The swimwear industry in Australia is one of our most famous exports. From Bondi to Berlin, the budgie smuggler is one of our most endearing and well-known Australian quirks.
? 1928 - Alexander MacRae launches the now legendary budgie smuggler, in Sydney.
? 1cm - The ideal length for any stray hairs you might have, to be successfully waxed.
? 1907 - The first appearance of our iconic ‘surf belt and reel’ lifesavers on Sydney beaches.
At NAB, we see Australian business. Do you have a quirky business story? We’d love to hear it. http://seebusiness.nab.com.au/
Posted for NAB
Who makes budgie smugglers?
Moderators: PeepeelaPew, Butts
- steve shearer
- BUTTONMEISTER
- Posts: 45749
- Joined: Mon Oct 13, 2008 8:20 pm
Re: Who makes budgie smugglers?
What kind of gormless toad tadpole would give free content to a bank?
I want Nightclub Dwight dead in his grave I want the nice-nice up in blazes
Re: Who makes budgie smugglers?
Makes you wonder doesn't it?steve shearer wrote:What kind of gormless toad tadpole would give free content to a bank?
How much more worthless can a human being get
It's possible to hate the filthy world and still love it with an abstract pitying lovesome cnut wrote:There are only two real problems that we face in life, knowing what we want but being unable to know how to get it and/or not knowing what we want
Re: Who makes budgie smugglers?
"Shills for hiresteve shearer wrote:What kind of gormless toad tadpole would give free content to a bank?
Shills for hire are a variation of shill reviewers. Instead of having the company owner or an employee doing the shilling, some shills hire other people to deceive the public for them. While these hired shills don't own the company they represent, they are affiliated with the company and try to hide this fact. This makes them as dishonest as shill reviewers who own or work for the company they shill."
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- barnacle
- Posts: 1684
- Joined: Mon Nov 24, 2008 8:01 pm
- Location: Devil Gate Drive
Re: Who makes budgie smugglers?
yeah, i have a quirky business story:
"Late last week, amid the parliamentary din surrounding the carbon tax, a little bill slipped through the Senate with minimal fuss.
This was the "covered bond" legislation - yet another friendly leg-up to the banks and one which effectively lumps another $130 billion of risk into the lap of taxpayers."
http://www.smh.com.au/business/more-lar ... z1bHlHKMX8
mr shill, you might want to be careful when you're bending over the bubbler having a drink.
"Late last week, amid the parliamentary din surrounding the carbon tax, a little bill slipped through the Senate with minimal fuss.
This was the "covered bond" legislation - yet another friendly leg-up to the banks and one which effectively lumps another $130 billion of risk into the lap of taxpayers."
http://www.smh.com.au/business/more-lar ... z1bHlHKMX8
mr shill, you might want to be careful when you're bending over the bubbler having a drink.
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