
The 2025 Logie nominations have been revealed
The full list of nominees for the 65th TV Week Logie Awards has been revealed, and an exciting new category has been announced.
Among those vying for the night's top accolade, the coveted Gold Logie for Most Popular Personality on Australian Television, are Home and Away star Lynne McGranger and television host Sonia Kruger, known for fronting The Voice and Dancing with the Stars.
Julia Morris and Hamish Blake have also been nominated for the title alongside some other first-time nominees, including Ally Langdon, Lisa Millar, and Poh Ling Yeow.
'Looking at the list of nominations, it's always thrilling to see the diverse range of Australian stories being told on our screens,' TV Week's Editorial Director Amber Giles said.
'It's especially pleasing to see the breadth of original Australian content on both free-to-air and streaming services. If you see a show or star on the list that you've watched and enjoyed, then don't be shy – get voting.'
The nominees for the 65th TV WEEK Logie Awards were revealed on Monday morning at the Sydney Opera House ahead of the awards ceremony that will be held at The Star in Sydney on August 3.
McGranger, who concluded her nearly 33-year run as Irene on Home and Away earlier in 2025, is the only Gold Logie nominee who will not be attending the event, as she is currently overseas.
The Logies has also introduced the Ray Martin Award for Most Popular News or Public Affairs Reporter, which will sit alongside the Graham Kennedy Award for Most Popular New Talent and the Bert Newton Award for Most Popular Presenter. Ray Martin attends the TV WEEK Logie Awards Nominations Announcement in the Yallamundi Rooms at the Sydney Opera House on June 16, 2025 in Sydney. Credit: Hanna Lassen / Getty Images for TV WEEK
7 News' Michael Usher is nominated in the inaugural category, alongside 9News Peter Overton, 7.30s Sarah Ferguson, 60 Minutes' Tara Brown, A Current Affairs' Ally Langdon, and Insiders' David Speers.
Gold Logie for Most Popular Personality on Australian Television Lynne McGranger, Home and Away , Seven Network
, Seven Network Sonia Kruger, The Voice , Dancing With The Stars , Logies Red Carpet Show , Seven Network
, , , Seven Network Ally Langdon, A Current Affair , The Olympic Games Paris 2024 , 9Network
, , 9Network Hamish Blake, LEGO Masters Australia , 9Network
, 9Network Julia Morris, I'm A Celebrity… Get Me Out Of Here! , Network 10
, Network 10 Lisa Millar, Back Roads , ABC News Breakfast , Muster Dogs: Where Are They Now , Muster Dogs: Collies & Kelpies , ABC
, , , , ABC Poh Ling Yeow, MasterChef Australia , Network 10
Bert Newton Award for Most Popular Presenter Ricki-Lee, Australian Idol , Seven Network
, Seven Network Sonia Kruger, The Voice , Dancing With The Stars , Logies Red Carpet Show , Seven Network
, , , Seven Network Hamish Blake, LEGO Masters Australia , 9Network
, 9Network Julia Morris, I'm A Celebrity… Get Me Out Of Here! , Network 10
, Network 10 Todd Woodbridge, Tipping Point Australia , Australian Open , The Olympic Games Paris 2024 , Paris 2024 Paralympic Games , 9Network
, , , , 9Network Zan Rowe, Take 5 With Zan Rowe , ABC New Year's Eve, ABC
Graham Kennedy Award for Most Popular Talent Hailey Pinto, Home and Away , Seven Network
, Seven Network Kate Miller-Heidke, The Voice , Seven Network
