logo
‘Shame on you': Karl slams Triple J over Hottest 100 snub

‘Shame on you': Karl slams Triple J over Hottest 100 snub

News.com.au5 days ago
As the countdown to the unveiling of Triple J's Hottest 100 of Australian Songs inches closer, Today co-host Karl Stefanovic has ripped into the hosts for skipping a song he argued changed Australian music forever.
On Saturday from 10am, Triple J will unveil its Hottest 100 of Australian songs that have ruled the airwaves across the country over the past five decades.
Speaking on Today, Triple J morning host Lucy Smith and comedian Adam Spencer were running through the Australian hits that could potentially wind up in the top 10, including classics from Cold Chisel, Kylie Minogue, Gotye and Powderfinger.
However, there was one notable song missing from the list, Stefanovic told the radio hosts.
'I think Australian music changed tectonically towards the end of last year,' he said, offering up his 'tip on the No.1 song in the Hottest 100 Aussies of all time'.
The song in question was his bizarre collab with music duo Peking Duk, who in 2024 teamed up with Stefanovic for a cover of Dolly Parton and Kenny Rogers' 1983 hit Islands in the Stream for his 50th birthday.
The wild video features a tanned Stefanovic alongside Peking Duk's lead singer Keli Holiday (AKA Adam Hyde) with their shirts undone, loaded up with gold chains and bopping to the beat in front of a wind machine, complete with guyliner.
'Shame on you Triple J,' he said. 'How was (Islands in the Stream) not on the list?'
The Triple J hosts were flummoxed as they watched the clip play on screen and Stefanovic offer up his best Fabio impression.
'Lucy, this is the real reason we brought you in,' the hosts laughed. 'It's an interrogation.' Then Smith made an extraordinary offer.
'Karl, you can take out No.1 if you will appear in the studio, oiled up like that (with your) shirt undone,' she suggested.
While Stefanovic seemed interested in taking up the offer, he instead decided to recreate the viral clip in the Today studio.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Queen Mary rushed indoors after shock moment during outing
Queen Mary rushed indoors after shock moment during outing

Courier-Mail

time5 hours ago

  • Courier-Mail

Queen Mary rushed indoors after shock moment during outing

Don't miss out on the headlines from Royals. Followed categories will be added to My News. IN LONDON Queen Mary has been forced to cut short her appearance at a royal walkabout after a painful encounter. The Australian-born monarch, 53, was with her husband, King Frederik, 57, and two of their children – Princess Isabella, 18, and Prince Vincent, 14, greeting locals in Gråsten, Denmark as they kicked off their summer holiday. The Danish royal family were greeting local wellwishers. Picture: Instagram In footage shared on social media, Mary was seen standing with her family before wincing and touching her leg in distress, prompting her husband and children to check on her. X Learn More SUBSCRIBER ONLY A wasp appears to have been to blame, with Sky News reporting that Mary insisted her family continue with the engagement, while she was whisked away to a nearby hotel. Meanwhile, local media outlet Billed Bladet confirmed she appeared to be OK despite the ordeal. 'The queen certainly did not seem to be badly affected by the encounter with the stinging wasp, and she, together with the king, Isabella and Vincent, made sure to greet the many citizens who had gathered in the square,' the publication reported. The Danish royal family later settled into Gråsten Palace, their summer holiday home for the next few weeks. The outing marked the beginning of their summer holidays. Picture: Instagram It's been an intensely busy 18 months for the King and Queen who officially ascended the Danish throne on January 14 last year, after Frederik's mother, Queen Margrethe, abdicated and thus ended her 52-year reign. A short time later, the King released a book, co-authored by royal biographer Jens Anderson, revealing a surprising amount of personal details about the royal couple. 'I love marriage, my wife, our children and the whole happy base that arises for the people who manage to stay together and persevere,' he wrote. He described Mary as his 'partner and wing woman' and praised their 'super dynamic'. Originally published as Queen Mary rushed indoors after shock moment during outing

Queen Mary rushed indoors after shock moment during outing
Queen Mary rushed indoors after shock moment during outing

