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Inside Seven's big Block poaching gamble for viewers

Inside Seven's big Block poaching gamble for viewers

News.com.au10 hours ago
Channel 7 is raiding its rival's tool shed, and it's hard not to call it a Blockxodus.
In a major reality TV shake-up, former The Block judge Neale Whitaker will front the 2026 season of My Reno Rules, jumping to Seven after more than a decade critiquing Nine's flagship renovation hit.
He was replaced by Whitefox chief executive Marty Fox in 2023, with Whitaker guest appearing in the 2023 and 2024 seasons respectively.
Joining him on the judging panel is Cohen Handler co-founder Simon Cohen – the same agency where fellow former Block buyers' advocate Nicole Jacobs is now managing director for Victoria.
Ms Jacobs famously sold her own Hampton home, along with several of her neighbours' properties, to The Block in 2021.
Interiors stylist Julia Green completes the line-up, bringing her bold, magazine-perfect designs and industry clout from years at the helm of her Greenhouse Interiors brand.
Earlier this month Seven announced LMCT+ founder Adrian 'Lambo Guy' Portelli is stepping in as principal sponsor and will take the spotlight in the show's live grand final.
Portelli made headlines last year splashing more than $27m on eight Block homes and gifting $50,000 to Sunrise host Alex Cullen in a stunt that ended the presenter's Nine career.
For My Reno Rules, he will give away two multimillion-dollar homes to viewers in a finale Seven is banking on to rival The Block's Sunday auction night event.
Industry sources say the 2026 season will see four teams transforming two rundown Melbourne homes under the watch of host Dr Chris Brown, competing for a major cash prize while viewers have the unprecedented chance to win one of the finished properties.
Whitaker's defection is the most high-profile of the moves, while Cohen's professional link to Jacobs ties the series even more closely to Nine's property empire.
The changes come as The Block faces its own challenges, with insiders pointing to softening property markets and the underperformance of spin-offs such as Listing Melbourne.
While that show tried to channel the glamour of Luxe Listings Sydney where Cohen was a central figure, it never connected with audiences.
An industry insider told the Herald Sun there was 'plenty of curiosity' about how the format will perform, but warned Seven faces a mammoth task.
'People are interested, but The Block is a juggernaut, it's been unbeatable for years and My Reno Rules has existed in various forms for over a decade,' the source said.
'This is a big swing, but whether it lands is another story.
'Seven's gamble is clear. Stack the line-up with personalities Block fans already know, add Portelli's high-octane profile, and hope the format finally hits its stride.'
Meanwhile, the source revealed Mitre 10 is reportedly in talks to come on board as a major sponsor after being shunned by The Block in favour of Bunnings this year.
A deal would give Seven another direct link to its rival's past, and the hardware chain a chance to reclaim prime time renovation turf it once dominated.
My Reno Rules will air on Channel 7 in 2026.
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Treasurer Jim Chalmers says ‘not surprising' Australia's birthrate has slowed but rejects bringing back baby bonus
Treasurer Jim Chalmers says ‘not surprising' Australia's birthrate has slowed but rejects bringing back baby bonus

News.com.au

timean hour ago

  • News.com.au

Treasurer Jim Chalmers says ‘not surprising' Australia's birthrate has slowed but rejects bringing back baby bonus

