
Frank Green just dropped glow-in-the-dark bottles, and they're lighting up water bottles like never before
No more fumbling around in the dark trying to find your water bottle at 2am, Frank Green has just delivered the solution you never knew you needed and then some.
The cult Aussie brand behind those sleek, spill-proof bottles that everyone from your barista to your Pilates instructor carries has just launched its most radiant range yet.
Teasing the new collection on their socials yesterday had fans guessing that it might be a Star Wars collab, but many others were right when they guessed the glow-in-the-dark collection.
Say hello to the Glow in the Dark collection, a limited-edition drop designed to take your hydration game from basic to brilliant.
There's even a glow-in-the-dark sticker sheet set to customise your bottle.
Frank Green's new range includes three pastel shades that soak up the sun by day, then glow in the dark when the lights go out.
It's soft neon during the daylight hours, transforming into a cosmic glow once charged under the sun (or even indoor light, if that's all you've got).
Whether it's a late-night gym session, camping trip, or just a glowy TikTok moment, these bottles have you covered.
With so many customers excited about this glow-in-the-dark launch, now is the time to buy before they sell out.
How does it work?
To activate the glow, simply leave your bottle in direct sunlight for about 30 minutes.
You'll get a bold, luminous shine that lasts for around half an hour, then eases into a dreamy afterglow for hours after.
It's practical meets playful, with a splash of nostalgia for anyone who loved glow-in-the-dark stars as a kid.
Glow Ceramic Reusable Bottle, $69.95
Available in three luminous colours: Aurora Glow (a zesty green), Star Glow (a sunny yellow), and Solar Glow (a warm, tangerine orange).
Made with Frank Green's signature ceramic lining for fresh-tasting water every time, these bottles are as functional as they are fun.
Bottle Bumpers, $14.95
Give your bottle a little extra edge (and protection) with these silicone sleeves. Bonus: they also glow, so you won't lose sight of your drink during that late-night Netflix binge. And they come with a designated slot to fit in your Apple AirTag, so you'll never lose your bottle.
Reusable Party Cup, $19.95
The sustainable answer to plastic party cups. With a glow-up, literally. Ideal for festivals, beach nights or backyard barbies that go long after sunset.
Not only are they reusable and ridiculously cute, but this collection is limited edition, so once it's gone, it's gone.
Judging by the hype already building online and at Frank Green's Chadstone flagship, these glowing beauties won't be around for long.
Time to charge up, sip in style and light up your hydration.
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Perth Now
16 hours ago
- Perth Now
Spaceballs: Lewis Pullman in talks to star alongside father Bill Pullman in sequel
Lewis Pullman is in negotiations to appear in the Spaceballs sequel. The Thunderbolts* actor, 32, is in talks to star in the upcoming follow-up to Mel Brooks' 1987 sci-fi parody movie alongside his 71-year-old father, Bill Pullman, The Hollywood Reporter has said. Bill Pullman will be returning as his Han Solo-esque character Lone Starr, while Rick Moranis is slated to reprise his role as Dark Helmet in what will be his first on-screen cinematic appearance in nearly 30 years. Daphne Zuniga - who played Princess Vespa in the original flick - is also expected to come back for the sequel. While Brooks is not due to direct the Spaceballs follow-up, the 98-year-old filmmaker will reprise his role as Yogurt in the movie, with Will and Harper director Josh Greenbaum set to helm the project for Amazon MGM Studios. Rounding out the cast of the Spaceballs sequel is Keke Palmer, who has reportedly boarded the project in an undisclosed role, according to Deadline. While plot details about the Spaceballs follow-up are being kept under wraps, it has been described as 'a non-prequel, non-reboot sequel part two, but with reboot elements, franchise expansion film'. The flick is being written by Benji Samit, Dan Hernandez, and Josh Gad, with the latter scribe also expected to star in and produce the film alongside Imagine Entertainment's Brian Grazer and Jeb Brody, Brooks and Greenbaum. Meanwhile, Kevin Salter, Adam Merims, Samit, and Hernandez are to serve as executive producers. The Spaceballs sequel is slated to hit screens in 2027. Spaceballs - which parodied sci-fi franchises like Star Wars, Star Trek and Planet of the Apes - followed Lone Starr (Pullman) and his loyal sidekick who are hired to rescue Princess Vespa (Zuniga), only to uncover Dark Helmet's (Moranis) plan to steal an entire planet's air supply. In November, Gad teased he and the writing team had finished the first draft for the Spaceballs sequel. He told Forbes: 'Without MGM taking me into their Culver prison cells, I can tell you that the draft is done. 'Everybody who's read it has been blown away. The process of working on this with and alongside Mel Brooks has been one of the highlights of my career.' The Frozen star added the whole experience has been 'sort of a fever dream', and said Brooks 'has been so unbelievably supportive, involved, and electrified by this because it's the one that surprisingly got away'. He gushed: 'It's a dream to be able to finally make the reality prophesied by Yogurt in the first movie happen. I can't say more than that. 'I can't tell you anything beyond [the] process at this point, but I can tell you every hour of every day right now is spent making this project closer and closer to reality — and I think we're nearing the end zone here.'


