I think I would prefer Hugh. Similiar vibe to what they are going for, but I think he would a bit better at the lighter stuff.
How long do we think it will be until we see Alex Cullen filling in?
I think I would prefer Hugh. Similiar vibe to what they are going for, but I think he would a bit better at the lighter stuff.
How long do we think it will be until we see Alex Cullen filling in?
Liam Tapper returns tomorrow.
Running content about travelling via cruise ships lifts Seven’s morning television audience by “at least 10%”.
That is according to Sarah Stinson, former executive producer of The Morning Show and current director of morning television at Seven, who said “cruising is so big for our viewers”.
Cruising and maybe Downton Abbey???
Very American term to use.
Wednesday: Nat and Mon hosting today.
Is this their first time hosting together?
Shirvo was at the Fight for Free TV event last night.
I believe so. It’s also the first time weekday Sunrise has had two female co-hosts since Sam and Nat five years ago (September 4, 2020 was the last time).
They have done weekends together when Nat was on weekday news. But first female duo in years. Great to see and even more interesting that it was rostered this way.
I haven’t watched weekdays in a while, but the format has improved nicely, some nicer throws to breaks by Eddy for entertainment or Sam with weather.
Kylie Gillies read the 8:30am sport headlines
Headline*
Aussie TV loves American terms, Sunrise especially.
A pet peeve of mine for a while was anchor vs presenter. It used to drive me nuts when David Koch would say anchor instead of presenter. Sadly it’s more common now.
Same with O&O. I used to remove it from Wikipedia pages for Australian network pages but some idiot would always add it back.
Both are stupid terms. I stopped caring once I moved to the US though. I hear so many stupid words here that anchor and O&O are the least of my concerns.
Not so much “very American”, but a Hollywood term. So why not?! A bit of fun.
Hollywood is in America, so American term is correct. It’s also used heavily in Florida because the theme parks are there too.
There’s not even room for a backlot at Everleigh. This is just typical Sunrise behavior to make it sound better than it is.
Hollywood is in America, so American term is correct
So what? Do you hate British terms used in Australia as much as American terms?
Strange.