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Ryan Gosling stops traffic but the real fall guy goes to prison - Sydney Morning Herald

In December last year, a young woman named Violet Maree Coco was sentenced to 15 months’ jail and fined $2500 for temporarily obstructing one lane of the Sydney Harbour Bridge as part of a climate protest.

On Sunday morning, the entire Bridge and its surrounds, including the Cahill Expressway and the water beneath it, was blocked off for several hours.

Try the tunnel.

Try the tunnel. Credit:Steven Siewert

The difference? Ryan Gosling, a US movie star, was filming an action movie called The Fall Guy.

Gosling was soon trending on Twitter, with most users pointing out what they considered an irony worthy of, I dunno, a film?

Australian taxpayers paid for that irony, and the inconvenience. The federal government reportedly gave the production company $30 million from a “location incentive” scheme, while the NSW government gave them $14.5m from the “Made in NSW” fund. In fairness, the producers would have paid a location fee to the City of Sydney, but that was not disclosed and would have been nowhere near those sums.

But bribing the film company with our money was entirely unnecessary; due to the plummeting Australian dollar, we are now the world’s film location of choice. When the Australian dollar hit US62c last October (right when I was in New York, paying $A8 for a coffee), we became very attractive. It’s this, combined with our governments’ generosity and compliance, which have turned Hollywood’s cameras in our direction.

Actor Ryan Gosling filming The Fall Guy on the Sydney Harbour Bridge.

Actor Ryan Gosling filming The Fall Guy on the Sydney Harbour Bridge.Credit:Nine News

Also ironically, if I’d wanted to stand in the street this morning, holding up a sign to protest the alienation of public space, I could have been fined $22,000 and sentenced to two years in jail. When the NSW government passed the Roads and Crimes Legislation Amendment Bill last year, it passed almost without comment, despite the fact it criminalised a fundamental Australian right – to stage a public protest.

The new law takes us straight back to 1970s-era Queensland where, in the wake of public protests about the Springboks South African rugby team, Joh Bjelke-Petersen passed Draconian anti-protest laws.

The Fall Guy movie is a remake of a 1980s television series of the same name which starred Lee Majors (The Six Million Dollar Man) as one of a group of stunt performers who used their Hollywood knowledge to catch criminals. Majors’ character and his team hunted bad guys over five seasons from 1981 to 1986.

Did I watch The Fall Guy? Of course not – I was hotly debating the relative merits of Jeremy Irons v Anthony Andrews in Brideshead Revisited. Here I acknowledge my innate snobbery. Would the Bridge incident be less annoying if it was a sequel to Muriel’s Wedding or an adaption of a Tim Winton novel? And am I still cross with Ryan Gosling for the two hours of my life that I spent watching La La Land that I’ll never get back? Yes and yes.

‘The Fall Guy’. April, 2022.

‘The Fall Guy’. April, 2022. Credit:Nine News

But it seems innately unfair that someone who is genuinely trying to alert the world to the imminent threat of climate disaster should be sentenced to jail for a minor inconvenience, while a US film company, which no doubt has a massive carbon footprint, is given the green light.

When the Roads and Crimes Legislation Amendment Bill was passed, President of the NSW Council for Civil Liberties Pauline Wright said it was shocking that a law threatening peaceful protesters with large fines had been passed in Australia in 2022: “In a liberal democracy, the government should welcome citizens expressing their views, not try to ban it. This law is an outrage, but it isn’t the end of the road – we fought for protest rights in the ’70s and won, and we’ll do the same now.”

So, the next time you become disproportionately angry with a young woman for making you late for work, remember what she stands for – the right to tell the government, in public, that you don’t agree with them.

The legal basis of the right to protest in NSW is the common law right to peaceful assembly, which can be traced back to the Magna Carta, a charter of liberty dating from 1215. In the words of Joni Mitchell, “you don’t know what you’ve got till it’s gone”.

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2023-01-22 04:45:00Z
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