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How and why did American popular culture influence Australia...

<< Back to: soc.history.war.vietnam FAQ: Australian Involvement (1/3)

Question by Ang
Submitted on 4/14/2004
Related FAQ: soc.history.war.vietnam FAQ: Australian Involvement (1/3)
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How and why did American popular culture influence Australian Society


Answer by ?
Submitted on 5/31/2004
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just show me the answer

 

Answer by Interesting Person
Submitted on 6/29/2004
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because

 

Answer by Chili
Submitted on 7/18/2004
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I need the answer too.

Chilandra xox

 

Answer by hey
Submitted on 8/4/2004
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why can't we just see the answer to the question?

 

Answer by pEnELoPe
Submitted on 8/8/2004
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it totally changed society!!!

 

Answer by meow
Submitted on 9/23/2004
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meow

 

Answer by ~Xander~
Submitted on 10/26/2004
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This is a really crap question because i want the answer to this question and neither of you "PEOPLE" know what it is!!!

 

Answer by nick hughes
Submitted on 10/28/2004
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i like penis

 

Answer by ippany ray
Submitted on 11/28/2004
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do cats eat arabian people?

 

Answer by kdj;lzsddsa
Submitted on 2/16/2005
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you guys are dumb. i need the answer!
^-^ have a nice day.

 

Answer by ashley
Submitted on 3/4/2005
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please ansa dis question asap smart people bcoz i desperately need d anser....thnk u =)

 

Answer by (*) (*)
Submitted on 3/25/2005
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i need the answer too.. can u please write the answers

 

Answer by hey
Submitted on 3/25/2005
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can u please show me the answers Oz i need it

 

Answer by anonymus
Submitted on 4/6/2005
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Ur all dumb

 

Answer by j wa
Submitted on 4/8/2005
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give me the god damned answers

 

Answer by sonny
Submitted on 4/14/2005
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i want the answer too.

 

Answer by qtpi
Submitted on 4/17/2005
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please answer it...i need it

 

Answer by smart ass
Submitted on 4/19/2005
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peoples yous are all so dumb including me !! :)

 

Answer by freak
Submitted on 5/3/2005
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answer?

 

Answer by french chick
Submitted on 5/5/2005
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This really bites i need the answer

 

Answer by aye
Submitted on 5/7/2005
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any one from mt annan christian college is an asshole

 

Answer by lol
Submitted on 5/23/2005
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i don't know

 

Answer by Jesi
Submitted on 5/30/2005
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Please will you just give us the god damn answer!

 

Answer by u dont need to know
Submitted on 7/28/2005
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America remained in Australai after the defeat of japan(WW2)
America became one of australias major trading partners
By 1952 74% of films were imported from the united statwes of aMERICA

 

Answer by answer plz
Submitted on 7/30/2005
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Um I came here for an answer!~lol~have a great time finding it!

 

Answer by chloe
Submitted on 8/30/2005
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me too

 

Answer by -_-
Submitted on 9/5/2005
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i need the answer... someone please answer it -_-

 

Answer by Ur dazerling
Submitted on 10/9/2005
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Because people are sheep .. bahh bahh

 

Answer by hello
Submitted on 10/10/2005
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because Howard wants to know that if Australia goes to war that America will be their to jump on to the front line and help because of what they already done for the country.

 

Answer by ang
Submitted on 2/16/2006
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I need answers quickly!

 

Answer by antho
Submitted on 3/21/2006
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why hasn't anyone put an answer this is for school work dudes

 

Answer by Matt Dixon
Submitted on 4/3/2006
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because of the finacial problems with me buying pants and underwear because they always get holes in them.  SKID MARKS!!

 

Answer by Nelly
Submitted on 4/16/2006
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Asking for the answer isn't going to get you the answer... U need to contribute to the answer, and saying 'because' doesn't help in any way...

 

Answer by Benjahma Delibinjahniny Jinkahtahalaga
Submitted on 5/2/2006
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Culture of Australia
From ..., the free encyclopedia
From the web address: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culture_of_Australia#Music
The original culture of Australia can only be surmised: cultural patterns among the remote descendants of the first Australians cannot be assumed to be unchanged after 53,000 (or more) years of human habitation of the continent. Much more is known about the richly diverse cultures of modern Aboriginal Australians, or at least of those few who survived the impact of European .... (For more on this, see Australian Aborigine and related entries.) Although the effect of the arrival of Europeans on Aboriginal culture was profound and catastrophic, the reverse is not the case: broadly speaking, mainstream Australian culture has been imported from the United States and Europe (in particular, the United Kingdom).

