Fisk star Kitty Flanagan responds after Logies triumph
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Sky News AU
10 hours ago
- Sky News AU
Todd Woodbridge reveals how he really felt about Jelena Dokic's 'he's my person' Logies speech - as she steps out with new boyfriend in Melbourne
Todd Woodbridge has spoken publicly for the first time about being the focus of colleague Jelena Dokic's extremely emotional Logies acceptance speech. The 54-year-old sports commentator and Tipping Point Australia host joined Nova FM's Jase and Lauren on Friday, where he was asked about the emotional tribute during TV's "Night of Nights". Dokic, 42, won Best Factual or Documentary Program for her documentary Unbreakable: The Jelena Dokic Story, and used her speech to thank Woodbridge for encouraging her to pursue a career in media after retiring- even calling him her "person". "I want to go back to the Logies on Sunday night, because I got very emotional when Jelena Dokic won her Logie and she made this incredible speech about how if every woman and wife and daughter and sister had a Todd in her life, the world would be a better place," host Lauren Phillips said during a visit to The Tipping Point set. "I mean, Paul, my fiancé and I were on the couch sobbing watching that. How did you feel in that moment?" Woodbridge admitted the speech took him by surprise. "Yeah, I was surprised by her doing that," he said. "I know she (Jelena) sometimes says that in a keynote a little bit, but I've never seen the keynote and been there, but her whole speech was flawless." The multiple Grand Slam-winning doubles champ said the moment was made even more special because the messaging "was so strong". "And to be a big part of that messaging and understanding of getting her on track, really, I felt incredibly proud to have watched someone be able to get up and deliver, in front of that audience at a Logies when you got all these TV people, that's nerve wracking," he said. "But she just killed it." Phillips also recalled Woodbridge's kindness towards both Dokic and herself during her former role as a Nine sports reporter. "I remember, in those early days of Channel Nine taking over the Australian Open and I worked on those first seasons… you were so nurturing to her, but not just to her, to all of us," she said. "You have this innate ability to make people feel so comfortable and so welcome, and you've just got this beautiful aura about you. So I'm so glad that that moment was shared so publicly, because a lot of us feel that way." Woodbridge thanked her, saying he "enjoys the company of it all" and wants "everyone to do well". "I want to do the very best job. I'm quite competitive, but I can't do it if the other people don't do it well. So you're together in that," he said. The tennis great said the evening was even more surreal after he later won his own Logie- the Bert Newton Award for Most Popular Presenter- for Tipping Point. "But that whole thing with what Jelena was able to deliver, and then to have my moment follow that, more or less, that was bizarrely, I just couldn't believe the whole timing of it all, because none of that's planned," he said. "We didn't know. She didn't know she's going to win. I had very little faith. And so it just became one of the most special evenings I've ever been a part of." On Thursday, Dokic shared a video of herself and Woodbridge moments after their respective wins. "We did it !!!! We won the Logies !!! This was just moments after both @ and I won. So good we were able to capture this moment together. Honoured and proud of us,' she wrote. In the clip, an elated Dokic asked, "Who won the Logies?" before Woodbridge replied, "We did!" He then joked: "Your speech goes down as the longest 30 seconds that the Logies have ever had, but it was worth it!" "Listen," Dokic laughed back, "for TV what do they say? It's better that you can talk than not talk!" That evening, Dokic reposted footage of herself with her new boyfriend, Melbourne-based hospitality operations manager Yane Veselinov, singing and laughing together during a date night at the Royal Botanic Gardens. She later shared a sweet selfie of the pair, captioned with love hearts.

