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Ruth: 'May you always feel as close as you do this day', for Karla and Simon - 2009

August 18, 2015

Brisbane, 2009

I wanted to begin by saying how absolutely beautiful Karla looks today. Simon is a very lucky man. And I guess he doesn’t look too bad either.

Now for anyone who doesn’t know who I am, I used to be Karla’s younger sister. But, since Karla now absolutely refuses to move past the age of 29 that means that I am now the older sister, which actually means I am officially the boss of her.

Our brother David is here tonight as well, but as he would rather be poked in the eye with a burning stick than stand up in front of a group and give a speech the duty of giving a speech has fallen to me.

I have to say that when Karla first told me she was going to go on a date with her old flame Simon S- I thought the whole thing was pretty hilarious. The last time I saw Simon before I met him again recently was on the day he was breaking up with Karla when she was 14. She was in her room crying and Simon was very distressed at being the cause of her tears so he kept coming out to my prime eavesdropping position on the verandah and saying, “What should I do?” Given that Karla and I spent our entire adolescence pretty much hating each others guts I responded with a very caring, “Don’t worry about it, she is always crying. She’ll get over it.” So I didn’t really offer him much help.

The fact that we have ended up here tonight means that they have, in my opinion, one of the best marriage stories ever to tell their kids.

I could stand here and say a lot of lovely things about Karla. I could tell you how amazing she is and how many obstacles she has overcome in her life. I could tell you all about her incredible capacity for care and love, about the strength of loyalty and commitment to her family and friends, about her capacity to be the life of the party and bring joy and laughter into people’s lives, but anyone who knows Karla will know these things without having to be told.

But one thing I did want to talk about, and the thing that as most delighted me in recent years, is Karla’s newfound willingness to move outside of her comfort zone and into the unknown. She initially started this journeying within the relatively safe confines of a Contiki Tour. Though she panicked about every detail and tossed and turned through many sleepless nights stressing prior to her departure, she came back a new woman. From a scared traveller who focused on what could go wrong to “I think next time I will go by myself and just hire a car.” Her growth and courage has been very impressive to witness.

She has been on many trips since that first Contiki tour and the travel she has done to the far corners of the globe has also been accompanied by some internal journeying as well. But the biggest change she has undergone is evidenced in what we are here today to celebrate.

She has finally attracted a wonderful man into her life. As I have gotten to know Simon I found him to be genuine, down-to-earth, kind, caring, humble and always ready to have a laugh. Exactly the kind of guy you hope your sister ends up with and someone I am very much looking forward to getting to know better over the next few decades. Since she has been with Simon I have never seen Karla so happy, with the possible exception of Brisbane Lions winning the grand final.

It is so obvious that they are meant to be together and I feel absolutely sure that they are going to be sitting in rocking chairs together one day reminiscing about what a great speech Ruth did at their wedding.

As with any partnership they have a great yin and yang of qualities that will keep them growing together for a very long time:

- Karla likes to make decisions quickly, Simon not so much

- Simon is a talented musician, Kerstin wishes the ground would swallow her up if she is asked to so much as hum a tune

- Simon is gunning to be the next masterchef, Karla’s interest in cooking often involves tinned spaghetti on toast

- Karla loves the Brisbane Lions, Stephen loves Essendon – actually maybe we shouldn’t bring that one up…

As someone who has been married for all of 5 years, I was looking for words of wisdom that I could impart to you on your wedding night and I found a quote, really it’s more for Simon than for Karla, that I thought might be helpful

“I have learned that only two things are necessary to keep one's wife happy.  First, let her think she's having her own way.  And second, let her have it.’

But finally, I just wanted to end with a wedding wish for you both.

May you always feel as close as you do this day.

May your lives be graced with good health.

May you always find happiness in your home,

and may it be a refuge from the storms of life.

May your love grow ever stronger as you share

your lives together, and may your future be even

more wonderful than you ever dreamed possible.

I am so happy for the both of you and I would like us all to raise our glasses and toast to a future full of happiness for Karla and Simon

To Karla and Simon

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In BEST MAN Tags SISTER, SISTER-IN-LAW
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John & Patrick: 'We’d like to conclude by saying that we think our brother Sean represents the bargain of a lifetime' for Sean and Rebecca - 2014

August 5, 2015

Joint Best Man speech at the wedding of Sean and Rebecca

[Note: John is Sean’s older brother. Patrick and Sean are twins.]

JOHN:  Thanks, Isabelle.   When, a few weeks back, Patrick and I asked Sean what he’d like us to speak about today, he said that he just wanted us to do a simple introduction of him to all of you here, but especially those of you on Rebecca’s side of the fence.  So we are going to talk about 2 or 3 of Sean’s main qualities.  I’m thinking of it as basically a Sales pitch to Rebecca’s family.  As his older brother, I suppose I am well placed to do that. But Patrick here knows Sean very well – their relationship stretches all the way back to when they shared a home in a single, fertilized egg in 1974 – so I’ll let him start.

PATRICK:  I think the first thing that occurred to me when we started thinking about Sean’s qualities was his longstanding fascination with beauty.  I guess that’s probably pretty evident in his choice of bride today  [GESTURE AND SLIGHT PAUSE] but it actually stretches all the way back to when he was a little boy growing up on the mean streets of Kew, often happily dressed in a heavily sequined bright red velvet magician’s outfit.   This love of his for glittery and beautiful things was reinforced around the time we were in kindergarten when Mum and Dad found a small rash on Sean’s chest and carted us all off to a pediatrician.  The doctor asked Sean to hop up on the examining table and whip off his denim overalls – this was the 1970’s – and when Sean undid his bib and out poured a thick wad of colored lolly wrappers, tightly bundled against the skin of Sean’s chest.   Sean – ever the eye for beauty – had been busily collecting the glittering wrappers out of the gutters, ashtrays and bins of Melbourne and, unsurprisingly, had developed a rash doing so.  Beauty is pain.  Mum was understandably embarrassed.

JOHN: No introduction to Sean’s key characteristics would be complete without some mention of his legendary ability to lose or forget things. Pat and I thought about some of the things Sean has lost, missed or forgotten in quite recent years:

PATRICK:  Six months of a Masters thesis research in a pub one night.

JOHN: Any footwear other than a pair of thongs for a two-week trip around Ireland in the middle of the Northern winter.

PATRICK:  A plane to Bali.

JOHN:  Countless mobile phones

PATRICK:  The home phone at Kew!

JOHN:  Film in the camera when he was the official family photographer for Phoebe’s graduation.

PATRICK:  And half a little finger somewhere on Footscray Hockey ground.

