The Adventures of Jet Frichot: Uncle Kurt's Parramatta
Parramatta has a hidden secret in the back streets of Parramatta called Uncle Kurt's and it won't disappoint.
Great drinks and great food can be served and in the background you can hear some great Hip-hop which tops off the overall feel of a great dive-bar.
10/10
Uncle Kurt's Bar | Fine Drinks Movement
Join FDM as we take a speed run through Uncle Kurt's Bar in Parramatta!
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The Westside | Fine Drinks Movement
The legends at Uncle Kurt's Bar showed us how to make The Westside. A Parramatta favourite and an Uncle Kurt's staple, The Westside is sure to please.
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Subscribe to Fine Drinks Movement:
Welcome to the Fine Drinks Movement...where the Boozehound and friends will show you a good time!!!!
OUR BRAND SITE:
SOCIAL NETWORKS
=================
Instagram: @FineDrinksMovement
Facebook:
EMAIL: info@finedrinksmovement.com.au
Kurt's Bar: Episode 2
Join Kurt and his friends as they pretend to know how to mix video game inspired cocktails professionally!! In this episode they conquer:
1. Spiritual Stones Shots Mojito (Legend of Zelda inspired)
2. Tequilachu (Pokemon inspired)
3. Alcoholic Alastor (Devil May Cry inspired)
Mix and Drink responsibly and pertain to your country's alcohol laws.
CHEERS MATE!!
Music: Wonderful LIfe! By HeatleyBros
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World Class Knight - Steve Simpson
A look at the link between the Hunters two great teams as Newcastle Knights legend and Hunter Valley coal miner Steve Simpson tells his story about why the Knights and mining are important to him.
Support our miners and keep mining strong.
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Highlights Sprintcars - Lismore Speedway 24-11-08
Kelly Linigen: The Little Lady With The Heavy Right Foot
14/11/2007 4:04:37 PM - Dennis Newlyn
Sydney's fast female sprintcar racer Kelly Linigen will make her season debut at Lismore speedway at our next meeting on November 24.
Kelly, the little lady with the heavy right foot, will be one of the star attractions when sprintcars take to the track for the first time this season.
She comes to Lismore as one of the highly regarded sprintcar drivers on the national scene.
Kelly treats her sprintcar racing very seriously and comes from a family that is speedway through and through.
Her father Brian was a former racer who drove super modifieds and sprintcars and has been around the scene for many years.
Her grand father also had a speedway heritage and so it was only natural that the day would come when she tried her hand at sprintcar racing.
That was 12 years ago and Kelly has become a very competent racer with a determined will to win.
She is not fazed by entering the high octane world of a man's domain and has run with the biggest names in world sprintcar racing, including America's legendary Steve Kinser and NASCAR super star Kasey Kahne.
I just want to race and I love the sport, Kelly, 29, said this week.
Her uncle Bruce Linigen is crew chief in this deeply entrenched family team that is one of the most professional in Australian sprintcar racing.
Kelly enjoyed a strong start to the new season and recently at her home track -- Sydney's Parramatta City Raceway -- she was second fastest in qualifying time trials in a field of 52 cars.
She says a highlight of her career is racing against the best sprintcar drivers in the world.
When she commenced racing few realised just how serious she was about carving out her own sprintcar career. It was not long before her male counterparts quickly realised that Kelly Linigen wanted to be a racer for many years into the future.
She is now highly regarded and has commanded plenty of respect from her male opposition because this little lady really does have a heavy right foot.
A Statisitcal History of Rugby By Stephen Kane
The Greatest Game of All or Rugby League as it is known to some has given me nearly a half a century of pleasure and a little pain. In 1966 at the ripe old age of 6 I was introduced to our game when my Uncle Harry moved into the bedroom I shared with my younger brother in a 2 bedroom fibro joint in Rockdale(Dragon Territory).
Harry was playing lower grades for Jack Gibson's Roosters and went on to play for St George in the 1971 Grand Final against my other front rower mate John Sattler and his Rabbitoh's. By the age of 9 I had memorized every player in the Big League magazine.
The game became my obsession. Even if I had not been lucky enough to play over 100 games in the best competition in the world(arguably in any sport) Rugby League was in my blood. As a Rothmans Medal winner (the official player of the year award in 1983 succeeded by The Dally M Medal) I have always been aware of the history of our great game and its effect on society especially in the northern states of Australia. Apart from obtaining a Law degree at Sydney University I studied the Politics in Sport while completing my Arts Degree at Macquarie University.
I believed our game was ahead of sports like baseball, gridiron and basketball that relied heavily on statistics to rate their great players. Ours is a game of passion made
for the blue collar working classman relying on guts and determination not on how many yards and minutes someone makes or plays. However as we get older we all like to dig deep into history and see who had the ability and drive to play even one game in the toughest competition playing the greatest game of all. This book does what none other has attempted to do—tell a story using numbers and statistics about our great game. It is something every player and fan would do well to study.
Stephen Kane the author of this book could be a reincarnation of Stephen Harold Gascoigne, better known as Yabba whose statue stands proudly at the Sydney Cricket Ground. Yabba was known for his knowledgeable witticisms shouted loudly from The Hill, a grassy general admissions area of the SCG. A lot like Yabba Kaney can be found every winter Sunday on the hill at Greenfield Park Albury(or away in Junee, Temora or Wagga) cheering his beloved Thunder to victory in the Group 9 Premiership loudly and clearly from 10 am to 5.30pm. In his spare time since breaking his back 7 years ago he has collected statistics on players in the NSWRL(now known as the NRL) dating back to 1908. The first words Kaney said to me was I have every Rugby League Week ever published as he showed me his EELS tattoo. You got sin binned once
in your career at North Sydney Oval in 1983 or was it 1984?? I knew I was in the company of a Rugby League tragic. This study of our game will help all of us who love the game and those of us lucky enough to have played it a better insight into the players of the greatest game of all from the top to the bottom.
Written by Mike Eden, who played 110 Games for Manly, Easts, Parramatta and Gold Coast, is Gold Coast Player Number 1, and Won the Dally M award for Player of the Year in 1983.
To learn more or order the book:
Nathan Peats - In My Own Words Pt 1/2 ????
Nathan Peats opens up about his Parramatta Eels exit, Jarryd Hayne & his move to the Gold Coast Titans ????
Wilbraham at Manchester schools camp at Benllech 1964, Part 1
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