logo
#

Latest news with #Tamsin

My neighbour chainsawed my fence down during privacy row – the council approved my plans but I've taken extreme measures
My neighbour chainsawed my fence down during privacy row – the council approved my plans but I've taken extreme measures

The Irish Sun

time5 days ago

  • The Irish Sun

My neighbour chainsawed my fence down during privacy row – the council approved my plans but I've taken extreme measures

Read on for more neighbour rows OF-FENCE My neighbour chainsawed my fence down during privacy row – the council approved my plans but I've taken extreme measures A WOMAN has been left raging after her neighbour chainsawed her fence down. Tamsin took to social media to share the nightmare feud she was having with her new next-door neighbour. 2 Tamsin Griff was stunned to see her neighbour had sawed down her fence Credit: TikTok/@tamsingriff 2 She decided to take extreme measure to ensure it didn't happen again Credit: Tiktok/@tamsingriff In the clip, Tamsin revealed she had just bought her first home and wanted to make the garden more private. But it seemed her neighbour had other ideas and wanted to keep the tiny 4ft fence that divided their outdoor space. She said: "When you buy your first house next to a neighbour who doesn't want privacy." Tamsin revealed that she needed the fence to be taller to make sure her dogs didn't escape. The council had come over to approve the high fence so she decided to go ahead with it. She decided to use small wooden panels and kept gaps in between them to ensure it didn't block her neighbour from getting sunlight. But one day she woke up to find the fence had been chainsawed down. Fuming over the action, Tamsin quickly installed cameras pointing to her fence before fixing it to ensure her neighbour didn't try it again. After fixing the fence, Tamsin decided to take extreme measures to warn her neighbour off from doing it again. While she was nice enough to leave gaps in her fence last time, she decided to take the privilege away and board the fence up. I hate my new build garden being overlooked so found a 5 METRE privacy fence to block out nosy neighbours for under £30 She added: "As you can see, before we left gaps of light to come through. "We didn't need to this I was just being nice and it still backfired. "So it will be boarded up until we can afford someone to build it back up properly." The clip soon went viral on her TikTok account @tamsingriff with over 400k views. People were quick to share their thoughts in the comments many claiming they would love a privacy fence from their neighbour. The Top Five Reasons Neighbours Squabble One study by Compare the Market revealed the top reason British neighbour's argue Broken fences - top of the board was broken fences and whose responsibility it was to fix it Parking: one of the leading drivers of neighbour disputes, with 54.1 per cent of people having issues with people parking in front of their house, parking bay or driveway Trees - complaints about a neighbour's tree cracking your garden path was also common with nearly half of participants finding it frustrating Bin wars - outdoor bin etiquette continues to ignite the most furious debates between neighbours Nosy Neighbours - some people have their eyes and ears at the ready to have a peek causing problems for others One person wrote: "Why does the neighbour want to look in your garden???" Another commented: "My neighbour could build a 20ft fence and I'd be cheering, the higher the better." "Elderly and chainsaw didn't come together in my mind! Hope it gets resolved and doesn't escalate"," penned a third. Meanwhile a fourth said: "Imagine getting privacy for free!!!!!! People are weird!" "Omg I'd be raging!' claimed a fifth Someone else added: "Every time you get it repaired send her the invoice."

My neighbour chainsawed my fence down during privacy row – the council approved my plans but I've taken extreme measures
My neighbour chainsawed my fence down during privacy row – the council approved my plans but I've taken extreme measures

Scottish Sun

time5 days ago

  • General
  • Scottish Sun

My neighbour chainsawed my fence down during privacy row – the council approved my plans but I've taken extreme measures

