Popular ABC Host Quits Live on Air, Says There Are ‘Penalties for Speaking Bluntly’

‘Having truly rational, bull-[expletive] free conversations about controversial issues is risky these days,’ Josh Szeps said.
Popular ABC Host Quits Live on Air, Says There Are ‘Penalties for Speaking Bluntly’
The logo for Australia's public broadcaster ABC is seen on its head office building in Sydney, Australia, on Sept. 27, 2018. Saeed Khan/AFP via Getty Images
Henry Jom
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A popular radio host in Sydney has quit live on air while making a thinly veiled critique of the national broadcaster’s management and its listeners around “uncomfortable conversations.”

“Having truly rational, bull-[expletive] free conversations about controversial issues is risky these days,” Josh Szeps, host of ABC Radio Sydney, said just before the 3 p.m. news on Nov. 15.

“The penalties for speaking bluntly, the penalties for trying to coax people out of their thought silos and their echo chambers are very high.”

The radio host, who appeared on the Joe Rogan Experience show and famously entered into a heated debate with the American commentator on the COVID jab, said the fact that controversial topics are risky “makes it more important to me.”

“The fact I have found a way of doing it independently that is financially viable leads me to the question that I have been mulling over ever since chatter about the 2024 [ABC] line-up began—which is, where am I at most use to the national conversation?” he said.

Mr. Szeps added that regular listeners know him for thriving on controversial discussions.

“You know I am the kid who gets invited to Christmas lunch and then starts talking to people I’m advised not to talk to,” he said.

“Like Uncle Herbie who might have voted for Pauline Hanson—as that old codger farts his way through the potato salad I will have an uncomfortable conversation with him.

“Maybe all I do is make the prim and proper partygoers uncomfortable, but that is not my intention. My hope is that by understanding Uncle Herbie’s point of view I might better understand my own. Everyone might better understand their own.

“Maybe there’s value in consciously defying bubbles of conversational safety.”

Szeps a ‘Misfit’ at the ABC

He explained that his conversations have become somewhat of a “misfit” at the ABC.

“I’m a child of refugees, but I’m a white Australian. I’m a gay guy, but I hate Mardi Gras,” he added.

“I have Holocaust-surviving grandparents but I’m conflicted about Zionism. I’m an ABC presenter but I don’t like kale.”

Mr. Szeps urged journalists to be “contrarians” rather than “team players.”

“The way to expand the conversation is to expand the people having the conversation, not just in ways that prioritise superficial diversity but in ways that reward true idiosyncrasy,” he said.

Mr. Szeps also plugged his podcast titled “Uncomfortable Conversations,” and said he would launch a YouTube show after he finished up with the public broadcaster.

Steve Ahern, acting head of ABC Capital City Networks, said: “Josh’s mixture of playfulness, intellect and fearlessness is one of a kind. We wish him all the best and hope he can contribute his significant talents to the ABC again in the future.”

Mr. Szeps said he will continue with his role at ABC Radio Sydney Afternoons until Dec. 22.

High Profile Journalists Depart the ABC

This comes after Tracey Holmes, a senior sports journalist whose career has spanned five decades, announced her resignation from the ABC in late October.

Ms. Holmes’s resignation follows the resignation of her husband, Stan Grant, who walked away from the public broadcaster and as host of the flagship Q&A program after he received racial abuse and criticism for ABC’s coverage of King Charles III’s coronation in early May.

Mr. Grant, who became a full-time host for the Q&A program in August 2022, said he wanted no part of social media because he and his family were regularly targeted with abuse.

ABC News director Justin Stevens said Mr. Grant took on the “tirade of criticism, particularly in the usual sections of the media that target the ABC.”

Meanwhile, Ms. Holmes has accused the public broadcaster of losing its backbone and being “agenda-driven.”

“I actually think the ABC has a responsibility not to be beholden to agendas, or to be beholden to the loudest people in the room, or the loudest critics that will criticise anyway, so you might as well stand up and tell the stories,” Ms. Holmes told the Sydney Morning Herald in November.

“So leaving was for a number of very complex reasons. Not the least of which was the treatment of my husband, not once but twice over a three-month period. Basically, it made it untenable for me to stay.”

Ms. Holmes said she found it difficult to report on some of her stories as the industry had been overrun by “systems and processes and admin” as well as “box-ticking.”

“There are stories I want to continue telling. And it’s getting harder and harder to tell them,” she said.

“I’m interested in talking to people of the world and telling their stories so that we can all understand each other a little bit better.

“And I’m most interested in the role that sport plays in that prism.”

The veteran journalist says that she is not criticising the entire ABC and its staff.

“Because I still think there’s a lot of great work. But it’s not the ABC it was, and I hope it finds its way back,” she added.

Henry Jom
Henry Jom
Author
Henry Jom is a reporter for The Epoch Times, Australia, covering a range of topics, including medicolegal, health, political, and business-related issues. He has a background in the rehabilitation sciences and is currently completing a postgraduate degree in law. Henry can be contacted at [email protected]
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