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Sonia and Todd rumba to radio

The dancing duo prove they have faces for radio after all!

One-time childhood sweethearts Sonia Kruger and Todd McKenney have teamed up to star on Sydney’s Mix 106.5 Mornings and are adamant, despite the early starts, they’ll bring a touch of glamour (and humour) to their listeners’ day.

How is the radio gig going to affect your social lives?

S: Mine won’t be affected because I’m a bit of a Nanna anyway. Todd’s social life, maybe more so…

T: It will be tricky but if you look at it, when we finish on Friday morning, we’ve got until Monday morning off! Although Sunday will probably feel really short, especially if we don’t have our stuff prepared for the next week! And if we haven’t… we’ll be sitting at Otto having lunch! Hoping someone does something outrageous at the restaurant so we can talk about it the next day!

Will there be a mirror ball in the studio?

S: They have ‘blinged’ my microphone. They have covered my microphone in Swarovski crystals. John Laws would be seething if he saw it. Gold Schmold!

T: I had to hang my own lighting up… and toss a sequin shirt over the back of my chair.

S: Todd’s a bit upset because his car park was initially outside the building, next to the wheelie bins. My car park is right next to the lift.

T: It took me four days to crawl in! I’ve now pinched Amanda Keller’s parking spot and I’m inside the building. Sonia also has a desk she can fit her knees underneath… it’s all the little things… there’s some serious girl power going on.

S: But on Todd’s desk… he’s got a bigger lamp… and a bigger ego.

T: Sonia called me an ‘ego covered in skin’.

S: I got that from Jeremy Clarkson’s book.

How many coffees do you think it’s going to take to get you going?

T: Mum bought me a De Longhi coffee machine for Christmas so all I have to do is set it and I wake up to coffee! I’ve bought a special coffee cup too to take in the car. At 5.30am, I’ll be hitting the ground running! Sonia will ‘wake up’ at 7am and think ‘What am I doing?’

S: Looks like I’ll be rattling around the tea room with the Nescafe Gold…

What advantages does radio have over television?

S: We’ve got three hours of live radio and live interaction with the audience. It’s far more immediate because you can interact with the listeners.

T: We’ll be able to ‘feel’ the energy because the phones ring. Whereas in television, for us, we have a bank of mechanics between us and the audience. Even with a live audience, we have a wall of cameras in front of us so you don’t get to ‘feel’ the audience or their reaction.

S: We want our listeners to be the stars of our show. We want them to tell us what they think. We want them to critique us.

Do you think your ‘real’ personalities will have even more of a chance to shine?

T: Yes. Definitely it was one of the reasons I wanted to do it. So I’m not just the acid-tongued person on television. We are three-dimensional people with feelings.

S: I-am-not-an-animal… I-am-a-human-being…

T: I’m also single so I’m hoping to get a few dates out of it…

What audience/demographic will you be aiming to appeal to?

T: We’re aiming to make our show unique. What we want to really do is make a show we’d want to listen to. From Kyle and Jackie O there is really a big gap. There’s nowhere for people our age group to go. I don’t want the show to just be bitchy. I want the show to explore the other side of our personalities as well so there is a bit of depth there. It’s not just young ‘ra ra ra ra ra’, it’ll be useful information with wit.

S: Music and lifestyle is what we’re all about. The demographic is predominantly women 30-49. It’s 60/40 women to men. We don’t want to do stuff that turns the guys off either. We feel like we know that market really well because that is ‘us’. We’re smack bang in the middle of it.

How old are you both?

Sonia: I’m 42.

Todd: I’ve gone backwards to 41. I had such a great time at 41 I decided to go there again.

Sonia: You’re two months older than me, aren’t you? We’re both born in ’65.

Have you been busy preparing over the holiday season?

T: Yes. I’ve carried my dictaphone around with me everywhere.

S: You’ve actually abused your dictaphone…

T: Yes. I used my dictaphone all through Christmas. I got it from Santa. Every time I thought of an idea I’d click it on!

S: Todd hasn’t transcribed any of those ideas yet though… I’m not sure how pressing ‘play’ on the Dictaphone is going to make for great radio…

T: I think it will be unique. Sonia has stories that only have a beginning… and so I’m going to have to do a bit more work because I like a middle and an end to a story. Sonia can start them and I’ll finish them.

Do you make notes when something funny or quirky happens to you?

S: I have been writing notes down and then testing segment and story ideas out on Todd.

T: We’ve got so much material. One of the things that has come out of this is…

S: I’m the teacher’s pet. They really like me. Todd… not so much.

T: They do like her a lot.