News.com.au

time5 hours ago

  • News.com.au

Queen Mary rushed indoors after shock moment during outing

IN LONDON Queen Mary has been forced to cut short her appearance at a royal walkabout after a painful encounter. The Australian-born monarch, 53, was with her husband, King Frederik, 57, and two of their children – Princess Isabella, 18, and Prince Vincent, 14, greeting locals in Gråsten, Denmark as they kicked off their summer holiday. In footage shared on social media, Mary was seen standing with her family before wincing and touching her leg in distress prompting her husband and children to check on her. Sky News reports that she insisted her family continue with the engagement, while she was whisked away to a nearby hotel. Meanwhile, local media outlet Billed Bladet confirmed she appeared to be OK despite the ordeal. 'The queen certainly did not seem to be badly affected by the encounter with the stinging wasp, and she, together with the king, Isabella and Vincent, made sure to greet the many citizens who had gathered in the square,' the publication reported. The Danish royal family later settled into Gråsten Palace, their summer holiday home for the next few weeks. It's been an intensely busy 18 months for the King and Queen who officially ascended the Danish throne on January 14 last year, after Frederik's mother, Queen Margrethe, abdicated and thus ended her 52-year reign. A short time later, the King released a book, co-authored by royal biographer Jens Anderson, revealing a surprising amount of personal details about the royal couple. 'I love marriage, my wife, our children and the whole happy base that arises for the people who manage to stay together and persevere,' he wrote. He described Mary as his 'partner and wing woman' and praised their 'super dynamic'.

The artwork taking flight above one of Sydney's busiest metro stations
The artwork taking flight above one of Sydney's busiest metro stations

Sydney Morning Herald

time7 hours ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

The artwork taking flight above one of Sydney's busiest metro stations

The finished artwork, The Seeds of Flight, is open to the public. Completed in the past few months, it reflects his fascination with alternative flight methods. It also captures the dream of floating free from fossil fuels, batteries, lithium, solar panels, helium and hydrogen, which is the goal of Aerocene, the non-profit foundation he initiated. Inspired by Alexander Graham Bell's tetrahedral kite experiments, these sculptures don't just look like they can fly; earlier models have taken flight. The colours are those of the Australian bush, developed with Matt Poll, manager of Indigenous programs at the Australian Maritime Museum. Saraceno said it was an 'artwork that drifts along the rivers of the wind, suspended like stars and planets carrying constellations of life's seeds through the universe … it attempts to remind us that we are all on board this Mother Earth'. 'Together with spores, spiders, birds, eucalyptus trees, can humans also float freely, without lithium or fossil fuels? 'In the interest of the trillions of inhabitants who would like to keep journeying around the sun, might we choose orbits of solidarity over extraction?' Connecting science with art, Saraceno has brought together musicians, scientists, aerospace engineers, ballooning experts, physicists, kite makers and Indigenous elders to reimagine and reinvent our relationship with the air and the earth. Saraceno's interest in spiders resulted in major installations at Tasmania's MONA and Britain's Tate Modern, where his installation Web(s) of Life received rave reviews. As well as major exhibitions and installations, Saraceno has done an international space program at NASA's Ames Centre, studied with the Centre National d'Études Spatiales, Paris, and continues to work with the MIT Centre for Art, Science and Technology in Cambridge. Saraceno founded Arachnophilia, an interdisciplinary research community with MIT and the Max Planck Institute, and recorded the vibrations of spider webs. He then invited musicians to jam with the sounds, to unveil their hidden musicality. He also created the Spider Web Scan – a laser-supported tomographic method – to study the architecture of their webs. Aerocene has broken records for solar-powered flight. In January 2020, Aerocene Pacha piloted by Leticia Noemi Marqués set 32 records for solar-powered flights recognised by the Fédération Aéronautique Internationale. An interview with Saraceno is like being carried along a jet stream. Was he an artist or a scientist? 'I am a little bit of everything,' he said. Saraceno abhors the myth of the lone genius, detests Elon Musk's Starlink with its reliance on fossil fuels, and says the only way to change the world is through collaboration. Loading Single disciplines cannot solve problems such as climate change, global warming and inequality. 'So why don't we try to weave or work together in different ways?' Seeds of Flight, developed by Investa on behalf of Oxford Properties Group and Mitsubishi Estate Asia, took more than two years to design and produce following a 13-month selection process led by curator Barbara Flynn.

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