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    tom phillips

    Explore " tom phillips" with insightful episodes like "Andrew Saunders: Acting Detective Inspector urges people to report further sightings of missing Marokopa man and his three children", "Will Loughrin: police inspector says stolen Toyota Hilux ute informing Marokopa Tom Phillips investigation process", "Chris Budge: Private investigator warns missing Marokopa man Tom Phillips may hide again after being spotted", "Kate Hawkesby: Why wasn't more done after the first time Tom Phillips disappeared with his kids?" and "Tom Phillips Tackles Toxic Masculinity through Middle Grade Mysteries" from podcasts like ""Heather du Plessis-Allan Drive", "Heather du Plessis-Allan Drive", "Heather du Plessis-Allan Drive", "Early Edition with Kate Hawkesby" and "Troped Out"" and more!

    Episodes (6)

    Andrew Saunders: Acting Detective Inspector urges people to report further sightings of missing Marokopa man and his three children

    Andrew Saunders: Acting Detective Inspector urges people to report further sightings of missing Marokopa man and his three children

    A renewed plea for information about missing Marokopa man Tom Phillips and his three children.

    A red farm-style quad bike with no registration was reported stolen from a Te Anga property on November 2.

    Police say two people, believed to be Phillips and one of his children, took the bike and drove south.

    CCTV then shows a child and an adult breaking the front glass of a Piopio superette - fleeing when the alarm went off.

    Acting Detective Inspector Andrew Saunders says they want the public to report any suspected sightings immediately.

    "For anyone out there that may be helping him, just remember that this is not a good father looking after his children."

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    Will Loughrin: police inspector says stolen Toyota Hilux ute informing Marokopa Tom Phillips investigation process

    Will Loughrin: police inspector says stolen Toyota Hilux ute informing Marokopa Tom Phillips investigation process

    Police believe a ute being driven by missing Marokopa dad Tom Phillips was involved in an altercation in the Waikato area last night.

    Phillips was spotted yesterday in Te Awamutu, Te Rapa and Kawhia in three separate sightings.

    He disappeared more than 18 months ago with children Jayda, Maverick and Ember.

    Police inspector Will Loughrin says the stolen bronze 2003 Toyota Hilux flat-deck ute forms part of the ongoing investigation.

    "What we can say is that ute we've had three sightings of was stolen, and it was stolen from an address in that surrounding area."

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    Chris Budge: Private investigator warns missing Marokopa man Tom Phillips may hide again after being spotted

    Chris Budge: Private investigator warns missing Marokopa man Tom Phillips may hide again after being spotted

    A private investigator trying to find missing Marokopa man Tom Phillips says he'll likely hide again, after being spotted.

    Phillips disappeared 18 months ago with his children Jayda, Maverick and Ember.

    He was seen yesterday in Te Awamutu, Te Rapa and Kawhia in Waikato - driving a stolen bronze Toyota Hilux flat-deck ute.

    Police still haven't found him or his children.

    Investigator Chris Budge says he says he's afraid Phillips will now do something silly.

    "Because he's feeling caged, and I know that that is well and truly at the police's front of mind. That has been at the police's front mind for some time, of the unknown actions that could occur."

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    Kate Hawkesby: Why wasn't more done after the first time Tom Phillips disappeared with his kids?

    Kate Hawkesby: Why wasn't more done after the first time Tom Phillips disappeared with his kids?

    When Thomas Phillips first went missing into dense bush with his kids back in 2021, I wrote an editorial at the time saying police and welfare agencies weren’t taking it seriously enough in my view. There was a lot of talk at the time about leaving it to the community, leaving it to the family, trying to understand that rural New Zealand is different to what those of us in cities are used to. 

    I was criticized by people who said worrying about three kids in the bush with their Dad was over the top, it was middle class angst, that the kids were “probably fine” and that they’d be used to being in the bush with their Dad. 

    I argued that no matter how used to pig hunting or going bush with your Dad you are, being taken from your family against your will and without your Mum or anyone else’s knowledge was akin to kidnapping.

    That there should be more alarm around finding them, securing their safety, making sure they were well, and that was before we even got to the fact that these kids should be in school not sleeping rough in a bush.

    And not to forget all the police time and resources wasted looking for him, the local lives jeopardized by becoming bush hunters themselves looking for them all.

