Fatso the Fat-Arsed Wombat

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Side view of "Fatso the Fat-Arsed Wombat" as he appears on top of a pole outside Sydney's Stadium Australia.
Side view of "Fatso the Fat-Arsed Wombat" as he appears on top of a pole outside Sydney's Stadium Australia.

Fatso the Fat-Arsed Wombat was an unofficial mascot of the Sydney 2000 Summer Olympics created by Sydney cartoonist Paul Newell with Roy and HG from the Australian Channel Seven sports/comedy television program The Dream with Roy and HG, which covered the event.[1][2] He took the form of a life-size stuffed toy wombat with a lazy, cheerful expression and comically pronounced rump, and usually appeared on The Dream broadcasts on Roy and HG's desk.

Fatso was a spoof of the official Olympic mascots Syd, Ollie and Millie, whom Roy & HG disparaged as "Syd, Ollie and Dickhead".[3] He was nicknamed "the battlers' prince" and proved to be more popular among Australian fans (and some visitors who viewed the program) than the official mascots.[4] Fatso appeared with Gold Medalists Susie O'Neill, Grant Hackett and the Australian men's 4×200 metre relay team on the winners' dais.[1][2] He consequently appears on an official commemorative postage stamp of the Australian men's 4×200 metre relay team in the arms of Michael Klim (second from the right).[5] During the Olympics the Australian Olympic Committee attempted to ban athletes appearing with Fatso to stop him upstaging their official mascots.[2] The impending public relations disaster forced the president of the AOC, John Coates, and the director general of the IOC, Francois Carrard, to distance their organisations from these attempts.[6][1]

At the end of the Olympics, Fatso was auctioned for the Olympic Aid charity, selling for AU$80,450 to Seven Network executive chairman Kerry Stokes. Fatso is currently housed in a glass box in Kerry Stokes's North Sydney office.[6]

In keeping with Fatso's role as a protest against the commercialization of Olympic mascots,[3] only two Fatsos were officially produced: one for use in the studio and the other for use in the athletes' village.[1] A number of unofficial Fatso toys and memorabilia were sold by merchants without authorization from the producers of The Dream.[7][8] A statue of Fatso appears as part of an official Olympic memorial outside the Sydney Olympic Stadium.[6]

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d Jim Parsons. "'Fat-arsed' wombat mascot causes uproar in Australia", The Daily Cougar, 2000-09-26. Retrieved on 2006-04-11. 
  2. ^ a b c The Rise of Fatso - The Fat Arsed Sydney Olympics Wombat. Strategic Resources International (February 2001). Retrieved on 2006-04-11.
  3. ^ a b Marr, Jim (2000-12-08). "Satire: Roy Slaven on the Rampage". Workers Online (81). 
  4. ^ Singer, Jill. "Is John So still our bro?", Herald Sun Sunday, 2006-03-30. Retrieved on 2006-04-11. 
  5. ^ Reuters. "'Groin gags, anti-mascot fatso lift Aussie duo to cult", indiavarta.com, 2000-09-22. Retrieved on 2007-03-21. 
  6. ^ a b c Browne, Rachel. "Roy, HG leave Fatso home", Sun Herald, 2004-07-18. Retrieved on 2006-06-30. 
  7. ^ Fatso the Wombat Online: THE Unofficial Fatso Fanclub, Pandora Archive, National Library of Australia, archived 2000-11-20
  8. ^ Fatso the Wombat Online: THE Unofficial Fatso Fanclub Tee-Shirt order form, Pandora Archive, National Library of Australia, archived 2000-11-20