The Winter Olympics: Beijing propaganda edition started last night. Well, the sports did. Not the Opening Ceremony. I know I "shouldn't" be watching, and I do intend to avoid the cultural stuff, but I'm genuinely passionate about Winter Sports (for... Reasons), so I intend to watch my country's athletes in action, where possible, and when I'm not doing other things (it's in a good time zone for me, so help me, lol).
Anyway, I watched the "mixed doubles" Curling last night, because it was the first sport event on. Australia was playing the USA. Round robin. I don't really give a fuck about curling (was much more interesting live, in person, anyway...), but I noticed something rather interesting, about the team dynamics...
In the American team, they were a couple, and both the guy and girl did an equal share of the work. The throw (or whatever the technical term is) of the rock, and the sweeping, or "curling"... They took it in terms. Naturally, this meant that the man did not get so worn out...
Why this was interesting? The contrast to the Australian team. I watched the whole thing. The Australian woman only threw maybe... 5 times, the whole game, and only swept once. She let the man do literally all the hard work, and spent the entire time yelling instructions. She then complained *when each "rock" didn't go exactly as planned...
She got have helped. She chose not to. And then yelled and screamed the entire time, while grinning from ear to ear. As a result, the bloke was exhausted, naturally enough, because he had to do all the work. There was no "rule", at play, here. No reason for it. She just chooses not to actually do the physical work. So naturally, they fucking lost. Right at the last minute (last rock), too...
And yet, when they were interviewed before and afterwards, she did all the talking, and the bragging. About "how they should have won", and "how it could have gone better". The bloke was almost too exhausted to talk.
It was made very apparent, before and afterwards, that they were not a couple, and that the bloke may well have been a fag. Amusingly enough, especially with how "whipped" he was...
His dad was providing the commentary, on the TV. I don't think he was terribly impressed with what went down...
Anyway, I just thought that was utterly symbolic of the relationship between most (adult) men and women, in Australia right now: The woman yells and screams, and then complains when it "isn't perfect", and the man does all the actual work, in this case literally. I grew up in that sort of environment. Let me tell you, it isn't healthy. And yet, my parents are somehow still together, so lord knows, maybe some men are just... Meant for that role. :-/
Anyway, they (the Aussie curling pair) are playing again today, twice, so it will be interesting to see if he continues to put up with the humiliation, or whether they implode, spectacularly, on mic and camera, lol... Because I know I wouldn't put up with that, for an entire week, if it was me, and if doing the work of two humans was enough to leave me nearly fainting by the end of each "end", lol...
The Australian female coverage "host" (ex field hockey and Aussie Rules football player) also called the Czech Republic Czechoslovakia twice, without pause, among so many other mistakes, which is just inexcusable...
She wasn't even alive when Czechoslovakia still existed...
Cringe. But then, it's TV, and I don't have to explain to you how bad that is, lol.
Down here?
You in Aus too, now, then..?
Yeah, I remember mentioning the Czechia thing to my Czech ex (from Prague, FYI, but aren’t you all, essentially? 😂) - she thought it was silly, but didn’t care much either way… Or so she said.
Then again, she has hardly spent any time in Česko, even since I met her, and moved to Costa Rica, of all places, only a few months after moving back to Prague from Aus…
Timed it just as the pandemic hit, though, so that turned out to be a pretty excellent decision on her part…
Though I imagine not being able to go back to see the family wasn’t ideal.
But anyway yeah, I don’t think she’s too invested, unfortunately…
She’s spent like all of her twenties travelling around, and justified it to me, pretty much, as “one long gap year before getting married” (not to me, obviously).
So yeah, anyway, guess she didn’t really care as much as you, haha. Or at least, that she told me, anyway…
I’m yet to meet pretty much any other Czechs, in person, to be able to confirm one way or the other. 😛