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Meg
14th July 2014, 05:39 PM
A relative of mine who works in the South Australian Museum saw Adam Goodes last November in the section of the museum where people can do research on their indigenous history. My relative sent me the link below for the resultant upcoming SBS program as part of the series 'Who do you think you are?'

7.30pm 12 August. One for the diary.


1058

Auntie.Gerald
14th July 2014, 05:49 PM
Thanks Meg

will watch that one !!

equally good news today was the double !!

"Ballantyne's hit on Bugg was assessed as a level two striking offence (125 demerit points), having been ruled to be intentional, low impact and involving body contact."

Bugg done and then Ballantyne done :)

joemoore12
14th July 2014, 06:36 PM
Thanks Meg. A must watch for all Swannies fans. I'll be tuning in for sure!

aardvark
14th July 2014, 06:45 PM
A great series, Goodsy will be a ripper, not to be missed.

AnnieH
15th July 2014, 07:18 PM
MickyO's was brilliant.
His great grandparents are on the 50 dollar note.
Looking forward to it.
Thanks for the heads up.

Meg
12th August 2014, 09:42 PM
That show was amazing. Am I the only one who had tears in my eyes watching Adam's emotions? I understand that what we saw was only a small part of the whole story Adam learnt. I hope Adam has a way of telling us the rest of it.

31 hard at it
12th August 2014, 09:57 PM
I always thought he was Royalty !

Strong mention of how the Swans are a very large part of his culture.
Leaders are the lifeblood.

Faunac8
12th August 2014, 10:00 PM
That show was amazing. Am I the only one who had tears in my eyes watching Adam's emotions? I understand that what we saw was only a small part of the whole story Adam learnt. I hope Adam has a way of telling us the rest of it.

Plus one
To hear the amazing story of his ancestry being involved with WW Hughes is a real surprise. As someone who spent a few years in Wallaroo I know that name is very much entrenched in the colonial history of the area. And then to have King Tommy as part of the picture as well was a twist. It is no wonder Adam carries himself so well and has such a presence.

jono2707
12th August 2014, 10:19 PM
Great show - a fascinating family history showing the intertwining between his indigenous and Anglo ancestry. No wonder he holds himself with such poise, seeing the stock he comes from.

Just a tad disappointed that no mention of his father's background was shown - I understand that it's a relatively short show and his Mum's side of the family is fascinating, but he certainly looks like his dad. But geez him Mum has done such a great job with him :)

These sorts of visits into someone's indigenous background and history should be compulsory viewing for all of us.

Meg
12th August 2014, 10:22 PM
For a while I was worried Adam's mum was going to have to have the tattoo on her arm removed. And "Adnyamathanha" is a long word! But eventually the "Narungga" and the "Adnyamathanha" sides of Adam's history came together. And what a story it made.

Ampersand
12th August 2014, 11:41 PM
Great episode. Really exposed the terrible treatment Adam's ancestors suffered at the hands of white people. To think he still has to cop racism to this day on top of that history of exploitation and abuse really is atrocious. I was genuinely amazed how many records survived intact over the centuries.

goswannies
12th August 2014, 11:44 PM
Adam. You came across as an impressively articulate, compassionate, sensitive and inquisitive. Coupled with the drive, commitment, and devotion that you have displayed throughout your career, you are a role-model for so many people from all walks of life. Thank you.

CureTheSane
13th August 2014, 12:03 AM
I clicked it on about 10 minutes in and was instantly bored.
Thought that maybe the Goodes interest factor might hold my attention, but I clicked away after 5 minutes :(
Does that make me a bad supporter?

goswannies
13th August 2014, 12:05 AM
I clicked it on about 10 minutes in and was instantly bored.
Thought that maybe the Goodes interest factor might hold my attention, but I clicked away after 5 minutes :(
Does that make me a bad supporter?

Not really. It had little to do with football or the Swans. Makes you not all that interested in Adam Goodes' ancestry is all.

Legs Akimbo
13th August 2014, 08:19 AM
I clicked it on about 10 minutes in and was instantly bored.
Thought that maybe the Goodes interest factor might hold my attention, but I clicked away after 5 minutes :(
Does that make me a bad supporter?

I watched Lip Service the night before on SBS on demand and nearly fell asleep. I found Adam's story on Who do you think you are infinitely more interesting. Not sure what that says about me!

YvonneH
13th August 2014, 09:51 AM
I was genuinely amazed how many records survived intact over the centuries.

