logo
Six women are up for the Gold Logie

Six women are up for the Gold Logie

The Advertiser5 days ago

There have been some far-fetched Gold Logie pitches over the years - but this is an entirely new one.
The 2025 field for the coveted prize has been revealed, and it's dominated by women, up against only one man, Hamish Blake.
The Lego Masters host says he doesn't want to win, as victory would be a PR disaster.
"It would not be a great look if I won, so figure out your favourite lady and get right behind her," he said.
Could this finally be the year for Ten's I'm A Celebrity… Get Me Out Of Here! host Julia Morris? Or will Seven's Sonia Kruger add to her Logies haul?
These hosts are vying for television glory against the ABC's Lisa Millar, Lynne McGranger from Home and Away, MasterChef Australia's Poh Ling Yeow, and A Current Affair host Ally Langdon.
At the announcement of the nominees at the Sydney Opera House on Monday, presenter Tara Rushton momentarily forgot to name the final nominee Sonia Kruger, who was waiting in the wings to be called to the stage.
"I am never going to live this down. I'm surrounded by my idols," said Rushton, apologising.
A new award named for five-time Gold Logie winner Ray Martin will be presented in 2025 - The Ray Martin Award for Most Popular News or Public Affairs Reporter.
The nominees are Nine's Ally Langdon, Tara Brown, and Peter Overton, the ABC's David Speers and Sarah Ferguson, and Seven's Michael Usher.
The ABC has received dozens of nominations, including for comedian Guy Montgomery for most popular new talent.
Two-time Logie winner, the children's cartoon Bluey is up for another award for best children's program.
Netflix show Apple Cider Vinegar, which tells the story of conwoman Belle Gibson, received a massive eight nominations.
Voting for the popular awards opened on Monday, with the ballot for the Gold Logie remaining open during the awards presentation itself.
The Logies will be held at The Star Sydney and broadcast live on Seven on Sunday August 3.
NOMINEES FOR THE TV WEEK GOLD LOGIE
* Ally Langdon, A Current Affair, The Olympic Games Paris 2024, 9Network
* Hamish Blake, LEGO Masters Australia, 9Network
* Julia Morris, I'm A Celebrity… Get Me Out Of Here!, Network 10
* Lisa Millar, Back Roads, ABC News Breakfast, Muster Dogs: Where Are They Now, Muster Dogs: Collies & Kelpies, ABC
* Lynne McGranger, Home and Away, Seven Network
* Poh Ling Yeow, MasterChef Australia, Network 10
* Sonia Kruger, The Voice, Dancing With The Stars, Logies Red Carpet Show, Seven Network
There have been some far-fetched Gold Logie pitches over the years - but this is an entirely new one.
The 2025 field for the coveted prize has been revealed, and it's dominated by women, up against only one man, Hamish Blake.
The Lego Masters host says he doesn't want to win, as victory would be a PR disaster.
"It would not be a great look if I won, so figure out your favourite lady and get right behind her," he said.
Could this finally be the year for Ten's I'm A Celebrity… Get Me Out Of Here! host Julia Morris? Or will Seven's Sonia Kruger add to her Logies haul?
These hosts are vying for television glory against the ABC's Lisa Millar, Lynne McGranger from Home and Away, MasterChef Australia's Poh Ling Yeow, and A Current Affair host Ally Langdon.
At the announcement of the nominees at the Sydney Opera House on Monday, presenter Tara Rushton momentarily forgot to name the final nominee Sonia Kruger, who was waiting in the wings to be called to the stage.
"I am never going to live this down. I'm surrounded by my idols," said Rushton, apologising.
A new award named for five-time Gold Logie winner Ray Martin will be presented in 2025 - The Ray Martin Award for Most Popular News or Public Affairs Reporter.
The nominees are Nine's Ally Langdon, Tara Brown, and Peter Overton, the ABC's David Speers and Sarah Ferguson, and Seven's Michael Usher.
The ABC has received dozens of nominations, including for comedian Guy Montgomery for most popular new talent.
Two-time Logie winner, the children's cartoon Bluey is up for another award for best children's program.
Netflix show Apple Cider Vinegar, which tells the story of conwoman Belle Gibson, received a massive eight nominations.
Voting for the popular awards opened on Monday, with the ballot for the Gold Logie remaining open during the awards presentation itself.
The Logies will be held at The Star Sydney and broadcast live on Seven on Sunday August 3.
NOMINEES FOR THE TV WEEK GOLD LOGIE
* Ally Langdon, A Current Affair, The Olympic Games Paris 2024, 9Network
* Hamish Blake, LEGO Masters Australia, 9Network
* Julia Morris, I'm A Celebrity… Get Me Out Of Here!, Network 10
* Lisa Millar, Back Roads, ABC News Breakfast, Muster Dogs: Where Are They Now, Muster Dogs: Collies & Kelpies, ABC
* Lynne McGranger, Home and Away, Seven Network
* Poh Ling Yeow, MasterChef Australia, Network 10
