CLIENT: SHORETRADE
OUTLET: HERALD SUN
In PNG, footy challenges beliefs about 'what a woman’s role should be'
CLIENT: DEMAND.FILM
OUTLET: THE SYDNEY MORNING HERALD / FAIRFAX
As a woman in sport, I know exactly how it feels to be trolled on social media. It happens to a lot of us. When I saw what AFLW player Tayla Harris was going through with the comments on that photo last month, it resonated.
Unfortunately, whatever your code, being harassed by strangers online is something a lot of us can all relate to in women’s footy.
When I joined the Papua New Guinea Orchids in 2017 ahead of the World Cup, a film crew was making a documentary about the team’s inaugural journey and the impact of women’s rugby league on lives and attitudes in Papua New Guinea. My story became part of the film.
Despite rugby league being the national sport in Papua New Guinea, not everyone was willing to get behind the country’s first female representative rugby league team. One of the biggest issues was the abuse we faced on social media.
New device launched to improve property inspection safety
CLIENT: WANDERSAFE
OUTLET: REAL ESTATE BUSINESS
An employee safety device that promises to de-escalate dangerous situations has found its way to the market, something that might be useful for property managers who feel vulnerable during property inspections as an additional safety tool.
WanderSafe’s beacon safety device and app is a new safety protocol that works in tandem to keep people safer when they are in potentially vulnerable situations.
Inventor Stephenie Rodriguez said that the non-violent device has four features that are designed to disorient and scare an assailant, giving somebody enough time to save their life.
“When pressed, the activation button sends off an SOS message and GPS coordinates to corporate security managers, next of kin or colleagues to take action,” Ms Rodriguez said.
Kelly and Brian were more than siblings – they were soulmates
CLIENT: DEMAND.FILM
OUTLET: SYDNEY MORNING HERALD
When people fall in love, they tend to retreat into their own world – subsisting on takeaway and endorphins – until reality pulls them back. It was no different for American actor Brian Donovan and his Australian girlfriend Tempany Deckert, a playwright and former Home and Away star.
But when Brian's sister Kelly came to visit, things changed.
The siblings spent every day together, photographing their favourite stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame and chasing the Bee Gees for autographs. At night, they'd cuddle on the couch.
"I'm supposed to be your other half," Tempany complained to Brian, "but there's already a half there."
New documentary highlights the power of PNG women through rugby league
CLIENT: DEMAND.FILM
OUTLET: ABC RADIO NATIONAL BREAKFAST W/ FRAN KELLY
Papua New Guinea is one of the world's most dangerous countries for women.
Indeed, no women sit in the country's Parliament, and more than two-thirds of all women in Papua New Guinea have suffered violence or rape at the hands of a partner.
But there are efforts underway to challenge this dominance, starting by enabling women's participation in rugby league.
A new documentary screening in Australia at the moment follows Papua New Guinea's first national women's rugby league team, the PNG Orchids, on their journey to the 2017 World Cup in Australia.
It's called Power Meri, or Power Women.
WanderSafe on YourMoney Live
Mum's genius idea on maternity leave
CLIENT: FLASHMOP
OUTLET: YAHOO! LIFESTYLE
This new mum used her maternity leave to revolutionise the cleaning industry with a genius idea, and you’ll be kicking yourself that you didn’t think of it first.
A former fly-in fly-out worker on a remote mine in Western Australia, it was outside the mines that Megan Harrison finally struck gold as a tech entrepreneur with her app FlashMop.
The on-demand cleaning app hooks up desperate households with freelance cleaners, and has found no small amount of success in Megan’s native Perth since its launch six months ago.
The ULTIMATE cleaning hack: Mum, 33, launches genius 'Uber for cleaners' app to get you a sparkling home at the click of a button – and business is booming
CLIENT: FLASHMOP
OUTLET: DAILY MAIL
A new mother has devised an 'Uber for cleaners' app to give people a sparkling home at the click of a button - without the hassle of hiring a cleaner via word of mouth, recommendations or booking over the phone.
Megan Harrison, 33, from Perth, came up with the idea when she was working as a fly-in-fly-out (FIFO) miner in remote Western Australia and was asked by friends and family if she knew any good cleaners.
'I had just become pregnant and it got me thinking about why it's so hard to find a good cleaner,' Megan told Daily Mail Australia.
Cleaning homes with new Uber style app
CLIENT: FLASHMOP
OUTLET: CHANNEL 7 NEWS
The recent boom in home ownership has filled more than the pockets of agents and brokers, it's also proven a windfall for cleaners.
Australians now schedule 20,000,000 home cleaning appointments each year with a new Uber style app the latest to cash in.
www.7plus.com.au/news
#7News
