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== Recent Days ==
== Recent Days ==
Throughout 2006, Derryn Hinch has been doing commercials for [[Kellogg's]] All-Bran Ceral. In this ad Hinch gives a couple the "two week challenge" where they must only eat this cereal. This couple don't seem to like this program as they are constantly hiding from Hinch. He constantly makes subtle references to how fibre can clean your insides.
Throughout 2006, Derryn Hinch has been doing commercials for [[Kellogg's]] All-Bran Cereal. In this ad Hinch gives a couple the "two week challenge" where they must only eat this cereal. This couple don't seem to like this challenge as they are constantly hiding from Hinch. He also continually makes subtle references to how fibre cleans your insides.


== Notable quotes ==
== Notable quotes ==

Revision as of 00:13, 30 October 2006

Derryn Nigel Hinch (born 9 February 1944) in New Plymouth, New Zealand (now an Australian citizen) is an Australian media personality best known for his work on Melbourne radio. He has also been a police reporter, foreign correspondent, newspaper editor, television show host, novelist and vintner.

Dubbed "the human headline", Hinch is controversial and outspoken; by his own account he has been sacked no less than fourteen times during his career in the media.

Married four times, including twice to Australian actress Jackie Weaver, he says that he remains on good terms with his former wives.

At the start of his radio program on 4th November 2005, he announced his engagement to 44 year Chanel Hayton, stating they "shall get married at Willows in February or March" of 2006, yet they will not live in the same apartment.

On 31 March 2006, Hinch appeared on Today Tonight and was questioned over allegations of sexual assault levelled by a former business partner, which he he strongly denied. Media reports on 27 July 2006 stated that the report given to the Victorian Office of Public Prosecutions (OPP) recommended that no charges be laid. Hinch was reported as saying that "I knew that I'd done nothing wrong and I said way back that it was malicious, it was vindictive" and that he has "vowed to pursue her for extortion."

In 2006 he lost a considerable amount of weight [1][2]. He has declined to comment on the matter, other than saying that it was a matter for himself, his wife, and his doctor.

Journalism

Hinch began his career at the age of 15 with the New Zealand Taranaki Herald. In 1963 he came to Australia on the MV Wanganella and joined The Sydney Morning Herald. By 1968 he had become a foreign correspondent for the Fairfax organisation, and finally moved to New York as bureau chief. He remained in the United States for eleven years.

Radio

3AW 1979

morning host until 1987; rumoured million-dollar earnings; ratings leader for six straight years; achieved the station's highest ever morning program rating (21.4 in survey two, 1984). Sacked (live on air) for breaching the 48 hour pre-election media blackout law

3AW 2000

presented "Nightline" from 8 p.m. to midnight, a program for older listeners; sacked after ratings slumped

3AK (Talk 1116) 2001

morning host, sacked, re-employed in 2002 but sacked again. Southern Cross Broadcasting (owners of 3AW) began but later withdrew defamation action against Hinch over comments made by him that 3AW boss Tony Bell "... had too much influence over the programming of that station [...] and, yes I called my past and future boss 'diddums'".

3AW Feb 2003

returned in the 4pm-6pm shift, replacing Stan Zemanek; salary rumoured to be $200,000

Television

Controversies

Hinch and paedophilia

Hinch has been a tireless, even obsessive, anti-paedophilia campaigner.

The entire first chapter - twenty pages - of his autobiography "That's Life" is given over to a detailed account of his childhood sexual experiences. The word "masturbation" first appears on the second line of the book.

Hinch has written that he was "molested by a man as a child":

"My only fear is that I will be misconstrued. That my genuine concern for the victims who face lifelong shadows from their forced experiences will be taken out of context when I say, yet again, that 'Yes, I was molested, but no, it didn't affect me.' That somehow it will give some bizarre support to the predators who claim 'child-love' is not unhealthy if I commit to print that an adult male acquaintance of my parents once pounced on me, put my penis in his mouth, and I suffered no apparent lasting trauma or damage." (That's Life, p. 113)

Hinch gives over the next six pages to details about the incident.

On August 7, 2005, Hinch caused controversy when he revealed living arrangements for Brian Keith Jones, also known as convicted child sex offender Mr Baldy, on air. Hinch's comments caused controversy in the Melbourne suburb of Frankston, where residents attacked the house named on air and abused its occupants. A local Frankston supermarket began a petition to remove Jones from the area. Hinch later stated his comments were mistaken and Jones was not living at the Frankston address. This was parodied on the Seven Network show Fast Forward, albeit some years before the incident with the character Hunch, played by Steve Vizard.

Hinch and the fifteen-year old girl

Hinch writes in "The Fall and Rise of Derryn Hinch" that as an adult he had sex with a fifteen-year old girl. He says:

"I met her at a party at Molly Meldrum's house about three o'clock in the morning. I had seen her in lingerie ads in magazines like the Women's Weekly. She was exotic. European. And I thought she was about 25. Obviously this was a long time ago. We went out together days later. We ended up in bed. The next night we went to dinner again and, frankly, I thought her lack of knowledge – and struggling current affairs conversation - was because English was obviously her second language."

see "Age Of Consent" (Hinch web site)

There have been no reports to date of the Victoria Police taking any action to investigate this matter.

Glennon affair

In 1978 Catholic priest Michael Charles Glennon was convicted of sexual assault upon a ten year old girl at his Karaglen property (near Lancefield, Victoria), for which he served seven months of a two-year sentence. In 1984 Glennon faced separate charges relating to two boys, aged eleven and thirteen, but was acquitted.

