Doug Mulray

Douglas John Mulray (born 1 December 1951) is an Australian comedian, radio and television presenter. He grew up in the Sydney northern beaches suburb of Dee Why.

Doug Mulray
Born
Douglas John Mulray

(1951-12-01) 1 December 1951
NationalityAustralian
Occupation
  • comedian
  • radio presenter
  • television presenter
Years active1975−present
Websitewww.mediaman.com.au/profiles/mulray.html

Radio career

He began his career at a small country station in Armidale, after doing a broadcasting course at the Digamae (Rod Muir's) Radio School.[1] From there he grafted his way south, securing a spot with Central Coast station 2GO Gosford. During the mid 1970s he worked on 3AW Melbourne with a program called "Mulray & The Man". In the late 1970s, he started a permanent job in Sydney with Australian Broadcasting Corporation's alternative rock station 2JJ (later Triple J), where he built up a sizeable following. In 1982 he was poached by a new station, Triple M.[2]

Mulray hosted the breakfast time slot on Sydney FM radio station 2MMM (Triple M) in the 1980s. After a break from Triple M, he worked for a brief time in the PM drive time slot on 2SM with Peter FitzSimons before moving to Sydney radio station 2WS eventually leaving that station in July 1999. He never regained the ratings he enjoyed at his former station Triple M.

In 2014, industry analyst Radio Today rated his breakfast show as the third best Australian metro FM breakfast show of all time.[3]

Television career

Outside of radio, Mulray has also featured on Australian TV shows such as Beauty and the Beast, and in 1992 hosted the infamous Australia's Naughtiest Home Videos, with the show's only episode pulled from broadcast by then-Nine Network owner Kerry Packer after 34 minutes. Mulray was fired and banned for life from the Nine Network as a result, although he would later return to Nine to be a judge on the 2005 series StarStruck (shortly after Packer's death in December that year). On Full Frontal, this was parodied with a skit of Mulray hosting a lottery draw, making sexual remarks as the balls drop.

He was also the host of the eponymously titled program Mulray, which ran briefly in the early 1990s on the Seven Network.[4] He also hosted Beauty and the Beast on Network Ten for a brief stint in 2002. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Doug was part of the Channel Seven Australian Touring Car Championship and Bathurst 1000 commentary team headed up by Mike Raymond and Neil Crompton until Seven lost the rights in 1997.[5]

In August 2008, Australia's Naughtiest Home Videos was re-aired on the Nine Network. Mulray reportedly refused requests from Nine management to reappear as the host. One commentator wrote that "it may be that Mulray, a very smart man, knew he would have been open to a few cruel comparisons between the relatively youthful Mulray of 1992 and the solitary Mulray of 2008. The years have not been particularly kind."[6]

Recorded works

Albums

  • 1982 – What a Rude Album
  • 1984 – Too Rude (aka 2 Rude)
  • 1993 – Nice Legs, Shame About the Fez

Singles

  • 1982 – I'm a Punk / Doug's Dub [as The Rude Band]
  • 1986 – You Are Soul (which reached number 34 on the ARIA singles chart despite being banned from broadcast[2]) / Smoke Two Joints
  • 1993 – Werewolf

Filmography

As producer / director:[7]

  • 2004  Kurt Elling: Live at the Basement (TV Movie documentary) (executive producer)
  • 2003  Steve Poltz: Live at the Basement (Video documentary) (executive producer)
  • 2000  The Basement (TV Series) (director, also executive producer of one episode)
  • 2000  The Breakfast Show (executive producer)

As actor:[7]

  • 1980  Making Weekend of Summer Last - Narrator

As himself:[7]

  • 1989  60 Minutes Episode dated 29 April 1989 (TV Series)
  • 1992  Australia's Funniest Home Videos (TV Series)
  • 1992  Australia's Naughtiest Home Videos (TV Series)
  • 1994  Mulray (TV Series)
  • 1996  Beauty and the Beast (TV Series)
  • 2000  The Basement (TV Series)
  • 2002  The Fat Episode #5.2 (TV Series)
  • 2005  Starstruck (TV Series)
  • 2007  Getaway 15th Birthday Special (TV Series)
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References

  1. "Interview - Doug Mulray". www.mediaman.com.au. Media Man Australia. 18 June 2003. Retrieved 13 December 2016.
  2. "Doug Mulray, Broadcasting and Radio Legend". Mediaman.com.au.
  3. March, Brad (13 April 2014). "The Top 20 Metro FM Breakfast shows of all time". www.radiotoday.com.au. Retrieved 12 December 2016.
  4. Browne, Rachel. "Oh, lucky man". WA Today. Retrieved 14 November 2016.
  5. "1988 Tooheys 1000 - Mount Panorama-Drama with Doug Mulray". Retrieved 11 November 2016.
  6. Holland, Mal (30 August 2008). "Kerry wouldn't have aired 's&#t'". The Daily Telegraph. News Limited. Archived from the original on 18 September 2008. Retrieved 31 August 2008.
  7. Doug Mulray on IMDb
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