Read on for more neighbour rows OF-FENCE My neighbour chainsawed my fence down during privacy row – the council approved my plans but I've taken extreme measures Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) A WOMAN has been left raging after her neighbour chainsawed her fence down. Tamsin took to social media to share the nightmare feud she was having with her new next-door neighbour. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 2 Tamsin Griff was stunned to see her neighbour had sawed down her fence Credit: TikTok/@tamsingriff 2 She decided to take extreme measure to ensure it didn't happen again Credit: Tiktok/@tamsingriff In the clip, Tamsin revealed she had just bought her first home and wanted to make the garden more private. But it seemed her neighbour had other ideas and wanted to keep the tiny 4ft fence that divided their outdoor space. She said: "When you buy your first house next to a neighbour who doesn't want privacy." Tamsin revealed that she needed the fence to be taller to make sure her dogs didn't escape. READ MORE NEIGHBOUR STORIES STEAL ESTATE I made £1,800 by dobbing in my neighbour – it paid all my bills for a month The council had come over to approve the high fence so she decided to go ahead with it. She decided to use small wooden panels and kept gaps in between them to ensure it didn't block her neighbour from getting sunlight. But one day she woke up to find the fence had been chainsawed down. Fuming over the action, Tamsin quickly installed cameras pointing to her fence before fixing it to ensure her neighbour didn't try it again. After fixing the fence, Tamsin decided to take extreme measures to warn her neighbour off from doing it again. While she was nice enough to leave gaps in her fence last time, she decided to take the privilege away and board the fence up. I hate my new build garden being overlooked so found a 5 METRE privacy fence to block out nosy neighbours for under £30 She added: "As you can see, before we left gaps of light to come through. "We didn't need to this I was just being nice and it still backfired. "So it will be boarded up until we can afford someone to build it back up properly." The clip soon went viral on her TikTok account @tamsingriff with over 400k views. People were quick to share their thoughts in the comments many claiming they would love a privacy fence from their neighbour. The Top Five Reasons Neighbours Squabble One study by Compare the Market revealed the top reason British neighbour's argue Broken fences - top of the board was broken fences and whose responsibility it was to fix it Parking: one of the leading drivers of neighbour disputes, with 54.1 per cent of people having issues with people parking in front of their house, parking bay or driveway Trees - complaints about a neighbour's tree cracking your garden path was also common with nearly half of participants finding it frustrating Bin wars - outdoor bin etiquette continues to ignite the most furious debates between neighbours Nosy Neighbours - some people have their eyes and ears at the ready to have a peek causing problems for others One person wrote: "Why does the neighbour want to look in your garden???" Another commented: "My neighbour could build a 20ft fence and I'd be cheering, the higher the better." "Elderly and chainsaw didn't come together in my mind! Hope it gets resolved and doesn't escalate"," penned a third. Meanwhile a fourth said: "Imagine getting privacy for free!!!!!! People are weird!" "Omg I'd be raging!' claimed a fifth Someone else added: "Every time you get it repaired send her the invoice."

My neighbour chainsawed my fence down during privacy row – the council approved my plans but I've taken extreme measures
My neighbour chainsawed my fence down during privacy row – the council approved my plans but I've taken extreme measures

The Sun

time5 days ago

  • General
  • The Sun

My neighbour chainsawed my fence down during privacy row – the council approved my plans but I've taken extreme measures

A WOMAN has been left raging after her neighbour chainsawed her fence down. Tamsin took to social media to share the nightmare feud she was having with her new next-door neighbour. 2 2 In the clip, Tamsin revealed she had just bought her first home and wanted to make the garden more private. But it seemed her neighbour had other ideas and wanted to keep the tiny 4ft fence tha t divided their outdoor space. She said: "When you buy your first house next to a neighbour who doesn't want privacy." Tamsin revealed that she needed the fence to be taller to make sure her dogs didn't escape. The council had come over to approve the high fence so she decided to go ahead with it. She decided to use small wooden panels and kept gaps in between them to ensure it didn't block her neighbour from getting sunlight. But one day she woke up to find the fence had been chainsawed down. Fuming over the action, Tamsin quickly installed cameras pointing to her fence before fixing it to ensure her neighbour didn't try it again. After fixing the fence, Tamsin decided to take extreme measures to warn her neighbour off from doing it again. While she was nice enough to leave gaps in her fence last time, she decided to take the privilege away and board the fence up. I hate my new build garden being overlooked so found a 5 METRE privacy fence to block out nosy neighbours for under £30 She added: "As you can see, before we left gaps of light to come through. "We didn't need to this I was just being nice and it still backfired. "So it will be boarded up until we can afford someone to build it back up properly." The clip soon went viral on her TikTok account @ tamsingriff with over 400k views. People were quick to share their thoughts in the comments many claiming they would love a privacy fence from their neighbour. One person wrote: "Why does the neighbour want to look in your garden???" Another commented: "My neighbour could build a 20ft fence and I'd be cheering, the higher the better." "Elderly and chainsaw didn't come together in my mind! Hope it gets resolved and doesn't escalate"," penned a third. Meanwhile a fourth said: "Imagine getting privacy for free!!!!!! People are weird!" "Omg I'd be raging!' claimed a fifth

