The Cairns Post

Be game and let Sam run riot

- — Rita Panahi is a Herald-Sun columnist

SAM Newman is The Footy Show. Channel 9’s efforts to gag the program’s pivotal star have only damaged the once high-rating program.

It would be a great shame if one of the longest-running TV franchises falls victim to the grievance industry.

If Newman is determined to make a fool of himself by donning a dress and fishnet stockings then let him and just ensure that he’s wearing supportive underwear.

He’s big enough and bad enough to wear the criticism and there are other panellists who can immediatel­y rebuke him if he does say something genuinely outrageous.

Controvers­y is at the heart of Newman’s schtick, and it is largely schtick, and to try to tame him is a sign of inept management.

Thankfully returning original host Eddie McGuire has promised to “let Sam off the leash” once the revamped program returns to air after a twoweek hiatus.

If it wasn’t bad enough that they inflicted the unwatchabl­e Craig Hutchison on a prime-time audience, Channel 9 also tried to make the program adapt to the PC age.

It seems that The Footy Show producers and Channel 9 management have been more concerned about apgrieved. peasing always-irate feminists and other assorted activists than putting together a program for the masses that is witty, insightful or even just entertaini­ng.

As one Footy Show insider told News Corp: “When we were at our best we embraced complaints, now we’re afraid of them.”

Meanwhile, the ratings are circling the drain.

It would be wrong to characteri­se Newman’s antics on Thursday night as a publicity stunt; the former Geelong great appeared genuinely ag- It was evident almost immediatel­y that something was wrong. Namely Sam was again not allowed to be Sam.

Last month Newman was forced to apologise for an insensitiv­e comment about former Olympian Caitlyn Jenner who is transgende­r.

The program was reacting to the outrage merchants desperate to be aggrieved on behalf of others.

Incidental­ly, Jenner herself is under fire for joking that Aerosmith’s Dude (Looks Like a Lady) is her “theme song”.

Many regular Footy Show fans would’ve been keen to hear Sam’s take on a tumultuous seven days in football that saw two senior AFL executives resign due to inappropri­ate relationsh­ips with junior female staff.

Instead they found a disgruntle­d Newman who contribute­d little to the program, declining to answer questions he once would have relished and then refusing to do Sam’s Mailbag segment.

Newman’s silent tantrum put him off-side with several of his co-hosts but perhaps that act of petulance was needed to force Nine’s hand.

When I spoke to the 71-year-old Hall of Famer last month he was defiant and vowed not to change his ways to mollify the “outrage brigade”.

“There’s a competitio­n going on in the world to see who can be the most aggrieved and who can be offended the most,” he said.

“I’ve got to the stage in my life where I don’t care about people who have agendas.

“I refuse, and our show refuses, to be intimidate­d.”

Let’s hope he is right. The Footy Show without Sam Newman is like a hot dog without sauce … bland.

Nine have done what they should’ve moved heaven and earth to do last year – lure back McGuire to re-energise a show that’s become stale and safe.

When he left the program it was averaging more than 450,000 viewers in Melbourne. With Hutchison as host it has fallen as low as 130,000.

In McGuire they also have a host who Sam fully respects and will listen to when creative difference­s arise.

The pervasive culture of political correctnes­s and identity politics has been shoved down the throats of footy fans for too long.

Let’s go back to enjoying the game and having a laugh without fretting about how the hypersensi­tive members of the community will react.

 ??  ?? SILENT TANTRAM: Sam Newman at the end of The Footy Show last week.
SILENT TANTRAM: Sam Newman at the end of The Footy Show last week.

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