Mike Carlton
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Mike Carlton is an Australian media commentator and broadcaster. He currently co-hosts the daily breakfast program on Sydney radio station 2UE with Sandi Alouisi and writes a Saturday column as a left-wing pundit for The Sydney Morning Herald. Carlton in recent times has been noted for his criticism of conservative public figures such as former Prime Minister John Howard, former Foreign Minister Alexander Downer [1] and radio personality Alan Jones, and for his criticism of conservative governments, including the US's Bush administration.[2]
[edit] Early career
Carlton began his career as a field reporter for the Australian Broadcasting Commission (ABC) in the mid 1960s. His file reports as an ABC war correspondent in Vietnam earned him great admiration within the industry and a promotion to chief of the ABC’s news bureau in Jakarta, Indonesia. Garnering further accolades on his return with the pioneering 1970s ABC-TV current affairs program This Day Tonight, he moved to his first radio program as host at Sydney commercial station 2GB in the early 1980s. In the early 1990s he was a presenter for London's LBC Newstalk 97.3FM, then under Australian ownership. At first he presented the drivetime programme, but it was as presenter of The Morning Report breakfast programme that he came to prominence, winning a prestigious Sony Radio Academy Award. This programme became required listening in London and helped to change the station's financial fortunes. He later wrote a novel set at a London talk radio station called Off the Air, which became a best-seller in Australia in the late 1990s.
[edit] Talk show host
In 1994 Carlton returned to Sydney to host a morning program on music station Mix 106.5. He then moved to the drive slot at 702 ABC Sydney. Building a large following and establishing a format that he has largely retained in the years since, he was then poached by commercial broadcaster 2UE. Carlton hosted 2UE's drivetime (3pm-6pm) program for a number of years, before moving to the breakfast timeslot (5:30am - 9am). In a move to improve ratings, 2UE management teamed Carlton with media personality, fellow Sydney Morning Herald columnist and longtime friend of Carlton's, Peter FitzSimons on the breakfast show in 2006. The ratings for the show gradually improved, however in mid-2007 they remained well behind the top two AM talk stations for the breakfast period [3] . Peter FitzSimons left the show at the end of 2007, replaced by Sandy Alouisi from 2008. Carlton's former workmate, now rival, Alan Jones continues to dominate the Sydney radio ratings[3].
A long-running feud with fellow 2UE broadcaster Stan Zemanek, noted for his conservative views, had become a feature of Carlton's recent career prior to Zemanek's death in mid-2007. On 17 July, 2007, Carlton made comments regarding his late rival. Responding to a listener's question as to why he wouldn't attend Zemanek's funeral, Carlton replied that it would be "an act of sheer hypocrisy ... I loathed him." [4] He continued: "I'd only go to check that he was actually dead."[4] Carlton later apologised for the remarks,[5] which had been the subject of criticism from fellow radio presenters and 2UE staff.[6]
[edit] References
- ^ The More Things Change. ABC-TV 'Australian Story' (23 April, 2007). Retrieved on 2007-07-18.
- ^ "Innocence lost amid Labor's list of horrors", The Sydney Morning Herald, 21 November, 2006. Retrieved on 2007-07-18.
- ^ a b "Dance star stumbles in the ratings", The Sydney Morning Herald, 2007-05-09. Retrieved on 2007-07-18.
- ^ a b "I loathed Zemanek, says Carlton", The Daily Telegraph, 2007-07-18. Retrieved on 2007-07-19.
- ^ "Carlton under fire for on-air Zemanek attack", IBN News, 2007-07-19. Retrieved on 2007-07-19.
- ^ "Zemanek slur puts Carlton's career 'on the line'", The Daily Telegraph, 2007-07-19. Retrieved on 2007-07-19.