‘Tactful disharmony': An interior designer's offbeat path to success
‘Tactful disharmony': An interior designer's offbeat path to success

The Age

time06-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Age

‘Tactful disharmony': An interior designer's offbeat path to success

This story is part of the June 7 edition of Good Weekend. See all 14 stories. Tamsin Johnson is perched on a white sofa, sipping ginger and lemongrass tea beneath a 19th-century French crystal chandelier in her Darling Point home in Sydney's east. Before her, roses nestle in a vase on a marble coffee table next to a pair of oak armchairs by Frank Lloyd Wright. Looming behind, a large religious icon, painted by the Indigenous-Australian artist Dan Boyd, is half obscured by an antique console laden with coffee-table books with titles like Equestrian Life in the Hamptons and Haute Bohemians: Greece. Every detail in the room is a quiet signifier of cultural erudition and taste. Indeed, there's so much to admire, the harbour view feels like a distraction. At 40, Johnson has become one of Australia's most sought-after interior designers. Locally, her work ranges from the Byron Bay hotel, Raes on Wategos, to the Bondi store of jewellery designer Lucy Folk, while international jobs include a Dubai members club and Frank Sinatra's former Hollywood office. In 2021, publisher Rizzoli New York released her first book, Tamsin Johnson: Spaces for Living, while a second is now in the works. 'Tamsin is a true artist,' says Nick Smart, the fragrance entrepreneur behind the Libertine Parfumerie boutiques. He enlisted her to design his Paddington flagship store, which includes parquetry flooring and antique marble basins from France. The cost of decorating the 200-square-metre space exceeded $1 million, but Smart is keen to use Johnson again. 'People emulate Tamsin's style, but they don't make it look good,' he says. 'She puts together pieces from different eras in a breathtaking way.' 'Tactful disharmony' is how Johnson describes her mix-and-match approach. 'It's about finding the balance of elements that might not have necessarily worked together – the old and the new, the pristine and the slightly messy, the weird and the super polished.' She points above her fireplace to a contemporary mirror whose jagged edges counter the curves of an antique bronze nude. Similarly, offbeat notes pepper Johnson's own look. Tall and slender in a floaty, pinstripe shirt and cream slacks, she sports a jumble of accessories, including a Jaeger-LeCoultre Reverso watch in burgundy, a diamond tennis bracelet, and a mishmash of rings that includes vintage sapphires and a dark-green bloodstone. Her husband, Patrick Johnson, is also a tastemaker. In 2009, the 44-year-old launched his P. Johnson tailoring brand that today also encompasses womenswear, and has expanded to 10 shops as far afield as London and New York. The couple have two children, Arthur, 8, and Bunny, 7, but parenthood hasn't curbed their panache. Damien Woolnough, fashion editor of The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age, believes the pair's aspirational image – the holidays in Tuscany, the artworks, the clothes – feeds into P. Johnson's appeal. 'You so want to be them, and that lifestyle justifies the price as much as the cut and fabrics.' In one showroom, an antique chandelier beams onto a portrait of André the Giant. Johnson decorates her husband's showrooms to evoke a refined but playful mood of relaxed hospitality. In the Windsor location in Melbourne, for example, an antique chandelier beams onto a portrait of the late pro wrestler, André the Giant. 'I never wanted spaces that were all old wood and leather, like a traditional English tailoring shop,' Patrick says. 'I wanted the interiors to be an extension of our lives and the things we found beautiful. I wanted people to feel like they're coming into our home.' Johnson's eye for an art-deco sideboard also started at home. Her parents, Edward and Peta Clark, were successful antique dealers, and she grew up in Melbourne playing beneath Louis XV sofas and Venetian gilt mirrors. Her father's big break had come in 1974, when he negotiated a huge sale from the Maharajah of Mysore that included a lavish collection of royal carriages. 'I made a few bob and I've lived on that ever since, really,' Clark admits. The proceeds bought the family's former home, the converted Golden Crust bakery in Armadale, that Domain describes as one of 'Melbourne's truly great homes'. From a young age, Johnson and her sister Tess accompanied their parents on buying trips to Paris markets and Rome galleries. 