Brian Wilshire

Brian Wilshire (born 30 March 1944 in Strathfield, Sydney, Australia) is a retired radio broadcaster for 2GB Sydney. He hosted the 'Australia overnight' programme (12:00am – 3.30 am) up until 11 December 2015. The signature of the show was the tune, "Hanky Panky", by Pete Fountain.

Brian Wilshire began his radio career in November 1969 at 2NZ in Inverell. . He won almost every survey at 2GB for 36 years.

Wilshire has many interests including snow skiing, car racing (having won his class in 1993 at Bathurst), writing books (his The Fine Print was Australia's best-selling book in 1992—source: Dymock's, Who Magazine), and playing drums in bands "Stringybark" and "Koala Soup".

Wilshire is well-known for expressing sceptical views on mainstream climate change science.[1]

Controversy over racial comments

On 16 December 2005, Wilshire was forced to make a public apology, after allegedly saying on air that many Middle Eastern immigrants were inbred as a result of consanguinity and thus hard to educate.[2]

"Many of them (referring to the carloads of youths who invaded the Sutherland Shire following the Cronulla riots) have parents who are first cousins whose parents were first cousins. The result of this is inbreeding – the result of which is uneducationable (sic) people...and very low IQ.” At no stage during the discussion was there any mention of the race of the rioters. The media assumed Wilshire was talking about Lebanese.

His comments were met with outrage. "It reveals an uneducated comment on his part – they are disgraceful comments," then Premier, Morris Iemma, said.

Stephen Stanton, spokesman for the Lebanese human rights organisation Cedarwatch:

"One is [Sydney radio] 2GB and the moronic manner that gargling boofhead has been berating and denigrating you. The airwaves are useless if they are used by people such as that. The other is newspapers such as The Australian."[3]

Following widespread condemnation, including by Premier Iemma, Wilshire has since apologised for his comments. He has since returned to 2GB Overnights in about May 2016, only about five months after retiring. Was Brian offered a pay rise to return?

Bibliography

References

  1. http://www.2gb.com/article/wilshire-scorches-climate-fears
  2. O'Riordan, Bernard (18 December 2005). "When the sands ran red". The Guardian. Retrieved 15 January 2010.
  3. Cubby, Ben (17 December 2005). "Religious leaders embrace for peace – and point finger at radio station". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 15 January 2010.
  4. http://catalogue.nla.gov.au/Search/Home?lookfor=author:%22Wilshire,%20Brian,%201944-%22&iknowwhatimean=1
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