In November 1985, Glennon was charged with further sexual offences on five boys and one girl aged between 12 and 16. While Glennon's preliminary hearings were still underway, Hinch made three broadcasts in which he expressed outrage that Glennon was still running a youth camp in Lancefield, together with details of Glennon's prior charges.

Under Australian law, published comments on cases currently before the courts (sub judice) that are prejudicial to the accused's rights, or unduly influence a jury, may be unlawful.

Hinch was charged with contempt of court and was found guilty. A series of appeals followed, in one of which Judge Murphy found:

"They (the broadcasts) held Glennon up to public obloquy, they vilified him at a time when charges were known by Mr. Hinch to be pending against him and they had in my opinion the effect of creating a real risk of prejudice to Glennon's fair trial by effecting the pre-judgement of witnesses and jurors at his committal and trial respectively."

Eventually Hinch served twelve days in prison, with one night at Melbourne's Pentridge Prison and the remainder of his term at the minimum-security Morwell River Prison Farm. The resolution of Glennon's case was delayed while the issue of whether or not his right to a fair trial had been undermined by the broadcasts. In 1991, he was convicted; the decision was initially overturned and then confirmed on further appeal.

In October 2003 Glennon, who was still in prison, was found guilty of twenty-six other offences against minors, for which he was sentenced to eighteen years. When combined with his then current sentences, the total came to an effective maximum of 20 years.

Graham Kennedy AIDS claim

Hinch caused offence with the Australian public on May 26 2005 by claiming that recently deceased king of Australian television Graham Kennedy had died of AIDS [3]. Kennedy died aged 71 in a New South Wales nursing home.

Hinch gave two items in support of his allegation:

(1) Kennedy's biographer Graeme Blundell had written that when he visited Kennedy

"... there were large triangular black patches on both his cheeks. They were so dark they looked as if they had been applied with make-up." [4]

Hinch said that the black marks were proof that Kennedy had Kaposi's sarcoma.

(2) an interview with a former Australian television sports reporter, now living in Thailand. Hinch said that he had "sprung" the two men together at Ziggy's restaurant in Sydney.

During the interview Hinch repeatedly pressed for confirmation that the person (a) had been Graham Kennedy's lover and (b) was HIV-positive. The interviewee said little, but in the closing moments of the interview remarked "If you haven't worked it out by now, you are not as smart as I think you are."

When Hinch first broadcast the HIV allegations against Kennedy, he did not know that Kennedy had been tested for AIDS a mere week before his death, after a carer suffered a needle stick injury. The results showed that Kennedy was not HIV positive.

Despite the overwhelming medical evidence, Hinch broadcast an unrepentant non-apology on 3AW:

"I will still stick to what I said. I believed what I said when I said it. And I know that my comments have upset some people, including obviously friends and Kennedy fans, especially in Melbourne. And for those people who have been upset and have sent me thousands of e-mails and letters, I apologise and I will say to them I'm sorry. So, let's move on."

At Kennedy's funeral service, held in Mittagong on May 31 2005, Stuart Wagstaff said:

"Delivering a eulogy for a close friend and for someone who was so much admired is never a happy occasion. Though, I must confess I would be quite happy to deliver a eulogy for a certain media personality who's tried the second Kennedy assassination of our time (applause) ... and failed."

Kennedy's writer Mike McColl-Jones read a spoof fax from Kennedy in heaven, which included (to great applause from the mourners):

"I hear Derryn outed me. I've got a hot flash for him - it's rife up here. Only a few minutes ago I saw Oscar Wilde holding hands with Chips Rafferty. I reckon if Hinch's body is ever washed up on a beach, police will be interviewing suspects for seven years."

Books by Derryn Hinch

File:Hinchbook.jpg
Cover of The Fall and Rise of Derryn Hinch: How I Hit the Wall and Didn't Bleed
  • The Scrabble Book (1972, rev. ed. 1977), ISBN 0-333-23073-6
  • Death at Newport (1986), ISBN 0-207-15422-8
  • AIDS - Most of the Questions, Some of the Answers (1987), ISBN 0-9587779-1-8
  • Death In Paradise (1989), ISBN 0-207-16165-8
  • The Derryn Hinch Diet (1991), ISBN 0-14-016527-4
  • That's Life (1992), ISBN 0-14-016986-5
  • The Ultimate Guide to Winning Scrabble (2001), ISBN 1-86325-324-6
  • 101 Ways To Lose Your Mobile Phone (2001), ISBN 0-646-40631-0
  • The Fall and Rise of Derryn Hinch: How I Hit the Wall and Didn't Bleed (2004), ISBN 1-74066-159-1

Recent Days

Throughout 2006, Derryn Hinch has been doing commercials for Kellogg's All-Bran Cereal. In this ad Hinch gives a couple the "two week challenge" where they must only eat this cereal. This couple don't seem to like this challenge as they are constantly hiding from Hinch. He also continually makes subtle references to how fibre cleans your insides.

Notable quotes

  • "Good evening Australia"
  • "Shame, shame, shame ..." or "Shame, Australia, shame ..."
  • "I'm Derryn Hinch"
  • "I've said it before and I'll say it again ..."
  • "That's Life"
  • "Who's looking after the children?"
  • "Fibre is you friend"

Many of these quotes became famous not so much because Hinch himself used them, but because of the 'Hunch' impersonations of Steve Vizard.