FEW economists can explain the global financial crisis as lucidly or engagingly as David McWilliams. His take on consumer culture, for instance, is illustrated via the long-running Aussie soap Neighbours. "Some time in the 1990s," McWilliams argues, "the sets began to resemble a shoppers' paradise, full of the gadgets we couldn't really afford." It's true: back in the '80s, the Ramsays and the Robinsons were content in their daggy but comfortable, three-bedroom homes.
2009년 11월 5일 목요일
News 53
http://www.watoday.com.au/news/entertainment/tv--radio/tv-reviews/thursday-november-5/2009/10/28/1256405417016.html
Michael Lallo
November 5, 2009
Page 1 of 2 | Single page Addicted to Money
FEW economists can explain the global financial crisis as lucidly or engagingly as David McWilliams. His take on consumer culture, for instance, is illustrated via the long-running Aussie soap Neighbours. "Some time in the 1990s," McWilliams argues, "the sets began to resemble a shoppers' paradise, full of the gadgets we couldn't really afford." It's true: back in the '80s, the Ramsays and the Robinsons were content in their daggy but comfortable, three-bedroom homes.
FEW economists can explain the global financial crisis as lucidly or engagingly as David McWilliams. His take on consumer culture, for instance, is illustrated via the long-running Aussie soap Neighbours. "Some time in the 1990s," McWilliams argues, "the sets began to resemble a shoppers' paradise, full of the gadgets we couldn't really afford." It's true: back in the '80s, the Ramsays and the Robinsons were content in their daggy but comfortable, three-bedroom homes.
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