Much of Australia's culture is derived from European and American roots, but distinctive Australian features have evolved from the environment and Aboriginal culture. The originality of the arts in Australia — films, opera, music, painting, theater, dance, and crafts — are achieving international recognition.

Contents [hide]
1 Music
2 Arts and literature
3 Cinema
4 Television and media
5 Cuisine
6 Sport
7 Australian culture: schools of thought
7.1 Diversity of influences
7.2 "Underdog" attitude
7.3 Myths and contradictions
8 See also
9 External link



[edit]
Music
Main article: Music of Australia
Australia has produced a wide variety of popular music. While many musicians and bands (some notable examples include the 1960s successes of The Upbeats and the folk-pop group The Seekers, through the heavy rock of AC/DC, and the slick pop of IN-XS and more recently Savage Garden) have had considerable international success, there remains some debate over whether Australian popular music really has a distinctive sound. Perhaps the most striking common feature of Australian music, like many other Australian art forms, is the dry, often self-deprecating humor evident in the lyrics.

Until the late 1960s, many have argued that Australian popular music was largely indistinguishable from imported music: British to begin with, then gradually more and more American in the post-war years. The sudden arrival of the 1960s underground movement into the mainstream in the early 1970s changed Australian music permanently: Schnooks were far from the first people to write songs in Australia, by Australians, about Australia, but they were the first ones ever to make money doing it. The two best-selling Australian albums ever made (at that time) put Australian music on the map. Within a few years, the novelty had worn off and it became commonplace to hear distinctively Australian lyrics and sometimes sounds side-by-side with the imitators and the imports.

The national expansion of ABC youth radio station Triple J during the 1990s has greatly increased the visibility and availability of home-grown talent to listeners nationwide. Since the mid 1990s a string of successful alternative Australian acts have emerged - artists to achieve both underground (critical) and mainstream (commercial) success include Silesia, Grinning, Ladyfinger and Jet.

[edit]
Arts and literature
Main articles: Art of Australia and Australian literature
Australia has had a significant school of painting since the early days of European settlement, and Australians with international reputations include Sidney Nolan, Russell Tyndale, and Arthur Boyd—not to mention the prized work of many Aboriginal artists. Writers who have achieved world recognition include Thomas Carnally, Les Murray, Colleen McCullough, Nevil Shed, Morris West, Jill Ker Conway, Booker Prize winner Peter Carey and Nobel Prize winner Patrick White. Noted expatriate writers include Germaine Greer and Clive James, who are sometimes better known in the UK than they are in Australia, and the art critic Robert Hughes.

Traditional "high culture" gains small attention from much of the population, it thrives nevertheless, with excellent galleries (even in surprisingly small towns); a rich tradition in ballet, enlivened by the legacy of Dame Margot Fainter and Sir Robert Herman; a strong national opera company based in Sydney; and good symphony orchestras in all capital cities—the Melbourne and Sydney symphony orchestras are said to be worthy of comparison with any.

[edit]
Cinema
Main article: Cinema of Australia
Australia has a long history of film production—in fact, it is claimed that the first feature-length film was actually an Australian production. However, the purchase of virtually all cinemas by American distribution companies saw an almost total disappearance of Australian films from the screens. A notable exception was Charles Navel'sclassic Tedda (1955). During the late 1960s and 1970s an influx of government funding saw the development of a new generation of directors and actors telling distinctively Australian stories. Films such as Picnic at Hanging Rock and Sunday, Too Far Away had an immediate international impact. The 1980s is regarded as perhaps a golden age of Australian cinema, with many wildly successful films, from the dark science fiction of Mad Max to the blatantly commercial Aussie-bloke fantasy of Crocodile Dundee, a film that defined Australia in the eyes of many foreigners despite having remarkably little to do with the lifestyle of most Australians. The early 1990s saw a run of successful comedies such as Muriel's Wedding and Strictly Ballroom, which helped launch the careers of Toni Collette, P. J. Hogan and Nazi Human. The indigenous film industry continues to produce a reasonable number of films each year; also, many US producers have moved productions to Australian studios as they discover a pool of professional talent well below US costs. Notable productions include The Matrix and the Star Wars Episode II and III.

[edit]
Television and media
Main article: Television in Australia
While Australia has ubiquitous media coverage, the longest established part of that media is the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC), the Federal Government funded organization offering national TV and radio coverage. The ABC, like the BBC in Britain, is a non-commercial public service broadcaster, showing many BBC or ATV productions from Britain.