    But the chorus of those criticising me for being over the top was loud, and so they were very smug when he wandered out of the bush 17 days later with the kids seemingly fine, physically, anyway. So all’s well as can be, they assumed.

    But I argued at the time that agencies needed to step in and do more, that 17 days is in the bush was still potentially traumatic, that something was off here and that Tom Phillips should face some sort of consequence.

    ‘The family will sort it out’, many argued back. And here we are now. A couple of months later he was gone again - disappearing with the children a second time - and this time not for a few weeks, but for so far seven months and counting. 

    The family are beside themselves.

    They’ve been searching, pleading with locals to search as well, they launched a petition asking for Police and Oranga Tamariki to step up their efforts. They’re worried the kids will be malnourished and say they’re “not used to that life”.  

    Oh, so it turns out just because kids grow up in a rural area, they’re not “used to that life”.. as those sitting pretty in the city wrongly assumed they might be. 

    The mother, who’s desperate, said it’s hard to believe they’re back in the same situation. I bet.

    But also, where was the wrap around service and care for this family after the first disappearance? Why were agencies so reluctant to step in and get amongst this? Why did Police just lay a ‘wasting our time’ charge and sit around waiting for a court date, which by the time it rolled around he’d vanished for anyway. 

    When this family’s vanishing act presented itself first time round, many wanted to believe it was just a rural adventure and we shouldn’t worry about it.

    The tone from people was to just calm down, leave it to them and stay out of their business. That ‘she’ll be right mate’ attitude, may well be what got us to where we are now.

    With three kids missing (again) and their mother beside herself. So I said it last time and I’ll say it again, this is not a ‘rural’ issue, this is a parenting issue. 

    This is a parent failing his kids. Police and other agencies need to get involved – and fast.

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    Tom Phillips Tackles Toxic Masculinity through Middle Grade Mysteries

    Tom Phillips Tackles Toxic Masculinity through Middle Grade Mysteries

    Show notes for TROPED OUT PODCAST brought to you by Typo Productions

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    Today we are chatting with middle grade mystery and adventure author Tom Phillips.

    • Tom Phillips debuts his first middle-grade novel, THE CURIOUS LEAGUE OF DETECTIVES AND THIEVES: EGYPT’S FIRE, in June 2022. An artist, optimist, writer, philosopher and retired superhero, Tom  mischievously brings the power of the written word by assimilating everyday lessons into witty and humorous stories of heroism and bravery. 

    • Tom really loves Em’s introduction for him, which she did not steal from his website at all. 

    • Em has to start by sharing that of all the blurbs she’s ever seen, the one on Tom’s debut is her favorite. 

    • A “blurb” is when an author gets other authors or celebrities to share a short quote about their book to put on the cover.

    • Tom’s blurb is from LeVar Burton, of Star Trek and Reading Rainbow fame. Talk about nostalgia, right? 

    • Tom shares that LeVar is a personal hero of his. As a kid he loved Reading Rainbow, and LeVar and his now-wife visited their area with friends regularly and rented a boat from Tom’s parents’ marina. 

    • Tom’s mother used to tell him, “Call LeVar, he’ll give you a job!” And Tom kept telling her, that’s not how this works. Then he moved to LA and was job hunting when Reading Rainbow was rebooted. Tom got a job on the team because they needed an editor – see? His mom told him to call LeVar. 

    • Tom says LeVar is exactly who you see – such an amazing man. 

    • Em agrees he seems very genuine.

    • LeVar has a podcast now: LeVar Burton Reads. If you love books and you aren’t listening to it, Tom is sad for you. 

    • Em reminisces that the 90s nostalgia brings her back to that whole era: Bill Nye and Scholastic Book Fairs and the Book It! Pizza Hut program. 

    • Tom says they should bring Book It! back, and also do one for adults where you get wine. 

    • Em and EJ agree they would do it for the pizza regardless. 

    • Pizza Hut! With the booths and the dusty chandeliers and the video games. Good times. Pac-Man. Mario. Choice-Ten. 

    • Tom feels most of his curiosity as a child came from Reading Rainbow. 

    • Tom grew up in a small town in the mountains, so there wasn’t much culture around other than nature, and reading was a cool escape. 

    • They’d drive down the mountain and go into Denver and he and his siblings thought they were the coolest when they got a Happy Meal. 

    • Flashback for Em to when Happy Meals came with the Land of the Lost dinosaur puppets. 

