Sue-Ann Post

And one memorable winter in Melbourne she worked as a wood splitter at a woodyard for a guy named Blue.

She wrote a weekly column for the Melbourne Age for three years and was nominated for the 2002 Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission's Print Media Award.

[3] In 1997 her original comedy show "An Ordinary Life" was featured on ABC's "The Smallest Room in the House".

Other Television appearances include Outland (2012), Kath & Kim (2004), The Genie from Down Under, (1996), The Bedroom Commandments (2012) The Glass House (2005), The Lost Tribe (2005), Standing Up (1999), The Panel (1999), Mouthing Off (1996), Something Hot Before Bed (1995).

But, after her father was killed in the Granville Train crash in 1977,[4] Post suffered incest, realised she was a lesbian and questioned whether God existed.

Sue-Ann Post at the 2010 Global Atheist Convention