Aaron Kearney | |
---|---|
Born | 3 July 1971 51) | (age
Nationality | Australian |
Occupation(s) | Broadcaster, journalist, sports commentator |
Aaron Kearney OAM (born 3 July 1971) is a multi-award winning broadcaster, journalist, sports commentator and the 44th MEAA Prodi Journalist of the Year.
He has covered some of the world's major sporting events from the Olympics, to the FIFA and Rugby League World Cups and AFC Champions League and Commonwealth Games. [1]
He is the creator of a 'Sports Broadcast for Development Commentary' system used at the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup in France. It was first adopted in Australian indigenous communities in Tiwi Islands and later the basis for Pacific-wide coverage of the 2015 Pacific Games in Papua New Guinea.
On 7 June 2020, he was awarded the Medal of the Order of Australia for service to the broadcast media as a radio presenter. [2]
He is currently working in media consultancy, sports diplomacy and broadcast development in Australia and overseas. [3]
Born in Newcastle, Kearney is the son of journalist Malcolm Kearney and Pennie Kearney, a former schoolteacher and now Chief Executive of welfare organisation Mai-Wel. [4]
Kearney's family moved to Woodville, near Maitland when he was five years old. He has three younger sisters, Karlie, Salena and Amber.
Kearney was school captain of St Peter's High School and earlier attended Maitland Marist Brothers and St John's Primary School.
He studied Communications at the University of Newcastle, Australia and holds a master's degree and Graduate Certificate in Communications from Griffith University, Australia. [5] [6]
Kearney began his career as a cadet journalist for Fairfax Media in 1990 and was the Chief Writer and co- Editor of the Hunter Valley Weekend newspaper [7] before joining Prime Television's fledgling Hunter news service in 1993, working as a police a political reporter before becoming the Sports presenter.
An all around sports-lover, Kearney has had the opportunity to cover a range of sports across Australian media. In the year 2000, Kearney was the chief reporter for Prime's Olympic Team at the Sydney Olympics, and sports presenter and sports editor for Prime Television from 1994 to 2001. [8]
He was also master of ceremonies for the arrival of the Olympic Torch in the Hunter [8] in front of an estimated crowd of 50,000.
He has previously presented and produced Pirate TV, [9] a television show about the now-defunct Hunter Pirates basketball club, and provided radio commentary for National Basketball League games.
Kearney hosted a popular sports/talk drive time program on 2HD from 2001 to 2003, and was a sports correspondent for Austereo Stations KOFM and NXFM in the early 2000s.
His works as a documentary producer and presenter include 'Inner Mongolia' [10] – a one-hour documentary tracing a four-wheel drive expedition from the far south to the northernmost regions of Asia, 'Hunter Holidays' – a Getaway style program that was co-hosted with well-known Australian presenter Penny Cook, 'Knight Fever' [11] – a one-hour documentary tracing the Newcastle Knights historic win in the 1997 Australian Rugby League Grand Final, and 'Cape Town to Cairo – The Ultimate African Safari.' [12]
The 'Cape Town to Cairo' Series consisted of four one-hour documentaries following a four-wheel drive expedition the length of Africa from the Cape of Good Hope to the Mediterranean Sea. The death-defying six weeks of filming risked Kearney and his teams' lives under extreme circumstances, dealing with everything from wildlife to rebel gangs of militia.
Kearney joined the ABC in 2005, initially presenting 1233 ABC Newcastle's Drive radio program and moving on to present the Breakfast program in 2007.
In 2011, the program returned its best ratings in 30 years, [13] beating the main talk rival for the first time.
During his time as an ABC Newcastle radio host, Kearney was also a sports commentator for the ABC, [14] having called a range of major sports from the Asian Cup of football (soccer) and FIFA World Cup, to the Rugby League World Cup and National Rugby League. This commentary work was recognised by ABC Radio with an Outstanding Contribution to Sport Award in 2006. [15]
In July 2011, he was awarded a Gold Medal at the World Radio Awards in New York City for 'Andrew's Story, a documentary on a young paraplegic man from the Hunter.
During his time on 1233's Breakfast program, Kearney has been nominated for 30 major media awards, has won a Walkley Award for Best Use of Media, [16] and was nominated for a Best Radio Reporting Walkley for work covering devastating storms that hit eastern Australia in June, 2007.
