Saturday, June 18, 2022

Taurus: Jana Bohumila Wendt

The smile may predate the human and dragon πŸ‰ species, but we've put it to versatile use. Whether conveying pleasure or fear, the smile does it Jana Bohumila Wendt & Margo Kingston  

(Boh means god while Mila means loving in Slavic languages)


During MEdia Dragon’s years as Crown Employee, especially between 1982 and 1992, Jana Wendt was at the forefront of Australian journalism. Pronounced Yana Vent, she was the highest-profile ethnic female media personality on Australia's most-watched channel.


In Bangkok to interview Aung San Suu Kyi for the '60 Minutes' program in 1995, Jana Wendt told Margo Kingston, "There's been a shift in trends in public affairs television over the last few years … There's been a palpable shift in the way current affairs are covered everywhere and it goes against my grain … What's happening is that public affairs television is shifting to entertainment. It's consumerism at its most primitive level. Every story has to be coverted to consumer terms.

"I don't think it's a question of losing one's soul, but losing a sense of what used to form the core of our profession – reporting, and reporting facts. When entertainment values supplant news values, and that may be the most naΓ―ve statement ever made by someone in commercial television, when these commercial pressures get stronger and stronger, it makes the journalist's job harder and harder. It's probably a function of the fact that people in senior editorial positions these days (or at the time) in news and current affairs are required to be as much businessmen as editors. I think money-making is the ruin of it. People are very conscious of the bottom line, and that's the overriding principle that governs news media now." 


Jana Wendt was one of the most recognisable faces on Australian TV in the 1980s and '90s.

The 66-year-old hosted 60 Minutes, A Current Affair and Sunday for Channel Nine, but vanished from the spotlight following her departure from the network.


Wendt previously revealed how ending her television career allowed her to pursue her passion for writing

Jana Wendt (pictured in February 2020) used to be one of the most recognisable faces on Australian television, but vanished from the spotlight after her departure from Channel Nine 

'I'm ensconced in what is for me the new, and deeply personal, occupation of fiction writing. From where I sit, it is hard to imagine doing anything else,' she said after being inducted into the Australian Media Hall of Fame in 2014.

Wendt was infamously 'sacked' by Nine's then-CEO Eddie McGuire in 2006.


The network was forced to pay her more than $2million for the remaining two and a half years of her contract to host the Sunday program.



'The only thing I'd say I was unhappy with is that I didn't leave earlier,' she previously told The Sydney Morning Herald.

Wendt explained the job had made her feel 'uncomfortable at times'.

She co-hosted Seven's 50 Years of Television event just 10 days after leaving Nine. 


The 66-year-old hosted 60 Minutes, A Current Affair and Sunday for Channel Nine 

She had joined 60 Minutes in 1982 - handpicked by executive producer Gerald Stone to join George Negus, Ray Martin and Ian Leslie - and soon became one of its biggest stars.

Wendt was just 24 and largely unknown to the public when she traded her Melbourne newsreader's chair for travelling the world with the current affairs juggernaut. 

In her early days Wendt was not immediately welcomed by the established male reporters but Leslie believed Stone played his 'ace card' when he brought her to the program.

'In doing so he created an icon,' Leslie said at Stone's memorial service in November 2020.


Wendt (right) joined 60 Minutes in 1982 - handpicked by executive producer Gerald Stone (left) to join George Negus, Ray Martin and Ian Leslie - and soon became one of its biggest stars 

Along with Negus and Martin he had initially been sceptical about Wendt's hiring, asking Stone 'Why are you putting on this beginner?'

'We were pretty puffed up and boy did she show us we were wrong,' Leslie said.

Wendt told Daily Mail Australia about those times when it was revealed in February that Negus had been diagnosed with dementia. 

'There was some quite well-documented initial combat between us at the time as Negus tried to sort out what this interloper was doing on the show,' she said. 


There was a bit of combat but we sure worked things out and it ended up in many occasions for laughter and good feelings so that's the way it's remained.'

Wendt's forensic interviewing technique and cool/steely on-camera demeanour led to Negus dubbing her the 'perfumed steamroller'.


She left 60 Minutes in 1986 after four years and went on to host A Current Affair, Dateline on SBS, Witness on Seven and returned to Nine to helm Sunday from 2003 to 2006. 

Wendt presented the Logies Hall of Fame award to 60 Minutes at the 2018 Logies.

She won the Gold Logie for Most Popular Personality on Australian Television In 1992 for her role as host of A Current Affair. 

When she wasn't working, Wendt and her cameraman husband Brendan Ward spent much of their time in their home at Whale Beach. They sold the Malo Road property in 2005 for $5.9million.

Wendt is the author of A Matter of Principle, based on interviews with notable subjects in politics, society, art, sport, music and architecture, and Nice Work, which examined people who were passionate about their jobs. 

Forty years after finding fame on national television Wendt recently narrated Deepest Dive: The Search for MH370, her first podcast. 


When she wasn't working, Wendt and her husband Brendan Ward (right) spent most of their time at their home in Whale Beach

Why veteran newsreader Jana Wendt vanished from the spotlight: Popular 60 Minutes presenter speaks out after being sacked by Channel Nine in 2006



Jana Wendt’s former Whale Beach home sells above $14m price guide, new suburb record


1997 Andrew Olle Lecture - Jana Wendt


No one would publish my novel, and now it’s up for the Miles Franklin

Rejection piled on rejection. No one knew where it would sit on a bookshop shelf. With every other avenue exhausted, Michael Winkler decided to self-publish.