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April Fool s Day 2021: police sausage dogs, self-jiggling tea bags and Gina Rinehart s new book

April Fool’s Day 2021: police sausage dogs, self-jiggling’ tea bags and Gina Rinehart s new book Natasha May © Provided by The Guardian Photograph: Alamy Last year was bleak. So this April Fool’s Day everyone from government agencies to brands and even Gina Rinehart jumped at the chance to generate some laughs in 2021. Many organisations created their own promotional videos or press releases to test the credulity of the Australian public. Guardian Australia sorted through them all to bring you the best – and worst – of this year’s jokes. © Photograph: Alamy Promotions for an ‘anti-gravity trampoline’ and Crime Stoppers Victoria announcing its call takers were also trained mind readers were among this year’s April Fool’s Day gags.

April Fool s Day 2021: police sausage dogs, self-jiggling tea bags and Gina Rinehart s new book | Australia news

Outdoor play company Vuly purported to sell the world’s first Anti-Gravity Trampoline. After revealing the promotion to be a joke, the company are now selling the April Fool’s Day video as a non-fungible-token (or NFT – a digital asset much like crypto currency) to the highest bidder to raise money for the Australian Trampoline Team, which they say “are grossly underfunded in the lead-up to the 2032 Brisbane Olympics.” Guardian Australia’s environment reporter, Graham Readfearn, was sent a press release purportedly from Nasa about the Mars rover finding single-use plastics. Nasa’s April Fool’s press release. But was it really Nasa? Photograph: Nasa

Ethnic, language data to be collected from Australian COVID-19 vaccine recipients - World News

2021-03-09 01:35:58 GMT2021-03-09 09:35:58(Beijing Time) Xinhua English CANBERRA, March 9 (Xinhua) Australian authorities will begin collecting language and ethnic data from everyone who receives a coronavirus vaccine to better document uptake in migrant communities. The Department of Health on Monday confirmed that everyone who volunteers to receive a COVID-19 vaccine will be asked where they were born and what language they speak at home. The data will then be used to identify communities where the uptake of vaccines is lowest, allowing the government to channel culturally appropriate information campaigns about the safety and efficacy of vaccines. Similar data has been collected from every Australian who has tested positive for COVID-19 since late 2020.

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