Herald Sun
20 hours ago
- Herald Sun
Richard Marx: The Voice coach on Hugh Jackman, Olivia Newton-John and reality TV
Don't miss out on the headlines from TV. Followed categories will be added to My News. Grammy-winning rocker Richard Marx has a long history with Australia. He first visited the country at the age of 12, when his Down Under fascinated dad brought him here for a month-long holiday and he was completely smitten with the place. 'That was it,' he says over Zoom call from Sydney, half way through production of this year's season of The Voice. 'That was the beginning of my love affair.' Once he hit the big time in his native US courtesy of hits including What About Me?, Crazy, Hazard and Right Here Waiting, he ensured that Australia was part of his schedule and he's been coming back ever since. Along his journey of selling 30 million albums, winning the Song Of the Year Grammy Award in 2003 and producing artists from Barbra Streisand to NSYNC, he's also made plenty of Aussie musical mates. He became 'obsessed' with John Farnham in the '80s, is touring this year with Rick Springfield, has written and produced songs with Keith Urban and counts Hugh Jackman as one of his best friends. But he reserves his deepest love and admiration for the late, great Olivia Newton-John, who took the young Marx under her wing when he was still a struggling musician. Her act of kindness in taking him to a fancy Los Angeles restaurant to celebrate his 20th birthday has stayed with him decades later and getting to perform a spontaneous version of Right Here Waiting with her when she came to see one of his shows in Florida in 2011 remains one of the highlights of his life. Singer-songwriter Richard Marx on the set of The Voice. Richard Marx and his The Voice co-star, Kate Miller-Heidke at the Logies. Picture: Getty Images 'I was so madly in love with her from a distance and then when I got to know her, I genuinely was crushing on her,' says Marx. 'When I would be around her, I would just stare at her and she would walk by me and I would just smell the air. We were friends to the end. I miss her and I think about her all the time. 'We had some really beautiful conversations about life and family and what it's all about and she was just gracious and elegant and generous.' As for Jackman, who he calls his 'brother', the pair performed the same signature song together at Radio City Music Hall in June and Marx says sometimes 'it's just annoying' how nice the Aussie A-lister can be. 'Really amazing guy!' New The Voice coach Richard Marx has opened up about his friendship with Hugh Jackman. Picture: AP 'We were friends to the end!' The late Olivia Newton-John. Picture: Getty Images 'Sometimes even to his detriment,' says Marx. 'I've seen him put himself in situations that he didn't need to be in because he just didn't want to hurt anybody's feelings. He's such a lovely guy and a wicked sense of humour. 'We've been friends for 20 years and we call each other brother. We've gone through a bunch of ups and downs together. We've helped each other through life's circumstances and he's a really, really amazing guy.' It's little wonder then, that when the opportunity presented itself to be a coach alongside Melanie 'Sporty Spice' Chisolm, ARIA-winning Aussie artist Kate Miller-Heidke and former Boyzone singer Ronan Keating for the 14th season of The Voice, Marx didn't need much convincing to relocate to Sydney for the duration with his wife Daisy Fuentes. 'I particularly wanted to do it in Australia for two reasons,' he says. 'One, I don't know what it is about the level of singing talent in this country. It's out of control. Everybody sings great. The butcher sings better than most people. The baristas sing better than most people. 'So I knew that the level of talent that I'd be dealing with was going to be exceptional. 'But selfishly, the idea of just being here this long and really living here for a couple months, really appealed to me. I've been here in a little clumps of time, but I've never really just had a place, rented a house and lived somewhere in Australia. We were completely sold.' But Marx wasn't always a fan of the reality TV singing format, once likening it to 'a person on a bicycle with training wheels being handed the keys to a Maserati – they are not ready'. His other beef was that some of the earlier iterations of the format – he declines to name names – revelled in the humiliation that inevitably came with bad auditions. 'That was never funny to me,' he says. 'They know going in that they're going to have these contestants humiliate themselves and that's part of the ratings, and that's part of the concept and it's just mean.' The Voice, he says, appeals to his desire to do more musical mentoring and connect with young, promising artists. He's less inclined to write and record new music because of the financial state of the music business – 'it's all just an expense at this point, you're never going to make that money back' – so he'd rather put his decades of experience to good use by helping musicians starting out. The Voice 2025 coaches: Mel C, Richard Marx, Kate Miller-Heidke, and Ronan Keating. 'If I could be someone they can reach out every once in a while and go, 'hey, I just got offered this deal, what do you think of this?'' he says. 'And I can say 'you don't want to go near that because of this, this and this'. I like being a sounding board for people like that.' Marx has seen first hand how difficult it can be for aspiring musicians to make a good living in 2025 through his three sons, who he describes as 'incredibly talented singer-songwriter-musicians. He still regards his 1987 savage take-down of superficiality the music industry Don't Mean Nothing as one of his most important songs, and says: 'I could write that song today and it would be the same'. Early in his career, Marx was rejected by label after label, who told him he had the wrong look, the wrong sound and would never have a hit. 'If I were made of different stock, I would have maybe called it a day and gone and done something else,' he says. 'But it turns out all those people were wrong and they're wrong about a lot of people. Empty promises, the sharks that swim around that want to take your content, they want to take your publishing, they want to take your creative rights away – that's all still a thing.' He says he sympathises with his middle son Lucas, who is making steady progress in the music world, including co-writing a song for Katy Perry, but is all too aware of the financial realities of the streaming world in 2025 compared with when Marx was selling albums by the truckload. Richard Marx and Daisy Fuentes at the Logies. Photo: NewsWire / Monique Harmer 'He said recently to a friend of his who is another writer 'In the heyday when my dad wrote a number one song he could buy a house and if we write a number one song now we might be able to get a case of candy bars'. That's about it.' When he's not touring, Marx says he can be found walking on the beach with his wife of nearly a decade, Cuban-American actress Fuentes and making his labour of love podcast Stories To Tell in his home bar. Marx says Fuentes has introduced him to the joys of a good martini and quality tequila and after years of clean living, he's embraced the ritual and the social aspect of the cocktail. 'My liver has had it so good for so long that I'm totally fine,' he says with a laugh. 'I'm definitely not at risk of anything.' Despite first experiencing success during the blizzard of cocaine that was the music industry in the 1980s, Marx managed to avoid the abuse and addiction that took hold of so many of his pairs. 'I was always afraid of it,' he says. 'Coke was so rampant and available and popular in the '80s when I was coming up and everyone around me was doing it. 'I was watching what was happening to the people doing it, so that was a turn off. 'And I honestly the other part of me was I was afraid I would like it too much. 'So I thought rather than risk a problem, I'm just going to not do it ever. And I still haven't.' The Voice, Sunday, 7pm, Channel 7.


Perth Now
a day ago
- Perth Now
Aussie star on The Voice exit, hints at next TV role
The singer joins TMS to discuss his Logies performance, his new album and new fragrance. Guy Sebastian says he didn't have time to miss being a coach on The Voice because if he grieved 'the best show to film' for too long, he would have 'hated' his decision to step away. The music superstar announced he was leaving the singing show in October 2024 after six years in the red chair so he could put all his energy into putting out his new album, 100 Times Around The Sun. After four years, the album was finally released on Monday, along with the news that he will once again be touring around Australia and will perform in Perth on May 15. Sebastian said he will, in fact, miss The Voice when it airs on Sunday. 'You know what I'll miss? When it goes to air and I'm watching, I'll see Ronan (Keating), who's taken my spot, and I'll be like, damn you little Irishman. He's taken the spot,' he said. 'I didn't really have the time to sit there and grieve too much, because if I were twiddling my thumbs, I would have hated my decision because it is honestly the best show to film. 'It's something I would, of course, naturally miss, but I didn't really have the time to, unfortunately. Guy Sebastian when he was on The Voice. Credit: Stu Bryce / The Voice AU 'It's so fun to film, and I find it very easy to do, except for the long hours; some of the days are 16 hours long, and you're exhausted. But beyond that, just the actual work itself is, I find it really enjoyable. I think, mainly because it's so positive. 'I feel like I've got this sweet little soft spot for it, just because I did it during COVID-19. And it was at a time when people were at home, and they just felt crap. And here's this show that's positive, and tells the story of everyday people who have this gift.' The Battle Scars singer hinted at a return to our screens, which he would be 'announcing soon'. 'It isn't necessarily like TV I've done before, but yeah, I'll announce something soon, it's a bit more musical related, and not anything even remotely close to being as cumbersome and time consuming as The Voice,' he said. 'Not doing The Voice opens opportunities like that up as well, just random little stints on other shows and the ability to just explore stuff that I normally wouldn't be able to do.' With his TV exit allowing for more time on his hands, Sebastian said he felt lucky to have his 10th album out in the world, where he was 'singing the best I've ever sung'. 'I just feel lucky. I probably should feel old because I've been doing it for over 20 years,' he said. Much of the 13 track record was written all over the place in Bali, LA and Nashville, but mostly inside his Sydney studio he claimed was the 'best studio ever'. Ive by Guy Sebastian. Credit: Supplied Not only is he singing his best, but the star has never smelled better, thanks to his new men's fragrance available to fans on Thursday at Chemist Warehouse. Sebastian, who is obsessed with smelling good, has created the scent called Ive, named after his dad, who has been struggling with his health recently. 'I always remember when he would leave for work, and the thing that would linger would be my dad's smell, and he was really known for always smelling good, and he dressed so cool,' he said. Sebastian, who already has a women's perfume, wanted to make something for men that was sophisticated but affordable. He described the scent as having a bit of spice, tobacco and leather. 'They can just go to town and spray heaps on in the morning, or if they're going out at night somewhere special, or whatever,' he said. 'It's affordable, and yet it smells like something that you're paying a lot more for.'