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KERRY O’BRIEN

Kerry O’Brien (journalist)

Born 27 August 1945 (age 73) Brisbane, Queensland, Australia

Residence Byron Bay, New South Wales, Australia

Nationality Australian

Education Queensland University of Technology University of Queensland Occupation Journalist

Kerry Michael O’Brien (born 27 August 1945) is an Australian journalist based in Byron Bay. He is the former editor and host of The 7.30 Report and Four Corners on the ABC. O’Brien is one of Australia’s most respected journalists, having been awarded six Walkley Awards during his career.

Kerry O’Brien was born into a Catholic family in Brisbane, Queensland, where he attended St Laurence’s College. He started as a news cadet at Channel 9 in Brisbane in 1966. He has worked in newspapers, wire service and television news and current affairs, as a general reporter, feature writer, political and foreign correspondent, interviewer and compere, and served as press secretary to Labor Leader Gough Whitlam.

O’Brien said: “I guess it was my curiosity that drove my attraction to political journalism—and drove my desire to work for Gough Whitlam when that opportunity came up—because I wanted to see what it was like behind the scenes. I wanted to see what it was like to be a part of the process, rather than just reporting on it. When I came back to journalism, I realised that the experience I’d had in the back rooms of politics was like gold for me—in terms of being able to understand and second guess what was really going on behind that sort of opaque screen that the political processes, the processes of government throw up.”

The 7.30 Report

After six years as compere and interviewer of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation’s Lateline program, O’Brien moved in 1995 to The National 7.30 Report, as editor, compère and interviewer. He also anchored and moderated the ABC’s election telecasts for 20 years. O’Brien has won many awards, including the top award in Australian journalism, the Gold Walkley in 2000. He has also made several appearances on The Chaser’s War on Everything.

With respect to effective interviewing, O’Brien revealed: “It’s very much about being prepared. Think through the issues related to what you’re talking about—think them through. Look for the logic. Try to understand as best you can, then you try and cut to the heart of the issue in the same way, I suppose, a lawyer might.” O’Brien announced in September 2010 that he would be resigning as the editor and presenter of The 7.30 Report at the end of the year, and would move on to new roles within ABC in 2011. He concluded his time at The 7.30 Report on 9 December.

Four Corners On 14 October 2010, the ABC announced that O’Brien would host Four Corners, beginning in 2011. On 6 November 2015, O’Brien announced he would be stepping down as host of Four Corners. He was replaced by Sarah Ferguson in 2016.

Awards During his career as a journalist, O’Brien has won six Walkley Awards for his journalistic work. His first two awards came in 1982, when he won the award for the best television current affairs report and the ceremony’s top prize, the Gold Walkley. He again received prizes in 1991 and 2000. In 2010—his final year on The 7.30 Report—he received two awards: one for broadcast interviewing, and the other for journalism leadership.

He has been awarded two honorary doctorates: Doctor of the University from the Queensland University of Technology in April 2009, and Doctor of Letters honoris causa from the University of Queensland in December 2011. In 2011, O’Brien was a recipient of the Queensland Greats Awards. In 2019, O’Brien was inducted into the Logie Hall of Fame.

Personal life

O’Brien has been married twice and has six children, three from his first marriage, and three with Sue Javes, whom he married in 1981.

In his 2019 induction speech to the Logies Hall of Fame, O’Brien voiced his support for the Uluru Statement from the Heart and called on the Australian Parliament, during the current term, to “make a genuine effort to understand and support what is embodied in the Uluru Statement From the Heart”. He added “the Uluru statement represents no threat to a single individual in any corner of this country, and certainly no threat to the integrity of Parliament. And if you’re told that, don’t you believe it. On the contrary, it will add much to the integrity of our nation.”

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia