logo
Tony Armstrong: ‘The tone of the world shifting. The way that I'm getting spoken to is wild'

Tony Armstrong: ‘The tone of the world shifting. The way that I'm getting spoken to is wild'

The Guardian16-05-2025

For someone so easily recognisable, Tony Armstrong is surprisingly unaccustomed to being famous. When he opened his front door to find paparazzi outside his house in Brunswick, his first thought was that they were birdwatchers. Rather sweetly, he walked up to ask them what bird they'd spotted: 'I was like, 'Hey, is there something cool in that tree? Oh, shit!''
Armstrong may not used to fame but he does politely endure it. As we walk around Brunswick more than one person gawps at the 35-year-old, so recognisable with his curls and that moustache as he strides along a mural-lined laneway while wearing the most Melbourne of uniforms to boot: a garish Wah-Wah jumper accessorised with a takeaway coffee cup. 'I just need a fixie with a loaf of sourdough and some pet-nat in the basket,' he jokes.
Brunswick, with its graffitied houses, web of tram lines and concentration of bougie cafes and wine bars, has been his happy home for almost a decade. He helpfully points out the 'good Coles' and 'shitty Coles' but refuses to show me around the monolithic Barkly Square shopping centre: 'I don't want to have a panic attack.' Somehow it has survived Brunswick's gentrification, which now manifests in peculiar ways: think community radio stickers on $100,000 cars.
Sign up for the fun stuff with our rundown of must-reads, pop culture and tips for the weekend, every Saturday morning
'Like, there's a Porsche,' Armstrong says incredulously, pointing at a car outside his local pub. The next car is also a Porsche. 'Fucking hell, that's a Maserati,' he says, pointing at the next, openly appalled.
We meet on the precipice of two bastions of democracy: a week before the federal election and two weeks before Eurovision. Armstrong is buzzing about the latter, as he's about to fly to Switzerland to cohost the SBS broadcast with the drag queen Courtney Act. 'Eurovision is like The Hunger Games meets Rock Eisteddfod but everyone has a bazillion bucks to make the biggest, campest thing they can,' he says. 'It's awesome.'
On the spectrum of Eurovision acts, Armstrong enjoys the camp oddballs more than the warbling divas: 'Give me, like, Käärijä from Finland any year. Cha cha cha!' As for Australia's entry this year, Go-Jo's innuendo-heavy techno bop Milkshake Man, 'I'm still wrapping my head around it. I think Go-Jo was built in a lab?'
Eurovision is his perfect assignment: low-stakes fun, unfettered creative expression and very likely to feature pyrotechnics. As a sort of ambassador from the hetero-masculine world of Australian sport – he was an AFL player before becoming a sports broadcaster and TV personality – it is Armstrong's hope he can lure in people who wouldn't normally watch something so queer, absurd or earnest.
'There's nothing cooler than people who have a fucking crack,' he says. 'If you have a go, I've got respect coming out the wazoo. But the kids at school who loved Eurovision had no social cachet. They were outsiders – so was I, until I got good at sport. I get what it's like to not be the cool kid.'
Armstrong 'grew up as an only child' – a distinction he makes carefully, having met his father for the first time in late 2023. 'I met Dad and with him came a half-brother and two half-sisters,' he says. 'I didn't know of their existence. I don't want to pretend they don't exist, but I also grew up without dad around, or siblings.' He doesn't want to say more yet: 'It's just so new and we're still working through it. Not in a bad way but it is big – I am still working out how I feel.'
The weather takes a turn for the wintery so we duck into Armstrong's local: a cosy pub with kitsch patterned carpets and roaring fireplaces. Armstrong remembers when it used to be 'a real dark old shithole – I loved it'. Over one hour four people who know Armstrong walk over to our table to say hello, while one stranger cheerfully raises his pint in exaggerated approval, which Armstrong graciously acknowledges.
These days he tends to avoid pubs when the footy is on. 'That would be wanting to be seen.' Does he mind being recognised? 'I don't love it,' he says 'Being recognised means you are doing a good job in my business, fucking annoyingly. I'm very conflict-averse so it has taken me ages to learn how to shut down conversations… and, if people have a few beers, they start forgetting they only know you through a screen.'