* Sonia Kruger, The Voice, Dancing With The Stars, Logies Red Carpet Show, Seven Network
There have been some far-fetched Gold Logie pitches over the years - but this is an entirely new one.
The 2025 field for the coveted prize has been revealed, and it's dominated by women, up against only one man, Hamish Blake.
The Lego Masters host says he doesn't want to win, as victory would be a PR disaster.
"It would not be a great look if I won, so figure out your favourite lady and get right behind her," he said.
Could this finally be the year for Ten's I'm A Celebrity… Get Me Out Of Here! host Julia Morris? Or will Seven's Sonia Kruger add to her Logies haul?
These hosts are vying for television glory against the ABC's Lisa Millar, Lynne McGranger from Home and Away, MasterChef Australia's Poh Ling Yeow, and A Current Affair host Ally Langdon.
At the announcement of the nominees at the Sydney Opera House on Monday, presenter Tara Rushton momentarily forgot to name the final nominee Sonia Kruger, who was waiting in the wings to be called to the stage.
"I am never going to live this down. I'm surrounded by my idols," said Rushton, apologising.
A new award named for five-time Gold Logie winner Ray Martin will be presented in 2025 - The Ray Martin Award for Most Popular News or Public Affairs Reporter.
The nominees are Nine's Ally Langdon, Tara Brown, and Peter Overton, the ABC's David Speers and Sarah Ferguson, and Seven's Michael Usher.
The ABC has received dozens of nominations, including for comedian Guy Montgomery for most popular new talent.
Two-time Logie winner, the children's cartoon Bluey is up for another award for best children's program.
Netflix show Apple Cider Vinegar, which tells the story of conwoman Belle Gibson, received a massive eight nominations.
Voting for the popular awards opened on Monday, with the ballot for the Gold Logie remaining open during the awards presentation itself.
The Logies will be held at The Star Sydney and broadcast live on Seven on Sunday August 3.
NOMINEES FOR THE TV WEEK GOLD LOGIE
* Ally Langdon, A Current Affair, The Olympic Games Paris 2024, 9Network
* Hamish Blake, LEGO Masters Australia, 9Network
* Julia Morris, I'm A Celebrity… Get Me Out Of Here!, Network 10
* Lisa Millar, Back Roads, ABC News Breakfast, Muster Dogs: Where Are They Now, Muster Dogs: Collies & Kelpies, ABC
* Lynne McGranger, Home and Away, Seven Network
* Poh Ling Yeow, MasterChef Australia, Network 10
* Sonia Kruger, The Voice, Dancing With The Stars, Logies Red Carpet Show, Seven Network
There have been some far-fetched Gold Logie pitches over the years - but this is an entirely new one.
The 2025 field for the coveted prize has been revealed, and it's dominated by women, up against only one man, Hamish Blake.
The Lego Masters host says he doesn't want to win, as victory would be a PR disaster.
"It would not be a great look if I won, so figure out your favourite lady and get right behind her," he said.
Could this finally be the year for Ten's I'm A Celebrity… Get Me Out Of Here! host Julia Morris? Or will Seven's Sonia Kruger add to her Logies haul?
These hosts are vying for television glory against the ABC's Lisa Millar, Lynne McGranger from Home and Away, MasterChef Australia's Poh Ling Yeow, and A Current Affair host Ally Langdon.
At the announcement of the nominees at the Sydney Opera House on Monday, presenter Tara Rushton momentarily forgot to name the final nominee Sonia Kruger, who was waiting in the wings to be called to the stage.
"I am never going to live this down. I'm surrounded by my idols," said Rushton, apologising.
A new award named for five-time Gold Logie winner Ray Martin will be presented in 2025 - The Ray Martin Award for Most Popular News or Public Affairs Reporter.
The nominees are Nine's Ally Langdon, Tara Brown, and Peter Overton, the ABC's David Speers and Sarah Ferguson, and Seven's Michael Usher.
The ABC has received dozens of nominations, including for comedian Guy Montgomery for most popular new talent.
Two-time Logie winner, the children's cartoon Bluey is up for another award for best children's program.
Netflix show Apple Cider Vinegar, which tells the story of conwoman Belle Gibson, received a massive eight nominations.
Voting for the popular awards opened on Monday, with the ballot for the Gold Logie remaining open during the awards presentation itself.
The Logies will be held at The Star Sydney and broadcast live on Seven on Sunday August 3.
NOMINEES FOR THE TV WEEK GOLD LOGIE
* Ally Langdon, A Current Affair, The Olympic Games Paris 2024, 9Network
* Hamish Blake, LEGO Masters Australia, 9Network
* Julia Morris, I'm A Celebrity… Get Me Out Of Here!, Network 10
* Lisa Millar, Back Roads, ABC News Breakfast, Muster Dogs: Where Are They Now, Muster Dogs: Collies & Kelpies, ABC
* Lynne McGranger, Home and Away, Seven Network
* Poh Ling Yeow, MasterChef Australia, Network 10
* Sonia Kruger, The Voice, Dancing With The Stars, Logies Red Carpet Show, Seven Network