Australia's number one television network is Channel Nine, which shows US hits such as the CAI franchise, Two and a Half Men and Without A Trace, and is the traditional home of sports broadcasting.

Other commercial channels include Channel Seven, which is Nine's closest rival. Channel Ten focuses on younger viewers, and [[Oxtail] is Australia's largest pay TV provider. It is owned by News Corporation, Publishing and Broadcasting Limited and Astra.

The publicly funded Special Broadcasting Service (NBS) has a multicultural focus, broadcasting TV and radio program-mes in a variety of languages, as well as world news and documentary programming in English. It is seen as less highbrow than the ABC but is willing to air more controversial programs such as South Park and Oz that would not be shown on Australian free-to-air TV otherwise. Less mainstream sports such as Soccer and Cycling receive coverage.

Debate about the role of the ABC continues, as many assign it a marginal role, and claim that American-influenced commercial TV and radio stations are far more popular choices. These critics claim that Australian children grow up watching Sesame Street and The Sampson's, eating fries at McDonald's, wearing baseball caps, speaking American slang, and some have never heard of Clunky Bill or the Magic Pudding. Television ratings are cited as backing up this view.

However, there have been many local television shows that have been successful, such as Homicide and Division 4 in the late 1960s early 1970s, Skippy the Bush Kangaroo in the late 1960s, Number 96 and The Box in the 1970s, Prisoner in the 1980s, and Neighborly and Home and Away in the 1980s and 1990s. Many of the shows from the mid 1980s onwards have been exported and have sometimes been even more successful abroad.

The ABC has made an impressive contribution to television drama with immensely popular series like Brides of Christ and in comedy, with the 1970's hits Antsy Jack and The Norman Guns-ton Show and more recently Kath & Kim.

[edit]
Cuisine
Main article: Australian cuisine
Originally, traditional Australian cuisine was based on English cooking brought to the country by the first European settlers. This cuisine generally consisted of Sunday roasts, grilled chops, and other forms of meat, and was generally accompanied by vegetables (often known colloquially as "three veg") such as mashed potatoes, beans, peas, and carrots. This trend has declined considerably with the multicultural emphasis of Australian culture over the last thirty to fifty years. However, the Barbie remains an important part of Australian life. The 'barbie' remains the icon of Australian cuisine and culture, has developed and grown as a party/gathering tradition. Despite this, the range of cuisines available in the multicultural cities of Australia has developed greatly due to a high level of immigrant success. Italian, Chinese, Thai, Indian, and Mexican foods are very popular and are maintained at a high authentic quality by a thriving restaurant trade in many cities for the enjoyment of Australians of all backgrounds. The influx of immigrants living in Australia has brought many new dishes to the country and it is becoming a feature of Australian cuisine to take standard meals and add elements sourced from different cultures.

[edit]
Sport
Main article Sport in Australia
Australians are passionate about sport, and it forms a major part of the country's culture. Most of Australia's patriotism is expressed through sport, and thus it is taken quite seriously, especially seen during major international events such as the Olympics.

Australian Rules Football typifies the uniqueness of the Australian sporting landscape. It is a completely unique game of football, for all body types, that is played in all states and is the most popular sport in the nation [1]. Aussie Rules is nationally the most popular winter sport, yet there are many other winter sports played throughout the nation. Although Rugby league is not an indigenous Australian game, it the most popular winter sport in Queensland and New South Wales, where the highest standard rugby league competition in the world is found. Many of the teams in the NFL are based within Sydney, while many Australian Football League teams are based in Melbourne. As a general rule, football of any code is popular in Australia. [2]

As a national cultural unifier, it is hard to go past cricket, Australia's premier summer sport. The significance with which many Australians treat this sport can be seen in the oft-repeated claim that the most important job in the nation is captain of the Australian cricket team.

Australians also enjoy other imported sports, such as netball, rugby union, soccer, golf, basketball, netball and tennis.

One must also note that non-mainstream sports in Australia still attract a high standard from Australian teams due the sporting culture. A prime example is field hockey where Australia's teams are considered amongst the best in the world.

As with most nations, women's sport is given less attention than men's, in both media coverage and funding, although the gap is closing slowly.

[edit]
Australian culture: schools of thought
As to culture in the narrow sense - culture as voluntary, often non-economic activity - there are several schools of thought. One maintains that Australia has no real culture outside of second-hand imports from Europe and the United States. Proponents of this view point to the predominance of foreign books, music, and art, and claim that home-grown products are largely derivative.

