On Dit 89.2

Page 40

For nearly four years, I worked in one of those suburban pubs in which every staff member either looked no older than eighteen or no younger than sixty-five. One of those pubs where the barman knows which pony to pick every time and making suggestive comments to the barmaid is considered a perfectly appropriate pastime. In other words, it was not the sort of place where one wished to stay too long unless there was patently no other choice. The euphemism us younger ones liked to use was in reference to our long-planned escape - “I’ve got to get out of here” becomes a mantra oft-repeated.

to work less in the dining room and more in the gaming room. When your average $500-a-day gambler ambled down the thoroughfare, change jangling in his pockets as he approached the cash register, they left a dark aura in their trail that was practically visible. They were often rude; if there is one thing pub staff bitch about more than anything else, it’s a rude gambler. It’s part of the make-believe that what is happening when you hand over their coin cup is a perfectly normal market transaction - “Geez, what’s his problem?” The answer: it’s that you’ve sold a bullet to a suicidal man.

This is not about working in hospitality. There are worse things in the world than being forced to smile against one’s will. It’s about the paradox of the Australian family pub: a strange territory fielded to the north by a clean, well-lit dining room (Hemingway would probably find it too well-lit), to the south by a comfortably spacious gaming room. Close your eyes and you’ll remember the sounds of the arcade at the Royal Show. Open your eyes, now: it is the violent, flashing lights of the Show as seen in one of those drab liminal spaces that appear in a dream. Anything is possible in this room, if you dream hard enough.

The poker machine industry in Australia made a turnover of around 20 billion dollars in 2018. The venue where I worked had a weekly turnover of about $1 million, which is in the upper crust compared to most venues. Part of it was because the suburb adjacent was of a low-socioeconomic status, and any study will show you there is a correlation between one’s desperation for money and a predisposition to gambling. Actually, common sense says the exact same thing. But once again, part of the make-believe is that there isn’t a problem. At worst, it is a symptom of the great liberal tendency to let others ruin their lives as long as you’re not forced to see the consequences of it.

I made a point of evading every request

WORDS BY JIALUN QI

WORDS BY ivan bucalo

Memoir: The Great Australian Pub

40 40


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the present moment

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pages 60-61

specimen

4min
pages 64-68

peter the pancake peddler

4min
pages 54-55

collective please stand up?

6min
pages 50-53

Stripes. Interview

3min
pages 46-49

hate

3min
pages 44-45

biden’s big 4 challenges how algorithms make us

5min
pages 42-43

australian pub

4min
pages 40-41

a univeristy story

2min
pages 38-39

review: girls can’t surf

2min
pages 36-37

dimweather

3min
pages 34-35

sustanabili-dit

5min
pages 26-27

reddit v Wallstreet

5min
pages 32-33

products

4min
pages 30-31

obituary to balcony bar

1min
pages 28-29

CLub Spotlight

1min
pages 24-25

LEFT RIGHT CENTRE

5min
pages 22-23

state of the union

2min
page 11

international student voice

4min
pages 18-19

sex and the small city

3min
pages 20-21

rural student voice

2min
pages 16-17

econ dit

4min
pages 14-15

vox pop

2min
pages 12-13

editorial

1min
page 7

src president

2min
page 10
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