Otago Daily Times

‘Giant’ transforme­d the media scene

- WARWICK ROGER Crusading journalist

AFORMER Auckland Star journalist, Warwick Roger founded the glossy, Aucklandfo­cused Metro

magazine in 1981 and edited it for 13 years.

As well as editing Metro, Roger headed North & South magazine in 1986. His widow, journalist Robyn Langwell, founded North & South.

Journalist­s have paid tribute to their ‘‘crusading’’ colleague and competitor, who died on August 17, aged 72.

Roger had been afflicted with Parkinson’s disease for many years.

Former Metro editor Nicola Legat said Roger was an amazing editor to work for.

‘‘He worked us really hard but he was inspiratio­nal and I think there was a whole generation of writers who owe Warwick such a lot. He helped us hone our craft.’’

Legat said Metro was ‘‘sassy, independen­t, spirited’’ — a pioneer when New Zealand media were ‘‘battened down’’ and respectful.

‘‘It was a breath of fresh air at a time New Zealand society was becoming more modern and outward looking.’’

She said as well as crusading journalism, Roger loved little stories, profiles of people who had been forgotten, and he had a ‘‘gentleness and romanticis­m’’.

‘‘He genuinely loved Auckland. He was born in Auckland, grew up in Greenlane. He had studied the city for so many years. Everything he wrote that was critical of Auckland was because he wanted it to be a better place.’’

Metro was a crusading magazine in the 1980s. It broke a story on National Women’s Hospital that led to fundamenta­l changes in the health system.

Legat said Roger’s death was a release for him ‘‘because he has been so terribly ill for many years’’.

Former mayor of Waitakere Sir Bob Harvey, a close friend of Roger’s, described him to the Herald as an extraordin­ary writer and outstandin­g journalist.

‘‘He was New Zealand’s Hemingway,’’ said Harvey, himself an author and Metro

contributo­r. ‘‘He was my mentor with all my books — and my dearest friend.’’

Harvey said Roger had a great eye for detail in a story, and in others’ writing.

‘‘Warwick and I lived in a golden age of friendship,’’ Harvey wrote on the Spinoff before Roger’s death.

‘‘For the last 10 years the dreaded Parkinson’s has crippled my man. Reduced his life. Taken his skill and breath. I hate what it’s reduced him to. ‘‘Warwick and I started running together; he was a true runner, lean and taut, plenty of air, a big strider.’’

Roger had a brush with death in 2012, when he was found floating face down in the water at Cheltenham Beach on Auckland’s North Shore.

His rescuers included two doctors and he was revived, then taken to North Shore Hospital’s intensive care unit.

Senior Herald journalist Simon Wilson, a former editor of Metro, said: ‘‘I always felt incredibly honoured to edit the magazine he founded. He was one of the giants of journalism.’’

Jenny Wheeler, who was editor of the Sunday Star newspaper, a Sunday StarTimes predecesso­r, paid tribute to Roger on Kim Hill’s Radio New Zealand show.

‘‘He was a totally crusading journalist. Once he got a conviction that something needed to be righted, he kept on going at it, hammering at it and hammering at it. I just think that sometimes he didn’t know when to let go.’’

Wheeler said Roger was the perfect person to head a city magazine in the ‘‘robber baron’’ era of the 1980s.

‘‘He could sail on it and absolutely pick at the foibles and ridiculous­ness of it all.’’

With the success of Metro in the 1980s, Roger was credited with transformi­ng the media scene virtually overnight.

He created the country’s first regular gossip columnist, Felicity Ferret, in 1982. The Ferret, said to have been written by a number of people, would go on to humble and humiliate those in the Auckland social scene.

But the column sometimes sailed too close to the wind.

A jury awarded former Sunday StarTimes gossip columnist Toni McRae damages of $375,000 — she later settled for $100,000 — in a defamation case.

For his services to journalism, Roger was in 2008 made an Officer of the New Zealand

Order of Merit. — Martin Johnston/NZME

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