Jim Chalmers says it's 'not surprising' Australia's birth rate has slowed given the 'financial pressures' on families, however, he has rejected calls to bring back the Costello-era $3000 baby bonus in favour of 'better, more enduring ways to support parents'. The comments come ahead of Labor's highly anticipated Economic Reform Roundtable, which will bring business and unions groups to Canberra for three days of intensive discussions on how to lift Australia's sluggish productivity rate. 'It's not surprising that the birth rate has slowed given the pressures on people, including financial pressures,' he told NewsWire. 'We want to make it easier for them to make that choice. If they want to have more kids, we want to make it easier for them to do that, and that's what motivates a lot of our changes.' However, as Australia struggles to boost the economy, and in turn raise wages and living standards, it's also contending with a sluggish birth rate of 1.5 births per woman, which is under the 2.1 figure needed to sustain population growth. Boosting productivity was also essential to ensuring that Australia's ageing population could weather economic headwinds, the Treasurer said. 'Now, the reason why the productivity challenge is important to this is because our society is ageing, and over time, there will be fewer workers for every person who's retired,' he said. 'We need to make sure that our economy is as productive as it can be, as strong as it can be to withstand that demographic change, which is going to be big and consequential.' Mr Chalmers also spurned calls from former Liberal prime minister John Howard to resurrect the $3000 baby bonus cash incentive bought in by his treasurer Peter Costello in 2004. The Queenslander's parliamentary colleagues have advocated for other measures to spur a baby boom, including Nationals senator Matt Canavan's proposed $100,000 loans for first-time parents to buy their first home. Parliament's maverick father of the house Bob Katter also proposed incoming splitting for parents so they paid less overall tax. For example, a household where two parents earn a combined income of $150,000 pays about $10,000 less tax than a household with a single worker pulling in $150,000. Instead, Mr Chalmers said Labor's supports were 'more enduring,' pointing to policies like guaranteeing three days of subsidised child care for families earning less than $533,280, increasing paid parental leave to 25 weeks, and paying super on government-funded parental leave to tackle the gender superannuation gap. 'That policy from a couple of decades ago was a one-off payment, and we found ways to support parents which is meaningful and enduring, not one off. That's the main difference,' he said. 'Our political opponents … haven't said how they would fund that, how they would pay for that, whereas we've been carefully budgeting all this help for parents in our budgets and providing that in an ongoing way. 'We're always in the market for ideas about ways to support families. We've got all this cost-of-living help rolling out, (like) all the childcare changes. All of that, I think, demonstrate a willingness on our part to support families (in making) decisions about whether they want to have kids or have more kids.' Mr Chalmers says the 'generational anxiety' plaguing Australia youth simultaneously contending with rising house prices and inflation will also be a touchstone ahead of the economic reform roundtable, which at one point was called the productivity roundtable before it was quietly changed. He concedes productivity can 'sound like a cold lifeless piece of economic jargon' but explains the metric is 'about efficiency' and 'about how we make our economy stronger to deliver for more people so that they can earn more and get ahead and be better off'. Generational equality has also fuelled some of the roundtable's more controversial submissions, including the Australian Council of Trade Unions' call to limit negative gearing and capital gains tax concessions on just one property by the next five years, and teal Wentworth MP Allegra Spender's overhaul of the tax system that she says is overly reliant on income taxes. The ACTU has also reiterated calls for a four-day work week, while the Productivity Commission irked business bodies with calls for a new 5 per cent cash flow tax and a road user charge to ensure EV drivers, who skip the fuel excise, also contribute to road upgrades. 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Why every Australian is losing $3600 a year as a result of Australia's failure to tackle productivity
Why every Australian is losing $3600 a year as a result of Australia's failure to tackle productivity

News.com.au

timean hour ago

  • News.com.au

Why every Australian is losing $3600 a year as a result of Australia's failure to tackle productivity

Treasurer Jim Chalmers has put a price tag on Australia's failure to make big productivity gains in the last decade warning it is costing every Australian thousands of dollars in lost wages. Ahead of the Albanese Government's economic roundtable set to kick off in Canberra next week, the government is laying out the problem it insists is a major focus of its second term: productivity. And the cost of that failure to boost productivity is having a real impact on Australians' ability to secure a pay rise and businesses' ability to turn a profit. It's a factor in why it's harder to buy a family home, pay for the groceries at the shops and why it takes too long to build infrastructure and build new homes. In simple terms, productivity means producing more goods and services from the same inputs – using new skills or technologies such as artificial intelligence or by coming up with more effective ways to work. But Australia's productivity gains have stalled, leading some workers and businesses to feel they are going backwards. New data prepared by the Albanese Government claims the productivity slowdown under the Coalition government is costing Australians as much as $3600 a year in lost income. 'The wasted decade under the Coalition is costing Australians dearly,'' Treasurer Jim Chalmers told 'This big drop in productivity growth has hit Australians in the hip pocket. 'Our predecessors ignored the warning signs and people are paying the price for it. 'We don't intend to waste the next decade like our predecessors wasted the last. 'We don't pretend it will be easy and it certainly won't be quick, but we've got a big and broad agenda aimed at tackling this productivity challenge and we're keen to add to it where we responsibly can.' The arithmetic on the $3600 cost is based on the idea that productivity was growing at 2 per cent per annum when the Coalition came to office but just 0.1 per cent per annum in the year before Covid-19 hit. According to the Albanese Government, if productivity had grown at 1.5 per cent - as forecast in the Budget - instead of 0.9 per cent in the six years prior to Covid, the level of real and nominal GDP would have been 3.6 per cent higher at the start of the pandemic. Even allowing for the volatility since then, the Treasurer argues that the 3.6 per cent shift in the level of nominal GDP is equivalent to around $3600 in lost income per capita in 2023-24. Dr Chalmers said the figures underlined why the Albanese Government was determined to talk about solutions. 'This is about setting the next generation of Australians up for success long after the next election cycle,'' he said. 'It's about higher wages, higher living standards and a better future for our children and grandchildren.' Business leaders have suggested one way forward is reduced regulation and lower tax. Unions have suggested a four day working week, negative gearing reforms and changes to capital gains tax. Lower pay rises, weaker consumer spending, softer business profits and declining living standards is the problem the government wants to tackle. The Treasurer has previously suggested that the productivity debate has 'focused too narrowly on one or two issues', and that the task now is 'broadening that focus out'. 'The challenge, however, is immense. Our productivity growth over the past decade was the worst in 60 years,'' Business Council of Australia chief executive Bran Black said. 'And yet, with all shoulders to the wheel, and agreement on what can and must be done, we believe Australia is capable of much more over the next decade. 'Here's how: First and foremost, we need to deliver our major projects and endeavours faster. It's not acceptable that building a renewable energy project in Australia can take more than two years of approvals before shovels are in the ground. 'Countries that get there faster will deliver better and more outcomes for their citizens, and that's why we're determined to work constructively with the government on implementing federal project approvals and reforms that get it right for both the environment and for business.'

