Tuesday, September 12, 2017

Please feed me Raman…..

Even though it is Tuesday in September, it feels like a nightmare before Christmas. Uni deadlines and other commitments are happening all at once but life’s good. I was feeling a little under the pump today and I had got a whole lot of stuff done, I suddenly had this urge for Raman.

So after a gym session and before working on a uni assignment, I popped in town for a bowl of the good soup, just any soup!!

From the outside Eat Me Raman looks unassuming. Just like any low key Asian eatery but when you walk inside it is cosy. You can either eat at a long table while sitting on stools, at a table with chairs or at a bench overlooking the kitchen.













I chose the Midnight Raman with some Japanese tea. The Raman had some dark broth with it’s blend soy source and super rich chicken elements to it. It tasted so good and had so much flavour and it made me so happy!


While it is one of Perth’s little secrets (hopefully it will stay that way) go ahead and try it. A bowl of Raman will make you smile!       

  

 Eat Me Ramen Bar Menu, Reviews, Photos, Location and Info - Zomato 


Saturday, September 9, 2017

How the media frames female politicians?

When you look back on politicians over the past 20 years or more they seem to framed in a particular way, Natasha Stott Despoja was seen as a pretty young thing who wore Doc Martins, Florence Bjelke-Petersen was the pumpkin scone queen of Australia, Meg Lees and Amanda Vanstone were the matrons.

As Julia Baird argues early in her book, ‘we watched prominent female politicians topple like ten pins under a barrage of media criticism. One after the other, with careers destroyed, credibility damaged, prospects of leadership slim or non-existent: hyped as heroines, the cast as villains or fools, or just made invisible. …. In many cases, the women were partly to blame or complicit in their demise, yet the bias that frequently emerged in the media made their transgressions grotesque, their mistakes almost sinister – a hall of mirrors that exaggerated their flaws that made them lethal’ (2004,4). Her message seems to be that women interested in politics have to be very, very careful about how they work with the media. If they want to play the political game they have to know the rules and play every move with caution while understanding that thriving in such an environment you have to be ultra media savvy, well prepared and be in the game for the right reasons.      

Some of the examples Baird looked at were images that were carefully scripted and actually worked but the public image of others were epic failures, not because they weren’t prepared but often lacked the policy substance to be taken seriously.

Other of these images came down to the perpetuation of long held stereotypes that never seemed to go away. But Julia Baird’s astute analysis really did look at the portrayal of women in the media in great detail and it highlighted the need for more study to be done in this area to get a more accurate picture of how women are actually portrayed.

While she raises many great points, Baird gives a warning about playing the gender card. For whatever short term gains you might think it gives you, in the long term it has no value. As she says, ‘playing the victim is one thing; being treated unfairly is another’ (200, 247). Just because someone is analysing you and/or work in ways that you perceive as being overly harsh, it doesn’t always mean that they are doing it because you’re a woman.

Baird gives nine tips for women in public live and needing to work well with the media. They are so good that anyone with a high profile and even a rising one could benefit from remembering them. They are:

1)    Establish a serious profile, as someone who is policy-oriented and has the respect of your colleagues
2)    Avoid the celebrity shots, posing in ball gowns or bikinis  
3)    Steer attention away from your personal life
4)    Avoid a personality cult
5)    Cop criticism   
6)    Understand that Journalists are not your enemies. Nor are they your friends
7)    Do not assume that female journalists will be more sympathetic because you’re a woman
8)    Try, in the midst of it all, to be yourself. Talk directly; answer honestly.
9)    Beware the gender card
 
(2004, 241-246)

Media Tarts, how the Australian press frames female politicians should be required reading for anyone who is thinking about running for any kind of public office. It would make interesting reading for those who work in reporting on those who 

Friday, September 8, 2017

Saigon on the corner.

Saigon Corner is new addition to the Victoria Park café strip. Places are coming and going these days like changes in the weather.

Since it is on my bus route, I’ve been past it a few times but its taken me a few months to get organised to pay it a visit.


Unfortunately for Saigon Corner, its opening coincided with the local council water works on Albany Hwy which has put has put a stop to traffic.   This has meant a decrease in visibility for their lovely little restaurant.

Saigon Corner is nicely presented with a nice atmosphere.












I had the Beef Pho and my friend has the Pepper Chicken. We thought they tasted lovely and were fresh and it is licensed premises which is good to remember so we were able to enjoy a beer with our meal.


If you like a good bowl of Pho and live close by, give Saigon Corner a visit. It is a really nice addition to Vic Park and the staff here are super friendly and are deserving of our support. 

Saigon Corner Menu, Reviews, Photos, Location and Info - Zomato 


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