'Subconsciously, I was learning, not just about furniture and antiques, but about selling as well,' Johnson reflects. She instinctively mastered the latter. When she was eight, her father recalls taking her to Camberwell market, where Johnson bought a gold bracelet for $5. 'An hour later, she resold it from my stall to a lady for $15.' Lauren Kozica, a high-school friend from Wesley College, remembers Johnson constantly hurling herself into extracurricular projects. 'Tamsin's always had the energy and stamina most people search for in a tablet.' As a teen, Johnson took sewing classes and began tie-dying petticoats and making her own clothes. By 18, she'd sold a line of beaded necklaces to Scanlan Theodore. That early win encouraged her to study fashion at RMIT; she then clinched an internship in London at Stella McCartney. After-wards, Johnson got a job with a London PR firm and during that period, she met her future husband in a pub. 'She just radiated this energy, this brightness,' Patrick says of his first impression. Raised on a 4000-hectare farm north of Adelaide, Patrick had already been in London for six years and was working for Robert Emmett, a high-end shirtmaker on Jermyn Street. Tamsin, meanwhile, was turning away from fashion. Recognising her sartorial taste would never be sufficiently edgy to stand out, she enrolled in a course at Inchbald School of Design in Chelsea: 'The minute I walked in, I was like: 'This is absolutely my field.' ' In 2009, the pair returned to Australia. While Patrick set up his tailoring business, Johnson got an interior design job at Sydney practice, Meacham Nockles McQualter. 'When Tam arrived she was well-travelled, with a broad knowledge of the history of art, design and architecture, which enabled her to develop designs with a distinctive language,' says her former boss, Don McQualter. Johnson credits her four-year stint with teaching her the fundamentals of her profession. But in 2013, she resigned to go out on her own. 'It wasn't a surprise,' says McQualter. Loading Her first job as a sole practitioner was with one of Patrick's tailoring clients, and in a business where social cachet matters, it proved to be heaven-sent. The Bondi home belonged to James Packer. Johnson turned the opportunity into a springboard. Her three-women team currently has 20 jobs on the go that range from overhauling a seven-bedroom home in Vaucluse to fitting new wardrobes in a child's bedroom. Johnson also runs a Paddington antiques shop that she opened in 2015. Each year she trawls the antique fairs in France, Italy and Spain for stock, shipping back five 12-metre-long containers laden with new (old) treasures. Sitting with her, I get the same pang of unease you get from too much Instagram, when you inadvertently compare your own reality to glimpses of the unattainable. It's not just her jet-set lifestyle. My kids are the same age as Johnson's, and we've twice had to get our sofa reupholstered due to peanut-butter stains and worse. How is her white sofa so pristine? 'We've always made sure the covers can be slipped off and cleaned,' she shrugs. What about the juggle of raising two children while running an internationally successful business? The family has help on Mondays and Tuesdays, when a nanny collects the kids from school, but Johnson admits to being pathologically efficient: 'If I've got something on my to-do list, I need to get it done. On holidays, I'll write an itinerary that Patch [Patrick] jokes is down to the minute.' As if to validate her working-mum credentials, Johnson's phone rings. It's her daughter's school: Bunny has a tummy-ache and needs collecting. Apologising, Johnson dashes out, urging me to finish my tea and try a piece of shortbread. Cut into heart shapes, even her biscuits are charmingly photogenic. Loading A week later, we chat on the phone. Johnson is driving to Melbourne Airport after seeing clients in the Otways who want an American ranch-style interior. I'm curious to know what her next chapter holds. She's already living the dream: where does she go from here? 'I've got a small, personal business and that's the way I like it,' she insists. 'I'm not trying to set up an office in London or New York. I like that we can still deliver amazing outcomes for clients that are super personal. Also, I want to raise my own kids.' She mentions how her signet ring, a gift from Patrick, is engraved with a turtle. 'I think it was to remind me to slow down.' Suddenly, I'm reminded of a recurring detail from her house. Beside the Bill Henson in the hallway, on the antique Spanish dining table, by the custom-made sofa, there were vases of mixed roses everywhere. Are they a visual cue, like that ring – a literal reminder to stop and smell the roses? 'Well, they are my favourites,' Johnson laughs. 'But maybe subconsciously, yeah.'

