The Gold Coast Bulletin

A heartfelt act sparks smiles and controvers­y

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IT’S been a braintease­r for eons: “If a tree falls in a forest and no one is around to hear it, does it make a sound?”

To give that modern local recent context: If fireworks burst above Surfers Paradise but no one is told about them, do they have a point?

According to Surfers Paradise Alliance CEO Mike Winlaw, the man behind them on Monday night, yes. Lots of points. Never mind the $4500 cost.

It was a thank you to health care workers. It was a signal that some Surfers traders are still trading. It was a morale boost for those same bleeding operators. It was to mark the minor easing of restrictio­ns last weekend. It was to put a smile on the faces of a cooped up population who have had few reasons to do so these past six weeks.

Mayor Tom Tate’s view? “Bit odd”.

Surfers Paradise MP JohnPaul Langbroek was blunter: “A big waste of money”. One veteran trader concurred.

They didn’t mind the simultaneo­us lighting up of the Q1 bright green. But fireworks? It wasn’t New

Year’s Eve, It wasn’t SeaFire.

Mr Winlaw couldn’t tell anyone or it would have risked inspiring a mass gathering and incurring social distancing fines.

I knew about it because the promotiona­l team told me off the record days prior for Monday’s paper to promote it – except we couldn’t mention the fireworks, just that Q1 would turn green.

Bit odd.

To cut some slack to Mr Winlaw – who is behind some very successful activation­s – it’s been a weird time. A lot of weird stuff has happened and is going to continue to happen.

You can play golf on the Gold Coast. But not in Victoria. When authoritie­s were telling everyone to stay at home, some idiot Minister in NSW was off holidaying in his bach. The Ruby Princess landing. Oops. For a while, soaking up rays on the beach was being heavily cracked down on. Excuse me?

And then US President Donald Trump raised the weirdness bar pretty high by musing on whether injecting disinfecta­nt or “blasting” the body with UV light might have some potential as cures.

But for weirdness, nothing has quite eclipsed standing on a balcony on Monday night watching spectacula­r fireworks shells explode and light up the night sky like it was New Year’s Eve again.

Don’t get me wrong. The show was awesome. I applaud the pyrotechni­cs crew. Who doesn’t like fireworks.

However, it’s a bit like neopolitan ice cream – I love the stuff but there is a time and a place. I don’t eat it for breakfast … y’know, that often.

Standing next to my house mate, feeling weirdly unified with those around us appreciati­ng the display, and watching other residents caught off guard sprinting to the beach for a view, I said ‘It’s cool eh … but it’s a bit bloody odd, too, isn’t it?”

I texted Mr Winlaw that it had had been cheered and whistled aplenty from tower folk. It’s true. It had. I’d joined them. But I was also thinking there is going to be a backlash about this and it’s entirely understand­able.

And thus, it came to pass. I couldn’t help but nod when my fellow All that Glitters columnist and Bulletin gossip contributo­r Andrew ‘Squirrel’ Meadowcrof­t posted soon after to Facebook that it was a nice thought but surely money could have been better spent on hampers for healthcare workers and their carparking fees.

Plenty felt it was great. We all needed a bit of cheer. One remarked his wife was a nurse and it was the first time she’d smiled in weeks.

Mike Winlaw’s heart is in the right place and he would have only had good intentions – and it cannot be argued that it did not bring smiles to people’s faces, many who needed it.

He has overseen and helped grow some seriously impressive and effective events.

This is a man who took an approach about how to bring the Magic Millions barrier draw from out of the sales yard at Bundall to the midst of Surfers Paradise and helped turn it into the world-famous horse race down the beachfront, which we have today. The successful activation­s and events under his Surfers Paradise Alliance banner are many – impressive free concert sessions Surfers Paradise LIVE, the VIVA Surfers Paradise Elvis Presley impersonat­ion and nostalgia fortnight, SeaFire – spectacula­r by any measure – and the deal with Village Roadshow to bring characters like Batman into the precinct regularly to give kids a thrill. The list goes on.

It’s people like him who are going to help get this city back on its feet. We’ll need them to be bold, innovative, probably suggest things that are “a bit odd” and not fear having said ideas shot all to hell.

Because out of that will come recovery and the necessary pivots and a uniquely Gold Coast way forward.

But maybe let’s leave the fireworks until we really do have something to cheer about.

Ryan Keen is News Director of the Gold Coast Bulletin. Email ryan.keen@news.com.au

 ??  ?? Q1 turns green and fireworks are set off to honour our healthcare workers and celebrate the easing of restrictio­ns in Surfers Paradise; and (insets) the Magic Millions barrier draw, also a production by Mike Winlaw.
Q1 turns green and fireworks are set off to honour our healthcare workers and celebrate the easing of restrictio­ns in Surfers Paradise; and (insets) the Magic Millions barrier draw, also a production by Mike Winlaw.
 ??  ?? Pictures: GLENN HAMPSON; LUKE MARSDEN
Pictures: GLENN HAMPSON; LUKE MARSDEN
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