Tag: australian media

  • Bill Leak dies: A brilliant cartoonist who polarised Australia

    Bill Leak poses in front of two painting of Australian comedian Barry Humphries Image copyright News Corp Australia Image caption Bill Leak has been celebrated for his wit and distinctive style

    Loved and loathed, he was to his admirers a genius of wit and originality who confronted tough topics, while to his detractors he fuelled race tensions and polarised a nation.

    Bill Leak, who created some of Australia’s most recognisable and inflammatory cartoons, has died of a suspected heart attack in hospital. He was 61.

    Last year, his caricature of an indigenous man with a beer can who could not remember his son’s name was labelled “disgusting” and “discriminatory” by Aboriginal leaders. The artist had also faced death threats and was forced to move out of his home after publishing an image of the Prophet Muhammad following the Charlie Hebdo attacks in Paris.

    “[He was] a giant in his field of cartooning and portraiture and a towering figure for more than two decades,” said Paul Whittaker, editor-in-chief of The Australian newspaper, where Mr Leak worked.

    The cartoonist was born in Adelaide but raised near Sydney, where he trained at the Julian Ashton Art School in the city’s historic Rocks district. He would later travel to Europe to soak up the region’s art, and it was in the early 1980s that he got his big break with The Bulletin magazine.

    Image caption Bill Leak’s most controversial cartoon sparked a racial discrimination complaint last year

    “He had terrific control over the pen. He also had a mind which seemed uncontrollable. It would go in any direction and he was totally unpredictable, so it was combination of his drawing skills and his quirky sense of humour,” Mr Foyle told the BBC.

    “I don’t think Bill was ever surprised about the controversy he caused. He enjoyed it and on many occasions tailored his cartoons to cause a stink. Bill enjoyed being in the limelight.”

    Mr Leak won nine Walkley awards that recognise journalistic excellence in Australia, and had worked for Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp Australia newspapers since 1994.

    His distinctive style won many fans, but he often drew intense criticism for his views – particularly in recent years. Last year’s depiction of the indigenous man sparked a complaint to Australia’s Human Rights Commission, with a claim it had violated a controversial race discrimination law.

    One indigenous advocacy group at the time called the “disgusting, disrespectful, and hurtful”, adding: “Those involved in publishing such a clearly racist cartoon should be ashamed and should issue a public apology to all Australians.”

    Emotional reactions

    Tributes on social media have praised his fearlessness, lamenting the loss of an artist who was “supremely talented, principled, brave, witty & decent”, and “a true warrior for freedom of speech”.

    Others, though, had far more brutal assessments. Several posts after his death did not just attack Mr Leak’s views, but the cartoonist personally – demonstrating how polarising he had become within sections of the community. Others swiftly condemned the critical posts.

    Image copyright @annabelcrabb Image copyright @JacquiLambie

    Those close to Mr Leak say while he made a career rattling cages, an avalanche of criticism of his work in recent years had become too heavy a burden.

    “Basically he was hounded to his death. He’s had the most incredibly stressful couple of years,” Spectator Australia editor and long-time friend Rowan Dean told the BBC.

    “There were death threats after he did a cartoon that showed the Prophet Muhammad, which led to him having to move his house. He was Australia’s version of Salman Rushdie for a while.”

    ‘Racist’ cartoon draws praise and criticism The racial discrimination law dividing Australia

    “He did a very poignant but accurate cartoon about Indigenous Australians, disadvantage and the lack of parenting amongst Indigenous Australians and for that he was hounded mercilessly by our Australian Human Rights Commission. The pressure that he was under was just enormous.”

    Defending his cartoon at the time, Mr Leak wrote: “I was trying to say that if you think things are pretty crook for the children locked up in the Northern Territory’s Don Dale Youth Detention Centre, you should have a look at the homes they came from.”

    Image caption Leak’s final cartoon accused education minister Rob Stokes of ignoring radicalisation in Australian schools

    Many of his fellow cartoonists share the thought that Mr Leak was pilloried to the point of submission.

    Mark Tippett, a Sydney-based caricature artist, told the BBC that his death was a terrible reminder of the battles they often face.

    “What do we do as satirists if we can’t satire anymore?” he asked. “Do we have to ask permission before we can put pen to paper? It just can’t go on this way. It [his death] makes us more defiant. We can’t go into a shell.”

    “What he was trying to do is make his messages as simplistic as possible for many people to understand. His style would appeal to the masses because it was so clean and recognisable. You just don’t see that every day.”

    Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has remembered his friend of more than 30 years.

    “I can’t believe that Bill Leak is dead,” Mr Turnbull posted on Facebook. “Who had more life, more energy than him? So many more cartoons to draw, paintings to paint, politicians to satirise.”

    Image copyright ABC Image caption Mr Leak in a recent interview on Australian television

    Indigenous leader Warren Mundine said Mr Leak “was just an incredible cartoonist”. He told the Australian Broadcasting Corp: “I’m just in shock. I was only with him the other night at his book launch and had a beer with him.”

    Left behind are the cartoonist’s wife Goong, his stepdaughter Tasha and his sons Johannes and Jasper.

    His friends have remember a gifted man.

    “Bill was an absolute genius,” said Mr Dean. “Here was a man who was one of Australia’s greatest political talents. Probably one of the world’s greatest satirists, certainly a brilliant cartoonist and also a brilliant portrait painter.”

