- James McCausland was born in New York City where he worked in various news organisations and publications, specialising in finance. He worked at United Press International, the monthly Finance Magazine as senior editor and was in charge of all internal and external communications at the American Stock Exchange. He has been involved in the starting up of several publications including Good Weekend and the Sunday Age.
He arrived in Australia from New York in 1971, and was a financial journalist and sub-editor for the Murdoch paper The Australian in the 1970s and night editor and business manager for The Age in the 1980s, before going into public relations.- IMDb Mini Biography By: TurboCruiser154
- SpousesMaureen Brooks Klette (October 2008 - February 20, 2022) (his death)Leonie Walshe(1975 - 1992) (divorced, 2 children)
- Was chairman of the Melbourne International Comedy Festival from its inception in 1987 until 1993.
- [on Mad Max] In 1973, the Arab oil-producing nations convulsed most of the world by tightening the spigots on their wells and sharply reducing production.
Corporations, and nations including Japan, went into crisis mode and many started to think of ways to lessen their reliance on petroleum products.
As the after-shock waves began to subside and black gold started to flow again, most enterprises kicked petroleum replacement well down the agenda.
Yet there were further signs of the desperate measures individuals would take to ensure mobility. A couple of oil strikes that hit many pumps revealed the ferocity with which Australians would defend their right to fill a tank. Long queues formed at the stations with petrol - and anyone who tried to sneak ahead in the queue met raw violence.
A couple of years later, George Miller conceived the scenario for Mad Max. Max (a very young Mel Gibson) was the antihero out on roads that had become battlefields where the prize was fuel. Society had corroded as a result of the reduction of supply and the rule of law deteriorated into chaos.
Mad Max may have been a fantasy with apocalyptic overtones - keep an eye out on the road for people in leather jackets and souped-up cars chasing bike gangs - with the price being a few hundred litres of petrol.
George and I wrote the script based on the thesis that people would do almost anything to keep vehicles moving and the assumption that nations would not consider the huge costs of providing infrastructure for alternative energy until it was too late.
Sure, it contained a large element of geeks' own adventures; but at its core was a sizeable kernel of truth. That kernel has taken root, and it's called peak oil.
When an oil well is discovered, it is at peak production until it reaches about 50 per cent of its total output. After this, the remaining half becomes more difficult to extract - and much more expensive - as the ratio of water to oil expands. Ultimately the well is abandoned and the search for a new well begins.
Easier said than done.
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