[PAUSE]

JOHN:  Leaving aside his forgetfulness, and more seriously, Sean has a real love of family.  He was always happy as a kid to play dud roles in our family plays  - I think he was a soldier in our crucifixion play - and share bedrooms, back car seats and sometimes even his name with Pat.  In more recent years, he’s relished welcoming visitors to his and Rebecca’s and home in Woodend – usually fresh from mowing the lawn, and dressed, even in the winter months, in a pair of old short shorts and a wifebeater (can you say wifebeater in a speech at a wedding? I mean a faded blue singlet).  Our sister Claire put it most eloquently when we asked her what she thought about Sean’s nature and she said that his inner child was alive and well.  That is unquestionably true – if any of you saw Sean dressed as a magic carpet at Ruby’s 5th birthday party earlier this year – as happy as I have ever seen him even when the skies opened up and we were all drenched – you would know that he is man who can see the world through a child’s eye and who loves being a dad. 

PATRICK: So, if this is a Sales pitch, I guess we’d like to conclude by saying that we think our brother Sean represents the bargain of a lifetime. He comes with proven family experience and  - going on the vows I heard earlier in the Church today – apparently a lifetime guarantee.  We recommend him to you, Rebecca, and would like to propose a toast to you both – so please be upstanding  [WAIT FOR EVERYONE TO STAND] - to the bride and groom.

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In BEST MAN Tags BEST MAN, BROTHER, TWIN
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Emma Race: 'Since meeting Paul, Rosie walks taller - she now tips 5 ft', for Rosie and Paul

July 27, 2015

It’s an honor to be asked to speak tonight. In fact it’s an honor to be here, without this wedding I was looking down the barrel of spending New Year’s Eve watching Andrew G commentating fireworks with bottle of cheap champagne and a packet of Tim Tams.

There is a book Rosie once bought called, “Why first borns want to rule the world and last borns want to change it”.  I found it ironic that Rosie would be drawn to such a book- when as a second born- the title clearly had no mention of her. 

It got me wondering if first borns and youngests can be so easily pigeonholed – what do the experts forecast for second borns.

It turns out Rosie is the poster girl for middle children. It is said that, “Second borns are the ‘people’ people, the compromisers, the flexible operators, people who always wear really great shoes”.  So Check Check Check Check

The experts go on to say “They may need other people to motivate them (probably only to do their tax and stuff) but SECONDS keep the peace, are the glue that holds groups together. And, above all else put their loved ones first.

Rosie shows her love for her family and friends daily, in the things she does.  Whether it be a cheeky joke that makes Caroline and Richard wipe their eyes at the kitchen table, an impersonation or story retelling for Sophie and Ben’s entertainment or a perfectly scripted poem she will write for one of her friends. 

Rosie always represents, is an enthusiast a wonder and a gift.  If we could describe people by comparing them to a day of the week Rosie would be New Year’s Eve. Exciting and colourful, a ray of limitless possibilities and really really hot!

Paul would be Grand Final Day.  Because he creates and exciting buzz and serves delicious cold beer.

The love Rosie and Paul have for each other is palpable.  It is as bright and optimistic as the dawn of a summer day, so tangible that we can all take a piece home with us tonight as the bonbonaire.

However most remarkable thing I have witnessed about Rosie and Paul’s love is that it is as dedicated and blinding among a messy flat or peak hour traffic as it is today among the pomp and ceremony of their wedding day.

I am in awe that no matter what time of the day it is, whether it be during try on session at the Chapel Street Bizarre or midway through a joke Rosie will always receive a phone call from Paul, heralding him with AMORE.  Her excitement to hear his voice wields the same weight should he be calling from a stinky payphone in Europe or out the front of the Canteen where he is double parked waiting to pick her up.

That she beams with the pride usually reserved for tales of Kitty and Isabel’s cuteness, when she recounts Paul’s achievements, whether she’s talking about the invention, his heeling hands at Beauie a delicious new amendment to his recipe of Paul’s Spicy Beef and Nuts.

I love that Paul cannot tear his eyes away from his girl and when he does it is only to review the latest most amazing photo he has taken of her, and upload it to Facebook post haste.

And that Paul so effortlessly got that Bromby Street is not just bricks and mortar but the heart of the Travers family, a hub of laughter and community for so many of us over the years.  I love that it was no coincidence that he asked Richard for his blessing to marry Rosie, in the library.

Theirs is not the love of mere mortals.

Cupids from all corners of the world reserved arrows for Rosie and Paul to ensure their paths would cross.

We should thank the Cupids wearing the strips of the Socceroos.  Specifically Aloisi for his goal against Uruguay 2005 which paved the way for Harry Kewell to equalize in Stuttgart on 22 June last year. I imagine these little cupids as you said the I do’s in the church– Aloisi shirt over the head doing the aeroplane and Kewell on his knees punching the air.

We should thank the Cupid’s who are Back in Black, for providing the anthem of You Shook Me All Night Long- which is not  a typical love song, but one which provided the opportunity for you to meet across a crowded tabletop.

We must thank the ANZACS for eating bully beef and fighting for our flag, so that you could share the most romantic kiss in history under a canopy of the southern cross.

And we should thank the Cupid of bureaucracy who didn’t renew Paul’s Italian residency visa.

The road to find each other was like a delicate puzzle that fortuitously came together but the life you have created together is the result of your dedication and passion for each other.  Since meeting Paul, Rosie walks taller- she now tips 5 ft.

I have noticed that when Rosie is by Paul’s side his smile is wide and beaming and there is an audible “ting” off his front teeth.

Together you look like you have found the meaning of life. It is privilege for us to bask in the glow that together you emit. I wish you a lifetime of love and happiness.

 

 

 

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In BEST MAN Tags BRIDESMAID, MAID OF HONOUR, BEST FRIEND
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Ollie: 'She deserves a good husband. So thank god you married her before she found one', for Simon and Kim - 2007

July 17, 2015

2007

Hi I'm Ollie, all the way from the UK

First of all I'd like to raise a massive toast to two of the most beautiful, wonderful and loving people I've ever had the pleasure to have in my life.

So if everyone can raise their glasses ... I've lost mine, but ...

So huge cheers to their future, our fortune, and everyone having a blast in this celebration of this wonderful event.

So before I really get going, let me just say that the formative years I have spent in the company of the groom, means he has had as much of a part in developing my sense of humour as anyone. So although I have tried to make this speech as funny as possible, please blame Simon if it's not.

And my second disclaimer is, that my speech does not really contain any original material. So if anyone is offended, it's got nothing to do with me.

I'm told that the best speech makers follow three simple rules: stand up, speak up, then very quickly shut up. So I'll try and stick to that advice. As part of my research I discovered that according to tradition, I'm supposed to sing the grooms praises, and tell you all about his many good points. Well I'm very sorry to say that I can't sing, and I won't lie.

I'm slightly bothered by the title of best man. If I'm the best man, then why is Kim marrying Simon? So I'm just happy in saying, that I'm a pretty good man. Because today Simon is the best man. And he is a man that admire for many reasons. Most notably his generous nature, what with him donating his body to science when he started at Plymouth University, and preserving it in alcohol the entire time he went there.

