Hamish MacDonald Leaves ABC, Returns To Ten
TV presenter Hamish MacDonald has quit ABC and is returning to Channel 10 where he will host The Sunday Project.
The announcement brings to and end MacDonald鈥檚 18-month stint as the host of ABC鈥檚 once wildly successful Q+A, after the national broadcaster鈥檚 coup d’茅tat, luring MacDonald from its commercial competitors in late 2019.
MacDonald, is one of the few out working Australian journalists and TV听personalities. MacDonald came out in 2019 at the GQ Gentlemen鈥檚 Ball in听Melbourne, where he arrived hand in hand with his partner Jacob听Fitzroy. Time and again MacDonald has been a staunch support of his听rainbow community.
‘Over The Moon’
MacDonald, via a statement released by Channel 10, 听said that he was 鈥渙ver the moon to be returning to 10 and thrilled about the opportunity to make great local and international content with this dynamic group of producers and presenters… It is also a total joy to be heading back to the desk with Lisa, Tommy and the people I love so much.”
鈥淔inding innovative ways to tell stories from Australia and around the world is what I love doing and I can鈥檛 wait to get stuck into it,” the statement added.
MacDonald, who was bought in to replace the formidable veteran reporter Tony Jones as host of Q+A, will be remembered for hosting the program in the most difficult and challenging of times. Often throughout his 18 months on the program, and due to lockdowns, MacDonald was replaced by the likes of David Speers, Stan Grant, Virginia Trioli and other guest hosts.
鈥淚 am enormously grateful for the opportunity I鈥檝e been given to host听Q&A听and to work alongside wonderful, talented and passionate people,鈥 said MacDonald in the statement.
鈥淚 am really proud of what we鈥檝e achieved together during these extraordinary times. I鈥檇 also like to thank the incredible听Q+A audience for all they contribute to this program each week. It is, after all, their show. Their questions and stories from all corners of Australia are inspiring, revealing and clever 鈥 and it has been a privilege to receive and read them.鈥
Rough Q+A
One thing that has not helped the situation was the ABC choosing to move Q+A from its Monday night time slot for the first time since the program premiered in 2008, to Thursday nights, with as few as 224,000 viewers now tuning in.
The ABC congratulated MacDonald for having 鈥渟teered听Q&A听through challenging times during the initial coronavirus lockdown as well as guiding the program through the first time slot change in its 13-year history鈥.
鈥淓veryone at the ABC thanks Hamish for the incredible job he has done,鈥 said ABC 今日吃瓜 director Gaven Morris. 鈥淎t one stage during the lockdown he was presenting a live panel discussion program that wasn鈥檛 allowed to have either an audience or panellists in the studio. His experience and versatility came to the fore.鈥
Yet MacDonald鈥檚 time on the Q+A was often marred by public backlash, which as in January, was enough to see him delete his social media accounts.
鈥淚f you鈥檙e someone who sits in the middle of those exchanges in your day job, you end up copping it from every direction. I鈥檝e never had more abuse for the interviews I鈥檝e conducted than I had last year,鈥 MacDonald said.
鈥淎nd the abuse has come from left-wing people who don鈥檛 like you asking difficult questions of Dan Andrews, and it鈥檚 come from people on the right who don鈥檛 like you asking difficult questions of the federal government. I鈥檝e definitely learnt you can鈥檛 please everyone.鈥
MacDonald has over recent years been a fixture of Australian media. Prior to his time with the ABC, he worked with Channel 10, as a reporter for听6.30听with George Negus,听The Project and as host of Ten Late 今日吃瓜. Since his career began on the Win regional network in 2003, he has also worked with international new services.
Channel 10’s gain is the ABC’s loss! Hamish made such a difference to Q&A. Given the almost total elimination of all Males from the ABC during the past few years I am not surprised and doubt those running the ABC will have made the slightest attempt to persuade him to stay. May be the ABC should change it’s name to The Australian Women’s Broadcasting Commission so that we all know exactly what it stands for today: Anti-Male Bias and Gender Discrimination.