Between 2008 and 2015 Armstrong played 35 games for the Adelaide Crows, Collingwood and Sydney Swans but he was never that famous then. 'I was lucky that I sucked,' he smiles. But you were a pro! I protest. 'No, no, I sucked,' he says cheerfully. 'Call a spade a spade.'
He likens his footy career to a backing singer – doing the same work as the stars but always on the periphery – which allowed him to watch how the high-profile players bore intense public scrutiny. 'Fame is not natural,' he says. 'If we ever meet again and I say, 'I am so used to this' – I want you to whack me.'
The brutality of professional sport taught him how to accept rejection, which has also helped him in media. 'This business is who can eat the most shit and who can remain sane whilst doing it the longest,' he says. Since he left ABC Breakfast last year, he worries whether the phone will keep ringing; he jokes that he regularly shakes his partner, the Kaytetye music producer Rona, awake to check: 'Can we keep the lights on?'
After his AFL career ended he spent four years trying on various hats – advertising, mentoring, being an agent – until a chance conversation with the former Brisbane Lions player Chris Johnson lead to Armstrong trying out as a commentator on the National Indigenous Radio Service. He immediately loved it. 'I'm so passionate about commentating,' he says. 'I never imagined this would be my job. But I'm so lucky that it has turned out to be a blend of my skills and passion.'
Sign up to Saved for Later
Catch up on the fun stuff with Guardian Australia's culture and lifestyle rundown of pop culture, trends and tips
after newsletter promotion
This led to him being hired by the ABC, reading sports news on breakfast television for three years. But he struggled to warm to the work. 'I had to keep reminding myself that it was important,' he says, then pauses. 'I don't want to shit on the industry that gave me everything, particularly when I want to keep working in it,' he clarifies. 'Look, I just didn't find news creatively fulfilling. For two and a half minutes, every 15 minutes, I just basically read out results. What it meant for people to see someone who looked and sounded like me doing that job – that was important. That was what gave it meaning.'
A couple of (very early) mornings towards the end, Armstrong found that he couldn't get out of bed, unable to bear going to work. 'I was supposed to be on air way more than I was at the end. But I knew news wasn't going to be forever, because I didn't love it enough for it to be for ever. And I was really struggling, because I was trying to do all these other things – books, documentaries.'
He was 'desperate and stupidly competitive', stretching himself thin until, 'I couldn't get out of bed at all. I'd never really taken time off – if I wasn't on air, I was shooting something else.' The first morning he couldn't get out of bed, 'That was what I knew. Time's right.'
Even now he always seems to be hosting another show, or writing another kids book. But he gives himself space for downtime. He has seen a psychologist since his footy days – another vulnerability he's happy to be open about in the name of doing some good – and makes time for his favourite comforts: 'Meaningless TV, anime and mid-90s action movies.'
'There's nothing quite like falling asleep to that soothing sound of explosions and gunfire,' he says, laughing. He can also, finally, enjoy sport again.
As we sit in the pub, neither of us yet know that Australia will resoundingly reject Peter Dutton's culture wars at the election but Armstrong is wary of how politics and discourse has changed, beyond the campaigns.
'We're seeing rights being walked back all around the world and freedom of speech being wrongly defined as tolerating hate speech,' he says, adding: 'I can viscerally feel the tone of the world shifting. It is fucking crazy – the way that I'm getting spoken to now is wild.'
Armstrong has always been unafraid to expose the racism he has copped but it is only getting worse. 'Way worse – I'm just incredulous about the brazenness,' he says.
But he would never go into politics. 'Fuck no,' he says, immediately. 'I'm too radical for politics. I want to shoot from the hip every now and then.
'I think my value is being where I am now.'
Eurovision, hosted by Tony Armstrong and Courtney Act, airs on SBS. The semi-final two, featuring Australia, will begin at 7.30pm on 17 May. The final will begin at 7.30pm on 18 May