  • Australia backlash over far-right figure’s TV interview

    Blair Cottrell at a far-right rally in 2016 Image copyright Getty Images Image caption Blair Cottrell was once convicted final yr of inciting contempt of Muslims

    An Australian TV network has said it was once “improper” to interview a miles-proper determine with a legal earlier, after the phase set off a widespread backlash.

    Blair Cottrell appeared in a one-on-one studio interview on Sky News Australia on Sunday to speak about immigration.

    Viewers mentioned that Cottrell was once remaining year convicted of inciting contempt of Muslims, and that he has in the past referred to as for schools to show footage of Adolf Hitler.

    Sky Information Australia answered on Sunday.

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    It was mistaken to have Blair Cottrell on Sky Information Australia. His perspectives don’t mirror ours. The interview has been far from repeat timeslots and online platforms.
    – Greg Byrnes, News Director

    — Sky News Australia (@SkyNewsAust) August 5, 2018

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    Cottrell is the previous chief of anti-immigration staff United Patriots Entrance. He was once interviewed via Adam Giles, a programme host and former chief minister of the Northern Territory.

    Other presenters at the community have been among the ones to criticise the interview.

    “Blair Cottrell is a miles proper-wing fascist who’s a self confessed Hitler fan. He Is boasted about using ‘violence and terror’ to control girls,” tweeted one host, Laura Jayes.

    A common commentator and previous Australian executive minister, Craig Emerson, stated it was once “some other step in a journey to normalising racism and bigotry in our country”. He said he wouldn’t appear on the community once more.

    Skip Twitter publish by way of @charliepick

    Hiya @SkyNewsAust – i have enough nationwide pleasure to keep in mind that my grandfather fought Nazis within the wasteland in Tobruk. You invite them on and give them air time. Possibly name a personnel meeting and speak about nationwide pride. @David_Speers @ljayes https://t.co/9FThMC7yHA

    — Charlie Pickering (@charliepick) August 5, 2018

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    Good Day @SkyNewsAust – my mum lived under Nazi profession. She barely survived. She died a couple of years in the past and that i miss her every day. However I thank god she isn ’t round to peer a mainstream TV network give a platform to a neo-Nazi racist thug who boasts about terrorising girls. https://t.co/SAWHXJu42e

    — Wil Stracke (@WilStracke) August FIVE, 2018

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    Cottrell used the interview to call on Australia to reduce immigration, offer protection to itself from “foreign ideologies” and to “reclaim our traditional identity”.

    He mentioned later that Sky Information Australia had succumbed to force to “silence” him.

    Last 12 months, Cottrell was once one of 3 males discovered responsible through a justice of the peace of inciting contempt of Muslims, after the men staged a ridicule beheading to protest towards the construction of a mosque.

    The United Patriots Front ‘used me for propaganda ’ Australian senator racially abused at pub the rise of populist politics in Australia

    He was up to now convicted of different offences, including arson and burglary.

    Last year some other broadcaster, Channel Seven, was once additionally criticised for airing a reside interview with Cottrell with out disclosing his historical past.

  • Australian media giants 9 and Fairfax agree to merge

    A spread of the Financial Review and The Sydney Morning Herald Symbol copyright Getty Pictures Image caption Fairfax newspapers together with the Financial Review and The Sydney Morning Herald will be sold to Nine

    Australian media giants 9 Leisure and Fairfax have agreed to merge, growing what they are saying will likely be the nation’s “biggest built-in media participant”.

    The surprise deal, value an estimated A$4bn (£2.25bn; $3bn), will depart 9 Entertainment with a 51.1% stake. the brand new business will likely be referred to as 9.

    Australia has a extremely consolidated broadcast and print media market.

    Many present and previous Fairfax group of workers have expressed unhappiness in regards to the deal.

    The deal includes 9’s television community, one in all the nation’s biggest, and Fairfax newspaper titles including The Sydney Morning Herald, Melbourne’s The Age and The Australian Financial Assessment.

    Australia relaxed media ownership regulations ultimate 12 months to permit proprietors higher keep an eye on over a couple of platforms.

    Skip Twitter post by means of @Kate_McClymont

    So after ONE HUNDRED FIFTY-plus years this is all we get: “i’d love to thank everyone for their contribution to Fairfax” https://t.co/GHjXMRTX2f

    — Kate McClymont (@Kate_McClymont) July 25, 2018

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    “The merged corporate will likely be referred to as 9”. I’ve spent most of my working lifestyles at Fairfax. i want to cry.

    — Katharine Murphy (@murpharoo) July 25, 2018

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    Skip Twitter submit via @AngelaCuming

    I’m so vintage I labored for the company while it was once still referred to as “John Fairfax Holdings”. So sentimental lately. #ripfairfax

    — Angela Cuming (@AngelaCuming) July 25, 2018

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    Fairfax has beneficial that its investors approve the deal, which gives a 22% premium to the company’s present share price.

    Like newspaper firms around the globe, Fairfax has suffered financial challenges in latest years due to declining sales.

    “Both Nine and Fairfax have played an important function in shaping the Australian media panorama over many years,” Nine chairman Peter Costello mentioned in a statement to the Australian Securities Trade.

    “The Combo of our companies and our other people easiest positions us to ship new opportunities and inventions for our shareholders, workforce and all Australians in the years beforehand.”