Steve Price has joined the ranks of grumpy middle aged men keen to give advice to women about how and where they should breastfeed.
Price — a 2GB host and regular on The Project with two daughters of his own — tweeted earlier this week:
In a fiery segment with Price on The Project last night, breastfeeding mother-of two, host Carrie Bickmore pointed out that mothers breastfeed their children where they need to, “not where you want us to. Why do women have to do it discreetly, what is your issue with it?”
Their exchange went like this [we have transcribed it in full]:
Carrie Bickmore: Now our very own Steve Price has got himself in a bit of trouble on Twitter. He tweeted last night saying “Discreet public breast feeding no drama but walking through Qantas domestic!!!” As you can imagine social media went a little bit crazy. I’ve got to admit I saw that tweet as I was sitting down breast feeding and I thought, “Pricey, you idiot. Be quiet.”
Waleed Aly: And you bolted straight for Qantas domestic, didn’t you?
Carrie Bickmore: Yeah, exactly.
Waleed Aly: You’re right though there was a big reaction, @NannanBay for example said “A breast feeding mum or a Radio jock spewing crap??? No Contest!!!” Ah didn’t say which one won, anyway, and Lou said “@StevePriceMedia are you jealous that she can multitask.”
Carrie Bickmore: My favourite one though, I think she summed it up for us “@StevePriceMedia I’m only seeing one tit in this story.” And that tit joins us now. Pricey, seriously why?
Steve Price: Well Carrie, if you read the twitter message I obviously didn’t object to what that woman was doing, it surprised me to see her walking through an airport breastfeeding while walking. Look, it twigged my interest but I have no objection to public breastfeeding. I just thought, “that’s unusual a woman walking through an airport breastfeeding.” You know very well I’ve got no objection whatsoever, and I don’t mean to sound defensive here by the way, I’ve got no objection whatsoever to public breastfeeding. In fact three weeks ago in a production meeting at The Project you were breastfeeding your gorgeous little baby daughter.
Carrie Bickmore: Absolutely…
Steve Price: …So if I had a problem I might have said something.
Carrie Bickmore: But you used the words ‘discreet public breastfeeding’ which means you clearly think it should be done privately in a room away from you. Just for your information we feed where we want to, not where you want us to.
Steve Price: Do you not find it interesting and would you actually breastfeed walking through a crowded airport?
Carrie Bickmore: No, because I’m not coordinated enough to walk and breastfeed at the same time. But if my baby needed to feed, I would feed, Pricey. I mean you choose to feed at the Qantas Club, that’s where she chooses to feed, walking through a terminal.
Steve Price: I’m not suggesting anyone go and sit in a dark room. But there’s more chairs in an airport then there is in just about any building in the world. So all she needed to do was sit down. Look I don’t care that she did it…
Carrie Bickmore: Then why comment, it’s none of your business.
Steve Price: …has anyone else on that panel ever seen someone walking publicly through a crowded airport with a baby clamped on their breast?
Peter Helliar: About six times a day, six times a day mate I reckon I see it to be honest.
Steve Price: Never, ever. Be honest.
Peter Helliar: So Pricey are you going to apologise for your drunken rant? I assumed you’d had a few because why would you take on mums and babies mate?
Steve Price: It was 11 o clock in the morning, I had had nothing to drink.
Peter Helliar: I stand by what I said.
Steve Price: And I think the response on Twitter is absolutely ridiculous. I had one message which said I had violated the human rights of the mother and the baby. Now for gods sake I didn’t even speak to this woman, I didn’t name her, I’ve got no idea who she was and she had no idea I’d even seen her. These people are just feral and they’re stupid.
Carrie Bickmore: Feral! Oh Pricey.
Steve Price: Since when did breastfeeding mothers are they a no go zone. I can comment on what I like, when I like and people can just go and jam it as far as I’m concerned.
Waleed Aly: Right. So ferals…
Carrie Bickmore: He’s doing this well, he’s doing this well to be fair. He’s a shock jock. He’s doing this very well.
Waleed Aly: Yeah he is. I like “ferals stupid people that can jam it.” Why would they possibly be offended pricey?
Steve Price: No idea.
Peter Helliar: Well Pricey sometimes I get offended by the stuff you do. Like I’m offended by this to be honest (plays a video of Steve Price playing golf). Your golf swing. And I’m offended by this as well (another video of Steve Price).
Steve Price: And so do I attack you on Twitter and call you a moron and threaten to come over and bash your head in? No I don’t.
Peter Helliar: No you text me.
Carrie Bickmore: Why do women have to do it discreetly? What is your issue with it?
Steve Price: I think walking though a crowded airport is an unusual place to breastfeed a child. Now if my wife and I got off a plane, and we’ve had two daughters, she breastfeed both of them, and Wendy said to me, “I think I might breastfeed Lucy while we walk to the car” I would say “Are you insane? Sit down and do it properly.”
Carrie Bickmore: Well I look forward to sitting on your lap in the meeting next Monday and doing it for you.
So to recap: the most important thing here is the delicate sensibilities of strangers. Not the needs of the baby. Not the needs of the mother.
Strangers like Steven Price who have strict guidelines about the way breastfeeding should happen.
Wait, this sounds familiar. When was the last time a man in the media called for breastfeeding mothers to be ‘more discreet’?
Responding to a story on Sunrise in 2013 about Liana Webster, a Bribie Island woman who was forced to leave her local pool after a complaint was made about her breast feeding in public, host David Kochie said: “I totally think women should be able to breastfeed in public but I just think they should be a bit classy about it.”
He had two breastfeeding daughters, he pointed out at the time. But noted that if they breastfed in restaurants, they’d turn their chairs around.
While broadly supportive of breastfeeding, he said, the problem was with ‘high traffic areas’.
Top Comments
I breastfed my twins for 14 months - often at home because it was easier and faster and less of a spectacle when tandem feeding to do it topless on the couch in my own living room. But I did it out in public (singly) a lot too - and quite frankly, I wasn't overjoyed to provide a spectacle of my milk-engirged breasts to anyone, but if the babies were screaming in hunger, what are you going to do?
And I find it way more offensive to see some slob, rushing down a busy street or through the shops, stuffing their face, dropping crumbs everywhere, masticating loudly with an open mouth, then putting their greasy or sticky hands all over the street furniture, so the next person to touch the pedestrian button cops it....
What annoys me is that you can walk into most News agencies and see magazines that are supposed to be adult only (full breasts on site) no one cares, but for me, I had 3 children the first one I was shamed into going to a quiet room to breast feed so as not to offend anyone needless to say I didn't feed for very long ,but by the time number two and three came along I fed anywhere and anytime my babies needed feeding, and was comfortable in feeding them for a long time.
That's an idea, next time anyone makes a comment to a breastfeeding mother to cover up, why not open up a zoo magazine to use as a shield?