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Nine unveils management shake-up in TV, Stan
Nine unveils management shake-up in TV, Stan

Sydney Morning Herald

time20 hours ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Nine unveils management shake-up in TV, Stan

Nine Entertainment head of streaming and broadcasting Amanda Laing has unveiled a new leadership structure that she hopes will better integrate the company's brands, with the heads of the television wing's sport, entertainment and news units to take on responsibility for content on Stan. On Friday, about five months since Laing was appointed as managing director of Nine's newly formed streaming and broadcast division, the former Foxtel executive announced a raft of leadership changes, including new roles in which several veteran TV directors will report to her. Broadly speaking, Laing's plan for the division includes giving the heads of various departments control of television output; its paid-streaming service Stan; and its free catch-up website 9Now, including deciding which content is best suited to each platform, as part of changes that will take effect from July 1. Nine is owner of this masthead. Driving efficiencies and drawing on resources across the company is central to the changes, including a merger of production teams from Stan Sports and the historic Wide World of Sports. Laing will lead a program to further grow the sport offering, with the aim of increasing advertising and subscription revenues as well as gaining additional broadcast rights and partnerships. Michael Healy, who has served as Channel 9's director of television since 2010, will move into an executive director of entertainment role that includes responsibility for the commissioning of all content across TV and streaming. This effectively puts him in charge of decisions for flagship shows such as Married at First Sight, Lego Masters and The Block, as well as for Australian original dramas and other series on Stan. Cailah Scobie, chief content officer at Stan, will take on the expanded role of executive director of entertainment content acquisitions, which will involve negotiating with studios to secure the rights for series, including big-name US-produced shows key to driving subscriptions and viewer numbers, for both streaming and broadcast television. Fiona Dear, Nine's director of news and current affairs, fresh from launching a dedicated long-form current affairs and investigations unit, will take on responsibility for streaming services as the company hopes to better unite the work of journalists across its broadcast and publishing divisions, which include The Sydney Morning Herald, The Age and The Australian Financial Review. The plan aims to build on the collaborations between print journalists from the mastheads working with programs such as 60 Minutes that have occurred since Nine's merger with Fairfax Media. No departures or redundancies were announced as part of the changes, which were explained to staff on Friday. Additionally, the company will soon recruit a chief strategy officer and chief marketing officer for the streaming and broadcast divisions, while Nine's state managing directors in Queensland, Western Australia and South Australia will now also report to Laing.

Nine unveils management shake-up in TV, Stan
Nine unveils management shake-up in TV, Stan

