Given the controversial nature of the role,the profile of the next host is already a topic of debate amongMedia Watch’s current and former hosts.
Stuart Littlemore,a barrister and the program’s founding host in 1989,said the next host ofMedia Watch should not be a journalist,or at least someone who does not seek to continue as a journalist after their stint is over.
“The person who’s going to do it really must be somebody who knows a great deal about journalism,probably has to have been a journalist at some stage,but has an external perspective of it,” he said.
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Barry disagreed,arguing any host of a program that puts the blowtorch to the media industry should “know how the sausage is made”. “It’s seen as a career ending opportunity. But it doesn’t need to be. You won’t win friends,but you will earn respect if you do the job properly without fear or favour.”
Meanwhile,Richard Ackland – who took over from Littlemore in 1998 – saidMedia Watch should spend less time on skewering tabloid news and morning television,which is “easy prey” in his opinion,and instead critique the behaviour of media outlets and voices that are “meant to attract respect”.
“If they’re failing or falling down on the job,I think that’s really important,” Ackland said.