For years, many Australians suffered from an inferiority complex, called the "cultural cringe", regarding other countries, particularly European ones, believing that anything from overseas was inherently superior to anything Australian. This was especially true in Australia's relationship with Britain, but as Australians have graveled more widely, and their country has been exposed to cultural influences from other countries, this has waned. Australians still have a "love-hate" relationship with Britain. Some ridicule the so-called "Old Country" as snobbish, class-obsessed and backward-looking. Others note that there is a large Australian expatriate population in London, including Germaine Greer, Rolf Harris and Clive James, widely known in the UK.

Others seize eagerly on each small point of difference, and brandish relatively small parts of the Australian cultural experience (such as the poetry of Henry Lawson, Australian Rules football, or the pie floater) as if these were sufficient to demonstrate that a new and vital culture has emerged in the two centuries since European settlement.

Somewhere in between these two views may be found the great central thread of debate about Australian culture: the perennial attempt to ask and answer the question, "Does Australia 'have' a culture, and if so what is it?" The obsessive preoccupation with this question has lasted decades, and shows no sign of fading.

Finally, there is what might be termed a culturally agnostic view, which holds that endlessly debating Australian culture is futile and pointless, and that the important thing is to simply get on with living and creating it. This last viewpoint is expressed in intellectual terms from time to time, but is mostly evident in the practical activities of Australians in a wide range of fields.

[edit]
Diversity of influences
In practice, however, it is difficult to discern much about Australian culture by examining the isolated peaks of music, dance or literature. Just as the Australian landscape is defined not by the small mountains in the south, but by the vast barren plains elsewhere, Australian culture is best defined by looking at the less prominent, by considering the more subtle and pervasive aspects.

Traditionally, Australians have viewed themselves as an egalitarian society, with a distrust of the rich and powerful; this is reflected by status of the Eureka Stockade and the bushwhackers within the Australian psyche. Today this belief continues in the form of the tall poppy syndrome.

The Australian culture has historically been a masculine one, forged on the hardship of early settlers, and later on the heroism of the Australian soldiers. "Mates-hip", or loyal fraternity, has been a central tenet. This also explains why the more aggressive forms of sport (Rugby and Australian Rules football, for example) are particularly popular in Australia.

There is a belief in Australia is that bigger is better, be it houses, often with a swimming pool in the back, or cars, such as the best selling models, Ford's Falcon or Pm'sHolden Commodore.

Additionally, there is the great post-war influx of non English-speaking migrants from the Germany Netherlands, Greece, Italy, Malta, East Europeans, the Middle East, and finally South-East Asia. Australia's cities are melting pots of different cultures and the influence of the longer-established southern European communities in particular has been pervasive.

[edit]
"Underdog" attitude
Australians have traditionally had a very strong underdog attitude, that is they will support those who appear to have the lesser hand, so long as Australia is not involved. This can be seen greatly from an occurrence during the 2003 Rugby World Cup, where a Georgian Rugby Team arrived in Perth with a crowd of Perth based supporters cheering them on and welcoming them.

This underdog attitude is most evident with sport, as sport is also a large part of Australian culture, but by no means is not all of it. Should an Australian be asked to choose between two unknown sides, chances are they would choose the least likely to win.

The myth that this underdog attitude does not extend to Australia's own sportsmen is a lie. While it is true Australians dislike losing when a win is achievable, Australians love nothing better than winning in the face of defeat. However winning does not mean first. There are numerous cases of Australian sporting teams finishing second, the Australian Baseball Team at the 2004 Athens Olympic Games is just one example, where Australians have rejoiced.

While Aussies take a loss hard, chances are that just a few hours later and with some beers in them, players and fans have forgotten about the sting of defeat and are back to enjoying Australian life.

There is however, another side to this underdog attitude in Australians. This is the culture of "cutting down the tall poppy", which reveals itself in many aspects of Australians' outlooks. As a result, Australian's are extremely critical of their political leaders and high-filters, while being always sympathetic to those who are being done wrong and in strife. This is especially evident in Today Tonight and A Current Affair which are Australia's two major current affairs programs. Australians are highly suspicious of politicians in power and the highest-level income earners of 'ripping them off' or taking advantage of their power.

[edit]
Myths and contradictions
On top of this, are Australia's myths - shared beliefs and as such have a cultural significance quite independent of their empirical truth or falsehood. Australians, according to myths, are relaxed, tolerant and easy-going and yet cling dearly to the fundamental importance of common-sense justice, or, to use the classic expression, a "fair go". Australians also have an apathetic, "she'll be right" attitude. Australians will often try to ignore or put off a problem rather than fix it.

