Matt Peacock

Matt Peacock is an Australian journalist and author who has worked for Australia's ABC News in television and radio since 1973,[1] authoring a critically lauded book on the asbestos industry during that time, and becoming a staff-elected director of the network.

Peacock "began his career with the ABC in 1973 as a trainee with the TV current affairs program This Day Tonight".[1] In 1979, he wrote a prize-winning radio program on the New South Wales town of Baryulgil, where the health of the local Aborigines had been affected by the local asbestos manufacturing industry.[2] Peacock became the chief political correspondent for current affairs radio in Canberra, and worked as a foreign correspondent in the United States in the early 1990s (in Washington, D.C. from 1990 to 1992 and New York City in 1993), and in London from 2001 to 2003. Over the course of his career, he "played a pivotal role in uncovering the corruption and spin of the asbestos industry over three decades, and his story was told in the mini series Devil's Dust which screened on ABC TV in 2012".[3]

In 2013, Peacock became the first staff-elected director of ABC following reinstatement of that position by the new Australian government.[1] As a board member, he participated in deciding where $254 million should be cut from ABC's budget; in 2014, he learned that he was facing termination as a redundant employee, under the same budget cuts.[3] In 2015, after ABC News faced criticism for allowing Zaky Mallah to ask a question on the ABC program Q&A,[4] Peacock wrote an email urging ABC News staff to "maintain our statutory commitment to fearless, impartial and independent coverage", while asking "my colleagues at News Corporation to resist pressure to mount unfair and provocative attacks on their fellow journalists".[5]

Killer Company and Devil's Dust

Beginning in 1977, Peacock engaged in a lengthy investigation of the use of harmful asbestos fibre in building materials produced by James Hardie Industries,[6][7] culminating in his 2009 the book, Killer Company: James Hardie Exposed. In the book, Peacock documents how Hardie's practices "led to the deaths of thousands of workers and customers, who were never informed of the dangers", resulting in medical abnormalities, such as asbestosis.[8] According to Peacock, James Hardie Industries circumvented the rules and regulations designed to protect the community from serious health hazards.[8] Peacock states that "Hardie embarked on a cold, calculated strategy to maximise profits, minimise compensation and conceal the culprits".[9]

Killer Company was a finalist for the Walkley non-fiction book of the year in 2009.[8] In 2012, Devil's Dust, a docudrama based on Killer Company, was released, with Ewen Leslie portraying Peacock.[10]

gollark: Spanishâ„¢'s pretty spread out.
gollark: A with circle.
gollark: Chinese or whatever is spoken by more people, as far as I know, and Spanish is too, but English is the dominant language of the internet and much technical/programming stuff now.
gollark: Why are you on esolangs at work? Do you work at an esolang foundry?
gollark: What if we design a way to express natural-language-type concepts in Haskell?

References

  1. Dan Harrison, "ABC elects staffer Peacock as director", Sydney Morning Herald (22 April 2013).
  2. Matt Peacock, "Aborigines and asbestos", New Scientist (29 March 1979), Vol. 81, No. 1148, p. 1020.
  3. "ABC board member Matt Peacock confirms he is in 'redundancy pool'", The Guardian (26 November 2014).
  4. James Massola (23 June 2015). "'Whose side are you on?' Tony Abbott lashes ABC's Q&A program". Sydney Morning Herald.
  5. Michael Bodey, "ABC staff urged to stand strong against inflammatory campaign", The Australian Business Review (29 June 2015).
  6. Amanda Meade, "Asbestos drama highlights role of probing journalist", The Australian Business Review (29 October 2012).
  7. Kristin Demetrious, Public Relations, Activism, and Social Change: Speaking Up (2013), p. 60.
  8. Angela Welsh. Review: Killer Company Archived 2011-02-21 at the Wayback Machine The Walkley Foundation, 27 October 2009.
  9. Matt Peacock. Australia's silent killer: James Hardie Archived 2011-02-18 at the Wayback Machine Evatt Foundation.
  10. Tim Elliott (8 November 2012). "Devil is in the detail". Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 14 March 2016.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.