The magic of one…

It’s taken me a few days to be able to put the words together about how I feel about this… the passing of Olivia Newton John. I like many others are heart broken by her passing.

As a Gen X, I grew up listening to her music and watching her movies and I now feel as though I have lost a close friend, even though she didn’t even know me.

Australia and the world lost a beautiful woman who had the heart and soul to match her outward beauty. She was a woman who gave greatly with her talent but also with her time and her money towards the things she cared deeply about.

Olivia Newton John was a genuine person and she will be greatly missed in this world. She has left behind her legacy with the people she touched, her music, her movies, the projects she supported but not only that but with her family and her friends she left behind.

For me and for many others, I think in years to come, we will remember what we were doing when we heard the news of Olivia Newton John’s passing. A friend told me that she had died in a text message, so I got onto Facebook after that and reading people’s posts and comments on the news pages I have on my Facebook, the tears started flowing.

During the day, I saw many Facebook, Instagram and Tiktok posts with people paying their own respects in their way to Olivia. They too had me shedding quite a few tears.

She may have been born in the UK but Australia adopted her as one of our own quickly. She loved Australia as much as Australia loved her.

On the night of 8 August 2022, one of the TV stations here in Australia played the movie Grease in honour of the passing of Olivia Newton John. I watched the movie, I’ve seen it many times as it’s a firm favourite, then there were moments I cried during the film that featured heavily Olivia, the end of the film had me in tears too as the car took flight into the clouds.

Thank you Olivia for the music and the movies for they will live on in our hearts. Thank you for being the person you were. Earth has lost an angel but she has grown her wings and is with the angels in heaven.

Until next time

Kaye

Moving with the times…

As a Generation X, I grew up not having a mobile (cell) phone as they didn’t exist then.

Our social networking was sending hand written letters and cards in the mail, or using a manual type writer to type a letter to someone. We actually went over to a friend’s house or called them on a landline rotary or push button phone to talk to them. We bumped into people we knew while out shopping or in the street and we stopped and talked with them.

As the late 1980’s came, so did mobile phones, which weren’t what we have now… these phones had huge handsets and the battery for the phone was carried separately in its own shoulder bag.

Not everyone had a mobile phone then either, only the YUPPIES (Young Urban Professionals), business executives or trades people had them.

Computers too only came into main use in the late 1980’s… remember the big monitors and hard drives? The floppy disks were huge as well. The printers would use a style of their own, dot matrix.

Time has definitely changed things with technology. Same with social media.

I love how technology has changed. Anyone who knows me knows that I enjoy looking at the new technology available and what is possible for the future. I also enjoy social media as well.

I know there’s a lot of social media platforms available and I use several of them – Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Snapchat and Tiktok in particular.

I’ve only just got onto Tiktok as I thought it was just for teenagers who want to show of new dance moves in videos that have gone viral but I’ve realised that it’s more than that.

What I love about Twitter and Tiktok is the learning about other countries and the connection with other people from around the world, especially during the lives on Tiktok.

I have made some good friends on Twitter who are now my friends on Facebook and I’m making friends on Tiktok as well. I love how social media makes a world seem like a smaller place to live. I also enjoy how you can chat online with people around the world in real time and it can be morning, afternoon, evening or night time.

During the covid-19 pandemic that swept the world, with people having to isolate or be in quarantine, technology played a bigger part in our lives, as did social media.

With offices and buildings closing or reducing staff numbers in an effort to stop the spread of the covid-19 virus, we learned how to work from home. Education, normally done in the classroom was done online. Church services started going online too for many churches, there was more online buying, cash wasn’t being accepted by most places and became cashless as long as you had a plastic card from your bank or credit union to use.

Meetings were done by Zoom, Skype, Microsoft Teams during the covid-19 pandemic. Friends socialised on the social media platforms because of the restrictions for how many people were allowed in the home.

As far back as 2019, before we had even heard the word coronavirus or covid-19, there were those who would be saying that technology and social media were keeping people isolated from others and how bad technology and social media is.

With the covid-19 pandemic, it was technology and social media that was keeping people in contact with each other, so we learned that yes, technology and social media can be our friend and can keep people together, talking to each other, keeping people connected.

I’m excited to see how technology changes for the future and what social media platforms will become the next big thing.

For me, my Facebook is for people who know me in real life and for those I’ve gotten to know over time through talking with them through social media.

For Twitter, Instagram and Tiktok, you can find me by my username kayezee71.

Until next time

Kaye

Neighbours, everybody needs good neighbours….

On Thursday night, 28 July 2022, Australian TV show, Neighbours had its final episode air on TV after 37 years.

873,000 people in Australia tuned in for the last time to watch the final episode.

Over the 37 years and 8,903 episodes of Neighbours, Ramsay Street has seen
180,000 scenes being filmed (I have no idea how many scenes would have been dropped on the cutting room floor or were bloopers)
100+ kidnapping/hostage situations
35 natural disasters
115 car crashes (or accidents)
64 deaths
39 weddings
17 births

Tonight, Monday at 6.30pm, I think it’s going to really sink in for many of us who are still in denial that Neighbours has ended after being on our TV screens for 37 years, when we turn on the TV out of habit to watch the show, only to remember with sadness that the show has truly ended.

I love how they brought back as many of the past cast as they could and the little “Easter eggs” they put in as well into the final episode.

I enjoyed seeing Kylie and Jason back again as the shows “super couple” Scott and Charlene and how their presence didn’t take anything away from the current cast.

Susan’s monologue at the end, had me in tears as she walked around the street looking at everyone gathered there for Toadie and Melanie’s wedding reception and she was looking at everyone during her monologue, tying it all in perfectly together.

I think the way they left things open was well done because it gave me the feeling that life will go on in Ramsay Street, regardless of the show ending.

I was celebrating my 14th birthday on the night Neighbours began on the 18 March 1985 and now I am 51, feeling as though I have lost a good friend as the show has been on a good part of my life. I will definitely miss the show and the life of the residents of Ramsay Street. I was there watching the debut of Neighbours.

I remember visiting Melbourne years ago and standing in “Ramsay Street” on a spur of the moment day trip one day, with a friend. That is a happy memory for me, standing there on Pin Oak Court, South Vermont, Victoria, Australia aka Ramsay Street.

I was gutted when I thought the Ramsay Street history book was destroyed and cheered when the young people made a new book along with a Ramsay Street Facebook page (Who actually got onto Facebook to see if the Facebook page really existed? I didn’t) Now, can we persuade someone to actually publish a real Neighbours history book? That would be amazing if it could happen. So many people have been a part of the show, both in front of the camera and behind the scenes. I for one would definitely buy it and I know I wouldn’t be the only one.

Thank you to the Neighbours cast and crew who over the last 37 years made magic happen in making an unique TV show and giving we viewers an escape for 30 minutes in our lives to enter your world. I’m going to miss catching up with the Neighbours and having a “cuppa” with them all while catching up with the everything going on in Erinsborough.

Okay, you didn’t think that I wouldn’t finish this post off without a Neighbours theme tune sing along did you? Here’s the words, happy singing…

Until next time

Kaye