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In 1996, Jill collapsed on-air as she attempted to introduce a story on the then Victorian Premier ]'s business dealings. The collapse, a severe migraine attack, prompted a public furore, and the story went to air the following night, unchanged. However, journalists and producers who worked on the story did not have their contracts renewed. The story behind this was uncovered by an ABC '']'' feature and the ] was accused of bowing to pressure from the State Government to pull the story. In 1996, Jill collapsed on-air as she attempted to introduce a story on the then Victorian Premier ]'s business dealings. The collapse, a severe migraine attack, prompted a public furore, and the story went to air the following night, unchanged. However, journalists and producers who worked on the story did not have their contracts renewed. The story behind this was uncovered by an ABC '']'' feature and the ] was accused of bowing to pressure from the State Government to pull the story.


In 2011, Singer advocated that people sceptical of the link between ] and ] be gassed with ], making her the most recent Socialist to advocate the use of poison gas as a means of disposing of political undesirables.<ref>{{cite news|last=Singer|first=Jill|title=Carbon tax sideshow must stop|url=http://www.heraldsun.com.au/opinion/sideshow-around-carbon-tax-must-stop/story-fn56az2q-1226079531212|newspaper=Herald Sun|date=22 June 2011}}</ref> In 2011, Singer advocated that people sceptical of the link between ] and ] be gassed with ].<ref>{{cite news|last=Singer|first=Jill|title=Carbon tax sideshow must stop|url=http://www.heraldsun.com.au/opinion/sideshow-around-carbon-tax-must-stop/story-fn56az2q-1226079531212|newspaper=Herald Sun|date=22 June 2011}}</ref>


==Personal life== ==Personal life==

Revision as of 23:20, 23 June 2011

Jill Singer is a well-known Australian journalist, columnist and television presenter. She began her journalism career as an ABC radio trainee in 1984. She worked her way up to become a senior reporter for The 7.30 Report on the ABC and later presented the Victorian edition of Today Tonight on the Seven Network. Currently she writes a weekly column for the Melbourne Herald Sun and lectures in television journalism at RMIT University in Melbourne.

In 1992, Singer won the Walkley Award for "Best Investigative Television Journalist."

In 1996, Jill collapsed on-air as she attempted to introduce a story on the then Victorian Premier Jeff Kennett's business dealings. The collapse, a severe migraine attack, prompted a public furore, and the story went to air the following night, unchanged. However, journalists and producers who worked on the story did not have their contracts renewed. The story behind this was uncovered by an ABC Four Corners feature and the Seven Network was accused of bowing to pressure from the State Government to pull the story.

In 2011, Singer advocated that people sceptical of the link between Carbon Dioxide and Global Warming be gassed with Carbon Monoxide.

Personal life

References

  1. Singer, Jill (22 June 2011). "Carbon tax sideshow must stop". Herald Sun.


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