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UPDATE: Gympie hits Aussie small screens 80s style

Our new-found fame is a little out of the blue but we'll take it!

UPDATE:

THE residents of Gympie, backed by Gympie Music Muster executive director David Gibson, announced to the world this morning about the greatness of Gympie...and of the 80s.

Branded as Australia's 80s revival town' by national headlines on the weekend, the momentum from the throwback tag has kept on rolling, with a live feature broadcast on national morning television show The Today Show at 8am this morning. 

Gympie was featured on The Today Show on Tuesday morning as 'Australia's 80s revival town'. Picture: Frances Klein
Gympie was featured on The Today Show on Tuesday morning as 'Australia's 80s revival town'. Picture: Frances Klein

"Gympie's one of those places - we have everything and we're close enough to the community - we know each other and we have a great time," Mr Gibson told Karl Stefanovic and Lisa Wilkinson in the studio, live from outside Gympie's Pizza Hut. 

Complete with mullet the proud Gympie-ite gave Gympie West Store a plug for their old-fashioned fill-you-up service and of course the three attractions that all the 80s catch cry about the town is: Gympie's rare all-you-can-eat Pizza Hut, the ever popular video store that has just been saved from closure and Gympie's coolest new business around- SkateZone.

If you missed Gympie's five minutes of fame you can catch the full clip above. 

EARLIER 7am Tuesday:

COMB your mullets Gympie because the gold city will be featured on national television this morning.

Gympie Music Muster executive director David Gibson is leading the revival pack with a special feature on The Today Show this morning about 7.50am.

He is telling Australia why Gympie life is like it was in the 80s and why that's such a good thing.

Residents were filmed yesterday around town and will feature on the show this morning, proudly touting why Gympie is 'Australia's 80s revival town'.

The piece will air this morning on the show at 7.50am. 

EARLIER Monday:

WE all know Gympie gets a bad rap. If you grew up here and moved away or visited elsewhere, you would have been excused for not announcing to the world that you were from Gympie (despite that niggly inner-traitor feeling).

This was never more rife than in the late 90s and the decade that followed when our usually proud gold city was branded 'Hell Town' by high-profile criminologist Paul Wilson for all the world to see in Australian Penthouse magazine in 1997.

The orginal 'Helltown' article written by Paul Wilson and published in Penthouse in 1997. Picture: Contributed
The orginal 'Helltown' article written by Paul Wilson and published in Penthouse in 1997. Picture: Contributed

The author who blatantly accused Gympie of being a "dark and sinister" culture of illicit sex, murder and drug use, has since fallen from grace, in a sad and bitter twist that saw him last year found guilty of indecently treating a girl under 12.

But despite its complete miss the mark sensationalism and the since-found sketchy credibility of the finger-pointer, the 'Hell Town' tag stuck for years.

There were jokes, jokes and more jokes and while we played along it actually wasn't a joke that everything that was good about the 'town that saved Queensland' was overridden by undue slander.

Why we love Gympie top reads:

5 reasons Gympie is not a 'bogan' town

'Hell Town' tag now a memory

Helltown tag no problem for Neil

No Caption. Picture: Contributed
No Caption. Picture: Contributed

But now we have a new generation of Gympities who know nothing of the horror tag that soured our beloved city and who according to national headlines made yesterday, are instead growing up in Australia's 80s revival town; complete with rare to find retro all-you-can-eat Pizza Hut, a video store that refuses to die and a brand new skating rink.

Our new-found fame is a little out of the blue because we are used to the 80s throwback gems that thrive here, but you know what - we'll take it!

We all know Gympie is great for so many reasons but it's nice to be acknowledged nationally for our little piece of it's-not-backwards-if-it's-cool paradise.

The Aussie town that refuses to let the 80s die 

(by Kim Stephens in The Courier mail and news.com.au)

WELCOME to Gympie. The Queensland town that refuses to let the 1980s die.

While the mobile internet era continues to fuel the seemingly relentless march of the Netflix-Domino's-Uber juggernauts, it seems there is one place left, at least, that will not let it cost them their local businesses.

In the past couple of years, the people of Gympie have mobilised in outrage over looming store closures the internet age has foisted upon them.

First, it was when there were moves afoot by Pizza Hut to close the town's all-you-can-eat restaurant, one of just 15 left in Australia.

Pizza Hut Restaraunt, Brisbane Road, Gympie. May 30, 2016. Picture: Patrick Woods
Pizza Hut Restaraunt, Brisbane Road, Gympie. May 30, 2016. Picture: Patrick Woods

Then came the news last month that its last remaining video store, Blockbuster, would shut its doors.

Now, in a Big-M shaped cherry on top, the town has just welcomed a brand new roller skating rink, 25 years after the last one shut up shop.

It comes complete with a regular Saturday night disco.

"If it's not going to work here, it's not going to work anywhere," owner Lena Nyberg laughingly told news.com.au, nearly a week after Skatezone opened its doors for the first time.

The gold rush town is celebrated locally as the town that saved Queensland.

Could it now be responsible for reviving arguably the Sunshine State's greatest decade?

While the 1980s had many elements best relegated to the past - its hair and fashion, for example - in the past couple of years, the good people of Gympie have mobilised to hold onto or revive, the elements they clearly regard as its best.

RIP Fashion. Never forget. Picture: Contributed
RIP Fashion. Never forget. Picture: Contributed

THE PIZZA HUT THREAT

Remember the all-you-can-eat Pizza Hut?