Now I know it's traditional for the best man to wax lyrical about the number of ex-girlfriends the groom has had. But I don't want to get into all of that. Because frankly, I find such macho, male posturing vulgar and offensive to the bride. But suffice to say, Simon, number 72, that was your lucky number.

Now I really should grab this once in a lifetime opportunity to reveal to you Simon's past misdemeanors. Unfortunately, I've played a part on most of these, and I really don't want to tarnish my impeccable reputation.

I believe that marriage is a wonderful thing for Simon. It will teach him loyalty, self restraint and control. And it will develop in him a sense of responsibility, fair play, and so many other qualities he just wouldn't need, had he stayed single.

So I'd just like to say to Simon, you're a lucky groom, marrying Kim, who is beautiful, smart, funny, warm, loving and caring. She deserves a good husband. So thank god you married her before she found one.

And now you're married, your level of domesticity needs to greatly improve. You need to find where the kitchen is, and learn what the mysterious items contained within it actually do. Gone are the days of hitting speed dial and waiting forty five minutes. You're going to have to start transferring food onto dishes, instead of eating it directly out of the saucepan. And you know that wet area that kitchens have? It's called a sink. The more you use it, the more Kim will love you.

So if we can all raise our glasses again and toast: to love, to laughter and to a happy ever after.

Cheers!

 

 

 

 

 

Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7YWMVXh-wF...

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In BEST MAN Tags BEST MAN, FRIEND, FUNNY, TRADITIONAL GAGS
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Tony Wilson: 'Game, set, match Ned and Olivia' - 2010

July 17, 2015

9 January, 2010, Red Hill, Victoria, Australia

Thank you Harvey for that lovely introduction.

Ladies and gentleman, hello and welcome, what an amazing afternoon and evening for us to share with Olivia and Ned.

For those who don’t know me, I’m Ned’s older brother Tony, and the fact that I’m here as Best Man today should give hope to any nine year old kid who gets boxing gloves for Christmas, and who keeps the right glove for himself while offering the left to his younger brother by four and a half years for a bit of ‘sparring’. Recalling Ned that day, as he lay on the deck, blood trickling from the corner of his mouth, I remember thinking to myself — I’m probably pretty long odds to be Best Man at his wedding — and yet, I never gave up. And now here I am. Best man. Better than you Weeksy. Better than you Dan. Better than all of you out there. Chosen because, as we found out in that flyweight classic back n 1981, blood flows thicker than water.

(And also because Willy was out of town)

It’s such a great pleasure to be here on such a beautiful night. The bridesmaids, Sally, Sarah and Arbie, have been wonderful. And given we’re on a tennis court, let’s see if we can give the bridesmaids’ toast an appropriate flavour, so if you can please be upstanding and raise you glasses and repeat after me …

Game, set, match, Ned and Olivia,

Thank you bridesmaids, thank you ballboys.

You’ll also note that Ned and Olivia have taken great care with the seating arrangements. Again, there’s been a tennisy theme. And so if you look down, it basically works the same way as tennis. If you’re seated inside the singles court, well done, you were first choice invitees and your spot at the wedding never in doubt. If you’re seated inside the doubles lines, um, congratulations … you got there in the end. And if you’re outside the court proper … well,. this is a very big wedding, and after the RSVPs rolled in … anyway, you’re all here now, and it’s an absolute joy to see so many friends and family.

On the line is in, by the way.

In some respects, we’re a little fortunate that Ned made it all the way to today to marry this special person. A best man should never mention previous girlfriends, and so I won’t … by name … but I will say that my brother, with his own wonderful ability to sum up a situation hilariously and in the fewest words possible, said of one previous flame: — ‘Yes, I may have dodged a bullet there.’

From a personal perspective, I’m glad he got here with body intact. When he was three and I was nearly eight, me and two friends developed a game on our Olympic sized trampoline called ‘quadruple bouncing’. Basically, what it involved was four friends (or three friends and an infant) holding hands, and on the count of three, everyone performing ‘a sit’. Of course just before we did that sit, we’d use our hands to lift tiny unsuspecting Ned that fraction of a metre higher  … and well you actually can’t imagine the results.

The first time he laughed … he really did. He disappeared up into the branches of the lilly pilly, nine or ten metres above us, about as high as the top diving board at the Balwyn baths. The next time, we must have unbalanced him slightly, and he didn’t hit his sit quite right, and so it was with considerable concern that we watched him shoot off at 45 degrees, straight over the back fence, just a tiny human cannonball arcing into the ditch that ran beside our house in Belmont Park. And you know what made me proud … that little fella tried so hard not to cry. He so wanted to be brave in front of the big boys.

And you know what made me even prouder? Three years later I look out on the trampoline, and there he is with Dan and John Besley, holding hands with little Pippa, telling her ‘now on the count of three, we want you to do a sit  … ‘

There were so many other great games. Olympics … Ned was a tireless competitor … but I made the medals and did the handicapping … and won a fair few events it must be said … Screamers … I offered up my back and Ned and his mates would film themselves taking species … … We did marbles racing … Basically I’d set up courses down the stairs and race marbles over the distance. I was the bookmaker, the starter and the steward. Ned, Dan Besley and Hugh Taggart were the punters, and they all loved a huge, murky chipped old see-through tom bowler called Junk. Junk was always backed into favouritism, just in front of a classier, newer looking Birdcage called Big Bluey. Hugh Taggart loved Junk and Big Bluey so much that he wrote a Uni essay about how marbles racing taught him about gambling. Now he’s the head of some division of Betfair in Australia, and Ned, with the mighty Diplomatic Force, is an actual equine owner – holding the Australian record for least number of dollars invested per minutes of conversation yielded. Marbles racing changed lives, I tell you. If any of you want to get your kids addicted to gambling, honestly, come and speak to me afterwards.

I don’t want to give the impression that Ned was a victim throughout childhood. He was also a hero. In this era where smacking has become taboo, I don’t want to paint Mum and Dad poorly by saying they were smackers. Always open hand, didn’t hurt, ner ner ner ner ner!  For special occasions, however, Mum would pull out the wooden spoon, and attempt to land flailing blows on bare backs of legs as she chased us upstairs. Suffice to say, the wooden spoon was her go-to threat. As Florida has the electric chair, 3 Highton Grove had the wooden spoon.

Picture this then. Ned does something bad. Mum yells. Ned yells back. Mum tells Ned to stop yelling or he’ll get the wooden spoon. Ned keeps yelling and tells her that the wooden spoon doesn’t even hurt, ner ner ner ner ner! Mum dives for the utensils drawer, and within a heartbeat, they’re both running. By this stage, Sam, Pippa and I have gathered at the top of the stairs, the best viewing platform for watching Christians get torn apart by lions. And we’re loving it. Mum’s flying, taking ground with every stride. Ned’s going fast too, circling the downstairs rooms before deciding on whether to tackle the stairs. And then he does, but Mum’s seen that move before, and she’s on his hammer, and she’s got her arm raised, and she’s really mad, and then CRACK!