Melbourne community football coach sacked after vile Tammy Hembrow comment
Melbourne community football coach sacked after vile Tammy Hembrow comment

News.com.au

time2 hours ago

  • News.com.au

Melbourne community football coach sacked after vile Tammy Hembrow comment

A community football coach has been sacked after making a crude social media remark about fitness influencer Tammy Hembrow's relationship with AFL star Bailey Smith. The Harvey Brunswick Leschenault Football Club confirmed on Friday that League coach John Baggetta had been terminated after he posted the offensive slur to Facebook, where he referred to Hembrow as a 'c** bucket'. FOX FOOTY, available on Kayo Sports, is the only place to watch every match of every round in the 2025 Toyota AFL Premiership Season LIVE in 4K, with no ad-breaks during play. New to Kayo? Join now and get your first month for just $1. The full comment read: 'He's trying to keep his relevance and she's a c** bucket.' Earlier this week, Smith and Hembrow were spotted on a Gold Coast date, kissing and sharing lunch at a waterfront restaurant. The sighting fuelled speculation of a new romance just two months after Hembrow's split from her former husband, Matt Zukowski. Later, she appeared online wearing what looked like Smith's jacket. Smith has not confirmed the relationship, responding only with a string of expletives when questioned by reporters at Geelong training. Their public outing attracted a wave of online commentary, much of it targeting Hembrow with misogynistic remarks. Baggetta's comment, left under a news article, quickly sparked calls for his dismissal. 'The board of the Harvey Brunswick Leschenault Football Club wish to inform all players, members, officials and supporters that John Baggetta has been terminated as League coach,' the club said in a statement. 'Regarding the social media post made by John, we do not condone those comments, and they do not reflect the values or standards of the Harvey Brunswick Leschenault Football Club at any level.' The club said such remarks were 'not to be tolerated in society'. Journalist Sherele Moody demanded his sacking in a post on social media. 'I shared a post recently with a range of disgusting misogynist slurs by Australian men directed at Tammy Hembrow after she went on a date,' she wrote. 'Old mate John Baggetta's comment was the worst – he called Tammy a C** Bucket. A man responsible for mentoring and shaping the points of view of young men is just casually throwing around sexist slurs.' The club said it consulted with its women's team and members before making the decision. 'We are incredibly proud to have a women's team, female representation on our board and women actively involved as members of our club. 'We have consulted with members of our women's side and we are committed to offering them and all the females in our club any support necessary. 'We also remain committed to supporting anyone else affected by these comments and welcome open communication with those who may have concerns.' It has been an intense week for Brownlow Medal fancy Smith and fitness queen Hembrow since news of their date first broke. Paparazzi photos showed the couple leaving a ritzy, chef-hatted venue at Burleigh Heads last Saturday — the day after the Cats' victory over Essendon in Geelong. According to The Herald Sun, it is the second time the pair have been spotted together on the Gold Coast. Love Island he was the one who chose to end their marriage. Smith's ex, Izzy Armitage, who dated the footy player back in 2021, earlier this week.

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