Daily Bulletin

Men's Weekly

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The False Feminism of Kendrick Lamar's Humble

  • Written by Lauren Rosewarne, Senior Lecturer, University of Melbourne

In a mediascape where women are routinely sexualised and oftentimes overtly objectified in music videos, the most thoroughly tokenistic deviations can achieve accolades.

Exhibit A: Kendrick Lamar’s “Humble”.

Despite no less than 40 uses of the word bitch, media were quick to dub the track as a feminist triumph.

According to Time for...

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Successful tips to a positive career change

  • Written by Cara Barilla , Educational Columnist and Journalist


It may be tough to turn around a complete different career, though it may be even tougher to stay in a career which you don’t even like anymore. Career changes occur quite often. In fact about 70% of Australians take the plunge to turn their options around in a new career. Many people around the globe commit to a long-term job which has no relevance at all to what they have studied over the last 3 or 4 years whether it was at university or TAFE. Fortunately in today’s society, we have many options to reevaluate our career, study at our own pace and deliver a brand new career and role for ourselves.

Here are some simple methods to assist in creating your new long-term job plan, how to sustain it and to transition into it smoothly.

Do your research: if your new career involves something which is completely different to what you are doing at the moment, do your research, jump on the internet and read up on its content, what you need to do to get there and how long it will take. In different countries and states the progression may vary. Call around and speak to a professional for guidance.

Test to see if is right for you: take a career test to ultimately evaluate if this job role aligns with your career test results. If it is you’re on the right track, if it isn’t, then try and see if there are any similar job roles that may interest you.

The experience: talk to people who are already in the field to get the 1st hand experience. Chat to locals, people who are already studying the chosen topic and gain additional reviews to see if this is compatible to you. If you feel like it is, you should call your local associations to see if you can gain some work experience. At the end of the experience you can consequently receive a letter of experience from the business owner or manager. This will aid in future job interviews and applications.

Study the trade: look at your options, visit your local careers advisor and take the next step into study. This will help you gain the ability of future work. There are now online and in person study options.

Take a gradual change: baby steps add consistency and natural development. This will gain a stronger foundation and not be a heavier impact into your career change. It will also help in manageability with time, money and balance.

Correct your Resume: ensure your new cover letter and resume includes your job prospects, mission statement and future goals. Ensure your resume isn’t too long and covers only the important points.

Network: keep in touch with like - minded successful individuals in the same field. This will help you work your way up in the chosen career path and will open your situation to positive opportunity.

Follicle challenge: the Ben Cousins saga and reforms to drug testing

  • Written by Daryl Adair, Associate Professor of Sport Management, University of Technology Sydney
imageAAP/Richard Wainwright

As a footballer, Ben Cousins was one of the best of his generation. Among various accolades, he won the Brownlow Medal in 2005 and was part of the West Coast premiership team of 2006. But today Cousins is about to serve a one-year prison term after pleading guilty to 11 offences, including aggravated stalking, breaching a...

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Company tax compromise is limited but works for both Turnbull and Xenophon

  • Written by Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra

The government’s company tax deal with Nick Xenophon has given Malcolm Turnbull something to spin between now and the May budget. It’s much less than the government’s A$48 billion plan, but it’s more than had earlier seemed likely to pass.

Turnbull said after the late-Friday Senate vote – passage through the lower...

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More Articles ...

  1. The Vice President Dines: A Philosophical Dialogue
  2. The APRA bandaid for the housing market is wearing off
  3. Electoral system flaws deny Labor and Greens WA upper house majority
  4. Carrots and pumpkin might reduce your risk of cancer, but beware taking them in pill form
  5. Does bad weather affect student performance in school?
  6. It's ten years since Rudd's 'great moral challenge', and we have failed it
  7. The search to extend lifespan is gaining ground, but can we truly reverse the biology of ageing?
  8. More low-paid work is part of the problem, not the solution
  9. The forgotten 660,000 locked out of home ownership
  10. VIDEO: Michelle Grattan on the company tax cut
  11. Comparing Australia's electricity charges to other countries shows why competition isn't working
  12. If you destroy it, they will come – climate change displacement and the Trump effect
  13. Cloud, backup and storage devices: how best to protect your data
  14. A guide to how we decide what to publish in Politics and Society
  15. Explainer: the rise of social impact investing
  16. What did the rich man say to the poor man? Why spatial inequality in Australia is no joke
  17. Turning Hazelwood's empty coal mine into a lake could help heal mining towns
  18. Vital Signs: war gaming the economic fallout from Brexit
  19. Why are some people more gullible than others?
  20. Friday essay: finding spaces for love
  21. Tiny frogs face a troubled future in New Guinea's tropical mountains
  22. Grattan on Friday: Turnbull's taxing battle as fractious session grinds towards end
  23. Follow the Moon to the stars and Jupiter
  24. Yes, your doctor might Google you
  25. Why politicians and television still need each other
  26. Mobile phones are not always a cure for poverty in remote regions
  27. Can an album still define the times? Oh Well. Whatever. Nevermind.
  28. The Cashless Debit Card causes social and economic harm – so why trial it again?
  29. Worried about shark attacks or terrorism? Here's how to think about the real risk of rare events
  30. Hazelwood power station: from modernist icon to greenhouse pariah
  31. Victoria leads the way on family violence, but Canberra needs to lift its game
  32. Amazon in Australia might not be the end of retail as we know it
  33. Explainer: how do our bones get calcium and why do they need it?
  34. Once upon a time: a brief history of children's literature
  35. Unleashed Latham too opinionated even for an increasingly opinionated Sky
  36. Art for art’s sake
  37. How to keep your mobile phone connected when the network is down
  38. Trump tears down US climate policy, but America could lose out as a result
  39. Still here: Night Parrot rediscovery in WA raises questions for mining
  40. Cyclone Debbie: we can design cities to withstand these natural disasters
  41. Cuts to sole parent benefits are human rights violations
  42. Four Corners: can the NDIS prevent abuse of people with disability?
  43. Tracking the storm: the science behind Tropical Cyclone Debbie
  44. Hazelwood closure: what it means for electricity prices and blackouts
  45. As Brexit begins, Australia mustn’t get caught up in Britain’s post-imperial fantasies
  46. Deadly Funny -- a new brand of Australian comedy
  47. Myth busting claims on the impact of the company tax cut
  48. The seven deadly sins of statistical misinterpretation, and how to avoid them
  49. New study shows HPV vaccine is working to reduce rates of genital warts
  50. Selective schools' long and tangled history with race and class

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