logo
Vale The Back Page, a rare and beautiful exception to Hunter S Thompson's TV dictum

Vale The Back Page, a rare and beautiful exception to Hunter S Thompson's TV dictum

The Age26-06-2025
'The TV business is uglier than most things,' Hunter S Thomson famously wrote.
'It is normally perceived as some kind of cruel and shallow money trench through the heart of the journalism industry, a long plastic hallway where thieves and pimps run free and good men die like dogs, for no good reason. Which is more or less true. For the most part, they are dirty little animals with huge brains and no pulse.'
Harsh, I know!
But there are many exceptions. One of them was The Back Page, the sports panel show which has finished up this week after a 29-year run. As one who was on it for its first decade and a bitty, I have been inundated with emails, texts and calls this week, from those lamenting its demise.
Inevitably, many of the obits have focused on its latter years – which is fair enough because, to my amazement, it has been bloody successful for the last two decades, too, and really was a great show. With its latter-day incarnation hosted by Tony Squires and boasting panellists such as Crash Craddock, Adam Spencer and Candice Warner, the thing was still working and doing great box office.
I have no clue why Fox Sports has cut it off at the knees, save the possibility its new owners, the British-based DAZN, intend to channel more foreign content to this small outpost on the other side of the planet at the expense of local content.
But I digress. For my obit, let me focus a little on the first decade, when The Back Page proved the antithesis of Thompson's dictum. It was a terrific show because we all really liked each other, and were close friends well beyond whatever we put to air.
The show was the idea of the veteran sports producer Saul Shtein. Knowing that Mike Gibson, the iconic sports broadcaster from Wide World of Sports, would be at the Atlanta Olympics at the same time as me, Saul asked me to duchess him on the idea of the show, after Mike had politely rejected his first approach. Mike and I got together one day at the beach volleyball, when Australia had just got the gold medal, and I pitched again.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Nikita Tszyu's wins comeback fight in devastating first-round TKO over Lulzim Ismaili
Nikita Tszyu's wins comeback fight in devastating first-round TKO over Lulzim Ismaili

7NEWS

time4 hours ago

  • 7NEWS

Nikita Tszyu's wins comeback fight in devastating first-round TKO over Lulzim Ismaili

Nikita Tszyu is pondering his next move after restoring family pride with a devastating first-round TKO victory over the previously undefeated Lulzim Ismaili. Ismail's corner opted to stop the fight after the Macedonian copped a battering from 'The Butcher' at the ICC Sydney Theatre on Wednesday night. Making his much-anticipated comeback following a year out of the ring, Tszyu needed barely a minute to show there were no lingering effects from hand surgery when he stunned Ismaili with two huge lefts. The 27-year-old slayer finished Ismaili with a liver punch that broke his hapless Germany-based opponent's rib. 'I wanted to properly hurt him,' Tszyu said. In improving his own record to 11-0 and capturing the vacant WBO intercontinental super-welterweight title, Tszyu also extended his famous family's incredible record in Australia to 52-0. As well as Tszyu himself, the 27-year-old's Hall of Fame dad Kostya (18-0) and older, former world champion brother Tim (23-0) have never lost a professional fight on home turf. After defending his family's honour, Tszyu admitted he'd been driven not only to deliver for his newborn daughter but also to quieten the doubters after his superstar sibling's three world-title losses in the US over the past 18 months. 'I copped a lot of criticism with my brother's recent fights,' he said. 'I mean, this is boxing. Sometimes you win, sometimes you lose. 'We celebrate our wins and we celebrate our losses. 'There's no shame in it.' Wednesday night's victory may have set up a domestic blockbuster with the Tszyus' arch-rival Michael Zerafa, who earlier destroyed American Mikey Dahlman also inside two minutes in the co-main event to claim the WBO intercontinental middleweight strap. The 33-year-old former world title challenger hurt Dahlman early with a big right before tripping and unfairly receiving a double count from the referee. An incredulous Zerafa mocked the decision and swiftly took matters into his own hands, punishing Dahlman further with a flurry of punches to the head. Standing corrected, the referee had no choice but to stop the fight and award Zerafa a TKO. While he would prefer to fight Tim Tszyu next, Zerafa said he was also prepared to settle for Nikita if need be - and show who's boss. 'I believe I beat Nikita,' he said. 'Nikita's doing good things and beating who's in front of him and he's proving that he belongs at that level with me. 'But I think there's a little bit more to do.' If he really had his way, though, the WBC's soon-to-be fifth-ranked middleweight would prefer to be fighting internationally for boxing's biggest spoils than settling any scores in a domestic grudge match. 'Overseas for a title eliminator, yeah, 100 per cent. Give me that,' Zerafa said. 'My dream was to be a world champion, not to fight one of the Tszyu brothers.'