The Advertiser
21 hours ago
- The Advertiser
Baby Shark just won't sound the same after this excellent Aussie thriller
Dangerous Animals (MA, 98 minutes) 4 stars The "final girl" is almost an essential in any horror film, the last of the film's female characters left alive to either triumph over the bad or evil figure, or the last and most spectacular of the film's killings. Hassie Harrison, a young and blonde Texan actress with a season on the horsey drama Yellowstone on her CV, is the lead and final girl in this spectacularly gruesome new Aussie horror film. She's an actor to keep an eye on because she is memorable in a film of memorable characters and moments, and particularly holds her own against Jai Courtney playing a character as iconic as John Jarratt's Wolf Creek antihero Mick Taylor. In a fictional surf-swept town close to the Gold Coast, Captain Tucker (Jai Courtney) runs a charter boat business offering tourists the once-in-a-lifetime experience of diving with sharks. It's a strange business for Tucker to have built for himself, considering a miracle childhood escape from a shark encounter that left his body scarred with the bite marks, but Tucker sees it as a marketing opportunity his tourists love hearing about. A thing they probably don't love, as we discover in the film's opening scene, is that when Tucker discovers a tourist hasn't told anyone where they're going, he enjoys throwing them to the sharks and filming the blood churning in the water as the sharks tear them apart. So, probably not the diving experience you're looking for. A Yankie surfer touring Australia in a beat-up camper van, Zephyr (Hassie Harrison) is in the wrong place at the wrong time when she asks Tucker for help with her surfboard, and finds herself kidnapped and awakens on his shark vessel, destined to be chum. But fortunately for Zephyr, she's made a real impression on local surfer Moses (Josh Hueston), who manages to track her down and just might have the fearlessness to take on Tucker. Australia makes great low-budget horror, and this film is certainly great, a prince among the many budget slasher films Australia churns out, but with the exception of one or two moments, this film does not look cheap at all. This is probably thanks to the assured direction of Sean Byrne, whose two previous turns in the director's chair, The Loved Ones and The Devil's Candy, were also very memorable. A lot of the film is cleverly set on a rusted-out trawler just infused with atmosphere. Harrison and Hueston, one of the cast of the recent Heartbreak High reboot, are very strong, and it's a weirdly enjoyable element of the screenplay that these two smoke shows continue to chat each other up and flirt outrageously even when they're being tied down and tortured by Courtney's serial killer. Nick Lepard's screenplay isn't the most original genre mash-up, and yet it all just comes together as an original and enjoyable scare-fest, in the way that first Wolf Creek felt new and memorable. And the most enjoyable and original element is Jai Courtney's performance, a force of nature that you almost want to root for as the anti-hero, and I feel this is a career second-act for Courtney, who has played villains before, but not like this. You will, honestly, never listen to Baby Shark the same way again. I had a brown underpants moment in my teens with a shark alarm at a surf carnival, so I am equal parts drawn to and terrified by shark films, and one of the interesting things in Dangerous Animals is that the sharks are probably the safer bet for the characters. Dangerous Animals (MA, 98 minutes) 4 stars The "final girl" is almost an essential in any horror film, the last of the film's female characters left alive to either triumph over the bad or evil figure, or the last and most spectacular of the film's killings. Hassie Harrison, a young and blonde Texan actress with a season on the horsey drama Yellowstone on her CV, is the lead and final girl in this spectacularly gruesome new Aussie horror film. She's an actor to keep an eye on because she is memorable in a film of memorable characters and moments, and particularly holds her own against Jai Courtney playing a character as iconic as John Jarratt's Wolf Creek antihero Mick Taylor. In a fictional surf-swept town close to the Gold Coast, Captain Tucker (Jai Courtney) runs a charter boat business offering tourists the once-in-a-lifetime experience of diving with sharks. It's a strange business for Tucker to have built for himself, considering a miracle childhood escape from a shark encounter that left his body scarred with the bite marks, but Tucker sees it as a