Not even the homelands that have birthed the Rioli football dynasty of Maurice, Cyril, Daniel, Dean, Willie and Maurice Jr, who as a collective have brought more joy to the game than any other family, is off limits. Port Adelaide wouldn’t be in partnership with Santos, whose offshore Barossa Project – described by gas economist Bruce Robertson as a “carbon dioxide factory with an LNG by-product” and by Richie Merzian of the Australia Institute as “one of the dirtiest gas fields in Australia” – is the subject of legal action by Traditional Owners from the Tiwi Islands who are seeking to stop the development. Nor would the West Coast Eagles and AFLW be in partnership with BHP, another multinational that destroys ancient Aboriginal cultural heritage and has exercised gag clauses that render Traditional Owners unable to lodge objections or to prevent their sacred sites from being damaged. If there really was “no room for racism”, then Fremantle would not be in partnership with Woodside. Living within the lands, seas and skies, Murujuga holds the Lore, Dreaming and Songlines that have connected and sustained the region’s First Nations people since the first sunrise. Woodside’s proposed Burrup Hub LNG expansion is threatening Murujuga, a priceless cultural treasure on Western Australia’s Burrup Peninsula which archives more than 50,000 years of human ingenuity. With his wife, Cassandra, by his side, Deep dives to the very depths of his soul and lays bare everything that has made him the fish-guy he is today.Without a shred of self-awareness, the Dockers have stood in solidarity with Walters and Frederick under the backdrop of a long-standing partnership with Woodside, Australia’s largest independent dedicated oil and gas company. Now, Deep-on the road promoting his memoir, Deeper-is sitting down for a no-holds-barred podcast interview. When he found himself patrolling the streets of Sandusky, Ohio, and then swallowed up into the Church of the Collective, Deep realized he had plummeted even deeper than the Mariana Trench. But his public glory masked the disrespect of his teammates who crushed him, day after day. After braving the childhood trauma of being the weird kid with gills, Deep rose to the very top, basking in worldwide fame with Earth's most powerful superheroes. He may be Lord of the Seven Seas, but for The Deep, life has been a tsunami of humiliations and setbacks. celebrates this year's World Oceans Day (RIP Timothy). Here's a look at an overview of what fans can expect, with the news coming on the same day as the U.N.
Set to debut on June 9th (more on that below), The Boys: Deeper and Deeper finds The Deep and his wife Cassandra ( Katy Breier) sitting down for a no-holds-barred podcast interview to discuss much more than what was in his book. One of the ways he was able to slip back onto the team was with his memoir Deeper, and that's now the focus of a very cool meta, in-world original scripted podcast from Audible. As you're more than well-aware having screened the first three episodes of Amazon and Showrunner Eric Kripke's The Boys Season 3, The Deep ( Chace Crawford) has been on a "public relations repair" tour to get him back on The Seven- and it worked.