'A succulent Chinese meal' - iconic Australian quote immortalised in national archive
In 1991, Jack Karlson (born Cecil George Edwards) was arrested at a Chinese restaurant in Brisbane, Australia, and his theatrical protest during the arrest, including the now-iconic phrases "democracy manifest" and "a succulent Chinese meal," became a viral sensation in 2009. The National Film and Sound Archive of Australia (NFSA) has now preserved the recording, known as "Democracy Manifest," recognizing its cultural significance and impact on Australian humor.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedIn 1991, Jack Karlson (born Cecil George Edwards) was arrested at a Chinese restaurant in Brisbane, Australia, and his theatrical protest during the arrest, including the now-iconic phrases "democracy manifest" and "a succulent Chinese meal," became a viral sensation in 2009. The National Film and Sound Archive of Australia (NFSA) has now preserved the recording, known as "Democracy Manifest," recognizing its cultural significance and impact on Australian humor. The NFSA highlights how Karlson's performance transformed a news event into cultural folklore, inspiring memes, remixes, and more. Karlson, who passed away in 2024, maintained the incident was a case of mistaken identity, with theories ranging from confusion with a dine-and-dash chess player to stolen credit card accusations. The recording is part of the NFSA's Sounds of Australia collection, which recognizes culturally significant recordings.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedNFSA releases its Sounds of Australia "capsule" every year.
Karlson maintained the 1991 incident was a case of mistaken identity.
Jack Karlson died from prostate cancer in 2024, aged 82.
Karlson's words became shorthand for irreverent Australian humour.
Jack Karlson's 1991 arrest monologue has been preserved by the National Film and Sound Archive of Australia.