Kearney is also a freelance writer, with his work appearing in Fairfax Media, football website The Roar [17] and ABC's The Drum. [18] This freelance work was recognised when he was awarded the MEAA Prodi for Best Print Feature Writing 2011 [19] for an ANZAC feature carried by the Fairfax press and the MEAA Prodi Best Specialist Journalist.
The judges said: "Aaron Kearney is a deserving winner of this award: he has demonstrated considerable talent, extending across media with apparent fearlessness and aptitude. [He] writes with style and verve, shares an intrinsic sense of sentiment and nuance, and challenges modern ideology." [20]
Kearney's 2011 piece "Apocalyptic Hyperbole Leave Journalism Speechless" [18] is a widely cited in journalistic and academic circles. [21] [22]
Additionally, as a freelance reporter, his work has been carried by SkyNews Australia, C7 Sports Network, TV3 New Zealand, the BBC and NBC America.
Kearney worked alongside Matildas goalkeeper Melissa Barbieri as play-by-play commentator of ABC TV's W-League coverage in late 2012, while regular commentator Peter Wilkins was calling Champions League Hockey. Kearney is the creator of a Sports Commentary Training Course that has been adopted by the Papua New Guinea National Broadcasting Corporation and by indigenous broadcasters in the Tiwi Islands. [23] An article on his course was featured in the June 2013 edition of industry journal, Walkley Magazine.
Kearney was a finalist for Travel Writer of the Year at the Kennedy Awards for "Kicking Tiwi Goals", written for Fairfax. [24]
He released a CD, Kokoda – Steps to Healing, after completing the Kokoda Track in 2008. [25]
1233's Breakfast Story Box interview segment was named the Best Two-Way Telephone Talk Interview Show at the 2013 New York Festival Radio Awards. Kearney handed a telephone to a listener in May 2012 and it has been passed from one person to another each day ever since. Each recipient is interview by Kearney live on his show. [26]
In early 2016, Kearney transferred from ABC Newcastle to ABC International. [27]
Here he developed a sports broadcast for development commentary system called 'Commentary for Good'. It was first adopted in Australian Indigenous communities in the Tiwi Islands and then used for the Pacific-wide coverage of the 2015 Pacific Games in Papua New Guinea. [28]
It will be used again at the FIFA Women's World Cup in 2019.
He has also created Sport Storytelling programs that have been adopted in six Pacific nations. [29] [30] [31] [32] [33]
His work on the Pacific Sports Partnerships earned two New York Festival World Radio Awards for Best Sports Coverage and Best News Report/Feature and two nominations, including Best Digital Sports Coverage, at the Australian Sports Commission Media Awards. [34] [35] [36] [37]
In April 2019, Kearney left his full time role at ABC Newcastle to start a media and sports diplomacy consultancy AKS Media International. [38]
Kearney has worked for the Griffith Asia Institute as a Sports Diplomacy researcher. [39] [40]
His 'Sports Broadcast for Development Commentary' system will be used at the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup in France.
He has two daughters and is married to ABC and former BBC journalist Karen "Kip" Shrosbery. [41]
This section of a biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification .(July 2017) |
The annual Walkley Awards are presented in Australia to recognise and reward excellence in journalism. They cover all media including print, television, documentary, radio, photographic and online media. The Gold Walkley is the highest prize and is chosen from all category winners. The awards are under the administration of the Walkley Foundation for Journalism.
Stan Grant is an Australian journalist, writer and radio and television presenter, since the 1990s. He has written and spoken on Indigenous issues and his Aboriginal identity. He is a Wiradjuri man.
Christopher "Chris" Wayne Masters PSM is a multi-Walkley Award winning and Logie Award winning Australian journalist and author.
Michael Lund is a journalist based in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. He was the winner in the 2004 Queensland Media Awards for his report on the pitch invasion at the 2003 Rugby World Cup. He was also "highly commended" in the Walkley Awards for his report on Peter Hollingworth and Hollingworth's dealings with child abuse allegations when Anglican Archbishop of Brisbane.
The Media, Entertainment & Arts Alliance (MEAA), also sometimes referred to as the Alliance, is the Australian trade union and professional organisation which covers the media, entertainment, sports and arts industries.
