"Just waiting for a mate" is the informal name given to a viral video clip from the Australian TV reality television show Highway Patrol . The video clip depicts a typical Australian bogan, who responds with preposterous answers to police questioning. The clip has received international attention after viral viewing in Reddit, with the phrase correspondingly entering the Australian Lexicon.
The footage has received 5 million views on YouTube, and inspired the creation of image macros and remix videos. It is widely seen as both a celebration and parody of Aussie bogan culture.
The clip was filmed as part of the Australian reality show Highway Patrol. In the incident, Senior Constable Ash Bowden attends to an accident in a shopping centre car park, in Carrum Downs. He questions a man who appears to be drunk, who is sitting immobilized in the driver's seat of a car. [1] When asked what he is doing, the man claims he is simply innocently "just waiting for a mate". [2] The car has clearly been in a collision and has been immobilized after an accident.
The man goes on to make further illogical statements and excuses, pretending to be oblivious to the state of his damaged car. [3]
The clip is famous in Australia for the bogan aspect of the responses of the subject of the video. It has been referred to as one of Australia's greatest videoclips [4] [5] [6] [7] and an iconic meme [8] after it went viral. [9] The phrase correspondingly became a common term in Australia, referring to the meme, [10] [11] and the incident earned notoriety in legal commentary, with the driver noted as one of "Australia's Top 5 Dumbest criminals". [12] The Guardian referred to the clip as "one of the ten funniest things on the Internet", noting the humour of the driver's relentless denial despite the obvious. [13]
Over time, other commentary on the incident rallied against the humour, noting the seriousness of the incident, given that the individual driver was apparently drink driving. [9]
Drunk driving is the act of operating a motor vehicle with the operator's ability to do so impaired as a result of alcohol consumption, or with a blood alcohol level in excess of the legal limit. For drivers 21 years or older, driving with a blood alcohol concentration (BAC) of 0.08% or higher is illegal. For drivers under 21 years old, the legal limit is lower, with state limits ranging from 0.00 to 0.02. Lower BAC limits apply when operating boats, airplanes, or commercial vehicles. Among other names, the criminal offense of drunk driving may be called driving under the influence (DUI), driving while intoxicated or impaired (DWI), operating [a] vehicle under the influence of alcohol (OVI), or operating while impaired (OWI).
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StopXam, also spelled StopHam and known as Stop a Douchebag, is a Russian non-profit organization, headquartered in Moscow and founded in 2010 by members of the youth movement Nashi, which opposes traffic rule violations and arrogance on the road. The mode of operation of the activists is to film offenses and their conversations and confrontations with offenders and subsequently edit and upload the gathered footage to video-sharing websites such as YouTube. One of the popular strategies is to place big stickers with the phrase "I spit on everyone, I park where I want", attributed to the 'Federal Programme Against Arrogance on Roads', on car windshields of non-cooperative traffic offenders.
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Zoom Cat Lawyer, also known as I'm Not a Cat, is an Internet meme that refers to a viral video taken from a live stream of a civil forfeiture hearing, and being held on the video conferencing application Zoom in Texas' 394th Judicial District Court. The video features an attorney named Rod Ponton, who is struggling to disable a cat filter that shows a white kitten instead of his face, making it appear as though a cat is speaking.
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The Kia Challenge is a viral TikTok trend to which a series of motor vehicle thefts is attributed, targeting Kia and Hyundai vehicles in the United States manufactured between 2011 and 2021. The trend, which began in October 2022, has led to eight fatalities, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.
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