Saturday, 7 November 2015

Kerry O'Brien resigns from ABC, taking his many awards but leaving a legacy

Extract from The Guardian

The highly-acclaimed and Walkley award-winning journalist says ‘this is not retirement’ as he has plans for future projects including writing more books
Kerry O’Brien
Kerry O’Brien – then and now. The host of the ABC’s Four Corners plans to leave. Photograph: ABC

Friday 6 November 2015 17.43 AEDT 

Kerry O’Brien has resigned from the ABC after a distinguished 32-year career hosting the broadcaster’s top news programs Lateline, the 7.30 Report and Four Corners.
Arguably the broadcast journalist of his generation, O’Brien has also been a foreign and a political correspondent and a veteran anchor of the ABC’s election night telecasts.
Having spent five years in the part-time role of Four Corners presenter, O’Brien says he has decided to concentrate on books, after writing his first book on Paul Keating based on an ABC TV series of interviews.



This is not retirement for me,” O’Brien said. “I have more than enough to get on with. It’s taken me this long to write my first book so I figure I’d better start now if I want to complete a second. I also have other ideas, which may offer the opportunity to work again with the ABC.”
I have been extremely proud to be associated with Four Corners for the past five years,” O’Brien said. “No other brand has been as enduring or as respected in Australian television and I have felt enormously privileged to be a part of it all again, albeit in a part-time capacity.”
O’Brien, who started in television 50 years ago on Channel Nine in Brisbane, has picked up six Walkley awards for excellence in journalism, including the Gold Walkley and the Walkley for outstanding leadership.
He joined the ABC in 1972 as a reporter on the groundbreaking current affairs show This Day Tonight, leaving only briefly to join Ten for its Page One program.
For the last 26 years he has been a constant presence on the ABC’s news and current affairs shows, establishing Lateline from Canberra as a major force in national and international affairs.

Kerry O’Brien interviewing President Barack Obama
Kerry O’Brien interviewing President Barack Obama on the ABC television’s 730 Report. Photograph: AAP

In 2001 O’Brien won a public vote to be named most preferred and most credible journalist in Australia, across all media.
ABC managing director Mark Scott said the ABC audience had known, trusted and respected Kerry O’Brien for decades.
In recent years at Four Corners he was able to synthesise important and often complex stories in a way that helped audiences stay and appreciate the very best in Australian journalism,” Scott said.
It has been a golden era at Four Corners, and Kerry has been a vital part of the team.”
The newly-appointed director of news, Gaven Morris, described him as “a giant of Australian journalism”.
He has set the agenda and broken stories for decades with integrity and passion,” Morris said. “Above all else, he’s held the powerful to account and let no office or authority deter his aim of getting answers to questions that mattered to Australians.
I am sure he will continue to play a significant role in Australian journalism. I thank Kerry for his enormous contribution and wish him all the best in his future endeavours, including with us at ABC News.”
Four Corners executive producer Sally Neighbour said: “Kerry is an iconic journalist and formidable role model who has inspired and mentored generations of reporters.

For his colleagues and viewers, Kerry personifies the dedication to fearless, groundbreaking journalism that is the hallmark of Four Corners.”

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