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Aussie film legend who produced The Flying Doctors and Cop Shop dies after long cancer battle
Aussie film legend who produced The Flying Doctors and Cop Shop dies after long cancer battle

Daily Mail​

time42 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Aussie film legend who produced The Flying Doctors and Cop Shop dies after long cancer battle

Legendary Australian film producer Ian Crawford died on Wednesday aged 91 after a long battle with spinal cancer. He was the son of pioneering Australian film producer Dorothy Crawford, who founded Crawford Productions, and followed his mother's footsteps into the industry. Crawford Productions was founded in 1945 and was one of Australia's most renowned film production companies for many years, making some of the country's most beloved shows. His death was confirmed in a heartbreaking social media statement from a family member. 'Very sad to report the passing this morning at 9.00 of Ian Crawford,' they began. From A-list scandals and red carpet mishaps to exclusive pictures and viral moments, subscribe to the DailyMail's new showbiz newsletter to stay in the loop. 'He died peacefully with family and loved ones at his bedside. He was 91.' Last month, his wife Carole shared a heartbreaking update to social media revealing her husband's health had taken a downturn and he had been hospitalised in Melbourne. 'Ian is in palliative care at Cabrini in Malvern after weeks of really bad back pain. They have discovered he has cancer of the spine which has now spread to his stomach,' Carole wrote. 'He is being looked after every moment by the staff and especially by his children and the whole family. 'Any notes or well wishes you would like passed on can be left in the comments below and they will be shared with Ian.' Heartbroken fans took to social media to pay tribute to Crawford. 'RIP Ian. Sending condolences to the Crawford family,' one person wrote. 'I loved his shows. They kept me entertained,' a second added. Across a three-decade plus career in the industry spanning from the '50s to the '80s, Crawford helped create some of Australia's most beloved TV shows. This included producing the ground-breaking police procedurals Division 4 and Cop Shop, as well as beloved drama The Flying Doctors. He also directed many TV shows, including episodes of The Last of the Australians, Matlock Police and Skyways. Crawford worked with many of Australia's most beloved actors throughout his career, including John Farnham, Rebecca Gibney and Sigrid Thornton. He is survived by his wife Carole and their two children, son Chris and daughter Anna, who acted in several of his shows including The Flying Doctors and Cop Shop.

Neale Daniher's no-nonsense nature keeps Big Freeze from slipping into cliche
Neale Daniher's no-nonsense nature keeps Big Freeze from slipping into cliche

The Guardian

timean hour ago

  • The Guardian

Neale Daniher's no-nonsense nature keeps Big Freeze from slipping into cliche

It starts with a sore toe, difficulty tying a shoelace, a tingle in a finger. Author Joe Hammond found himself 'like a passenger in the aisle of a plane going through gentle turbulence'. For Ross Lyon's mum, Louise, it started with a twitch in her calf muscle. Within a few months, she couldn't move her arms or legs. Within a year, it was in her throat, and she was unable to breathe. For Don Pyke's father, Frank, it started with difficulty swallowing. He was a professor and a sports scientist and a member of the Sport Australia Hall of Fame. In the early 1970s, he played a key role in rehabilitating Dennis Lillee's back. Motor neurone disease (MND) killed him in 16 weeks. For Neale Daniher, it started in his hands. He found it hard to peg his shirts on the clothesline. He fumbled with his car keys. A friend noticed his handshake had weakened. Daniher calls it 'the beast' but doctors, researchers, patients and carers around the world call it 'the bastard'. Every day in Australia, two people are diagnosed and two people die. Prof Brad Turner of the Florey Institute says it's 'the most incapacitating disease of our species'. The Danihers are farming people from the baking red dirt of the Riverina. Neale and his 10 brothers and sisters quickly learned there was no room for sentimentality and self-pity. On the farm, you planned for the worst. You never complained. You worked hard. You got on with it. You learned that so much in this world is beyond your control. Neale was the only Daniher sent away to boarding school. He didn't want to be a farmer. He was too curious, too introspective, too restless for that life. He studied theology for a year at the University of Melbourne. He was coached by Ray Carroll at Assumption College and Kevin Sheedy at Essendon, and his own coaching tenure melded their ferocity and cunning. Many of his former players were amazed at the wise-cracking man who emerged later in life. Having been kept at arms-length during their playing careers, so many of them have built enduring, meaningful relationships with the man they once feared, and now adore. It's more than a dozen years since Daniher was diagnosed with MND. It's a decade since the inaugural Big Freeze match. So much has changed in that time. The queen's birthday is now the king's birthday. Both Melbourne and Collingwood have cycled between ineptitude and success. Daniher, initially given 27 months at best, has walked two daughters down the aisle, welcomed grandchildren, and been named Australian of the Year. He now uses gaze interaction technology to communicate, utilising his voice from old press conferences. After being woefully underfunded for so long, there's better understanding of MND, there's groundbreaking research, and there's cautious optimism that this thing can eventually be beaten. Initiatives such as the Big Freeze could easily drown in cliche. It could get drawn into tired analogies of sport and death. Football could easily strain to mean more than it does. That was never going to happen with Daniher. He hates it when people call him a hero. He doesn't want pity. He wants a cure. 'When you're dying,' Daniher wrote in his book, 'everyone thinks you're a great bloke. When I was footballer, they had me in the 'natural born leader' box and then the 'unfulfilled talent' box. As a coach they put me in the 'intense bastard' box and now that I have a terminal illness I'm in the 'such an inspiration' box.' Reading that, I think of something The Sopranos creator, David Chase, said: 'Whatever the opposite of bullshit is, that's what I think Jim Gandolfini was searching for.' In every utterance, every joke, every deflection, every dollar raised, that's Daniher – the complete absence of bullshit. MND takes nearly everything. It takes your ability to walk, to talk, to hug, to eat, to cry and, eventually, to breathe. I could reel off words like 'inspiration' and 'spirit' and 'courage' and 'grace', but none of them could do justice to what Daniher and the sufferers of MND endure. I think again of that quote – 'the most incapacitating disease of our species'. If that's the case, few could look at Daniher and not see the very best of the species. But he'd say that was bullshit. The Suns are out to snap a horror streak at GMHBA Stadium against the Cats on Saturday and continue on the path toward a first finals campaign. Jack Watts had been killing them in school footy. Ron Barassi presented him with his No 4 jumper. He was interviewed on The Footy Show. Prior to the 2009 queen's birthday game, the late Jim Stynes sent a text message to Melbourne supporters, urging them to get along to the MCG. The late Dean Bailey didn't think the youngster was ready. Nonetheless, he also bought into the promotion. 'We will look back at this time in three, four or five years to see where it all began and to be able to say I was there the day Jack Watts made his debut,' he said. But Mick Malthouse-coached sides aren't renowned for going easy on Brighton Grammarians. His mature and pitiless Collingwood team gave young Jack a torrid time. Early on, he was gang tackled by three Pies – Shane O'Bree, Nick Maxwell and Heath Shaw. The Dees were pumped, and Watts was left bruised and battered, though he still turned up for his year 12 accounting exam the following day. Port Adelaide's Brownlow medallist suffers from a heart irregularity which can cause palpitations that have forced him to be substituted out of three matches in the past four years. Sign up to From the Pocket: AFL Weekly Jonathan Horn brings expert analysis on the week's biggest AFL stories after newsletter promotion 'We into it.' Jamarra Ugle-Hagan has hinted that he is on the comeback trail with a black and white video of him training and boxing posted on social media. The 23-year-old forward has not played at all this season while taking personal leave from Western Bulldogs. Which clubs have had the most common grand final match-up? Bonus point if you know the number of deciders they have played. Answers in next week's newsletter, but if you think you know it, hit reply and let me know! Last week's answer: What is the highest place Gold Coast have finished on the ladder? The Suns finished 12th in 2014 and 2022. Congratulations to Alan Hoban, who was first to reply with the right answer. GWS Giants midfielder Callan Ward shines a light on all that is great about the sport as he turns personal heartbreak into inspiration for his side. AFL boss Andrew Dillon explains the executive reshuffle at head office while insisting the decisions are 'not personal'. Any thoughts you want to share? Reply to this email or send your views to fromthepocket@ Reply to this email and drop me a line, or email fromthepocket@ Have a friend who might? Forward this to them, or tell them how to get it.

