
Sky After Dark host launches furious spray at ABC for broadcasting ‘far-left activist' spouting ‘partisan rubbish'
When youth media boss Hannah Ferguson was given a platform at the National Press Club to bemoan that 'Rupert Murdoch is the conservative mouthpiece for the English-speaking world', it was all too much for Chris Kenny.
Ferguson announced she planned to run as an independent Senate candidate in 2028, and took aim at the Murdoch media, saying it 'presents a departure from our reality'.
The Sky After Dark host was furious the 'far-left activist' was spouting 'partisan rubbish' at the Canberra institution, and unimpressed the ABC broadcast her address live.
The previous night, Sky's Kenny Report had lambasted the ABC for presenting the content creator as a 'political insider' on Gruen, where she was invited to discuss the election, when in Kenny's view she was 'anything but neutral'.
Kenny delivered a speech on Sky about Ferguson's press club appearance that neatly summed up his worldview: 'It was broadcast by the ABC, of course, and it included plenty of the usual extreme-left bile directed at the Coalition parties, at News Corp media, or anyone else invested in the liberal democratic market capitalism model that's delivered all of our success, prosperity and social advancement in the western world.'
The ABC's new Melbourne Breakfast duo, Sharnelle Vella and Bob Murphy, became the news this week when the former Bulldogs captain inexplicably kicked a sleazy comment towards the former Seven reporter and had to apologise.
Vella and Murphy took over the highly competitive slot of 5.30am-8am weekdays this year, replacing Sammy J.
The co-hosts were discussing odd jobs when Vella said: 'I remember when I worked in retail many moons ago when I was still in high school … ' and Murphy interjected, 'Not at Spearmint Rhino, the other one.'
On Breakfast on Thursday Murphy responded to a newspaper report about his comments. 'I did make a comment that insinuated my colleague and co-host Sharnelle here worked at Spearmint Rhino, a well-known Melbourne strip club,' he said.
'Cutting straight to the point, it was not just a mistake, it was a gross and inaccurate offhand quip. I promised Sharnelle that I'd never disrespect her and I did break that promise. Put simply, I'm really sorry.'
The tension in the studio was evident in her response: 'I won't let you off the hook on it,' she said. 'It wasn't OK. I appreciate your words but we do move on.'
The ABC said Murphy's comment was inappropriate.
'Bob intended to humorously reference a conversation from an earlier program, however, the comment was out of context in that moment and Bob acknowledges it was inappropriate,' a spokesperson said. 'Sharnelle has accepted Bob's apology and wants to move on from the incident.'
Anthony De Ceglie, the news director who brought horoscopes and a satirical segment to the 6pm bulletin on Seven News, has dramatically quit the Kerry Stokes media empire to become the inaugural chief executive of the NRL's Perth Bears.
It's a surprising move as De Ceglie loved being a newspaperman, rising fast through the ranks at News Corp before being hand-picked at a young age by Stokes to run the West's newspaper empire: the West Australian, the Weekend West, the Sunday Times, thewest.com.au, perthnow.com.au and 19 regional publications.
A little over a year ago, Stokes handed De Ceglie the keys to the Seven Network's news division at the age of 38. That didn't go as well, and 13 months of mass redundancies and falling ratings ensued.
His shock defection to the NRL is a particularly jarring move as Seven West Media has a $1.5bn deal with the AFL, and the West Australian has actively campaigned against the NRL team. Now one of Stokes's former lieutenants will be inside the tent.
The Australian Rugby League Commission chairman, Peter V'landys, was blunt about the West's coverage of the Bears, which included last week's front-page headline 'The bad news Bears', and a subheading: 'Rugby mad Roger Cook forces WA taxpayers to pay Sydney NRL rejects $65m to play in Perth.'
V'landys said: 'Well I think the media coverage has been a bit biased in the sense that the main newspaper here is owned by Seven West Media that has the AFL rights, let's be quite frank, so they don't want us to be here because they realise we're going to be competitive and we're going to take some of their lunch – and we eat a lot.'
Underlining the contempt the West Australian has for the NRL, the newspaper reported De Ceglie's big move on page five on Friday, without even naming the Bears: '[Seven West Media chief executive Jeff] Howard thanked outgoing director of news and current affairs Anthony De Ceglie, a former editor-in-chief of The West, who is leaving journalism to help launch a new rugby league team in his hometown Perth.'
At Seven De Ceglie was responsible for Seven News, Sunrise, The Morning Show and Spotlight, as well as 7news.com.au despite having no experience in television. His legacy looks set to be that he was the mastermind behind the short-lived horoscopes and satire, and the sacking of much-loved Brisbane newsreader Sharyn Ghidella. Ghidella was dumped over the phone while she was at the hairdresser after 17 years with the network. Weekly Beast understands Stokes reached out to her at the time to tell her he was sorry about the unceremonious dismissal. Ghidella was soon snapped up by Ten to host 10 News First in Queensland.
The South Australian police issued an unusual statement on the weekend following a particularly dramatic report on Seven News in Adelaide, described as a 'SA Police bombshell'.
Seven's report included a live cross from police headquarters to say the assistant commissioner, John Venditto, 'is tonight off duty in mysterious circumstances'.
'Mr Venditto was seen packing up his things before storming out, and he hasn't been seen since.' There was no further detail.
The police media team sprang into action. 'In response to inaccurate reporting on Channel 7, SAPOL wishes to correct the record with the following statement,' it said.
'Assistant Commissioner (Crime Services) John Venditto is on paid leave.
'Mr Venditto has not been suspended from duty, nor did he 'storm out' of any police premises and he has not cleared his office out.'
The story remains online but has not been followed up by other media.
A spokesperson for Seven told Weekly Beast: 'We're comfortable with the story.'
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Daily Mail
3 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Inflation is so high, even Rachel Reeves's voice is going up: Chancellor suffers from technical gaffe as inflation surges to 3.5% - far higher than expected as Labour's economy spinsout of control
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We want to see inflation coming down after the cost of living challenges that people have been through these last few years' Ms Reeves was facing the music after headline CPI rate rocketed from 2.6 per cent in March to 3.5 per cent last month, a peak not seen since January 2024. Worryingly, it was significantly more than the 3.3 per cent analysts had pencilled in, with Ms Reeves acknowledging the figures were 'disappointing' and her national insurance hikes were partly to blame. Core CPI - excluding energy, food, alcohol and tobacco - was also at the highest for a year. The grim data will fuel Bank of England concerns about underling pressures, with chief economist Huw Pill having already warned that interest rate cuts have been too fast. Experts immediately suggested that Threadneedle Street might pause reductions at the next monetary policy committee meeting next month. The Bank had forecast that inflation would top out at 3.5 per cent in the third quarter of the year. 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'We are a long way from the double-digit inflation we saw under the previous administration, but I'm determined that we go further and faster to put more money in people's pockets. 'That's why we have increased the minimum wage for millions of working people, frozen fuel duty to protect commuters and struck three trade deals in the past two weeks that will go towards cutting bills.' Asked if the inflation figures had been pushed up by measures including the NICs hike, Ms Reeves said: 'When I became Chancellor last year, I faced the very difficult challenge that there was a £22billion black hole in the public finances. 'We had to fix that, and if we hadn't have done the Bank of England would not have been able to cut interest rates four times this last year, which has obviously had a direct effect on the mortgages and the rents that people pay. 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Daily Mail
4 hours ago
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The Guardian
5 hours ago
- The Guardian
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