
EXCLUSIVE Sydney real estate love twist as developer is caught with the ex of the hotshot agent who sold his $8.4m home just weeks ago... and there's ANOTHER couple swap we never saw coming
There's a saying about people in the eastern suburbs: they won't date anyone west of Edgecliff Station.
Yes, those coastal elites are an incestuous bunch, with the beachside enclaves full of recycled flings, overlapping love triangles and exes playing musical chairs.
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The Guardian
4 hours ago
- The Guardian
Why is so much of life spent clearing up?
Gardening, I've realised, is easy. It's clearing up afterwards that takes all the effort. This is true of many things, from cooking to relationships. Doing them is one thing; sorting the mess out afterwards is another. Planting stuff is a doddle. Planting the right things in the right place is less straightforward. But both are easier than the clear-up. I've learned this the hard way, by working like an ox all day, only to leave the place looking as if a team of oxen has been driven through it. I had thought that pruning trees, fighting hedges, pulling up brambles and obsessively weeding counted as tidying. In this I was mistaken, because cutting, hacking and digging count as tidying only if you, well, tidy up after yourself. Leaving stricken branches and weeds where they lie creates more mess. Obvious really, but at some level I must have been thinking that all that browning vegetation would sort itself out by means of decay and decomposition. Or birds would take it away and build nests. Not so. A gardener friend came round, had a look, said he could see how much work I had done, but inquired as to why I'd left it looking such a mess. This was a fair question, to which I had no answer. He pointed at the path through it, covered in weeds, discarded and growing. 'If I were you,' he advised, sagely, 'I'd get the path nice and clear and everything will go from there.' I did, and he was right. With the pathway clear, the rest of the garden looked a lot better. It feels as if there's a maxim for life in there. I blame myself for my chaos – ye gods, you should see the state of the kitchen when I've finished my culinary magic. But I also blame gardening and cookery programmes. Advice on tidying up, or even merely the importance of it, isn't proffered; you rarely see the gardener with a broom or the chef with a cloth. If tidiness is next to godliness, then I am doomed. I'm determined to change my ways before it's too late. No longer do I venerate the topiarist; it's the poor devil clearing up all the clippings I most admire. The Welsh are on to something when they use 'tidy' to mean good or nice. Yes, that's right. Tidy, in fact. Adrian Chiles is a broadcaster, writer and Guardian columnist


Daily Mail
7 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Why this photo of a dirty shared room complete with a mould-infested shower has enraged Aussie renters
Aussies battling Sydney's competitive rental market have reacted to an advert for a shared bedroom complete with a single bed, stained carpet, and a mouldy shower. The property, which was advertised in a now-deleted Facebook post, offered a $300-a-month shared furnished 'space' near Bankstown in western Sydney. The dingy bedroom shows two dishevelled single beds, one of which appears to be just a mattress on the floor. The carpet also appears to be stained, and, despite the suggestion that the room is furnished, a chair can be seen being used as a bedside table. From the angle the photo was captured, there does not seem to be a wardrobe. In a photo of the bathroom, the words 'keep shut' had been scrawled on the shower door in large capital letters. At the base of the shower, what appears to be thick black mould can be seen. The room and bathroom are understood to be part of a shared house that includes a kitchen and living space. A screenshot of the advert was also published on a tenants' group on Facebook which erupted over the room. 'I've got an infection after looking at that shower,' one person wrote. But another person said it could be a reasonable deal in the current housing crisis. 'If it was actually $300-a-month between two people (or even each), a bit of bleach, new mattress, and a good all around scrub, it wouldn't be too bad, particularly in this rental climate,' they said.


Daily Mail
12 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Kmart customer blasts 'grubby' shoppers for disrespectful act to staff: 'I can't believe it'
An outraged Kmart customer has lashed out at shoppers and labelled them 'grubs' for leaving behind a trail of mess at her local store. Queensland mum Emma Karanges was on a late-night shop last week when she was stunned to see items tossed onto the floor. 'I can't believe the state of the store tonight,' she said in a TikTok video. 'To the Kmart staff, you do an amazing job and I'm sorry that you have to put up with us grubs who just come in and think we can just throw everything on the floor. 'I get that it's a budget store, but it doesn't mean you're in a rummage bin.' Footage showed mounds of clothes left on the floor next to shoes that had not been returned to their racks. Ms Karanges called out customers who didn't put items back where they belonged and said there 'was more stuff on the floor than there was hanging'. 'What are we doing? You can hang things back up if it doesn't fit. Don't just throw it on the floor and think that's someone's job,' she said. @themumway_ 🚨RANT INCOMING!🚨 Couldn't believe the state of my local @kmart australia when I recently went in for a quick late night shop. Absolutely appalling that people are doing this not only to this store, but every Kmart across the country in varying degrees. Yes, the staff work there, but NO it's not their job to clean up after your lazy mess day in, day out. As you can tell, I'm pretty annoyed. This isn't ok! I feel so sorry for all the staff. We need to do better ❤️ #kmartaus #kmartaustralia #kmartlove #mumlife ♬ original sound - Emma | Mum Life | UGC Ms Karanges said she asked a staff member if the store was in a similar state at the end of every day. 'And they're like "yep",' she said. 'And they have to set up these barricade things, like wet weather barricades, so people don't fall all over the stuff because of the amount of stuff on these floors. 'I tried on a heap of dresses and hung them back up, and the look on the girl's face was like "oh my God thank you so much, why did you do that?" Ms Karanges told the staff member it was the right thing to do. Many Aussies thanked her for not blaming the staff and holding the customers to account. 'You have to wonder what their houses are like. I feel for the staff,' one said. 'People are just getting lazier and their behaviour is like they're entitled,' another said. 'People out there, get off your bums and tidy up after you try on shoes and clothes. How hard can it be to do the right thing?' 'As a Kmart employee, thank you. I've had customers leave shoes on the floor whilst I'm literally in the same aisle picking up the other shoes,' a third chimed in. Some social media users claimed more staff should have been rostered on. 'This has been happening for decades,' one wrote. 'Now there are even fewer staff on the floor and customers have to serve themselves. This is also a major managerial problem.' 'I used to work for Kmart. Yes, the customers being like this doesn't help, but it's also because Kmart is so understaffed,' another said.