‘Tactful disharmony': An interior designer's offbeat path to success
‘Tactful disharmony': An interior designer's offbeat path to success

Sydney Morning Herald

time06-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Sydney Morning Herald

‘Tactful disharmony': An interior designer's offbeat path to success

This story is part of the June 7 edition of Good Weekend. See all 14 stories. Tamsin Johnson is perched on a white sofa, sipping ginger and lemongrass tea beneath a 19th-century French crystal chandelier in her Darling Point home in Sydney's east. Before her, roses nestle in a vase on a marble coffee table next to a pair of oak armchairs by Frank Lloyd Wright. Looming behind, a large religious icon, painted by the Indigenous-Australian artist Dan Boyd, is half obscured by an antique console laden with coffee-table books with titles like Equestrian Life in the Hamptons and Haute Bohemians: Greece. Every detail in the room is a quiet signifier of cultural erudition and taste. Indeed, there's so much to admire, the harbour view feels like a distraction. At 40, Johnson has become one of Australia's most sought-after interior designers. Locally, her work ranges from the Byron Bay hotel, Raes on Wategos, to the Bondi store of jewellery designer Lucy Folk, while international jobs include a Dubai members club and Frank Sinatra's former Hollywood office. In 2021, publisher Rizzoli New York released her first book, Tamsin Johnson: Spaces for Living, while a second is now in the works. 'Tamsin is a true artist,' says Nick Smart, the fragrance entrepreneur behind the Libertine Parfumerie boutiques. He enlisted her to design his Paddington flagship store, which includes parquetry flooring and antique marble basins from France. The cost of decorating the 200-square-metre space exceeded $1 million, but Smart is keen to use Johnson again. 'People emulate Tamsin's style, but they don't make it look good,' he says. 'She puts together pieces from different eras in a breathtaking way.' 'Tactful disharmony' is how Johnson describes her mix-and-match approach. 'It's about finding the balance of elements that might not have necessarily worked together – the old and the new, the pristine and the slightly messy, the weird and the super polished.' She points above her fireplace to a contemporary mirror whose jagged edges counter the curves of an antique bronze nude. Similarly, offbeat notes pepper Johnson's own look. Tall and slender in a floaty, pinstripe shirt and cream slacks, she sports a jumble of accessories, including a Jaeger-LeCoultre Reverso watch in burgundy, a diamond tennis bracelet, and a mishmash of rings that includes vintage sapphires and a dark-green bloodstone. Her husband, Patrick Johnson, is also a tastemaker. In 2009, the 44-year-old launched his P. Johnson tailoring brand that today also encompasses womenswear, and has expanded to 10 shops as far afield as London and New York. The couple have two children, Arthur, 8, and Bunny, 7, but parenthood hasn't curbed their panache. Damien Woolnough, fashion editor of The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age, believes the pair's aspirational image – the holidays in Tuscany, the artworks, the clothes – feeds into P. Johnson's appeal. 'You so want to be them, and that lifestyle justifies the price as much as the cut and fabrics.' In one showroom, an antique chandelier beams onto a portrait of André the Giant. Johnson decorates her husband's showrooms to evoke a refined but playful mood of relaxed hospitality. In the Windsor location in Melbourne, for example, an antique chandelier beams onto a portrait of the late pro wrestler, André the Giant. 'I never wanted spaces that were all old wood and leather, like a traditional English tailoring shop,' Patrick says. 'I wanted the interiors to be an extension of our lives and the things we found beautiful. I wanted people to feel like they're coming into our home.' Johnson's eye for an art-deco sideboard also started at home. Her parents, Edward and Peta Clark, were successful antique dealers, and she grew up in Melbourne playing beneath Louis XV sofas and Venetian gilt mirrors. Her father's big break had come in 1974, when he negotiated a huge sale from the Maharajah of Mysore that included a lavish collection of royal carriages. 'I made a few bob and I've lived on that ever since, really,' Clark admits. The proceeds bought the family's former home, the converted Golden Crust bakery in Armadale, that Domain describes as one of 'Melbourne's truly great homes'. From a young age, Johnson and her sister Tess accompanied their parents on buying trips to Paris markets and Rome galleries. 