Tom Waterhouse, the son of famous bookmaker Robbie Waterhouse and leading racehorse trainer Gai Waterhouse, has posed with farm animals and women in bikinis in a series of bizarre Christmas posts.
The 38-year-old bookmaker posted a photo of himself in a suit holding a baby goat surrounded by more goats, alpacas and scantily-clad young women on a regional property to Twitter and Instagram on Christmas Day.
‘From my family to yours, wishing you all Merry Christmas,’ Waterhouse captioned the post.
The women in the photo were models and not actually Waterhouse’s family.
He is the fourth generation of the Waterhouse racing dynasty and the grandson of Australia’s most influential bookmaker William ‘Bill’ Waterhouse, who died in November last year.
Bookmaker Tom Waterhouse (centre), 38, posted a photo of himself in a suit holding a baby goat surrounded by more goats, alpacas and scantily-clad young women on a regional property to Twitter and Instagram on Christmas Day
Tom Waterhouse’s Christmas post divided users, with many saying it was sexist.
‘I’d feel more comfortable if he wasn’t parading women like livestock and posing them like objects. What he does and doesn’t wear is of no concern to me. The sexist attitudes he perpetuates are,’ one man wrote.
‘Women as decoration was tacky in the 90s. This is gross,’ a woman wrote.
Another woman pointed out the double standard in clothing: ‘Tom! Where are your speedos? We are gender blind these days so don’t be shy’.
‘This type of marketing rings alarm bells for me,’ one man said.
Another man wrote: ‘Sad AF… He had to pay for a farm and all those models for a tweet? That has to be the most incel Christmas tweet of 2020.’
Waterhouse’s Christmas post divided users, with many saying it was sexist
On Christmas Eve, Waterhouse posted a similar picture of his suited self surrounded by alpacas, goats and the same women, one of whom was holding a napkin for him, on the same regional property
While the post was largely panned, some people appreciated it for either its perceived marketing or ‘comedy’ value.
‘GOAT = Greatest of all time! Pretty smart marketing!’ One man wrote.
Another man said: ‘This is comedy gold, in a world where everyone is too scared to have a joke and a laugh. Well played, sir!’
‘Lot of people getting highly strung about this family photo. What they don’t realise is this is giving Tom the exposure he desperately craves. Tom 1, Easily Offended 0,’ another man said.
On Christmas Eve, Waterhouse posted a similar picture of his suited self sitting at a dinner table drinking an UpandGo with trophies, fruit, a Fanta can and a bunny also on the table.
While the post was largely panned, some people appreciated it for either its perceived marketing or ‘comedy’ value
The previous week he posted a picture with two more women, captioned: ‘Just had 6 Up&Go. Now I’m ready to party.’
He was again surrounded by alpacas, goats and the same women, one of whom was holding a napkin for him, on the same regional property.
‘Good times in Happy Valley,’ he captioned the post.
The previous week he posted a picture with two more women, captioned: ‘Just had six Up&Go. Now I’m ready to party’.
Up and Go, Fanta, female models and luxury sportscars are recurring themes in videos and photos on Waterhouse’s social media channels as of late.
Most of the posts are promoting his new smartphone application, which he claims finds the top betting odds for punters.
Up and Go, Fanta, female models and luxury sportscars are recurring themes in Waterhouse’s social media posts as of late, most of which are to promote his new betting application
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