, Seven Network Guy Montgomery, Guy Montgomery's Guy Mont Spelling Bee , ABC
, ABC Jenny Tian, Taskmaster Australia , Network 10
, Network 10 Kylah Day, Territory , Netflix
, Netflix Sofia Levin, MasterChef Australia , Network 10
Ray Martin Award for Most Popular News or Public Affairs Presenter Michael Usher, 7NEWS , 7NEWS Spotlight , Seven Network
, , Seven Network Ally Langdon, A Current Affair, 9Network
9Network David Speers, Insiders , ABC
, ABC Peter Overton, 9News , 9Network
, 9Network Sarah Ferguson, 7.30 , ABC
, ABC Tara Brown, 60 Minutes , Dangerous Lies: Unmasking Belle Gibson , 9Network
Silver Logie for Best Lead Actor in a Drama Lloyd Griffith, Return To Paradise , ABC
, ABC Michael Dorman, Territory , Netflix
, Netflix Robert Taylor, Territory , Netflix
, Netflix Sam Corlett, Territory , Netflix
, Netflix Sam Neill, The Twelve , BINGE / FOXTEL
, BINGE / FOXTEL Tai Hara, Return To Paradise , ABC
Silver Logie for Best Lead Actress in a Drama Lynne McGranger, Home and Away, Seven Network
Seven Network Alycia Debnam-Carey, Apple Cider Vinegar , Netflix
, Netflix Anna Samson, Return To Paradise , ABC
, ABC Anna Torv, Territory , Netflix
, Netflix Ayesha Madon, Heartbreak High , Netflix
, Netflix Kaitlyn Dever, Apple Cider Vinegar , Netflix
Silver Logie for Best Lead Actor in a Comedy Aaron Chen, Fisk , ABC
, ABC Ben Miller, Austin , ABC
, ABC Clancy Brown, Good Cop/Bad Cop , Stan
, Stan Luke Cook, Good Cop/Bad Cop , Stan
, Stan Michael Theo, Austin , ABC
, ABC Patrick Brammall, Colin From Accounts , BINGE / FOXTEL
Silver Logie for Best Lead Actress in a Comedy Harriet Dyer, Colin From Accounts , BINGE / FOXTEL
, BINGE / FOXTEL Jenna Owen, Nugget is Dead: A Christmas Story , Stan
, Stan Kitty Flanagan, Fisk , ABC
, ABC Leighton Meester, Good Cop/Bad Cop , Stan
, Stan Sally Phillips, Austin , ABC
, ABC Vic Zerbst, Nugget is Dead: A Christmas Story , Stan
Silver Logie for Best Supporting Actor Ashley Zukerman, Apple Cider Vinegar , Netflix
, Netflix Darren Gilshenan, Colin From Accounts , BINGE / FOXTEL
, BINGE / FOXTEL Glenn Butcher, Fisk , ABC
, ABC Mark Coles Smith, Apple Cider Vinegar , Netflix
, Netflix Matt Nable, Apple Cider Vinegar , Netflix
, Netflix Sam Delich, Territory , Netflix
Silver Logie for Best Supporting Actress Aisha Dee, Apple Cider Vinegar , Netflix
, Netflix Chloé Hayden, Heartbreak High , Netflix
, Netflix Julia Zemiro, Fisk , ABC
, ABC Marg Downey, The Newsreader , ABC
, ABC Michelle Lim Davidson, The Newsreader , ABC
, ABC Tilda Cobham-Hervey, Apple Cider Vinegar , Netflix
Best Drama Program Bump , Stan
, Stan Heartbreak High , Netflix
, Netflix Return To Paradise , ABC
, ABC Territory , Netflix
, Netflix The Newsreader , ABC
, ABC The Twelve , BINGE / FOXTEL
Best Miniseries or Telemovie Apple Cider Vinegar , Netflix
, Netflix Critical Incident , Stan
, Stan Fake , Paramount+
, Paramount+ How To Make Gravy , BINGE / FOXTEL
, BINGE / FOXTEL Human Error , 9Network
, 9Network Plum , ABC
Best Entertainment Program ABC New Year's Eve , ABC
, ABC Australian Idol , Seven Network
, Seven Network Countdown 50 Years On , ABC
, ABC Dancing With The Stars , Seven Network
, Seven Network The Voice , Seven Network
, Seven Network Vision Australia's Carols by Candlelight , 9Network
Best Current Affairs Program 60 Minutes , 9Network
, 9Network 7.30 , ABC
, ABC 7NEWS Spotlight , Seven Network
, Seven Network A Current Affair , 9Network
