December 27, 2024

From Kerry O’Brien to Leigh Sales: Have ABC send-offs become too self-indulgent?

Leigh Sales #LeighSales

In his 15 years hosting the national edition of The 7.30 Report, O’Brien covered three prime ministers; Sales has had to wrap her head around six in 12 years. When O’Brien’s run began, the internet barely existed and social media was still a decade away. Sales, a perennial target of vile abuse online, has had much to say about how that has turned out.

And the way the ABC deals with goodbyes and other major moments has also shifted. The national broadcaster’s celebration of Sales’ tenure in its most prominent anchor chair is of a different stripe altogether.

For weeks, Aunty has been building up to the moment with a campaign heralding Sales’ departure, and plugging a tribute show that will air on Friday night.

“The momentum. The moments. The magic,” are the words flashed across the screen as a montage reminds us how diverse Sales’ talents have proven to be: Tim Minchin, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Malcolm Turnbull, Boris Johnson, Julia Gillard, Sarah Huckabee Sanders, Harrison Ford, Toni Collette, Blanche d’Alpuget, Shane Warne, Paul McCartney and John Laws.

As TV tributes go, it is most reminiscent of the 1992 send-off to Jana Wendt from A Current Affair (Wendt, like O’Brien, had a Clarke and Dawe sketch on her final show). In the 24/7, celebrity-driven social media age, the ABC does once unthinkable things, like win Gold Logies, as it did when Tom Gleeson carried off his great gold heist in 2019. An unusual moment it was: that had happened four times in 62 years and the last winner before Gleeson was Norman Gunston in 1976.

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And then there was Tony Armstrong’s win as most popular new talent at the 2022 Logies, which prompted an avalanche of celebration including cake and balloons on News Breakfast where Armstrong has made his mark.

This being the ABC, these celebrations of its talent do not sit well with everyone. Presenters on Sky News have been especially exercised by the Sales hoopla, with regular guest and The Australian’s media reporter Sophie Elsworth this week telling the national broadcaster to “get a bit of a grip”. This admonition was affirmed by host Chris Kenny, who declared with a straight face that it was “all a bit strange and self-indulgent”.

It’s likely the ABC will take this sort of criticism, and where it’s coming from, as a sign it is doing something right.

As for Sales, on Thursday she began her final day with a round of media interviews, including a live cross into News Breakfast, where she revealed she had recently been on the phone to her predecessor. She noted that the national edition of the show had seen only one change of host (and one change of name) in its 27 years on air under the 7.30 and The 7.30 Report banners.

“I was thinking about when I was a young journalist … and if you got in the lift with Kerry O’Brien it was like, ‘My gosh’,” Sales recalled.

My gosh, indeed, and now the baton is handed to Sarah Ferguson. It happens in the same week as Aunty marks its 90th birthday, and given the slings and arrows it often endures you can hardly blame her for giving herself a pat on the back.

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