marketing opportunity his tourists love hearing about. A thing they probably don't love, as we discover in the film's opening scene, is that when Tucker discovers a tourist hasn't told anyone where they're going, he enjoys throwing them to the sharks and filming the blood churning in the water as the sharks tear them apart. So, probably not the diving experience you're looking for. A Yankie surfer touring Australia in a beat-up camper van, Zephyr (Hassie Harrison) is in the wrong place at the wrong time when she asks Tucker for help with her surfboard, and finds herself kidnapped and awakens on his shark vessel, destined to be chum. But fortunately for Zephyr, she's made a real impression on local surfer Moses (Josh Hueston), who manages to track her down and just might have the fearlessness to take on Tucker. Australia makes great low-budget horror, and this film is certainly great, a prince among the many budget slasher films Australia churns out, but with the exception of one or two moments, this film does not look cheap at all. This is probably thanks to the assured direction of Sean Byrne, whose two previous turns in the director's chair, The Loved Ones and The Devil's Candy, were also very memorable. A lot of the film is cleverly set on a rusted-out trawler just infused with atmosphere. Harrison and Hueston, one of the cast of the recent Heartbreak High reboot, are very strong, and it's a weirdly enjoyable element of the screenplay that these two smoke shows continue to chat each other up and flirt outrageously even when they're being tied down and tortured by Courtney's serial killer. Nick Lepard's screenplay isn't the most original genre mash-up, and yet it all just comes together as an original and enjoyable scare-fest, in the way that first Wolf Creek felt new and memorable. And the most enjoyable and original element is Jai Courtney's performance, a force of nature that you almost want to root for as the anti-hero, and I feel this is a career second-act for Courtney, who has played villains before, but not like this. You will, honestly, never listen to Baby Shark the same way again. I had a brown underpants moment in my teens with a shark alarm at a surf carnival, so I am equal parts drawn to and terrified by shark films, and one of the interesting things in Dangerous Animals is that the sharks are probably the safer bet for the characters. Dangerous Animals (MA, 98 minutes) 4 stars The "final girl" is almost an essential in any horror film, the last of the film's female characters left alive to either triumph over the bad or evil figure, or the last and most spectacular of the film's killings. Hassie Harrison, a young and blonde Texan actress with a season on the horsey drama Yellowstone on her CV, is the lead and final girl in this spectacularly gruesome new Aussie horror film. She's an actor to keep an eye on because she is memorable in a film of memorable characters and moments, and particularly holds her own against Jai Courtney playing a character as iconic as John Jarratt's Wolf Creek antihero Mick Taylor. In a fictional surf-swept town close to the Gold Coast, Captain Tucker (Jai Courtney) runs a charter boat business offering tourists the once-in-a-lifetime experience of diving with sharks. It's a strange business for Tucker to have built for himself, considering a miracle childhood escape from a shark encounter that left his body scarred with the bite marks, but Tucker sees it as a marketing opportunity his tourists love hearing about. A thing they probably don't love, as we discover in the film's opening scene, is that when Tucker discovers a tourist hasn't told anyone where they're going, he enjoys throwing them to the sharks and filming the blood churning in the water as the sharks tear them apart. So, probably not the diving experience you're looking for. A Yankie surfer touring Australia in a beat-up camper van, Zephyr (Hassie Harrison) is in the wrong place at the wrong time when she asks Tucker for help with her surfboard, and finds herself kidnapped and awakens on his shark vessel, destined to be chum. But fortunately for Zephyr, she's made a real impression on local surfer Moses (Josh Hueston), who manages to track her down and just might have the fearlessness to take on Tucker. Australia makes great low-budget horror, and this film is certainly great, a prince among the many budget slasher films Australia churns out, but with the exception of one or two moments, this film does not look cheap at all. This is probably thanks to the assured direction of Sean Byrne, whose two previous turns in the director's chair, The Loved Ones and The Devil's