Wallabies to unleash fastest man in Australian rugby against Springboks
Wallabies to unleash fastest man in Australian rugby against Springboks

The Age

time7 hours ago

  • The Age

Wallabies to unleash fastest man in Australian rugby against Springboks

The fastest man in Australian rugby is set to be unleashed against the Springboks, with Brumbies speedster Corey Toole set for a Wallabies debut in Cape Town. Toole is expected to join the side as a replacement for Dylan Pietsch, according to informed sources, after the Force winger suffered a broken jaw in the Wallabies' historic win at Ellis Park. Pietsch underwent surgery in Johannesburg earlier in the week and will be sidelined for the remainder of the Rugby Championship. Toole's call-up comes after several strong years of Super Rugby form for the Brumbies, where the 25-year-old has used his rapid pace to score 28 tries in three seasons; twice being the club's top tryscorer. Before joining the Brumbies, Toole was the breakout star for the Australian sevens team as they won the World Series in 2022, when he was also named Rookie of the Year for the global tour. Toole went viral on social media after scoring a 130m try with sheer pace at Twickenham, after getting the ball inside his own in-goal. Toole is set to finally debut after being selected in five separate Wallabies' squads since Joe Schmidt first took over in July last year, including two Rugby Championship campaigns and the squad for the massive British and Irish Lions series. Schmidt said last year that Toole's debut is a 'matter of when' and indicated he might have won his first cap against Georgia in the July series had the Wagga speedster not been drafted back into the Australian sevens team for the Olympics instead. The Aussie side narrowly missed out on winning a bronze medal. Speaking after selecting Toole again this year, Schmidt said: 'Corey spent time with us last year during the TRC. He didn't get his Test cap, but he was close to it. I think it was another really good Super season from him, putting his hand up.' Toole's raw pace – he can hit elite speeds of 10.2m per second – and finishing have seen him score some insane tries for the Brumbies. But he will also likely be targeted by an aerial bombardment, given his relatively short stature at 178 cm and 85kg.

Like being inside your mother's womb: Melbourne's new choose-your-own-adventure artwork
Like being inside your mother's womb: Melbourne's new choose-your-own-adventure artwork

The Age

time7 hours ago

  • The Age

Like being inside your mother's womb: Melbourne's new choose-your-own-adventure artwork

Melbourne's Now or Never festival kicks off on Thursday for its third year. Described (somewhat ambiguously) as a 'festival of new dimensions', it's set to bring a range of art displays and performances to the city. One such endeavour is a giant pink inflatable installation which will occupy part of the interior of the heritage-listed Royal Exhibition Building in Carlton until Sunday. For any past and present University of Melbourne students visiting – more accustomed to the venue as an exam hall – surely, a massive colourful balloon is a more welcoming sight. A lot less stressful than a biology test, we're sure. The Barcelona-based artist, Sergi Arbusa, was delighted to be bringing the MATRIA exhibit to hallowed halls of the building. 'Our practice is making inflatables in relation to architecture,' he said. 'The space ends up becoming the art object – we present an experience that people can make their own.' The artist cited Christo and Jeanne-Claude as his main sources of inspiration. While we're not sure that Carlton Gardens compares with the Champs-Élysées, we're happy to be in the conversation. Lord Mayor Nicholas Reece, speaking at the launch on Wednesday, was especially excited about the event. 'I've seen a lot of art in my time,' he explained of the inflatable. 'And I have never seen anything like this.' Reece said that the event was the perfect way to bring the city alive in winter. 'It may be frosty in the mornings. But our hearts and souls are burning bright,' he said. The man loves an adage – what can we say?

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store