, 9Network Australian Story , ABC
, ABC Four Corners , ABC
Best Scripted Comedy Program Austin , ABC
, ABC Colin From Accounts , BINGE / FOXTEL
, BINGE / FOXTEL Fisk , ABC
, ABC Good Cop/Bad Cop , Stan
, Stan Melbourne International Comedy Festival , ABC
, ABC Optics , ABC
Best Comedy Entertainment Program Gruen , ABC
, ABC Hard Quiz , ABC
, ABC Have You Been Paying Attention? , Network 10
, Network 10 Sam Pang Tonight , Network 10
, Network 10 Thank God You're Here , Network 10
, Network 10 The Weekly with Charlie Pickering , ABC
Best Competition Reality Program Alone Australia , SBS
, SBS Australian Survivor: Brains V Brawn II , Network 10
, Network 10 LEGO Masters Australia , 9Network
, 9Network MasterChef Australia , Network 10
, Network 10 My Kitchen Rules , Seven Network
, Seven Network The Block , 9Network
Best Structured Reality Program Farmer Wants A Wife , Seven Network
, Seven Network Gogglebox Australia , Network 10
, Network 10 Married At First Sight , 9Network
, 9Network Muster Dogs: Collies & Kelpies , ABC
, ABC Shark Tank Australia , Network 10
, Network 10 The Real Housewives of Sydney , BINGE / FOXTEL
Best Lifestyle Program Better Homes and Gardens , Seven Network
, Seven Network Do You Want To Live Forever? , 9Network
, 9Network Gardening Australia , ABC
, ABC Grand Designs Australia , ABC
, ABC Restoration Australia , ABC
, ABC Travel Guides , 9Network
Best News Coverage or Public Affairs Report Betrayal of Trust , Four Corners, ABC
, Four Corners, ABC Building Bad , 60 Minutes, 9Network
, 60 Minutes, 9Network Courage & Science , A Current Affair, 9Network
, A Current Affair, 9Network Cyclone Alfred , 7NEWS, Seven Network
, 7NEWS, Seven Network Melbourne Protests , Sunrise, Seven Network
, Sunrise, Seven Network Trump Assassination Attempt , 7NEWS, Seven Network
Best Factual or Documentary Program Big Miracles , 9Network
, 9Network Ego: The Michael Gudinski Story , Seven Network
, Seven Network Miriam Margolyes Impossibly Australian , ABC
, ABC The Assembly , ABC
, ABC Tsunami: 20 Years On , 9Network
, 9Network Unbreakable: The Jelena Dokic Story , 9Network
Best Sports Coverage 2024 AFL Finals Series, Seven Network
Seven Network 2024 State of Origin , 9Network
, 9Network 2025 Australian Open Finals , 9Network
, 9Network Australia v India: Border – Gavaskar Trophy , Kayo Sports / FOXTEL
, Kayo Sports / FOXTEL CommBank Matildas V China PR , Network 10
, Network 10 The Olympic Games Paris 2024 , 9Network / Stan Sport
Best Children's Program Bluey , ABC
, ABC Ginger and the Vegesaurs , ABC
, ABC Hard Quiz Kids , ABC
, ABC Little J & Big Cuz , NITV / ABC
, NITV / ABC Play School , ABC
, ABC Rock Island Mysteries , Network 10
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Advertiser
4 hours ago
- The Advertiser
Newcastle Comedy Club: Friday Night Comedy - Fri 27 Jun to Fri 22 Aug
Community Newcastle Comedy Club: Friday Night Comedy When Fri 27 June 7.30pm Repeats weekly, each Fri, until August 22 2025 Where Newcastle Comedy Club Get Directions Head over to Newcastle Comedy Club on Darby Street for a rolling lineup of comedians - from locals to travelling comedians from Sydney, interstate and worldwide every single week. You can expect to see 5-6 different acts, with different styles so there is something for everyone. Discover the next big thing in Australian comedy before everyone else! Strictly 18+.