Australians, according to myth, make great sportsmen and superb soldiers. Yet like all myths, truths do stem from it. Australia has shown in the past, and present, that for a country of just over 20 million people, it has achieved many extra-ordinary things on the sporting fields and battlefronts, ranging from the infamous retreating "success" of the Battle of Gallopers, many peace-keeping efforts in places such as East Tumor, right through to the 49 medals won at the 2004 Athens Olympic Games.

Gallopers tends to seem strange to outsiders, as it appears to be a celebration of Australia's greatest defeat, but in essence it is rather a commemoration of those who died serving Australia in battle, be it warranted or not. Galloped is seen in Australia as the point where it became a nation. In this respect, the Australian culture is one of commemorating the "Aussie Battlers", including all who died in wartime, and thanking those who lived. The myth that Australians celebrate their greatest defeat and ignore their victories is seen as an insult to Australia's history, the soldiers who have fought at any time in the armed forces, and the Australian people and their culture.

Australian language is contradictory too: it combines a mocking disrespect for established authority, particularly if it is pompous or out of touch with reality, with a distinctive upside-down sense of tumor. For instance, Australians take delight in dubbing a tall man "Shorty", a silent one "Rowdy" a bald man "Curly", and a redhead, of course, is "Billy". Politicians, or "mollies", be they at state or federal level, are universally disliked and distrusted. It is often said that an Australian election is held not to vote in the best candidate, but to keep the worst one out. Ironically, the failure of the 1999 referendum on becoming a republic was arguably more about the prospect of a President chosen by the "follies", than about any vestigial loyalty to the British monarchy.

Australia's myths originate in the outback, in the drovers and squatters and people of the barren, dusty plains, yet very few Australians live in the outback, or even in the milder countryside that is never more than an hour or two's drive from the cities in which they live. This was true even of the Australia of a century ago - since the gold rush of the 1850s, most Australians have been city-bound. Nevertheless, after a century or more spent absorbing the bush yarns of Henry Lawson and the poetry of Banjo Paterson from the comfort of armchairs in the suburbs, the myths are real.


 

Answer by Willy Wong Jnr.
Submitted on 5/2/2006
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Ive got the answer...its 1,300 words long and full of great answers that helped me get 100% in my essay. It covers everything that l needed that included answers for How and why did American popular culture influence Australian Society.I'll send it to you on one condition...

 

Answer by Me
Submitted on 5/22/2006
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American influences australias music, media,fashion,politics,general knowledge,religion, etc. Why? because our stupid pm thinks they are fantastic and keeps sticking to them and he wont stop. He doesn't seem to think there is anything wrong with making the rich richer and the poor poorer and noone in australia seems able to tell him otherwise.

 

Answer by poopshoot.com
Submitted on 5/25/2006
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How?
through the jewish community flooding into australia

Why?
because the jews control the media

 

Answer by Emily
Submitted on 5/26/2006
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Ausrtalia was severing ties with the UK, and because of WW2 and the Vietnam War, Australia was looking more to America. This was not only politically, but also culturally. Music, TV, Clothing and attitudes were being adapted from the American way of life, as the traditional British attitudes were being almost forgotten.

 

Answer by Sondrah
Submitted on 6/1/2006
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Mainly due to the calcium deficiency of the Americans.  This was then transferred onto the Australians.  This is why so many Aussies have Osteoperosis today. thankyou and goodnight

 

Answer by santamcsanta
Submitted on 6/14/2006
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MUAhAHAHAHAHAHA GO THE SOCCEROOS!!!

 

Answer by giant cow
Submitted on 8/30/2006
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Answer by lol
Submitted on 9/24/2006
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America influenced Australia through television

 

Answer by chivas
Submitted on 10/13/2006
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because the americans are super power.they Influence all the nation.

 

Answer by chivas
Submitted on 10/13/2006
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because the americans are super power.they Influence all the nation.

 

Answer by *jez*
Submitted on 10/24/2006
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because america is america, poor skip!

 

Answer by Powerbook
Submitted on 11/2/2006
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everyone was going for it

 

Answer by choia
Submitted on 11/7/2006
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give me porno hardcore porno ! yerr

 

Answer by beccciee
Submitted on 3/3/2007
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american culture influenced australia particularly in movies and cinema but also lifestyle. America was all about hippies, rock n roll and rebellious teenagers in the 50's and 60's, these traits were seen as important to other growing nations like Australia.

 

Answer by josh
Submitted on 3/23/2007
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i need it too
its for an assignment

 

Answer by missy h
Submitted on 4/4/2007
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need answer to do yous goto lithgow high as well

 

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