    • Speaking of books as an escape for kids, writing for kids is so important, especially now. Books can offer a comforting escape. Em asks Tom where the CURIOUS LEAGUE books help kids escape to. 

    • Here’s the thing about Tom’s book: It’s insane. 

    • It’s about a kid who lives in a museum and is framed for stealing an invaluable ruby. He joins a Willy Wonka-ish detective to catch the Mauve Moth. Kids escape into an old school middle grade zany adventure book–think THE MIXED UP FILES OF MRS. BASIL E FRANKWEILER or THE PHANTOM TOLLBOOTH

    • But today’s kids have different needs. One of Tom’s biggest issues with the world now is how we handle toxic masculinity. 

    • He’s a huge advocate for people being happy, whatever that means for them. As long as you aren’t taking away someone else’s happiness, you’re okay, and have a right to live your life as you see fit. 

    • But while we’re pushing for equality we’re leaving young boys behind. In today’s world, the old role for boys is gone, everyone has new roles, but no one is telling boys how to take their role and fit into this new world and change with the times. 

    • In CURIOUS LEAGUE, the boy learns the 37 Rules of Being a Good Detective-which are also the 37 rules of being a good man. 

    • Example: The first rule is that you learn the most in an interrogation in the silence, not when you’re talking. The message being, you have to listen to the other person, and not spend that time thinking about what you will say next. If you listen, you can understand the other person’s needs and find a solution. 

    • You can’t force lessons down kids’ throats. You have to introduce it and let them decide on their own. This book is about John making his choices, and learning that no matter what, he’s responsible for his own happiness. 

    • E.J. observes that a kid living in a museum feels like a science nerd spin on ELOISE, who lived in the Plaza Hotel. (Please ignore the dog barks in the background, nothing to see here, we are very professional.)

    • Tom elaborates on his inspiration, THE MIXED UP FILES OF MRS. BASIL E FRANKWEILER, in which the kids run away and go live in a museum. That always stuck with him, because he wished he could live in a museum. When he lived in New York City, he went to the American Museum of Natural History maybe three times a week to hang out and draw. 

    • His friend pointed out that when you have kids in cities, you designate a landmark so that if a kid gets lost, they have an easy place they can get to so you can reunite–like the Empire State Building. Which is basically what happens in the book: something happens to John’s mother and she never comes to get him, so he just stays there. 

    • EJ calls out the big trope of children’s fiction: Where are the parents?

    • Em points out how necessary it is–parents don’t let adventures happen.

    • Tom adds that if a child has parents, they can’t be lost, and if a child isn’t lost, they can’t be found. And then, what’s the point?

    • A good example: In A SERIES OF UNFORTUNATE EVENTS, all the adults are so dumb, and the kids are really smart. Which is totally how middle grade kids think about adults. 

    • Shout out for the Netflix show with Neil Patrick Harris. And the film with Jim Carrey while we’re at it. 

    • Em wants to know what Tom’s favorite book was as a kid. 

    • THE NEVER ENDING STORY! Tom is dyslexic, so most of his stories were from his sister reading out loud, and she read that one over and over and over. Also THE PRINCESS BRIDE and PETER PAN.

    • Em shares that PETER PAN was the first book she read that she felt was a “real” book, the first thick adult book, as a kid. (Side note, ALL books are real books!)

    • E.J. never read the book but has the ‘80s TV adaptation burned into her brain for all eternity, VHS recorded with all the commercials. As the ‘80s kid does. 

    • Tom has the PETER PAN trivia: Did you know it’s tr...

    Ep 4 | Paydirt with Matt McGloin and Tom Hannifan - A Penn State Football Podcast

    Ep 4 | Paydirt with Matt McGloin and Tom Hannifan - A Penn State Football Podcast

    On Episode 4 of Paydirt, Matt & Tom talk about:

    - The much discussed alliance between the Big Ten, ACC, and PAC-12

    - Updates on COVID policies for the Big Ten and Penn State

    - Updates on the defensive line position through camp

    - Is this a make or break season for James Franklin with the Penn State fanbase?

    - Penn State begins the season at Wisconsin this Saturday in Week 1 action!


    Visit https://bleav.com/podcast-show/paydirt-a-penn-state-football-podcast/ for more information on the show, and other places to listen to the podcast. Don't forget to subscribe, comment, and like us!


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