The Age
10 hours ago
- The Age
Your cooking looks disgusting. Please, never stop posting it on Instagram
To the untrained eye, the plate was a mess of slop. On closer inspection, it must've been food of some description. Potatoes, maybe? Peas too. There was definitely a meat element, but it had been cooked for so long that it didn't matter what it was, or at least what it had once been. A thin sauce, presumably gravy, pooled in the middle of the plate. Remarkably, everything on the dish appeared a different shade of grey. A photo was taken, slightly out of focus, and posted online, accompanied by a simple caption: Cheeky Sunday roast. The person responsible for this situation was someone I barely knew, a friend of a friend of a friend, added to my Instagram account after a chance meeting years ago. We maintain almost no online relationship, but his cooking exploits are the highlight of my week. Every Sunday, without fail, he tackles something refreshingly regular – spaghetti bolognese, homemade tacos, a particularly raw-looking baked salmon – and he painstakingly documents the process. The results are unspectacular and occasionally alarming, but that's beside the point. In a world ruined by social media pressure, where everyone must always put their best foot forward, here is an average man unafraid to celebrate an average coq au vin. The glorification of everyday meals has long been stitched into the Australian national identity. We are the country of laid-back larrikins, a melting pot of cultures who refuse to take themselves (or their food) too seriously. That's why we laughed along in shared acknowledgment when Dale Kerrigan's mind was blown by his wife's rissoles in The Castle ('Yeah, but it's what you do with them!') and it's why we decided that the only fitting symbol for our democracy was a Coles sausage, covered in tomato sauce, served on white bread. Sure, we have a thriving food scene, complete with talented chefs serving world-class cuisine, but that represents the best of us, not the rest of us. At first, the rise of social media supercharged our ability to embrace our ordinariness. Twitter feeds like Rate My Plate, created in 2013, and the much-loved Instagram page Cook Suck (created by the late, great Darrell Beveridge in 2011) encouraged users to submit their horrific-looking home cooking for our collective enjoyment. The aim wasn't to shame (most of the time) but rather to celebrate how mediocre we can all be and how bad something might look, even if it tastes good. Then the inevitable happened: social media became less about slices of real life and more about curation and competition. Amateur home cooks became obsessed with viral recipes, abandoning their sloppy homemade pizzas (featuring packet cheese!) in favour of endless recreations of Alison Roman's caramelised shallot pasta or insane TikTok trends.

Sydney Morning Herald
10 hours ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
Your cooking looks disgusting. Please, never stop posting it on Instagram
To the untrained eye, the plate was a mess of slop. On closer inspection, it must've been food of some description. Potatoes, maybe? Peas too. There was definitely a meat element, but it had been cooked for so long that it didn't matter what it was, or at least what it had once been. A thin sauce, presumably gravy, pooled in the middle of the plate. Remarkably, everything on the dish appeared a different shade of grey. A photo was taken, slightly out of focus, and posted online, accompanied by a simple caption: Cheeky Sunday roast. The person responsible for this situation was someone I barely knew, a friend of a friend of a friend, added to my Instagram account after a chance meeting years ago. We maintain almost no online relationship, but his cooking exploits are the highlight of my week. Every Sunday, without fail, he tackles something refreshingly regular – spaghetti bolognese, homemade tacos, a particularly raw-looking baked salmon – and he painstakingly documents the process. The results are unspectacular and occasionally alarming, but that's beside the point. In a world ruined by social media pressure, where everyone must always put their best foot forward, here is an average man unafraid to celebrate an average coq au vin. The glorification of everyday meals has long been stitched into the Australian national identity. We are the country of laid-back larrikins, a melting pot of cultures who refuse to take themselves (or their food) too seriously. That's why we laughed along in shared acknowledgment when Dale Kerrigan's mind was blown by his wife's rissoles in The Castle ('Yeah, but it's what you do with them!') and it's why we decided that the only fitting symbol for our democracy was a Coles sausage, covered in tomato sauce, served on white bread. Sure, we have a thriving food scene, complete with talented chefs serving world-class cuisine, but that represents the best of us, not the rest of us. At first, the rise of social media supercharged our ability to embrace our ordinariness. Twitter feeds like Rate My Plate, created in 2013, and the much-loved Instagram page Cook Suck (created by the late, great Darrell Beveridge in 2011) encouraged users to submit their horrific-looking home cooking for our collective enjoyment. The aim wasn't to shame (most of the time) but rather to celebrate how mediocre we can all be and how bad something might look, even if it tastes good. Then the inevitable happened: social media became less about slices of real life and more about curation and competition. Amateur home cooks became obsessed with viral recipes, abandoning their sloppy homemade pizzas (featuring packet cheese!) in favour of endless recreations of Alison Roman's caramelised shallot pasta or insane TikTok trends.