Yesterday, Sydney’s Sunday Telegraph devoted an entire page to describing a lawyer who put on her wig and gown before addressing the court.
So, why did this seemingly ordinary and routine act receive full page, full colour, multiple photo attention in one of the country’s most read newspapers? Because this wasn’t just any lawyer. This was a lady lawyer. A sexy lady lawyer. And she was wearing a fitted skirt.
In her role as Crown prosecutor, Gina O’Rourke (pictured in the left of this image) has spent the past six weeks prosecuting the Crown’s case against former Hey Dad star Robert Hughes. Hughes is charged with multiple counts of child sexual abuse and has pleaded not guilty to each of them. Given the nature of the charges and the high public profile of the defendant, the case has, unsurprisingly, received extensive media attention.
But Sunday’s Telegraph article was something else entirely and has caused many to check their calendars to make sure ‘winding back the clocks’ at the end of daylight savings did not mean back to the 1950s.
The female journalist who wrote the column described the Crown prosecutor’s presence in the courtroom as “sexy” and “compelling”, and her outfit as one that “would even turn heads in the most glamorous offices in the CBD”. O’Rourke’s skirt in particular was described in detail as “so body hugging that it left little to the imagination”. A fact that apparently kept the men in the public gallery “enthralled”.
The column went on to provide some thrilling background information: Gina O’Rourke has tried other cases (!), presumably where she was equally as hot (!!), and including one where the charge was MURDER (like a real-deal proper lawyer – only hot!!). O’Rourke also has the same job as another hot lady lawyer called Gina (Liano) who stars in Foxtel’s reality television program the Real Housewives of Melbourne (context!).
Top Comments
Doesn't this website comment on what women wear? I see it nearly every time I look at this website.
These articles normally have the word "Fluff" in the headline. Maybe you just need to ask the Daily Telegraph to start tagging their articles with the word "Fluff" and then everyone will be on the same page.
I essentially made the same comment hours ago and I didn't make it through moderation. What is the difference between this and the 'fluff' headline about Kendall Jenner's nipples walking the runway? Not much.
Because the subjects of Fluff are generally celebrities, people who have put themselves out there in a beauty-driven business, and promoted themselves in that way. This barrister seems to have only worn a skirt a little tight. She has never sought out attention just for her looks or clothes. Making that the sum total of her achievements belittles what she has actually achieved.
So should women be treated unequally based on what profession they work in? They put themselves out there so they are fair game. Not sure I agree. It's all fluff. It all feeds the same obsession.
This article seems more like the pot calling the kettle black.
I can't believe the telegraph would publish that article, how disrespectful to the victims of the crimes. It's just badly written trash really. How surprising that Gina O'Rourke refused to be interviewed! All those jokes about lawyers having no ethics when the real sharks are the colomnists!