The Bombers could learn from that!!

Sorry for derailing the thread, but could not help myself.

Margo
13th August 2014, 10:26 AM
He inherited the leadership gene

Zlatorog
13th August 2014, 12:16 PM
Great show - a fascinating family history showing the intertwining between his indigenous and Anglo ancestry. No wonder he holds himself with such poise, seeing the stock he comes from.

Just a tad disappointed that no mention of his father's background was shown - I understand that it's a relatively short show and his Mum's side of the family is fascinating, but he certainly looks like his dad. But geez him Mum has done such a great job with him :)

These sorts of visits into someone's indigenous background and history should be compulsory viewing for all of us.

As much as I loved the whole story line, I have to agree with you re his dad. No word about his background. I know it must be a painful subject, but ignoring it all together was a bit disappointing.

erica
13th August 2014, 01:00 PM
As much as I loved the whole story line, I have to agree with you re his dad. No word about his background. I know it must be a painful subject, but ignoring it all together was a bit disappointing.

None of the episodes in this series fully explore both sides of a person's genealogy. The episodes focus on what the editors think make the most interesting viewing. There is always a lot of research left out of the show but the subject receives the benefit of the research.

CureTheSane
13th August 2014, 01:07 PM
I watched Lip Service the night before on SBS on demand and nearly fell asleep. I found Adam's story on Who do you think you are infinitely more interesting. Not sure what that says about me!

yep, ch 32 is probably my most watched channel of recent times.
But the way they presented Lip Service in the ads was completely misleading... :(

Meg
13th August 2014, 01:08 PM
None of the episodes in this series fully explore both sides of a person's genealogy. The episodes focus on what the editors think make the most interesting viewing. There is always a lot of research left out of the show but the subject receives the benefit of the research.

This article is interesting in that respect.

?What you see on the TV show is actually 20 per cent of the stuff they actually find,? Goodes said.

?Once this airs next Tuesday I then get the rest of the 80 per cent that they?ve found, and I get to learn so much more about other bits of my family history and ancestry, and there?s another part of my aboriginal ancestry that they didn?t even go into that shows how I?m related to Michael O?Loughlin.?

http://www.news.com.au/entertainment/tv/adam-goodes-related-to-mining-millionaire-walter-watson-hughes/story-e6frfmyi-1227018451650

Primmy
13th August 2014, 04:51 PM
What Meg said.

One thing that stands out strongly for me in Adam's story is the ancestral need to educate (even GGGGG gave $2m to set up university). That seems to be a driving force in the story which stands firm today with the GO foundation.

It is a shame some found it boring. It is a white ancestral story as well. We need to know what happened. I come from First and Second Fleet stock (assisted passage scheme I call it) but that doesn't make it a lay down that I know enough about what happened in this country from then to now. All information needs to be told and knowledge shared to create greater understanding and empathy between all of us.

I do like Adam's calm. Almost an inner serenity. I find him an interesting man. Not like some of you lot,

Meg
13th August 2014, 05:42 PM
I have found myself thinking a lot about Adam's story today. Parts of aboriginal history that we know in general but which become much more immediate (and to some extent more shocking) when it is personalised through someone we feel we know and think of as one of us.

For example, Lisa Sansbury's tears on seeing photos of the parents she never knew because she was taken from them at 5 years old. Her need for identification with her people symbolised by the tattoo on her arm. Two aboriginal women who were part of Goodes' family tree, one from the Adnyamathanha people and the other from the Narungga people, both bearing children of white fathers outside of marriage. Adam's moving and appropriate comment that it both disappointed and angered him that white men had thought it good enough to bed aboriginal women but not good enough to bring those children up as their own.

Primmy is right, it is a white ancestral story as well.

mcsquirta
13th August 2014, 08:51 PM
Just a tad disappointed that no mention of his father's background was shown...Apparently his dad was a collingwood supporter so nobody wanted to follow up on the black&white sheep of the family

dimelb
13th August 2014, 10:09 PM
Thank goodness for SBS on Demand. We were out of home last night but watched it tonight. A well-constructed story of Adam's indigenous side, moving and illuminating, and obviously has made a significant input into his own story. We wish him all the best as he travels into his future, with the Swans and beyond. He has much to offer all Australians.

stellation
13th August 2014, 10:24 PM
I enjoyed it. One lasting impression that it left me with was that the government should fund similar genealogical studies into family trees for every single member of the stolen generation.