The crack is so loud that for a moment, we think that Ned has been dealt the mother of all wooden spoon hits. But then we look and see the glorious truth. Ned is still flying up the stairs and Mum is standing there, staring at a broken shard of wooden spoon handle. It’s dead. Ding Dong the Wooden Spoon is Dead! Ned runs past us and into his room, already giggling, and all three kids follow, and we raise him onto our shoulders, and hail him as a hero, for that is what he is.

Our celebrations were soured somewhat during the next supermarket shop when Mum bought a new wooden spoon, but that’s beside the point. For 24 hours, Ned had led us out of Egypt and into a Spoonless Promised Land.

Before I go too far with that analogy, Ned has none of Moses’s knack of handling locusts. Back in 1998, Ned and Stewie White, now just known as the celebrant’s son, were heading to Boots Staunton’s twenty first — a long hot drive into the sun, and Ned was behind the wheel. About half an hour from Camperdown, God got jack of some of the language they were using in the car, and beset a plague of locusts upon them. Suddenly there was zero visibility. Stewie remembers the moment as terrifying – one minute they were driving along enjoying the sunset, the next, totally blinded by tens of thousands of hungry insects, swarming the car. Fortunately, the windows were up, but what added to Stewie’s stress was that Ned didn’t decide to pull over. No, instead he chooses to drive on, his big fluffy head lowered below the level of the steering wheel, steering blindly into the plague, hoping that what he couldn’t see couldn’t kill him.

It’s not a bad adage for his life, because Ned can’t see plenty. He’s not alone on that front. We Wilson kids have a royal flush of eye defects — long sightedness, astigmatism, amblyopia — when Ned first texted me and told me about Olivia, and how she was one of the most beautiful girls he’d ever seen, I texted back and said: ‘Make sure you find out what others are saying.’ Yes, that’s our Ned. Big, blind and vague. The man who’s right eye wanders off to do it’s teeth and get into its jarmies half and hour before he does.

Even with these considerable sight handicaps, Ned was actually a pretty decent footballer. In his last year at Camberwell Grammar, he was under consideration to be captain of the First XVIII, and his coach, Ken Schwab, decided to hand him the reigns for the pre-season lightning premiership. He led the boys onto the ground, and did it with aplomb. Good clapping, from all accounts. A spring in his step. He took the boys through the warm up. They’d never been warmer, never looked sharper. Then, he trotted over to the umpires for the coin toss. The other captain tossed and Ned called.  He called loudly, and he called correctly. He jogged back to his teammates, chest out, formulating the words that would have the boys cherry ripe for the first bounce.

 ‘Let’s go fellas! The season begins now. This is a lightning premiership. If we’re not switched on from the first bounce, the game will be over before we know it.’

The boys were behind him. ‘Come on Wellers. Good one Neddles. Let’s go boys.’

Stewie White can’t remember if it was him who asked the question. “Ned, which way are we kicking?’

It was met with a long, contemplative silence …

‘I don’t know.’

Eventually, through a process of elimination, the ends were sorted out, and Ned’s, eventually brief, captaincy career was underway.

When our sister Sam’s second son was born, controversially, also named Ned, my brother greeted the arrival of a new Ned with the statement, ‘’I’ll have to give him a Neducation.’ A Neducation, for those who don’t know, are lessons preparing you for a life of being a Ned. Ned’s have to be big. Ned’s have to be affable. Ned’s don’t have to talk very much, but they have to say quiet, funny things that everyone laughs at, and remembers as the highlight of the night. Neds have to watch heaps of TV, you’ll recognise a sofa that has been used by a Ned by its Ned-shaped wear marks, and Ned’s must have an almost polar bear capacity to hunker down and sleep through times of adversity, like party clean-ups or other such unfortunate group endeavours. Neds have to be smiley, friendly and kind.  Neds have to be proud of being Neds, unless they get to Scotland and find out that ‘Ned’ is slang for juvenile delinquent, in which case an upstanding Ned will insist that his friends call him ‘Lance’. And it’s not widely known, but most Neds are naughty.

Our Ned is quietly naughty, and persists in being so because he always seems to get away with it. To give an example, on one trip to Adelaide casino, Ned and a group of friends were playing roulette. The game was proceeding as normal – people who don’t understand the concept of independent variables writing down numbers, the croupier doing his dramatic hand wipes and ‘no more bets’ calls – when suddenly a spanner was thrown into the works. ‘Where’s the ball?’ the croupier asks the table. Nobody replies. The croupier peers into his wheel, unable to believe his eyes, groping into all the nooks and crannies to locate a ball that has suddenly become invisible. A minute and a half later, Ned opens the pocket of his jacket, and with a big, ham-acted ‘shhhh’ gesture, shows the boys exactly where the roulette ball has gone. Yes, Neds might not be delinquents, but they are naughty.

Amazingly, the roulette ball is not even the best ‘light fingers’ story we have in the family.  Ned’s younger sister Pippa once managed to steal a live lobster from a tank at a Chinese restaurant. How do they manage such sleight of hand, such conjuring skill. The truth goes all the way back to their childhoods. They were trained by one of the greats, a master illusionist who went by the name of The White Magician. The White Magician was a magician who could take on the appearance of any person in the world. Miraculously, he chose to take on my appearance. He always wore white pyjamas, my white pyjamas, and he could do magic tricks like fusing two matches together, turning his eyelids inside out, and locking a door from the other side that didn’t have a lock [mouthed: you hold the handle]. Ned loved the White Magician, and would happily report back to me the next morning that ‘the White Magician had visited again last night. ’Tony Tony, he came, he came!’ Sadly, after a year or so, he confronted me with the truth. ‘The White Magician is you … isn’t it. I know it is.’ Reluctantly, I confessed. The game, it seemed, was up. Except Ned wasn’t done yet. ‘I want in,’ he said excitedly. ‘I want to be a magician too.’ And so for the next few months, the White Magician appeared to Pippa and Pippa alone, and he had a new sidekick, ‘The Purple Pantomime’ who could take on the appearance of any person in the world, and who had chosen to take on Ned’s appearance. Pippa bought it. In fact I think we got tired of the game before she did. Indeed it’s entirely possible that Pip is currently in a state of shock over there. He’s not real, Pip. The Purple Pantomime is actually Ned.

It’s now time for telegrams, and we’ve got two – two actual telegrams that were delivered by Rolf from the Sound of Music and had STOP written in words at the end of each sentence. The first one is from Jamie Carter, a long-time friend of Ned’s and Olivia’s who now lives in the US.                      