S: I am carrying the show… but I knew that was going to happen…

Read more of this interview in Woman’s Day (on-sale January 21, 2008) — Sonia and Todd share their thoughts on Daryl Somers leaving Dancing With The Stars, and the possibility of Hugh Jackman quick-stepping into Daryl’s hosting shoes.

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The Kernaghans’ secret family anguish

They’re a talented bunch, those Kernaghans. And 2008 is shaping up to be a big year, with new albums, Lee’s nomination for a whopping six Golden Guitars at the Country Music Awards, and his nomination for 2008 Australian of the Year.

While Lee, 43, and Tania, 39, are Australian country music icons, another Kernaghan’s star is on the rise. Younger sibling Fiona, 34, a respected songwriter, has returned from the US with a rock-inspired album, Shadow Wine and Truth Lilies, brimming with autobiographical songs.

Woman’s Day sat down with the Kernaghans and learnt why Fiona almost burnt down her New York home, and why being a Kernaghan is so damned cool.

Lee, the Kernaghans are a country music family. What are your feelings about your little sister Fiona’s rock’n’roll music?

Lee: I think we’re all pretty much in awe of her talent. She basically locked herself in her bedroom as a teenager and all she did was play guitar. Her own creative spirit started to emerge and she started writing songs that blew us away.

Tania are you blown away by your sister’s songwriting ability?

Tania: I would look at the lyrics that Fiona was writing at 17, 18 and I’d ask her how do you know how to write this stuff? It was beyond her years and so intense. She said it just came through her. She’s such an observer, she takes in all around her. She’s amazing, and I couldn’t have had the career I’ve had without the songs that Fiona has written for me. Her new album is very autobiographical and really targets women. It speaks to women’s hearts. That song You Can Call Me Baby… ‘All I ever wanted was a love to take my breath away’… it’s great stuff. A lot of women will say, “That’s about me.” It’s things that you feel and Fiona has put it out there for everybody.

Fiona you’re the youngest. Were your siblings encouraging to you as a muso and writer?

Fiona: Yes. We’d rehearse and play together even as little kids in a family band. I learnt an awful lot from Lee when he got his record deal and went to another level. I am nine years younger and took a lot of creative cues from him.

It must have been hard being placed in the ‘country music’ box against your will?

Fiona: I don’t take too well to any creative confines. It was good to go the US where I could be taken for my own person. They weren’t aware of what the Kernaghans had done previously. There was a lot more freedom.

Tell us about the pressures that go with being a Kernaghan?

Fiona: I don’t really look upon it as pressure. I’ve been really fortunate to have the opportunity to write with and for them as well. It’s been more of a blessing than a curse. But what I do musically is different from what they do.

You suffered from depression while in the US. Would you say your music was a benefit to your healing?

Fiona: Yes, absolutely. Writing and singing my own material has been incredibly healing. Being able to express what I was holding in my own heart was really empowering.

Was there a turning point?

Fiona: I think as a songwriter you have a self-awareness and you do tend to analyse your own thoughts. I was painfully aware of what was going on and realised I had to start writing more personal songs that were more to do with my own real life. Those songs are on the album.

It takes a lot of bravery to put yourself out there like that.

Lee: It’s very exposing. It’s OK for me because I’m singing about my mates out in the bush knocking back a few and raising hell. Fiona really digs deep at an emotional level.

Fiona: The record is a reflection of a very different lifestyle. The last 10 years. Life changed dramatically when I moved to Nashville, New York and LA.

And in going to America you found the love of your life, Dan Kresco, your record producer and husband.

Fiona: Had I not gone I would never have met Dan. I can’t imagine life without him. Meeting Dan was the greatest thing that happened to me.

Were you in the midst of depression when you met?

Fiona: I was just hitting my burn-out. It was fortunate for me to have this relationship with Dan. He became a real support. Which was great for me. It was unlucky for Dan I was pretty burnt out. We went through the toughest times earlier in the relationship, but it’s been on an upward trend thank heavens.

Lee and Tania, how have you survived the pressures of the music industry?

Lee: Just whenever I see my kids, whether it’s wrestling on the floor with them — that always brings you down to earth. You realise that’s the most important thing in life. You put your life into the music because that is our life, but at the same time you have to be careful it doesn’t consume you. One great thing dad said to me when I was starting out was, “Son, don’t get a swelled head and don’t believe your own publicity.” You’re only as good as your last show. Getting out in front of a live audience is a great leveller.

Tania: We saw all the wonderful things Dad did when he used to perform. We learnt early that the music industry is so up and down. When you’re high, you’re so high and then you can come crashing down. Because of Mum and Dad’s wisdom, they taught us to enjoy the highs and don’t worry about the lows and just keep going.

