch was displayed in Philadelphia during the Centennial Exposition in 1876. People were charged an entry fee to go inside and climb up to the torch, and they were also sold photos of themselves with the arm. The head turned up on its own at the 1878 Paris World's Fair, where even more money was raised. It wasn't until 1886 that the statue was in place and officially unveiled - requiring some special construction feats to both carry the weight and create the illusion of Lady Liberty's flowing gown. I also didn't know the star-shaped base was not created for the statue. That was already there, the remnants of a fort that was on the site and the base simply took advantage of it. This series - apparently designed to one-up the MAFS juggernaut - has been a bit of a disaster for Seven. It hooks up couples via a speed date and then immediately sends them off to a deserted island to get to know each other. The series was apparently filmed almost two years ago and has only now seen the light of day. Which causes obvious problems in terms of keeping under wraps whether the couples stayed together. A simple check of social media shows some of them didn't - one has since gotten married to someone who wasn't even on the show. That's a huge problem for a show like this, where the whole "will they or won't they" question is the one that keeps viewers tuned in. The ratings haven't been that great, resulting in the show being pinballed around the schedule. But even if none of that happened it's unlikely the series would have worked. That's because most of the participants are pretty dull. With the possible exception of Amy, who is the closest the series gets to the required villain. Though the person she seems to hurt the most with her anger is herself.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store