Hi Ned and Olivia,
I would like to wish you both a very happy day and a very rewarding future together as a married couple.  I would like to do this, but I can’t. 
See, as many who witnessed the service would know, today Ned married my ex-girlfriend. Olivia and I may not have had relations, and if memory serves, we may not have even kissed, but I’m pretty sure we held hands, which was pretty fricken intense for a couple of love-sick 12 year olds.
We had our ups and downs, and we decided to take a break.  A break, Ned!!   I turn my back, in swoops Ned, and now we find ourselves in this awkward love triangle.   
At Carey we had a code - no person may date, consider dating, or even look at a girl that was once the romantic interest of a mate, even if the romantic interest fizzled in the 80s. We called this — the “Peter Busse Principle”.
You broke this principle Ned, shame on you.  But you went Camberwell Grammar; you lack a Baptist’s fortitude and moral fibre.
So here we are on your happy day.  I am Eric Clapton to your George Harrison and Pattie Boyd; I am Jason Donovan to your Michael Hutchance and Kylie Minogue.  And it hurts, hurts like hell.  But I will move on with pride and dignity.  I will channel my hurt into creating classic rock songs, while avoiding drug binges and crap London musicals.
In my more secure and happy moments, I am thrilled for both of you.  Knowing both of you for as long as I have makes me begrudgingly confident in how happy you both will be together.  You’re both wonderfully intelligent, modest, kind, and fun people, and I’m not surprised that you found happiness together.  If I promise to bury my hurt deep inside, I hope you’ll let me continue to be a part of your lives for many years to come.
Ned, you win, you got the girl.   Olivia, I want my pocketknife back.

This one comes from Chris Williams, who would have been best man had he not been in japan for his own pre-nuptials.

Firstly congratulations Ned & Olivia. Olivia, I’m sure you look beautiful. I hope you have an amazing day, but I’ll come back to the nice bit.
Firstly I would like to talk about Ned. Ah ‘The Fluff’. I have known Ned since Sergy the red pen famously broke vaulting record after vaulting record over the ruler in Year 5, some 22 years ago. Since then we have  been through a lot together — from weekend camp-outs at Tenno’s, to the Merricks slater-bug massacre, to learning lessons travelling around Europe — like if you are drunk enough to join a Spanish conga line, be careful of your wallet. And don’t ever join a round with Glen20.
So I was very keen to be at Ned’s wedding, but alas, it is not to be. The reason being that I beat him down the aisle by about 10 days. This is just one of many victories I have enjoyed over Ned over the years. If I were to go through all the others (like the time I beat Ned in this year’s DreamTeam Grand Final) there would be little time left for anything else this weekend, so I think it’s probably better I go through the couple of occasions Ned got the upper hand. It is his wedding after all.
The first of these occasions involves an over I bowled to him during Captain’s Cricket on the extremely undersized and then cordoned off JTO, where a 12 year old Wilson, who was the same size he is now (if anything he has possibly shrunk since 1989) managed to hit around bowling off normal sized year 7s pretty well. Well, we don’t want to dwell on this story but the over I bowled to him went something like: 4 6 6 4 un-rebowled wide 6. Moving on…
The other story that gets told more often than I wish to hear it is the time when the Nintendo 64 was new, and a game called WWF Attitude was my main leisure activity. (I thought this story may appeal to the many fans of 1990s video game wrestling in your wedding audience.)
Anyway, the plan was to play the game by myself for “x” number of hours until I was pretty damn awesome. The key was remembering button combinations and once I had those down, then stage 2 was initiated – invite the button-mashing Wilson round for a hiding. He took the bait – the fly was in the well spun Williams web. We set about creating likenesses of ourselves to wrestle with. What hope would The Neducator have against the Penultimate Warrior? Well actually, not much to start with, so we played a few exhibition bouts so Ned could get his bearings. I wanted him to have a few small successes in a controlled environment to make sure he would agree to a title fight.
It worked – I had filled Ned with enough faux confidence, and Ned being the arrogant sonuvabitch he is, agreed to fight me for the title. The bout started, and things were going largely predictably but slowly, yet the Neducator, after amassing an okay amount of offence, just could not contend with the power moves the Penultimate Warrior was executing. So eventually, after an epic 40 minute war of attrition, the Neducator finally dwindled down to the dark red, meaning he was ripe for the pin as soon as I next knocked him over. Meanwhile I was still in the yellow, with still orange to go until red (It may sound like its not important, but it is). What was to happen next was one of the great miscarriages of video game justice ever. The Neducator pulled off a meagre body scissors from which the Penultimate Warrior should have expected to recover, especially with the amount of Yellow I had left in my “Attitude Meter”.
Then the Neducator hit the wrong button and made an accidental pin.
Then the referee somehow made it to a 3 count.
Then the Neducator was having his hand raised in victory followed by his belt presentation!
Of course I challenged Ned to a rematch, my pride as wounded as my sore and throbbing thumbs. Ned, the mongrel, refused, and so it seemed to me that a natural end to the evening had been reached. Rather than drop a hint by looking at my watch and yawning, I suggested that it was time for Ned to leave, — ‘get out of my house’ were the exact words — which Ned mistakenly interprets as me kicking him out of my house in a sore-loser rage.
So there you go Ned. Congratulations for those victories, and congratulations for today! What a find Olivia is, an attractive young neuroscientist undertaking one hell of an experiment! You compliment each other so well; The way you interact with each other, and little Eliza, is incredibly affectionate. You are both so ‘switched-on’, considerate and funny and it really is a privilege to be part of your lives. I’m looking forward to getting back and exchanging stories and photos (where mine will probably be better than yours). All the very, very best!!!
What a lovely man and what a great friend. I was so impressed with the telegram that I wrote straight back to Willy:

Wonderful telegram. Love it. BTW, did you mean to call Suzie, ‘Eliza’ in the nice bit? Is that your nickname for her?

To which Willy replied:

Ah, good pick up. Eliza is Hank's kid. Big mistake, please can you fix that up!
And so I have. And I’d like you all to tell Willy that I have.

I’ve long considered Olivia Carter to be my sister in law, but today it’s so exciting to see you as a bride and to know how happy you and my brother are together. When Olivia first arrived on the scene, she and Ned had the distance hurdle to get over. She was a neuroscientist at Harvard. Ned, was not a neuroscientist, not at Harvard. Quickly, he assessed that ‘daughter of a Peruvian princess who is also a neuroscientist at Harvard’ was, in the cricket jargon of today, a ball bowled in good areas. He flashed his blade. Again that’s cricket jargon. I’m not saying he actually flashed his blade. And for the first time in his romantic life, Ned was building a memorable innings.