What is next for you, Lee?

Lee: I’m spending a lot of time song writing at the moment for a new album and tour next year. I’ve spent the last 18 months out on the road and also doing a series of big outdoor shows to raise the spirits of the farming communities. I’m committed to the cause and will do this for the rest of my life. I’m spending much of my time on the road. My boys Jett and Rock are 4 and 6, I love spending as much time as possible with them, too. They love the bush. They’re both really into music. They love it. I think they’ll be musos, too…

Read more of this interview in Woman’s Day (on-sale January 21, 2008)

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The plot to destroy Mary

Princess Mary is feeling more isolated than ever since becoming convinced that a senior member of the Danish royal household is trying to undermine her by leaking a string of embarrassing stories about her and her husband.

As Mary and Frederik take the unprecedented step of publicly defending their reputations, controversial author Trine Villemann exclusively tells Woman’s Day that Frederik and his brother Prince Joachim now rarely speak, and further reveals the bitter gulf that exists between Fred and his parents.

Suspicion that there is a palace plot against Mary first ignited several months ago, after intimate details of the Aussie royal’s relationship with her husband and in-laws appeared in Trine’s controversial book Copenhagen 1015K.

“Ever since the book came out there has been a steady stream of embarrassing stories about her in the Danish press that could only come from inside the palace,” reports a source…

Read the full story in Woman’s Day (on-sale January 21, 2008)

More about Princess Mary

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One-piece winners

Floral Large, bold prints can camouflage your shape, and a flattering v-neck or plunging neckline draws attention to your neck, not your thighs.

Animal A striking pattern up top disguises a small bust, while a black or solid colour at the bottom will make your bottom and tummy appear smaller. A band or stripe at the waist gives definition.

Nautical Sleek, plain styles in a single colour are the most slimming, while bold monochrome horizontal patterns can help shape a boyish figure.

Stripes Stripes can change your body shape! Vertical stripes elongate the body, making you appear taller and thinner; horizontal stripes add curves. A high cut slims the hips and thighs, but if you have narrow hips, go for boy-leg bottoms.

Get the latest issue of Woman’s Day for your weekly dose of fashion inspiration.

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Nicole Kidman – pregnant at last!

The stunning Aussie beauty and award-winning actress has announced to the world that she’s expecting a baby with her husband, rocker keith Urban.

It’s certainly no secret that Nicole Kidman has desperately wanted a biological child of her own for many years and especially since her wedding in June 2006. After much media speculation and pictures of possible ‘baby bumps’, the happy couple have finally announced that they are expecting their first child in July this year, just after Nicole’s 41st birthday.

The Weekly’s Editor-in-Chief Deborah Thomas spoke to Nicole at length in an interview for the January issue of the magazine about the joys of motherhood and having children later in life. Read Deborah’s blog about the interview here!

Nicole has had her share of ups and downs in her love life over the years with her marriage to Tom Cruise coming to an end after 10 years together (incidentally one of the longest lasting marriages in Hollywood!). But, like the true Aussie battler she is, her career has sky-rocketed and since the days of BMX Bandits, Nicole has forged her way into Hollywood as one of the world’s most talented and sought-after actresses of her time.

The Weekly wishes Nicole and Keith all the best with the pregnancy and the baby.

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I stole the family heirloom because I deserved it

When my sister and I were young, we loved going to our Nan’s place for the holidays. Nan was from England, and her house was a treasure trove of antiques that she had bought from her home country. But there was one item that stood out for me: an ancient mahogany tea chest. I could spend hours studying the swirling patterns engraved in the dark wood, making up stories about the figures and animals represented in the panels, or pretending I was a pirate, and that it was full of treasure.

My sister, Felicity, two years older, thought my fascination with the tea chest was pathetic. She spent her holidays trawling through Nan’s jewellery box, picking out, she would declare, the best jewellery she would have when Nan died. It horrified me to think of Nan that way, and I would never have dreamed to ask for the chest. But Felicity was endlessly pestering her about an heirloom engagement ring she had found. Poor Nan had wanted to give that ring to another daughter of hers — not our mother — who had daughters of her own, which meant Felicity would never have any claim on that ring at all. But fifteen-year-old Felicity, stubborn and persistent, drove her into submission with requests, outright rudeness, and full-scale tantrums. Nan was the kindest woman in the world, and she actually thought she was breaking Felicity’s heart by saying ‘no’. So she said ‘yes’.

