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November 25, 2024
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Logie awards 2024: ‘television’s most axed man’ Larry Emdur takes gold | Australian television


Morning Show presenter Larry Emdur has reflected on once being “television’s most axed man” after winning the Gold Logie at the Logie awards on Sunday night.

“I’ve never done anything else, and I’ve never wanted to do anything else,” said Emdur, after winning his first ever Logie in a 40-year career that has seen him front everything from The Price is Right to Celebrity Dog School.

He promised to uphold a promise to “have all the nominees’ initials tattooed on my arse live tomorrow morning”, having beaten Tony Armstrong, Julia Morris, Robert Irwin, Asher Keddie, Andy Lee and Sonia Kruger for the evening’s top prize.

“So we’ll see you on the Morning Show tomorrow,” he said.

US streaming giant Netflix and its hit miniseries Boy Swallows Universe also dominated Australian television’s biggest night, with 15-year-old star Felix Cameron fighting back tears after winning the best actor in a drama and most popular new talent categories for his breakout role as Eli Bell.

Felix Cameron, after winning best lead actor in a drama and most popular new talent. Photograph: Bianca de Marchi/AAP

“The last award that I won before tonight was student of the week in grade five,” Cameron said at Sunday night’s ceremony, held in Sydney. “This is quite a big deal.”

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Accepting the best miniseries or telemovie award, author Trent Dalton, who drew on his own family and childhood to write the bestselling novel that inspired the book, paid tribute to “all the mums who are a bit like Frankie Bell”.

“They’re out there in the suburbs tonight, and they’re feeling a bit lost in the darkness,” he said. “Please believe me when I tell you that when your children look at you in the darkness, all they see is your light.”

Kitty Flanagan poses with the Logie award for best lead actress in a comedy. Photograph: Wendell Teodoro/Getty Images

In his second year hosting the awards, comedian Sam Pang poked fun at Australia’s free-to-air networks in his opening monologue, including at Logies broadcaster Seven.

“I stand before you safe in the knowledge that whatever I say, this network will defend me in court,” Pang said, in a reference to the network’s connection to multiple high-profile legal cases.

“And with their impeccable record in defamation cases in recent years I think I’ll be fine,” Pang added. “Full disclosure: I won’t be paid by Channel Seven tonight. Instead they’ll pay my rent.”

Later in the night, 60 Minutes presenter Tom Steinfort also made reference to the network when accepting the best news coverage or public affairs report for its investigation, Ben Roberts-Smith: The Truth.

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“We definitely weren’t expecting this given Ben Roberts-Smith’s employment history,” Steinfort said. The soldier resigned from Seven West Media last year, a day after a judge found he murdered unarmed civilians while serving in the military in Afghanistan.

Seven claimed a win of its own when its coverage of the Matilda’s barnstorming Fifa Women’s World Cup run became the first standalone women’s sport event to win the Logie for best sports coverage. The network’s flying doctor drama RFDS also won best drama.

Rebecca Gibney poses with the Hall of Fame award. Photograph: Wendell Teodoro/Getty Images

Also on the night, The Flying Doctors and Packed to the Rafters star Rebecca Gibney became only the fourth woman to be inducted into the Logies Hall of Fame.

“If someone had told 16-year-old me who suffered crippling anxiety and severe body dysmorphia that one day I’d be standing on this stage with this award, she wouldn’t have believed it,” Gibney said.

The ABC’s longrunning satire Utopia also claimed three awards, with Rob Sitch and Kitty Flanagan winning best lead actor and actress in a comedy, while the series won the best scripted comedy award.

Close to the end of the nearly five-hour-long broadcast, Utopia and Thank God You’re Here star Celia Pacquola delivered a memorable moment after apparently reading the wrong category title from the teleprompter while presenting best drama program, shouting: “Someone at Channel Seven has fucked me!”

Pacquola’s off-the-cuff remark was trumped only by Emdur’s victory speech, in which he joked that his own children hadn’t watched free-to-air television in 15 years and said, “This is lovely recognition; recogintion for me is usually someone telling on the street, ‘Come on down, you wanker!’”



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