Rarely seen True Blood star Ryan Kwanten emerges in Sydney with his partner after going 'missing' as he confirms huge family news
Rarely seen True Blood star Ryan Kwanten emerges in Sydney with his partner after going 'missing' as he confirms huge family news

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Rarely seen True Blood star Ryan Kwanten emerges in Sydney with his partner after going 'missing' as he confirms huge family news

Ryan Kwanten and wife Ashley Sisino have re-appeared in Sydney after the Australian actor dropped off the map following his rise to fame. The True Blood star, 48, and his partner, who are notoriously private, emerged after going 'missing' and confirmed they have welcomed their first child together. Having kept the birth completely under-wraps, the couple were seen in Northern Beaches as Ashley used a blanket to hide their bub, who appears to be at least six months old. Ashley looked every inch the doting new mother as she stepped out in warm black tights and white sneakers for the beach day. Pulling her brunette tresses back into a bun and hiding her eyes behind a pair of sunglasses, Ashley topped her look with a large cardigan. From A-list scandals and red carpet mishaps to exclusive pictures and viral moments, subscribe to the DailyMail's new showbiz newsletter to stay in the loop. Having kept the birth completely under-wraps, the couple were seen in Northern Beaches as Ashley used a blanket to hide their bub, who appears to be at least six months old She carried her tot in a baby carrier against her chest, using a blue shark blanket to cover up her sleeping bundle of joy—perhaps hinting it may be a boy. At one point, she also used part of her cardigan to cover the child as she went for a stroll with Ryan. The Australian actor looked very casual in a basic white T-shirt and grey jeans as he slipped on a pair of bicycle sunglasses and a black cap. Following a walk down to the sand, Ryan then stripped off his clothes to change into a pair of swim trunks, tucking his belongings into a black backpack. As Ashley continued to rock their baby in her arms, Ryan took a brisk swim in the ocean, body surfing waves as they rolled through. It comes as no surprise Ryan and Ashley have welcomed a child together, as the actor confessed in 2019 the couple had family plans. 'I've haven't had a child yet,' Ryan told shortly after welcoming a rescue dog into his small family at the time. 'At some point, I'm sure it's going to happen and I'll become a father, but this is the first addition to the family so far!' She carried her tot in a baby carrier against her chest, using a blue shark blanket to cover up her sleeping bundle of joy—perhaps hinting it may be a boy Ryan gained thousands of devoted fans when he portrayed heartthrob sheriff deputy Jason Stackhouse in True Blood. But after starring in the hugely popular HBO series, the former Home and Away star dropped off the radar and almost entirely wiped his social media presence. He was last spotted in public in 2022, when he enjoyed breakfast in Manly with his family and wife Ashley after jetting in from Los Angeles. The veteran actor had a boom in his career when he moved to LA following his stint on Home and Away, and landed on HBO's hit series True Blood from 2008 to 2014. However, he is rarely seen on the mainstream big screen nowadays, despite working more than ever in the film industry. Ryan has made some very interesting moves in his acting career, choosing to 'stand behind first-time filmmakers and independent filmmakers' as often as possible. In an interview with Cinema Australia in 2022, Ryan said it brings him great joy to help other Australians 'raise their creative baby' and execute their vision. 'There's nothing that appeals to me more than being on set... surrounded by like-minded crazy people,' he said. '[We're] all working towards this one goal of trying to make art in the middle of all this madness. It's amazing. I love it.' Since True Blood, Ryan has worked in a slew of indie movies and television series, with his IMDB showing multiple works being released almost every year. And while he didn't appear to release any movies in 2024, likely due to the birth of his first child, he currently has three movies in post and pre-production. Ryan could be seen body surfing the waves as he went for a swim

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store