'Subconsciously, I was learning, not just about furniture and antiques, but about selling as well,' Johnson reflects. She instinctively mastered the latter. When she was eight, her father recalls taking her to Camberwell market, where Johnson bought a gold bracelet for $5. 'An hour later, she resold it from my stall to a lady for $15.' Lauren Kozica, a high-school friend from Wesley College, remembers Johnson constantly hurling herself into extracurricular projects. 'Tamsin's always had the energy and stamina most people search for in a tablet.' As a teen, Johnson took sewing classes and began tie-dying petticoats and making her own clothes. By 18, she'd sold a line of beaded necklaces to Scanlan Theodore. That early win encouraged her to study fashion at RMIT; she then clinched an internship in London at Stella McCartney. After-wards, Johnson got a job with a London PR firm and during that period, she met her future husband in a pub. 'She just radiated this energy, this brightness,' Patrick says of his first impression. Raised on a 4000-hectare farm north of Adelaide, Patrick had already been in London for six years and was working for Robert Emmett, a high-end shirtmaker on Jermyn Street. Tamsin, meanwhile, was turning away from fashion. Recognising her sartorial taste would never be sufficiently edgy to stand out, she enrolled in a course at Inchbald School of Design in Chelsea: 'The minute I walked in, I was like: 'This is absolutely my field.' ' In 2009, the pair returned to Australia. While Patrick set up his tailoring business, Johnson got an interior design job at Sydney practice, Meacham Nockles McQualter. 'When Tam arrived she was well-travelled, with a broad knowledge of the history of art, design and architecture, which enabled her to develop designs with a distinctive language,' says her former boss, Don McQualter. Johnson credits her four-year stint with teaching her the fundamentals of her profession. But in 2013, she resigned to go out on her own. 'It wasn't a surprise,' says McQualter. Loading Her first job as a sole practitioner was with one of Patrick's tailoring clients, and in a business where social cachet matters, it proved to be heaven-sent. The Bondi home belonged to James Packer. Johnson turned the opportunity into a springboard. Her three-women team currently has 20 jobs on the go that range from overhauling a seven-bedroom home in Vaucluse to fitting new wardrobes in a child's bedroom. Johnson also runs a Paddington antiques shop that she opened in 2015. Each year she trawls the antique fairs in France, Italy and Spain for stock, shipping back five 12-metre-long containers laden with new (old) treasures. Sitting with her, I get the same pang of unease you get from too much Instagram, when you inadvertently compare your own reality to glimpses of the unattainable. It's not just her jet-set lifestyle. My kids are the same age as Johnson's, and we've twice had to get our sofa reupholstered due to peanut-butter stains and worse. How is her white sofa so pristine? 'We've always made sure the covers can be slipped off and cleaned,' she shrugs. What about the juggle of raising two children while running an internationally successful business? The family has help on Mondays and Tuesdays, when a nanny collects the kids from school, but Johnson admits to being pathologically efficient: 'If I've got something on my to-do list, I need to get it done. On holidays, I'll write an itinerary that Patch [Patrick] jokes is down to the minute.' As if to validate her working-mum credentials, Johnson's phone rings. It's her daughter's school: Bunny has a tummy-ache and needs collecting. Apologising, Johnson dashes out, urging me to finish my tea and try a piece of shortbread. Cut into heart shapes, even her biscuits are charmingly photogenic. Loading A week later, we chat on the phone. Johnson is driving to Melbourne Airport after seeing clients in the Otways who want an American ranch-style interior. I'm curious to know what her next chapter holds. She's already living the dream: where does she go from here? 'I've got a small, personal business and that's the way I like it,' she insists. 'I'm not trying to set up an office in London or New York. I like that we can still deliver amazing outcomes for clients that are super personal. Also, I want to raise my own kids.' She mentions how her signet ring, a gift from Patrick, is engraved with a turtle. 'I think it was to remind me to slow down.' Suddenly, I'm reminded of a recurring detail from her house. Beside the Bill Henson in the hallway, on the antique Spanish dining table, by the custom-made sofa, there were vases of mixed roses everywhere. Are they a visual cue, like that ring – a literal reminder to stop and smell the roses? 'Well, they are my favourites,' Johnson laughs. 'But maybe subconsciously, yeah.'

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