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Brisbane Tennis Trail's video: Hugh Lunn reflects on the Hong Kong situation in October 2019 from his1964 experiences

@Hugh Lunn reflects on the Hong Kong situation in October 2019, from his1964 experiences.
Refer http://www.hughlunn.com.au/ Hugh Lunn has never had a problem finding his way into trouble. In 1964, aged 23, he talked his way into ‘Red China’ before the Cultural Revolution —a story he tells in Spies Like Us. On arrival in London, Hugh worked for the Daily Mirror before snaring a job at Reuters, 85 Fleet Street. They sent him to Vietnam where, with three days of his year to go, he witnessed the 1968 Tet Offensive. Three of his Australian journalist friends — including his roommate Bruce Pigott — were killed there. Vietnam: A Reporter’s War won an Age Book of the Year award in 1985 and has twice been published in New York. In 1969 Hugh was Reuters correspondent in Jakarta when Indonesia took over the western half of New Guinea and its 800,000 Papuan inhabitants. Only Hugh and Dutch journalist Otto Kuyk were there to tell the world—by morse code—that the UN ‘Act of Free Choice’ was a rort. Returning home in 1971, Hugh joined The Australian, the newspaper Rupert Murdoch started. As Rupert’s ‘foreign correspondent in Queensland’, Hugh won three national Walkley Awards for feature writing between 1974 and 1979. He also wrote books on politics, Queensland, and even a tell-all book about his seventeen years Working for Rupert, which was praised in America as ‘without a doubt the most instructive, emotional, enlightening and ironic book on Rupert Murdoch’. In 1984 the Aboriginal Treaty Committee published Hugh’s Four Stories with the chairman, Dr Nugget Coombs, describing them as ‘these historic articles’. Hugh misses the inventive way Australians used to speak before American TV took over our lives. So he wrote Lost for Words and Words Fail Me to recapture in context our rich, direct Aussie lingo. His childhood memoir Over the Top with Jim became Australia’s all-time bestselling childhood memoir. Over the Top with Jim and Lost for Words were named in the ‘50 Books You Can’t Put Down’ national project. In 2006, “Australian Story” on ABC TV broadcast a programme on the life of Hugh’s friend, Wimbledon and Davis Cup tennis champion Ken Fletcher. Following this, ABC Books asked Hughie to write Fletch’s biography, and The Great Fletch was published in 2008. Over the Top with Jim has been set as a prescribed text for Higher School Certificate English in NSW; while Vietnam: A Reporter’s War has been set as a core text for English students in Year 12 in Victoria and for Years 11 and 12 in Tasmania. In 2009 Hugh was named a Queensland icon, on the state’s 150th anniversary. He was in good company, along with David Malouf, Geoffrey Rush, the Bee Gees, Powderfinger … and the Great Barrier Reef. When the SBS TV Rockwiz team rolled north on tour in 2011, they invited Hugh to write a five episode musical radio serial. The serial was performed live on stage each night by the beautiful Julia Zemiro, Andrew Buchanan and Bruce Spence, and broadcast around the state on Steve Austin’s ABC Local Radio show as part of the Queensland Music Festival. Hugh then adapted his serial into Comin’ Home: The State of Origin Musical. Hugh turned Over the Top with Jim into a play for the inaugural Brisbane Festival in 1996 with Bille Brown directing, and he has adapted both Over the Top with Jim and Spies Like Us for serialisation on Ian McNamara’s Australia All Over ABC Radio show. In 2015, along with a small group of scientists and academics, Hugh was made a Fellow of the Queensland Academy of Arts and Scientists at a ceremony hosted by Queensland Governor Paul de Jersey at Government House, Brisbane.

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This video was published on 2019-10-24 05:39:25 GMT by @Brisbane-Tennis-Trail on Youtube. Brisbane Tennis Trail has total 50 subscribers on Youtube and has a total of 279 video.This video has received 2 Likes which are higher than the average likes that Brisbane Tennis Trail gets . @Brisbane-Tennis-Trail receives an average views of 87.9 per video on Youtube.This video has received 0 comments which are lower than the average comments that Brisbane Tennis Trail gets . Overall the views for this video was lower than the average for the profile.

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