Candy, were also very memorable. A lot of the film is cleverly set on a rusted-out trawler just infused with atmosphere. Harrison and Hueston, one of the cast of the recent Heartbreak High reboot, are very strong, and it's a weirdly enjoyable element of the screenplay that these two smoke shows continue to chat each other up and flirt outrageously even when they're being tied down and tortured by Courtney's serial killer. Nick Lepard's screenplay isn't the most original genre mash-up, and yet it all just comes together as an original and enjoyable scare-fest, in the way that first Wolf Creek felt new and memorable. And the most enjoyable and original element is Jai Courtney's performance, a force of nature that you almost want to root for as the anti-hero, and I feel this is a career second-act for Courtney, who has played villains before, but not like this. You will, honestly, never listen to Baby Shark the same way again. I had a brown underpants moment in my teens with a shark alarm at a surf carnival, so I am equal parts drawn to and terrified by shark films, and one of the interesting things in Dangerous Animals is that the sharks are probably the safer bet for the characters. Dangerous Animals (MA, 98 minutes) 4 stars The "final girl" is almost an essential in any horror film, the last of the film's female characters left alive to either triumph over the bad or evil figure, or the last and most spectacular of the film's killings. Hassie Harrison, a young and blonde Texan actress with a season on the horsey drama Yellowstone on her CV, is the lead and final girl in this spectacularly gruesome new Aussie horror film. She's an actor to keep an eye on because she is memorable in a film of memorable characters and moments, and particularly holds her own against Jai Courtney playing a character as iconic as John Jarratt's Wolf Creek antihero Mick Taylor. In a fictional surf-swept town close to the Gold Coast, Captain Tucker (Jai Courtney) runs a charter boat business offering tourists the once-in-a-lifetime experience of diving with sharks. It's a strange business for Tucker to have built for himself, considering a miracle childhood escape from a shark encounter that left his body scarred with the bite marks, but Tucker sees it as a marketing opportunity his tourists love hearing about. A thing they probably don't love, as we discover in the film's opening scene, is that when Tucker discovers a tourist hasn't told anyone where they're going, he enjoys throwing them to the sharks and filming the blood churning in the water as the sharks tear them apart. So, probably not the diving experience you're looking for. A Yankie surfer touring Australia in a beat-up camper van, Zephyr (Hassie Harrison) is in the wrong place at the wrong time when she asks Tucker for help with her surfboard, and finds herself kidnapped and awakens on his shark vessel, destined to be chum. But fortunately for Zephyr, she's made a real impression on local surfer Moses (Josh Hueston), who manages to track her down and just might have the fearlessness to take on Tucker. Australia makes great low-budget horror, and this film is certainly great, a prince among the many budget slasher films Australia churns out, but with the exception of one or two moments, this film does not look cheap at all. This is probably thanks to the assured direction of Sean Byrne, whose two previous turns in the director's chair, The Loved Ones and The Devil's Candy, were also very memorable. A lot of the film is cleverly set on a rusted-out trawler just infused with atmosphere. Harrison and Hueston, one of the cast of the recent Heartbreak High reboot, are very strong, and it's a weirdly enjoyable element of the screenplay that these two smoke shows continue to chat each other up and flirt outrageously even when they're being tied down and tortured by Courtney's serial killer. Nick Lepard's screenplay isn't the most original genre mash-up, and yet it all just comes together as an original and enjoyable scare-fest, in the way that first Wolf Creek felt new and memorable. And the most enjoyable and original element is Jai Courtney's performance, a force of nature that you almost want to root for as the anti-hero, and I feel this is a career second-act for Courtney, who has played villains before, but not like this. You will, honestly, never listen to Baby Shark the same way again. I had a brown underpants moment in my teens with a shark alarm at a surf carnival, so I am equal parts drawn to and terrified by shark films, and one of the interesting things in Dangerous Animals is that the sharks are probably the safer bet for the characters.


