Collector
James Valentine showed us what public broadcasting could be at its very best. It’s a legacy I hope to live up to | Jess McGuire | Collector
James Valentine showed us what public broadcasting could be at its very best. It’s a legacy I hope to live up to | Jess McGuire
Guardian Australia

James Valentine showed us what public broadcasting could be at its very best. It’s a legacy I hope to live up to | Jess McGuire

The public grief is enormous but it keeps giving way to joy, to moments of hilarity that have stayed with listeners for years ‘On his own terms’: James Valentine chose assisted dying but barriers remain for Australians wanting to access it Like so many of you, my experience of James Valentine was almost entirely through radio. I’m an ABC broadcaster in regional New South Wales, many hours drive from the Sydney studios where he conjured radio magic out of thin air every weekday and, as I’d sit in my studio preparing for my own show, I’d listen to Afternoons – a masterclass in quality talkback. The thing I most admired was how comfortable James was with silence, secure enough to let a moment breathe where other announcers might rush to fill the air. He knew that it was in that space that a caller might land the killer line, or offer the surprisingly touching reveal. It’s been a huge influence on how I make radio. Continue reading...

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