Felicity rarely went and visited our grandmother after this. It was as though, after spending every summer of our lives entertaining us, Nan had no more value beyond the diamond ring. But it didn’t end there. As we moved into our twenties, Felicity became impatient that she didn’t have the ring yet.

“When’s the old battleaxe going to die?” she would moan, always out of earshot of anyone but me.

“How can you say that?” I would respond furiously, to which Felicity would always begin taunting me that I was going to get nothing, and I was jealous. I couldn’t believe my sister had grown into such a greedy woman, who cared for nothing but possessions. I hoped my Nan was lying about giving her the precious piece of jewellery.

When I was in my late twenties, my beloved Nan passed away. I was inconsolable for the loss, and didn’t want any of her things, but at the reading of the will found out that, after all these years Nan had remembered my childhood love of the tea chest, and left it to me.

“Ha!” Felicity smirked. “All you get is a chest full of mouldy old sheets. Nan must have loved you!”

But there was a snag in Felicity’s own long-held plan. The ring had gone missing. Felicity had raced to the house before anyone else could “get their mitts on it”, but it was already gone. Fuelled by Felicity’s rage, the whole family spent hours turning precious Nan’s house upside down, but the ring could not be found. Felicity got nothing.

I took Nan’s tea chest home, and found that Felicity was right — it was full of old and mouldy blankets and sheets. Most of them, I knew, would have to be thrown out, but that didn’t bother me; my memories belonged with the chest itself.

A few weeks after my father and partner had heaved it into my living-room, I decided I was up for the challenge of cleaning out the chest. I made two piles of linen: those good enough to keep, and those that needed to be discarded. There were only a small number of items not affected by years of moths and being kept in a musty, airless box. As I took this pile into the laundry to be washed, something fell onto the tiles with clink. I saw, with great astonishment, that it was my Nan’s lost ring!

I sat with the ring for hours, wondering what I should do with it. It had been wrapped in a lace tablecloth that was right at the bottom of the box, so it had obviously been there for a long time. Perhaps, I thought, ever since we were teenagers, and Felicity had begun pestering her about getting the ring? I wanted to believe that Nan had intended for me to have the ring too — why else would it be in the chest she left me — but I also knew that Felicity was the last person on earth who deserved it. I was going to keep it!

Felicity spent years moaning about the loss of her ring, and viewed the whole family with bitter suspicion — except, ironically, for me, who she knew had never had any interest in the ring. When my boyfriend Dan proposed a few months after Nan’s death, we tidied the ring up a bit, and had the diamonds reset in a new band — the original was ancient, scratched and bent. I suppose in this way, the ring ceased to be the one that Felicity had pined over for most of her life, and lost, but I still got great pleasure every time I flashed my left hand and she had no idea I was wearing the ring that was supposed to be hers!

Image: Getty / Picture posed by model

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Johnny Depp’s big thank you

Johnny Depp has donated £1million (AU$2.2million) to the London hospital that saved his daughter’s life last year.

Eight-year-old Lily-Rose was treated over nine days at the Great Ormond Street Hospital and nearly lost her life after her kidneys failed from an E.coli infection.

“It was the most frightening thing we have ever been through. It was hell for all of us,” Johnny said soon after his daughter’s recovery. “But the magic is that she pulled through beautifully. She was amazing — a strong, strong kid.

“Great Ormond Street was terrific — such a great hospital.”

Johnny arrived unexpectedly and in secret to make the donation to staff at the hospital this week. But this isn’t the first time he’s expressed his thanks. Last week he invited five doctors and nurses from the hospital to the premiere of his film Sweeney Todd and last November he spent four hours at the hospital reading stories to sick children, dressed as Captain Jack Sparrow.

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Flying with dogs

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Bathing cats without water

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I had gastric-banding to have a baby

Taryn Johnson cradles her baby boy in her arms, looking just like any other proud mum. However, the road to motherhood has been a long and painful one for the first-time mum, who was told she might never become pregnant — because she was too fat.

After drastic surgery to curb her ballooning appetite, Taryn became a mum this year, and she says all the pain and heartache has been more than worth it.

“I’d definitely encourage other overweight women who are trying to fall pregnant to explore the idea of surgery,” says Taryn. “Talk to other women who have had it, then just go for it. It’s so worth it.”

Taryn, 29, and her partner Dave McGarvie, began trying for a baby four years ago, but after two miscarriages and month after month of unexplained infertility, her doctor sat her down for a brutally frank discussion.

“The doctors ran through lots of possibilities for my problem, but the main one was my excess weight. It was heartbreaking and I blamed myself for the miscarriages. I felt so guilty that my weight was stopping me having a baby…”

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