The Advertiser
a day ago
- The Advertiser
Red Hot Summer a perfect warm-up for Mark Seymour's Antarctic odyssey
Veteran Aussie songwriter Mark Seymour will be feeling the heat this summer, but come December next year, he will be preparing for a cool change. From October to December, Seymour will join some of Australian music's biggest names for the Red Hot Summer festival. Just 12 months after the tour wraps up, he will embark on a voyage to the coldest continent on earth. Seymour, 68, said he couldn't resist the offer to join an 11-day cruise to the Antarctic, which will see him performing intimate acoustic sets for those onboard. Read more from The Senior "I'd never do it otherwise. I'd never get down there. So it's an incredible opportunity to see, you know, this really, magnificent part of the earth," he said. Seymour is particularly excited about travelling the infamous Drake Passage. The notorious stretch of water between South America's Cape Horn and Antarctica's South Shetland Islands has historically been considered the most dangerous body of water in the world for seafarers. "It's got hundreds and hundreds of old wooden shipwrecks somewhere down on the bottom, you know, and so the history of the area is incredible." Before heading off on the adventure of a lifetime, Seymour will join the likes of Crowded House, The Church, The Waifs, and Angus and Julia Stone on the lineup for this year's Red Hot Summer touring festival. He can't wait to perform at the festival. He enjoys the opportunity to hang out with fellow performers at festivals and said Red Hot Summer offers a different vibe to most music festivals. "It just sort of becomes its own little kind of like a community backstage, but it's definitely got that vibe in the audience as well, I think. "What sets it apart from other tours or other festivals, it's very much about communities in towns, and it's sort of multi-generational. It's not focused on one particular age group." Joining Seymour on stage will be Vika and Linda. Seymour has had a long association with the popular vocal duo, having written When Will You Fall For Me, the first single from their self-titled 1994 debut album. The show will combine hits from both Seymour and Vika and Linda's catalogues. Seymour will take on lead vocals for some of Vika and Linda's hits, and they will take the lead on some of his, giving audiences the chance to experience the songs in a new light. Outside of touring life, Seymour, who co-penned Australian classics like Throw Your Arms Around Me, Holy Grail, and When The River Runs Dry, continues to write and produce music. The former Hunters and Collectors frontman released his latest album The Boxer with his current band, The Undertow last year. Its eponymous first single tells the story of a young woman who leaves a country town to pursue a boxing career and was inspired by his personal trainer. "I'm at my best (as a songwriter) when I inhabit a character. So there's a person engaged in something, and then they've got an attitude or they're in a particular emotional state." Having written and recorded music for more than 45 years, you might think the occasional bout of writer's block would be inevitable, but it has never been an issue for Seymour. "I look out at the world, and there's never a lack of material, ever. And I just basically experiment with my guitar, you know, it's a very simple process." "Why I chose songwriting as a pathway in life was pretty intuitive, really. Whatever that trigger is, it has always been there." Tickets for the Red Hot Summer are on sale now and selling fast. Red Hot Summer; touring regional venues in Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria, South Australia and Western Australia from October 11 to December 6. For tickets visit Share your thoughts in the comments below, or send a Letter to the Editor by CLICKING HERE. . Veteran Aussie songwriter Mark Seymour will be feeling the heat this summer, but come December next year, he will be preparing for a cool change. From October to December, Seymour will join some of Australian music's biggest names for the Red Hot Summer festival. Just 12 months after the tour wraps up, he will embark on a voyage to the coldest continent on earth. Seymour, 68, said he couldn't resist the offer to join an 11-day cruise to the Antarctic, which will see him performing intimate acoustic sets for those onboard. Read more from The Senior "I'd never do it otherwise. I'd never get down there. So it's an incredible opportunity to see, you know, this really, magnificent part of the earth," he said. Seymour is particularly excited about travelling the infamous Drake Passage. The notorious stretch of water between South America's Cape Horn and Antarctica's South Shetland Islands has historically been considered the most dangerous body of water in the world for seafarers. "It's got hundreds and hundreds of old wooden shipwrecks somewhere down on the bottom, you know, and so the history of the area is incredible." Before heading off on the adventure of a lifetime, Seymour will join the likes of Crowded House, The Church, The Waifs, and Angus and Julia Stone on the lineup for this year's Red Hot Summer touring festival. He can't wait to perform at the festival. He enjoys the opportunity to hang out with fellow performers at festivals and said Red Hot Summer offers a different vibe to most music festivals. "It just sort of becomes its own little kind of like a community backstage, but it's definitely got that vibe in the audience as well, I think. "What sets it apart from other tours or other festivals, it's very much about communities in towns, and it's sort of multi-generational. It's not focused on