And what an innings it has been. He went to Harvard himself, something I for one never thought Ned would do, and did a double major in long-distance Dreamteam and sleeping. Then, having won the Fluiffamatics their first premiership, he brought Olivia back, and she wowed us Wilsons with her beauty, her intelligence and her friendliness. Olivia’s status in the family was secure by the time of her first Wilson Christmas. But she made absolutely sure of it in the traditional post-lunch cricket game, when she faced up to her very first ball. Tom Nisbet was the bowler, and I’m sure Tom won’t mind me saying that his offies lack turn, and fizz, and drift … I mean the kid bowls pies … but that said, you’ve got to put away the bad ball. And so, with her future father-in-law looking on from a crouch behind the wicket, Olivia danced nimbly down the pitch, one skip, two skips, and lifted the ball sweetly over mid-on. It was a timeless moment. Olivia haring between the wickets. Uncle Ian drunkenly lumbering around the boundary, attempting in vain to stop the four. She was a Peruvian princess, but, as we were quickly finding out, she owned a full wardrobe of tracksuit pants, and had Ponting-esque footwork, something we’ve been looking for in the gene pool for some time.

We’ve also lacked an Eliza in the gene pool - still do in fact. But we now have a Suzie, and what a lovely little baby she is. Of course, for most of her nine months, she hasn’t really liked me, but this morning let me hold her for a record breaking forty-five minutes, which was as thrilling as being allowed into a really exclusive nightclub. I think the thing that swung her around was me whispering to her that under old English inheritance rules, only issue born after the marriage stand to inherit anything. She apparently had no idea about this, and promised to me there and then that she will now be on her best behaviour.

Ned, Dad says that you’re lucky and I guess you are. You invest in a horse and it immediately wins its first four starts. You bump into a friend at the races, who casually tosses over the numbers for four thousand dollars worth of longshot quadrella. You have this amazing group of mates, who I’d attempt to annexe and take for my own mates if I didn’t know how much they mean to you. And now you have Olivia, and Suzie, and a love that is as deep as the many Ned-shaped indents you have left in couches worldwide. A love that makes all of us so happy and so proud. Ned, you are lucky, but I think that good things come to you because of who you are: the sheer pleasantness of your personality, your willingness to have a go, your good-natured embrace of the good things in life. And I’m lucky too. Because I get to have you as a brother.

Well done Olivia and Ned. I hope you continue to have a memorable night.

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Abe: 'We combined forces, and we built a dynasty', For Greg and Lynette - 2013

July 1, 2015

3 August 2013, Minnesota, USA

[Series of thankyous]

Greg’s family has been so good to me, I’ve known Greg since 1996, which is how many years ago, seventeen? I’m not a mathematician. I was actually talking with Ben and Lexi, the cousins, and I was with Greg and I was saying I’ve known him since 1996, when I was ten years old, and Ben said, ‘yeah I was four’ and Lexi said,  ‘yeah I was one’ and it was like, yeah, I get it, I’m not in college anymore, thanks for rubbing it in.

Thank you so much to the guests that are here. I know there are some here from Florida. Some people from Michigan, Virginia? Anyone from Minnesota? Thanks a lot for getting here. It’s a lot with the travel, but we do it for these two.

Thank you to the wedding party, the groomsmen, the bridesmaids, the true MVPs of tonight. And most importantly, thanks to Lynette and Greg. I guess we’re all here for you guys, it’s a big night, it’s a special night, everyone is here for you.

It’s a big honour to be Greg’s best man. I guess we met in 1996, we went to Blessed Trinity, any BT grads in the house? In # Minnesota. We were in fourth grade and myself [names friends] we were the top dogs in the playground. Not so much in the classroom but definitely in the playground. We were not scholars. AndGreg comes in, Greg was at Burroughs, public school kid coming into a private school, and everyone liked him. The girls liked him, a lot of the guys liked him, and I could not stand Greg. He walked in, and he was a little too confident, you know he’s coming into our playground, coming into my territory, trying to take my girls, and I wasn’t cool, I wasn’t cool with it.

And everyone liked him, everyone liked him. Like I said the girls did, the guys did, and I figured I better join forces. I’m not going to beat him, so I better join his team. So we met in a dark alley. I told him where to meet. I told him not bring anybody. I wanted to be one on one. Because I knew i could take him.  So we met and shook hands and we made an agreement. And you know, we combined forces, and we built a dynasty. So myself Greg, Scott and Zac. It was really great ... so. [applause] Thank you.

So I was talking with Greg on the phone one day, and you know, we talk all the time, saying hey how’s your day going, and he says, yeah I’m pretty good, I took this girl Lynette out, and I said,  ‘ok, tell me a bit about her,’ and he said ‘she went to [names colleges] and so I said, ‘ok clearly a smart girl’, and said ‘what does she do now?’ and he said ‘she’s a teacher, she’s a special education teacher, working with younger kids,’ I said, ‘ok, she’s got a heart, that great, that’s great.’ I said, ‘Ok, how does she look?’ and Greg said, ‘oh, she looks good man. She looks real good.’ And then I ask him the most important question, the question that I think every best friend, every best man should ask his best friend, when he starts seeing a girl. ‘Does she have a sister for me?’ And he said ‘no’ and I said, ‘you gotta cut it off! You gotta cut it off! This isn’t going to work. This isn’t going to work for us, we’re a team.’

Clearly, he never listens to me, he did the opposite to what I said, and I’m glad he did. I’m really glad he did. So like I said, it’s a great day, it’s a special time for the families, for the friends, but I guess most importantly we’re here for two people and that’s Greg and Lynette.

And so because it’s such a special day, I thought I’d write a poem. And I don’t, I don’t really write poems. The last poem I wrote was in fifth grade so – it was haiku. It was a haiku. And so, I thought I might brush off the poem skills, and see what we could do. The title of the poem is ‘Greg’s Most Embarrassing Moments ’96 to 2013’. I’m kidding. It’s actually called ‘My Brother’.

[To Greg] You good? Right. You’re giving me that look man!

August 3rd, 2013. Here we are on your wedding day.

On such an occasion I think it’s a must that we take a trip down memory lane.

We met in third grade, you were the new kid in school

The girls liked you immediately, they thought you were cool,

At first I was not, Greg’s biggest fan

But we spent more time together, and I realised he was the man

He’s really not, but it rhymes, so I had to make it work.

Greg was an only child, just like me

His dad’s name was Mike, and his mom Mary

His favourite team was the Packers, (Booo, Booo!)

That made me want to hurl

And his favourite band at the time, the one and only Spice Girls

The fact he liked the Packers, while friends laughed and jeered

And Greg knowing all the Spice Girls dance moves, was just plain weird

We got close fast, we created a wolf pack

The four of us together, Greg, Scott, Abe and Zac

Has anyone seen The Hangover? Does anybody remember Alan? Greg was our Alan. It was eerie how much he was like Alan.

