Adam Boland
Adam Boland | |
---|---|
Born | 1977 Sydney, Australia[1] |
Nationality | ![]() |
Occupation | Television producer and director |
Known for | Sunrise, Weekend Sunrise, The Morning Show, Wake Up, Studio 10 |
Adam Boland (born 1977) is an Australian television producer and director. He was Network Ten's Director of morning television from March 2013 until 23 January 2014, when he resigned due to ill-health.[2] He had previously been the executive producer of the Seven Network's breakfast show Sunrise and created The Morning Show and Weekend Sunrise.
Early life
Boland was born in Sydney, Australia, in 1977, and lived his early life in Parramatta, Sydney. He then moved to Queensland with his mother.[1] His first job was as a cadet reporter at radio station 4BC in Brisbane. He then moved to Melbourne radio station, 3AW before starting his television career in 1995, as a Sky News Australia producer.[1]
Career
From February 2002 until November 2010, Boland was the executive producer for the Seven Network's breakfast show Sunrise. The show with Boland at the helm gained the position of number one breakfast morning program, pipping the Nine Network's Today out of the spot which it held for 20 years. He also created The Morning Show and Weekend Sunrise.
Before working on Sunrise, Boland was a senior producer in ATN-7's Sydney newsroom. Prior to that, he was a reporter at Channel Ten in North Queensland, gaining some notoriety for interviewing comedian Jerry Seinfeld at Cairns Airport.[3]
In June 2010, the Seven Network confirmed that Boland intended to leave the network at the end of the year, following the expiry of his contract.[4] Seven's director of news and current affairs, Peter Meakin, said that Boland was not intending to move to another network.
In August 2010, the Seven Network announced that Boland would be setting up his own production company but would spend two days a week at the network in 2011 consulting on a range of projects, including morning television and social media and strategy.[5]
In November 2011, Boland was appointed as executive producer of Weekend Sunrise. He left the Seven Network in February 2013.[6]
During late 2011 until mid 2012, Boland and then partner Julian Wong[7] endeavoured to set up a Ginseng Korean bathhouse in Potts Point, New South Wales, but after falling $1.2 million short of the needed $4.4 million to fund the whole project the venture did not eventuate. Boland and Wong reportedly lost $600,000 on the project.[1][8]
In March 2013, Boland joined Network Ten as the network's director of Morning Television. He resigned due to ill-health on 23 January 2014, less than three months after the programs he created, Wake Up and Studio 10 launched.[2]
In October 2014, Boland released the book Brekky Central: Behind the smiles of Australian breakfast television (ISBN 9780522867183) which reflects on his media career and the competitive television industry.[9]
Personal life
Boland suffers from depressive illnesses including Bipolar disorder and the conditions have impacted on his life to the extent that he has had to stop work for significant periods to regain his health.[10] In 2010, Boland was selected by readers of long-established gay and lesbian website samesame, as one of the 25 most influential gay Australians.[11][12]
References
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Further reading
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External links
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- Pages with reference errors
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- All Wikipedia articles written in Australian English
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- Living people
- 1977 births
- Date of birth missing (living people)
- Australian television personalities
- Seven Network
- Network Ten
- LGBT people from Australia
- Australian television producers