The Age

time20 hours ago

  • The Age

Nine unveils management shake-up in TV, Stan

Nine Entertainment head of streaming and broadcasting Amanda Laing has unveiled a new leadership structure that she hopes will better integrate the company's brands, with the heads of the television wing's sport, entertainment and news units to take on responsibility for content on Stan. On Friday, about five months since Laing was appointed as managing director of Nine's newly formed streaming and broadcast division, the former Foxtel executive announced a raft of leadership changes, including new roles in which several veteran TV directors will report to her. Broadly speaking, Laing's plan for the division includes giving the heads of various departments control of television output; its paid-streaming service Stan; and its free catch-up website 9Now, including deciding which content is best suited to each platform, as part of changes that will take effect from July 1. Nine is owner of this masthead. Driving efficiencies and drawing on resources across the company is central to the changes, including a merger of production teams from Stan Sports and the historic Wide World of Sports. Laing will lead a program to further grow the sport offering, with the aim of increasing advertising and subscription revenues as well as gaining additional broadcast rights and partnerships. Michael Healy, who has served as Channel 9's director of television since 2010, will move into an executive director of entertainment role that includes responsibility for the commissioning of all content across TV and streaming. This effectively puts him in charge of decisions for flagship shows such as Married at First Sight, Lego Masters and The Block, as well as for Australian original dramas and other series on Stan. Cailah Scobie, chief content officer at Stan, will take on the expanded role of executive director of entertainment content acquisitions, which will involve negotiating with studios to secure the rights for series, including big-name US-produced shows key to driving subscriptions and viewer numbers, for both streaming and broadcast television. Fiona Dear, Nine's director of news and current affairs, fresh from launching a dedicated long-form current affairs and investigations unit, will take on responsibility for streaming services as the company hopes to better unite the work of journalists across its broadcast and publishing divisions, which include The Sydney Morning Herald, The Age and The Australian Financial Review. The plan aims to build on the collaborations between print journalists from the mastheads working with programs such as 60 Minutes that have occurred since Nine's merger with Fairfax Media. No departures or redundancies were announced as part of the changes, which were explained to staff on Friday. Additionally, the company will soon recruit a chief strategy officer and chief marketing officer for the streaming and broadcast divisions, while Nine's state managing directors in Queensland, Western Australia and South Australia will now also report to Laing.

The US says this Australian writer was expelled because of a drug lie. He's not the first
The US says this Australian writer was expelled because of a drug lie. He's not the first

The Age

time20 hours ago

  • The Age

The US says this Australian writer was expelled because of a drug lie. He's not the first

A years-long legal battle followed. In 1975, Lennon triumphed. While the government had attributed its attempt to expel Lennon to his cannabis conviction, documents submitted to the court suggested the Nixon administration had been motivated by a fear Lennon could promote opposition to the president. Judge Irving Kaufman would have none of it. 'The courts will not condone selective deportation based upon secret political grounds,' he ruled. Chaplin's exile was on flimsy grounds, too. Scott Eyman, who wrote a book on Chaplin's stoush with the US government, told NPR that authorities had no legal grounds to revoke the actor's entry permit because he had not committed a crime. 'What was not stated and what Chaplin did not know was that if he had turned around and come back and demanded a hearing to get back his re-entry permit, they would have had to give it to him,' Eyman said. 'So they actually had no legal justification for excluding him from coming back to the country.' But times – and visa rules – have changed. ANU international law professor Donald Rothwell told the ABC that US border officials have complete discretion over whether to allow someone into the country, whether or not they hold a valid visa or visa waiver. Loading 'They don't have to give a reason, and there is very little ability for an Australian traveller to challenge that,' Rothwell said. Along the way, they can search phones and luggage and detain people without providing access to a lawyer. The system is not new, or particularly different to Australia's border regime, but the way in which it is being used has shifted. Cases of Australians being denied entry to the US are getting coverage they have never had before. There was the man who told this masthead's Traveller in April he had been sent home from New York for taking a circuitous route to the US (which he said he did because it was cheaper). And a former NSW police officer travelling to Hawaii to visit her American husband was expelled in May for taking three suitcases, which the Daily Mail reported made officers suspicious she would stay longer than allowed in the country. Whether these deportations were caused by the Trump administration's aggressive new approach to screening remains unclear. What is obvious is that its rhetoric has shifted. The US Department of Homeland Security issued a statement on social media questioning the circumstances of the marriage of the former police officer who had travelled to Hawaii, Nikki Saroukos. The department said Saroukos met her husband the same day her former partner left her, and that they had married one month later. 'I never want to return back to the United States,' Saroukos said, even before the statement was issued. Loading It has barely dented other travellers' appetite to go stateside. Australian Bureau of Statistics data shows 56,770 Australians travelled to the US in April 2025, down from 60,520 in April 2024. Kitchen, the writer who was denied entry, says the US government has immense discretion that it uses to keep out people it doesn't like. 'The question [on the visa waiver application] asks if you've consumed illicit drugs in the past,' Kitchen said. 'If every Australian flying into Los Angeles International Airport answered honestly, the lines would get very short, very quickly.' Chaplin's exile deeply hurt the star, who never returned to the heights of success he had enjoyed in America. He would not go back to the country for 20 years, but was greeted as a hero with a 12-minute standing ovation at the 1972 Academy Awards. Loading Lennon stayed in America and was slain five years later. Kitchen is back with his family in Castlemaine, north-west of Melbourne, and has achieved a dream of many young writers: The New Yorker published his account of his deportation.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store