The mountains of self-made soft serve, jelly and smarties that made it the staple special occasion venue of many an 80s and 90s childhood?

Far from following the mullet, blue eyeshadow and stonewash jeans into the annals of history, the ghosts of restaurants past continue to live on in a handful of Australian towns.

In May 2016, the Gympie venue looked set to join the list of the lost.

The local paper, the Gympie Times got wind of a proposal that, like many a dine-in Pizza Hut before it, the store was to downsize to a delivery-only venue, the market competitor Domino's dominates.

Cue outrage.

Picture: Contributed
Picture: Contributed

More than 1300 people in the 20,000-strong town shared the story on Facebook.

"God dam (sic) it. Why do they destroy all the good things Gympie has?" one resident wrote, among the largely nostalgia-themed objections.

"This is devastating," wrote another.

RELATED: 'All you can eat' Pizza Hut lives on, as if it's the 90s

It did not take long for the powers-that-be who remain at the ailing Pizza Hut to cotton on to the fact that shutting down the all-you-can-eat side of the business may be killing off a cash cow.

"Pizza Hut Australia can confirm there are no approved plans to convert the Pizza Hut dine-in restaurant in Gympie into a delivery outlet," it said in a statement.

And so the buffet salad and dessert bars live on in Gympie, as if the 21st century never came

Chalk that one up to a win for people power.

THE LAST OF THE VIDEO STORES

No sooner had the threat of the lost Pizza Hut subsided than a new one emerged.

Blockbuster, the last remaining DVD hire store in Gympie, was apparently still a thriving business when the once-powerful company announced in late January that a dispute between owners had forced its closure.

READ: Shock closure leaves movie lovers saddened

In a world where Netflix has hundreds of movies on demand at the touch of a button, it turns out many people in the Wide Bay-Burnett region town still prefer the tradition of heading down the DVD store to choose their evening's entertainment.

The opposition to the news was almost equally as vehement, or at least equally as mournful, as that directed Pizza Hut's way.

VIDEO DRAMA:  Local investor Peter Fife (LEFT) along with store manager David Kendall (RIGHT) have saved Gympie's beloved video store from closure. Picture: Rowan Schindler
VIDEO DRAMA: Local investor Peter Fife (LEFT) along with store manager David Kendall (RIGHT) have saved Gympie's beloved video store from closure. Picture: Rowan Schindler

But just as there had been a sad kind of acceptant of the apparent inevitability of the move, up stepped the knight Gympie didn't know it was looking for.

Peter Fife, a veteran of the town's home entertainment scene as owner of the Gympie Video Movie Barn, in the halcyon days of the 1980s, stepped in to revive the store.

"I felt for the staff when I heard and I felt for the regional area of Gympie," he told The Gympie Times.

"I realise a lot of people love this store. Where else can they go?"

From first to last: Gympie family lives video rental history

Blockbuster closed, as planned, and reopened this week as Network Video, complete with a brand new library of 20,000 titles on offer.

A new member sign-up day is being held this Saturday.

Muriel's Wedding. Muriel worked in a Sydney video store before the evil internet killed them all. Picture: Contributed
Muriel's Wedding. Muriel worked in a Sydney video store before the evil internet killed them all. Picture: Contributed

BACK TO THE SKATING RINK FUTURE

Long before the skate park, there was the skating rink, where many an 80s romance bloomed on rollerskates.

Now, 25 years after Gympie lost its last skating rink, a new one has emerged, where, now, many an excited parent is returning to eight wheels to show their children where it all began.

Pretty gross, right, kids?

Lena Nyberg, who opened it with her roller hockey playing husband Darren, said it had taken them five years to find the right venue, and many people had been eagerly awaiting its return.

"We haven't even done any advertising, only Facebook and word-of-mouth so far," she said.

"The people who grew up at that rink skating are now in their 40s and are now bringing their kids here because it's something they can do as a family."

But the 80s revival of the most 80s of sports does not end with the rollerskates.

Saturday nights are disco nights, complete with music and light show, while there are also talk of the return of a Blue Light Disco to the venue in the near future.

And outside the rink is an nostalgic's dream.

Skatezone, Peter Knowles. Picture: LEEROY TODD
Skatezone, Peter Knowles. Picture: LEEROY TODD

OPINION: Let the good times roll Gympie

"We have a games table, with galactic space invaders, glass tables with all old school arcade games, pinball machines, and, of course, two Daytonas," she said.

Despite the closure of the last roller skating rink in Bundaberg, two hours from Gympie, just last year, Mrs Nyberg said she and her husband believe it will be a successful business.

"Everything goes in roundabouts, fashion, sports, everything tends to go around, and I think it just phased out for a while," she said of the skating rink.

"People who did it a lot in the 80s got a bit bored, I suppose.

"It's really making a comeback. We know a few people who own rinks in Brisbane, the numbers are increasing, the popularity is increasing, and its definitely something making a comeback."

We can only hope it's a comeback sans leg warmers and leotards.

'Dem 80s fashions. As depicted in a 90s movie. Picture: Contributed
'Dem 80s fashions. As depicted in a 90s movie. Picture: Contributed

Original URL: https://www.couriermail.com.au/news/queensland/gympie/update-gympie-hits-aussie-small-screens-80s-style/news-story/c0c9f9bfc4caf5e24be9972490ac210c