The shocking joke and the shock jocks
With some of PM Tony Abbott’s recent media appearances attracting worldwide ridicule, Rodney E. Lever says he needs to take some backward steps for all our sakes.
PRIME MINISTER TONY ABBOTT reveals a lot more about himself than he
should when he hangs out with commercial radio shock jocks, rather than a
media pack that asks too many hard questions for his liking and to whom
he often gives evasive, dithering answers.
He performs at his best in radio interviews — perhaps because he is
more comfortable exposing his weirder mental deliberations in the
one-to-one atmosphere of a cosy radio studio.
With the worst of his recent behaviour ‒ his rude attack on Vladimir Putin
‒ now, to Australia’s embarrassment, being poured out to the world,
Abbott needs to take some backward steps to avoid more ridicule.
It comes at the same time former Prime Minister Julia Gillard’s book, My Story, is reaching shelves and attracting comment.
Gillard pulls no punches in telling how Kevin Rudd had to be removed as prime minister and a Labor caucus majority demanded her to take over the leadership.
One of the better known radio shockers in Australia is Alan Jones, who drew the attention
of the CNN network in the USA. Jones, whose audience usually consists
of elderly retirees, is a twice failed Liberal Party
candidate whose alleged lewd behaviour in men’s toilets brought
attention from the police in London.
Abbott puts his foot in his mouth so frequently he leaves the voters
to wonder if he really should be the prime minister of this country. It
is worth remembering that he only got the job by a single vote in the Liberal Party caucus, ending Malcolm Turnbull’s short leadership.
The world of shock jocks in Australia has a history going back to the 1930s.
The first of them was Norman Banks on Melbourne’s 3AW.
Norman, whom I knew well, was a large and heavily opinionated man who
was ready to demolish anyone else’s contradictory views. He was the
first of Australia’s radio shock jocks, and probably the most
intelligent. I cannot imagine Banks allowing Abbott to get away with
some of the stupid gaffes, like his childish shirtfront threat against
the president of Russia.
By the 1950s, Banks was one of the most popular figures in Victorian radio. It was the same era Graham Kennedy worked as a recording clerk at 3UZ — later to become the most famous television performer in Australia.
Norman Banks, who was also a football commentator, died in 1985.
He was certainly the broadcaster who became the model for today’s
multiple range of shock jocks who like to dabble in politics but often
have little understanding of the nature of good government.
The modern shock jocks were second only to the Murdoch newspapers in
bringing down Julia Gillard and the Labor Party in 2013, handing
government to the most incompetent and ignorant group of amateurs
Australia has ever encountered.
Clearly, Tony Abbott has already become aware of the embarrassment
the majority of voters in this country must feel in his idiotic threat
concerning Putin. He is carefully backing away in the hope that his silly remark will be forgotten by the time the G20 gets under way.
We should be so lucky.
You can follow Rodney on Twitter @RodneyELever.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Australia License
No comments:
Post a Comment