one particular age group." Joining Seymour on stage will be Vika and Linda. Seymour has had a long association with the popular vocal duo, having written When Will You Fall For Me, the first single from their self-titled 1994 debut album. The show will combine hits from both Seymour and Vika and Linda's catalogues. Seymour will take on lead vocals for some of Vika and Linda's hits, and they will take the lead on some of his, giving audiences the chance to experience the songs in a new light. Outside of touring life, Seymour, who co-penned Australian classics like Throw Your Arms Around Me, Holy Grail, and When The River Runs Dry, continues to write and produce music. The former Hunters and Collectors frontman released his latest album The Boxer with his current band, The Undertow last year. Its eponymous first single tells the story of a young woman who leaves a country town to pursue a boxing career and was inspired by his personal trainer. "I'm at my best (as a songwriter) when I inhabit a character. So there's a person engaged in something, and then they've got an attitude or they're in a particular emotional state." Having written and recorded music for more than 45 years, you might think the occasional bout of writer's block would be inevitable, but it has never been an issue for Seymour. "I look out at the world, and there's never a lack of material, ever. And I just basically experiment with my guitar, you know, it's a very simple process." "Why I chose songwriting as a pathway in life was pretty intuitive, really. Whatever that trigger is, it has always been there." Tickets for the Red Hot Summer are on sale now and selling fast. Red Hot Summer; touring regional venues in Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria, South Australia and Western Australia from October 11 to December 6. For tickets visit Share your thoughts in the comments below, or send a Letter to the Editor by CLICKING HERE. . Veteran Aussie songwriter Mark Seymour will be feeling the heat this summer, but come December next year, he will be preparing for a cool change. From October to December, Seymour will join some of Australian music's biggest names for the Red Hot Summer festival. Just 12 months after the tour wraps up, he will embark on a voyage to the coldest continent on earth. Seymour, 68, said he couldn't resist the offer to join an 11-day cruise to the Antarctic, which will see him performing intimate acoustic sets for those onboard. Read more from The Senior "I'd never do it otherwise. I'd never get down there. So it's an incredible opportunity to see, you know, this really, magnificent part of the earth," he said. Seymour is particularly excited about travelling the infamous Drake Passage. The notorious stretch of water between South America's Cape Horn and Antarctica's South Shetland Islands has historically been considered the most dangerous body of water in the world for seafarers. "It's got hundreds and hundreds of old wooden shipwrecks somewhere down on the bottom, you know, and so the history of the area is incredible." Before heading off on the adventure of a lifetime, Seymour will join the likes of Crowded House, The Church, The Waifs, and Angus and Julia Stone on the lineup for this year's Red Hot Summer touring festival. He can't wait to perform at the festival. He enjoys the opportunity to hang out with fellow performers at festivals and said Red Hot Summer offers a different vibe to most music festivals. "It just sort of becomes its own little kind of like a community backstage, but it's definitely got that vibe in the audience as well, I think. "What sets it apart from other tours or other festivals, it's very much about communities in towns, and it's sort of multi-generational. It's not focused on one particular age group." Joining Seymour on stage will be Vika and Linda. Seymour has had a long association with the popular vocal duo, having written When Will You Fall For Me, the first single from their self-titled 1994 debut album. The show will combine hits from both Seymour and Vika and Linda's catalogues. Seymour will take on lead vocals for some of Vika and Linda's hits, and they will take the lead on some of his, giving audiences the chance to experience the songs in a new light. Outside of touring life, Seymour, who co-penned Australian classics like Throw Your Arms Around Me, Holy Grail, and When The River Runs Dry, continues to write and produce music. The former Hunters and Collectors frontman released his latest album The Boxer with his current band, The Undertow last year. Its eponymous first single tells the story of a young woman who leaves a country town to pursue a boxing career and was inspired by his personal trainer. "I'm at my best (as a songwriter) when I inhabit a character. So there's a person engaged in something, and then they've got an attitude or they're in a particular emotional state." Having written and recorded music for more than 45 years, you might think the occasional bout of writer's block would be inevitable, but it has never been an issue for Seymour. "I look out at the world, and there's never a lack of material, ever. And I just basically experiment with my guitar, you know, it's a very simple process." "Why I chose songwriting as a pathway in life was pretty intuitive, really. Whatever that trigger is, it has always been there." Tickets for the Red Hot Summer are on sale now and selling fast. Red Hot Summer; touring regional venues in Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria, South Australia and Western Australia from October 11 to December 6. For tickets visit Share your thoughts in the comments below, or send a Letter to the Editor by CLICKING HERE. .