Anthony William Jones is an Australian television news and political journalist, radio and television presenter and writer.
Sally Jane Sara AM, is an Australian journalist and TV presenter.
Waleed Aly is an Australian journalist, academic, and lawyer.
Tracey Leigh Spicer is an Australian newsreader, Walkley Award-winning journalist and social justice advocate. She is known for her association with Network Ten as a newsreader in the 1990s and 2000s when she co-hosted Ten Eyewitness News in Brisbane, Queensland. She later went on to work with Sky News Australia as a reporter and presenter from 2007 to 2015. In May 2017 Spicer released her autobiography, The Good Girl Stripped Bare. She was appointed as a Member of the Order of Australia "For significant service to the broadcast media as a journalist and television presenter, and as an ambassador for social welfare and charitable groups".
Peter Charley is a U.S-based journalist, documentary film maker, television producer and author.
Eric Campbell is a prominent Australian foreign correspondent, who began his career as a journalist at The Sydney Morning Herald. His assignments have included reporting the wars in Chechnya, Afghanistan and the Balkans, tracking polar bears in the Arctic, filming at secret military bases in Central Russia and travelling by sled with nomadic reindeer herders in Siberia.
Rebecca Louise Wilson was an Australian sports journalist, radio and television broadcaster and personality, known for the comic television talk sports show The Fat, in which she appeared regularly with host Tony Squires. She was a panellist on numerous television programs including Beauty and the Beast, Sunrise and The Footy Show. She worked in both the newspaper and television industries for over 20 years and won a Kennedy Award in 2013.
The Global Mail was a not-for-profit multimedia site for longform and project-based journalism in the public interest operating from 2012 to 2014. Based in Sydney, Australia, the site launched in February 2012 with philanthropic funding from internet entrepreneur Graeme Wood, who committed funding for five years.
Margot O'Neill is an Australian journalist, writer and producer. She founded Original Thinking Productions, a multi-platform content provider after leaving the ABC in 2019 where she was a journalist for over 25 years. O’Neill worked as a journalist for nearly 40 years in television, radio, newspapers and online in Australia and overseas covering politics, national security and social justice issues and has worked on a variety of ABC programs including the investigative flagship program, Four Corners. O'Neill twice won Australia's Walkley Awards including for Best Investigative Reporting as well as four human rights awards. She also wrote a book called Blind Conscience telling the stories of some of the key players in Australia's refugee advocacy movement. It won the 2009 Human Rights award for best non-fiction. She has a Bachelor of Arts (Politics) degree from Melbourne University. She was a Journalist Fellow at the University of Oxford.
Mark Willacy is an Australian investigative journalist for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC). He along with ABC Investigations-Four Corners Team won the 2020 Gold Walkley for their special report on Killing Field, which covered alleged Australian war crimes. He has been awarded six other minor Walkley awards and two Queensland Clarion Awards for Queensland Journalist of the Year. Willacy is currently based in Brisbane, and was previously a correspondent in the Middle East and North Asia. He is the author of three books.
Nick McKenzie is an Australian investigative journalist. He has won ten Walkley Awards, been twice named the Graham Perkin Australian Journalist of the Year and also received the Kennedy Award for Journalist of the Year in 2020 and 2022. He is the president of the Melbourne Press Club.
Julia Woodlands Baird is an Australian journalist, broadcaster and author. She contributes to The New York Times and The Sydney Morning Herald and is a regular host of The Drum, a television news review program on the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC). Her non-fiction work includes a bestselling memoir and a biography on Queen Victoria.
Sophie McNeill is an Australian journalist, television presenter, author and human rights activist. She is best known for her work reporting from conflict zones.
Avani Dias is a Sri Lankan Australian journalist and radio presenter. She is currently posted as the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC)'s international foreign correspondent for South East Asia, based in New Delhi. Dias is perhaps best known for being the presenter of current affairs program Hack on youth radio station Triple J from 2020 to 2021, after succeeding Tom Tilley at the end of 2019.
Andrew John Fowler is an Australian TV reporter, author, and journalist. Born in the United Kingdom, he worked as a journalist in London before migrating to Australia. He specialises in human rights and national security issues.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)