Our friend would cause mischief, harmless little fun

Throwing water balloons at cars, and teepeeing on the run

I wanted Greg on my side, we made a killer team

And if angry parents ever chased us, they would catch him before me

Like most great friendships, there were some bumps and cracks,

But we kept looking forward, and never looked back

Greg was always in my corner, he pushed me to improve

And whenever I had doubt, he helped me fight through em

Not sure of the month, not sure of the day,

But at some point, something changed

No longer a friend that you see,

But so much more, a brother to me,

My brother all day, my brother all night

My brother tomorrow, my brother for life

Loyal, fun, popular, honest

The shorter, less-good-looking brother that I’ve always wanted.

Now here we are, on your wedding day

It’s time to party, to celebrate

You stand beside, your beautiful queen,

She’s smart, genuine, the opposite of mean,

And warm and caring and lovely and kind

How you pulled this off Gregors, really blows my mind.

Enough of this poem, you know that I care,

Just one last thing, that I’d like to share,

There will be times in your marriage, when you’ll be frustrated with Lynette

Just know that you can call me, if you ever need to vent

You’ll say she’s done this, you’ll say she’s out of line

Just know that I’ll be siding with Lynette, one hundred percent of the time.

You know I love you guys, this is a huge honour, this is major, everyone can raise your glass. To Mr and Mrs Gregory Manderfeld.

Love you guys.

Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mhofjALkvo...

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Jonathan: 'He's so old and I'm so young and handsome', for brother Ricky & Lauren

July 1, 2015

Thank you, thank you. It is great to be [inaudble].

For those of you who may not know, I'm Ricky's younger brother, Jonathan. And I'm extremely honored to be here tonight to be the best man not just to my brother but to one of my best friends, Ricky. You might think it would be hard for us to be so close. We're like 90 years apart. He's so old and I'm so young and handsome. But as luck would have it, both of us have a maturity level of about a seventh grader. RICKY: Put together. JONATHAN: Combined. So it kinda works out nicely.

Before I get all sentimental, it wasn't always so great to be Ricky's brother. I know, it's shocking. But when Ricky was in high school, he often babysat for me, my sister Josie and my cousin Mike. So when it came time for dinner, Ricky used to order a pizza, take in the whole thing into his room and leave us with cool-aid packets. That's right. He didn't even make the cool-aid for us. Now that I think about it, high school Ricky kinda sucks. I can't hold that against him anymore because he's really made up for it since then. Just a show of hands, how many people have ever left a conversation with Ricky thinking, "That guy would really be something if he had a personality." We got one guy. Okay, yeah, not very many. Ricky can make almost anyone laugh except for poor Lauren after she's heard of the same joke for the 90th time.

I'm about to reveal Ricky's most guarded secret. I think Lauren would be here. Ricky is like the funniest person alive, for like twenty minutes next to me after that he's only so-so. I'm sorry, it's true. Don't get me wrong though, there's no one in the world I'd rather hang out with than my brother Ricky. And I mean that literally because we hang out together all the time. Sometimes we even go out to lunch together wearing the exact same outfit. It's a great time until one of Ricky's high school and college friends comes by and thinks as though we might be dating. Let me tell you that it's awkward.

Speaking of dating - see what I did there - Ricky and Lauren have been dating for the past five years. And I just want to say Lauren's making me feel amazing right now because I know this speech was terrible. She'd be giving me this look right now like, "You are making such a fool of yourself." A.K.A the look she gives Ricky 95% of the time. So thank you for the support.

Anyways, out of those five years, I can count on one hand the amount of days that they've spent apart from each other. And you know what, if it hasn't happened yet, you guys never getting sick of each other, it's not gonna happen. And I hope that it never happens because I know that you guys truly love each other.

What else but love can explain how Ricky come up to Lauren and say, "Listen, I have this great idea. I'm gonna put on this tank top, we're going outside, I'm gonna pour this freezing cold jug of milk on my head, I'm gonna make sure it's in super slow motion, and then" - (laughter) - you should give it up for [Lauren] here [inaudible] - and Lauren agrees to it. But the results speak for themselves, [inaudible].

Ricky and Lauren asked me to be their best man, that's right, their best man. Because as Ricky has put it no one has spent more time with Ricky and Lauren together than me. And I know a lot of you are thinking to yourselves right now, "Wow, that sounds terrible. I don't want my little brother hanging around with my girlfriend all the time." But not once did you guys ever made me feel I was getting in your way or you secretly wish I would go away. Maybe once in a while you [inaudible], but I thank you for hiding it so well.

I honestly love you both for all that you've done for me and I couldn't be happier to be here today to celebrate your wedding. If I was less awesome, I'd be crying right now. But instead, I just wanna toast my brother Ricky and my new sister Lauren, I wish you both a lifetime of happiness and I honestly cannot wait to see what your kids end up like.

One last thing, since so many of our family came all the way from the great country of Mexico tonight, I've translated this entire speech into Spanish and I would like to read it for all of you right now. Ricky y Lauren, los quiero.


Read more: http://www.sweetspeeches.com/s/1906-best-man-the-best-best-man-speech-ever#ixzz3ebhmjtTf

Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vr4ZEMyKrW...

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Alex with friend Ben.

Alex with friend Ben.

Gabriel: 'The condition was that he had to write the best man toast', for Alejandro & Meghan - 2011

July 1, 2015

 

24 June, 2011, Massachesetts

When Ale asked me to be his best man I felt really touched. He’s such a classy guy that I was truly honored. But then he quickly followed the invitation with what he said was a very important condition. And I remember he had this conflicted look on his face like as if he wished he didn’t have to say what he was about to say, but he said it anyway and he told me that the condition was that he had to write the best man toast.

Most of you are probably puzzled and are thinking what’s up with that. But I knew exactly what he was referring to. You see, when I was in college, with my whole family in attendance, I gave a bust of an acceptance speech at a scholarship dinner and he’s never let me live it down.

So I knew well, that implicit in his conditional invitation to be his best man was a serious warning that said basically, “Don’t you dare make an ass yourself again at MY wedding.”

So, I did what every loving older brother would do, I looked past the mixed feelings of honor, excitement, AND shame that he had made me feel and I heeded his warning.

And so, as awkward as this may sound, for the first time in my lifetime, and probably yours too, I will now read to you the best man toast written by the groom himself… it reads:

Dear Ale, or as I like to call you when I look at you in the mirror every morning, dear Mr. Perfect (kiss to the bicep):

Today is your day. Tonight is your night. And can I just say this publicly: there are no words good enough to express how good you look right now, but I will try anyhow: you, hot stuff, look outstanding. All that money and effort that you put into getting your tuxedo tailored to fit your perfectly chiseled and muscular physique was well worth it! On most days, Tom Brady’s got nothing on you handsome, and tonight he’s not even close.

To my beautiful new bride Meghan: tell me, my sexy little soda bread, how does it feel to be the chosen one, the luckiest girl in the world who gets to keep this guy by your side for the rest of your life?

I mean, who would of thought that the simple act of taking my shirt off after rugby practice at Framingham State would have resulted in all of this? Well, frankly, I would have. I mean, it’s nearly impossible to resist me. If it were socially acceptable to marry oneself, I would have said “yes” to me too.

