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More drama at Nine as top female exec walks out on the embattled network after two of her popular presenters were sacked

J.Martin33 min ago
EXCLUSIVE

A senior Nine executive has dramatically quit the network just days after two of her top presenters were unceremoniously sacked by the media company - and with rampant speculation a third is about to head for the door.

Daily Mail Australia can reveal Nine Radio's 6PR content manager, Emily White, has resigned from the network after more almost 15 years at its Perth talkback station.

Nine Radio's national head of content, Greg Byrnes, quietly announced her departure in a staff email at 6pm on Friday after most employees had already headed off for the weekend.

'Emily has been at 6PR since 2010 when she accepted a casual newsreader role,' he said in the internal announcement.

'Along the way she excelled in a variety of news and program positions before being elevated to Content Manager in 2019.

'But as 2024 comes to a close Emily and her family feel the time is right to explore a WA tree change.

'I know that to many of you Emily is much more than just a work colleague and you will miss her leadership greatly.

'On a personal level I will miss her insight, intellect and warm nature.

'Emily leaves Nine Radio with our very best wishes and we'll be sure to send her off with great affection before her final day at the end of November.'

White's departure comes just two days after Nine sacked two of the station's star presenters - including its only female host - as part of a drastic overhaul at the ailing Perth outlet.

Nine Radio revealed on Wednesday popular hosts Julie-Anne Sprague and Tod Johnson had both been given the chop.

The announcement was overshadowed just hours later when Nine confirmed it would be releasing the long-awaited independent report into the company's toxic workplace culture the following day.

Although the investigation concentrated predominantly on the embattled business's television news and current affairs division, it found bullying and harassment was also rife among its radio arm.

Station insiders told Daily Mail Australia the departures were expected to continue with incumbent morning show host Gary Adshead tipped to transfer across to the company's Perth television newsroom in the coming weeks.

Sprague, the station's only female presenter, signed on to front the station's critical 'afternoons' timeslot to much fanfare just 18 months ago after outgoing host Steve 'Millsy' Mills was promoted to the breakfast program.

Johnson, a legend of the Perth music scene from his days fronting local 80s band V Capri, joined the station as host of its 'The Nightshift' show from 8pm in a major revamp of the evening line-up back in February 2021.

Sources within the station said both presenters were caught completely off-guard when given the tap this week after Nine Radio's head of content, Greg Byrnes, flew in from Sydney to oversee the cuts.

Neither of the presenters will be replaced and instead other hosts' shifts will be extended in a desperate bid to crack down on costs.

Mills and his breakfast show co-host, Karl Langdon, who are usually on-air from 5am, will now be given a little sleep-in with their start time pushed back to 6am and their show now running through until 10am.

The reshuffle means Adshead's 'mornings' show will now be on-air until the middle of the afternoon at 2pm after starting an hour later from 10am - though rumours are rife he will not be spending too much longer fronting the program.

The 'afternoon' show will be scrapped entirely, with drive host Oli Peterson hitting the airwaves from 2pm before wrapping at his current knock-off time at 6pm, with the station's Wide World of Sports then being stretched out to two hours.

Johnson's former timeslot will now be filled by Tony McManus' Money News program piped in from 3AW's Melbourne studios from 8pm until 12am after.

His show had previously run in the graveyard shift from midnight until 3am.

In an internal email to all station staff, Nine Radio boss Tom Malone said the overhaul was needed to cut costs at the cash-strapped media company.

'The advertising market in Perth has been tough - down 16% in the past 5 years, and rising costs have added extra pressure on our financial performance,' he said in the email.

'To ensure the station's sustainability, we're making adjustments that will help us return to profitability over the next 12 months, while still delivering the quality content our listeners love.

'Unfortunately this means that we'll no longer get to hear Julie-Anne Sprague or Tod Johnston on our airwaves.

'This is a sad and tough day for the Afternoon and Nights teams along with our listeners, and we deeply appreciate their contributions to 6PR.'

Staffers at Nine said the changes showed no one at the network was safe amid the company's ongoing, aggressive cost-cutting.

'Forget the hosts - not even the shows are safe anymore,' one Nine Radio insider told Daily Mail Australia.

'This demonstrates just how desperate they are to take the axe to our budgets - and that no one and nothing is sacred.

'And it's not just the presenters - it's the producers who make these shows who are also in the firing line.'

The shock reconfiguration at the talkback station is so fresh, 6PR's website was still promoting Sprague and Johnson's programs on Wednesday afternoon.

The changes echoed those at 4BC which saw four hosts go in the space of just two weeks.

The station's struggling breakfast hosts Laurel Edwards, Gary Clare and Mark Hine were given the axe last month - just a week after Daily Mail Australia revealed they were in the crosshairs following a devastating ratings nose drive.

The trio - household names in the Sunshine State - joined 4BC two years ago as the station switched to a classic hits format in the critical breakfast timeslot.

They initially claimed an impressive 11.8 per cent audience share - and third place - on debut in the Queensland capital's fiercely contested breakfast radio contest.

But the decision to steer the station away from talkback in favour of 'light entertainment' alienated listeners and ultimately proved a disaster.

Amid the turmoil, the station's highly regarded breakfast newsreader Steve Barker also announced he was heading for the door.

Nine bosses indicated the station would return to its talkback roots by giving hard-hitting 4BC Weekends host Peter Fegan the chance to prove himself in the crucial breakfast timeslot until the end of the year.

Veteran presenter and former Liberal MP Gary Hardgrave was then parachuted in for the outgoing Gleeson.

Nine axed about 200 jobs from the company in August as part of $30million worth of cuts, with interim chief executive Matt Stanton vowing to chop a further $50million from the budget this financial year.

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