Anyhow, today is truly inspired by love, friendship and commitment…and my burning desire to populate the human race with the most beautiful and talented offspring this world has ever seen. Of course, they will all be little Crossfitters who will grow up to teach their cousins how to do burpees with perfect technique and why the Paleo Diet is good for them even if they are not even 10 years old.

Speaking of Paleo, it’s really a shame that the cup cakes are not caveman-approved. To my family and friends, please don’t be offended if I look at you with disdain as you chow down on them later. As for me, I plan on mashing a couple of them together into a kettle bell, freezing it, and doing swings with it a year from now on our wedding anniversary. With CrossFit, it’s all about doing what you can with what’s around you. Like the time we were at the lake house with the O’Brien family and I woke up wicked early to do squats with sandbags and push jerks with a kayak. My goal for this August: to LIFT the entire lake house with the whole O’Brien clan in it.

Well, I’m digressing and I think it’s time to bring this toast to a close, so I would like to end with a few words for Meghan from one of my favorite wrestlers of all time, the Heartbreak Kid, Shawn Michaels. Dear Meghan, for the rest of your life, “I guarantee you BEYOND a shadow of a doubt, I will give you a show like you HAVE never… ever seen before…Why?…Because I can.”

PS - Lady’s and gentlemen, the Heartbreak Kid, Alex Verdaguer, has left the building.

On a serious note, I have a lot of fond memories of my times with Ale, and especially those few occasions where we managed to show one another that we really cared about each other. I want to share with you one of those examples. I was in college and I had a big weekend track competition that included some travel, so I had packed my bag the night before. Friday morning, after class, I went back home to pick up my bag and I found a note sitting on top of it. I pick it up, I see it’s from Ale, and it read something like, “Good luck this weekend. I’ll be thinking of you.” I kept the note for a while after that because it meant a lot, especially because it came at a time in our lives when we were both so busy that we barely did much together.

So, I share this story with you also to remind you of the value of doing little things like that to let each other know that you love each other.

Source: http://thecoolkidztable.blogspot.com.au/20...

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Courtney Blair: 'If anyone can turn him, Jen it’s you', For Rob and Jen - 2010

July 1, 2015

2010, Shaw Hill Golf and country Club, Lancashire

To be honest, I am a little surprised that he is getting married to a lady today,  because there was always rumours going around the family that, y’know, that Rob might not be ... well we thought he might be gay. So I was trying to sum up some of the stories, but instead I put it into a bit of a song, so if you just bear with me.

What’s up Rob? It’s only a bloody song.

Think you’re outdoing me, pal?

So I’ve done it to the tune of ‘Matchstalk Men, and Matchstalk Cats and Dogs’. I know it’s a favourite of some people here,  so we’ll er, we’ll go with it.

So here we are, it’s 2010

A beautiful bride by the name of Jen,

Fantastic day so far’s been had by all,

I hate to be the one to say,

I always thought, that Rob was gay

Did no one read the warning signs at all?

Well it started sat on Santa’s knee,

I was six, our Rob was three

An action man was my polite request.

Then Rob sat down with his list in hand

On Santa’s lap, in this wonderland

And said, ‘I’d like a Barbie doll the best’

So here’s to Rob and Jen, on your wedding day

You were made for each other in every way

Well Rob you’ve got a beautiful wife

And I wish you a happy life

But I still believe that our Rob could be gay.

Well I was flabbergasted, struck with shock,

I couldn’t believe that Rob liked ... [laugh]

Frocks.

But I was a modern brother of the day.

There’s nothing wrong wearing comfy shoes

And meeting men in public loos,

But he’s our kid and we’ll love him anyway.

So here’s to Rob and Jen, on your wedding day

You were made for each other in every way.

Well you know you’ve got more friends than most

Raise your glasses to a toast,

To Rob and Jen, on their wedding day.

Well over twenty years have been and gone,

And here he is saying Jen’s the one,

If anyone can turn him, Jen it’s you,

He’ll steal your products to his hair,

And prance around in your underwear,

But at least he leaves the seat down on the loo.

So here’s to Rob and Jen, on your wedding day,

You were made for each other in every way,

Well Rob you’ve got a beautiful wife,

And I wish you both a happy life,

But in the laws want grand kids by the end of May.

So here’s to Rob and Jen, on your wedding day,

You were made for each other in every way.

Well charge your glasses to a toast ...

To Rob and Jen, on your wedding day.

Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c_wr5P7thK...

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Daniel Buccheri: 'They're stuck together for life', for brother Adrian and Sarah - 2015

July 1, 2015

29 March, 2015, Melbourne, Australia

Guess it’s true, what they say

When you become a man

When you find the one and take her hand

Luckily for you, it all went to plan

And she didn’t say no, ‘cause that’d be sad.

Now you’re here with me,

I’m singing my best man’s speech.

For my brother and his wife

Now they’re stuck together for life.

When we were kids, trying to get to sleep

You’d say to me, ‘be quiet please, I’m trying to get to sleep’

But every breath you took,

Used to sound like this [snooore!]

So when you moved out of home, I thought, 'Thank the Lord

I won’t be missing you.'

And then you hook up, with a special girl,

Thought you were dead!

Never saw you again,

Then she found the ignition,

Let you sleep in the kitchen

Had you feeding the dogs,

Doing the laundry and dishes

Your independence is gone,

No more fun on your own,

Except for your bucks last weekend,

When we were having some fun

And although you met, on the internet

I know this love is true

It’s enough, to let the dogs on your expensive rug

And not keep them outside

And hey my new sister

From anther mister

You look so great on your wedding day

I hope it’s been the perfect day

And hey my new sister

Thanks for making him so

Happy all the time

Because his loneliness had never been a friend of his

So he searched and searched for you

Then one day in the craziness you came along

He couldn’t get you out of his head

It was Sarah this, it was Sarah that,

And Sarah this

Oh I knew that he loved you,

Sarah this, and Sarah that

And Sarah this

Oh I knew that he loved you

[musical interlude]

Adrian now, you’ve become a man,

We’re not the kids, we used to be

Though we’d scream and fight, as children

Now I really like it, when we two meet

I’m so proud of you,

All you’ve done for me,

Do you realise or not,

I’ve always looked up to you,

It’s okay, if it gets you emotional,

It’s the same way, I feel for you,

All the time that's gone,

Where have the years gone,

Adrian, I’ve got so much love for you.

So won’t you raise your glass,

[raise your glasses]

For these, these special two

Wish you nothing but the best

For your lives and all the rest

This is love, it’s clear to see,

Oh this is love, it’s clear to see,

So won’t you raise your glasses with me

This is love, it’s clear to see,

I wish you joy and happiness

For eternity

 

Thank you guys, have an amazing life, I love you both.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Source: http://www.danielbuccheri.com/#!home/mainP...

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