George Donikian
George Donikian | |
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Born | George Jack Donikian 15 December 1951 Sydney, New South Wales, Australia |
Nationality | Australian |
Occupation | Television news presenter |
Spouse(s) | Athena Donikian (m. 1979–87) Di Gillett (m. 2005) |
George Jack Donikian (born 15 December 1951) is an Australian television news presenter of Greek-Armenian descent.
Early life
Donikian was born and raised in Sydney. His father was a Greek Armenian who had emigrated to Australia from Athens in 1949, with his fiancée following a year later. He grew up speaking Greek, Armenian and Turkish, and did not speak English until the age of 7.[1] Despite his father's wish for him to become a doctor or barrister, Donikian found his calling in sports, in particular soccer. At the age of 16, his soccer skills brought him to the notice of Jozef Vengloš, the manager of the national team, however his sporting hopes ended when he dislocated his shoulder whilst lifting weights in training.[2]
Radio career
Donikian commenced his media career as an announcer with radio station 4AM in far North Queensland in the mid-1970s, then went to 2WL in Wollongong. According to Donikian, he was asked to go by the surname "Donekan" during his radio career—his bosses claiming that his real name was too difficult to pronounce and remember, and that the pseudonym sounded like the more "acceptable" Irish surname "Donegan".[2] Then he went to 2WS in 1979. Then he did talk back on Radio FIVEaa in Adelaide. Then he covered the Athens Olympics for Melbourne commercial radio in 2004.
Television career
George's television career began in 1980, when during a chance meeting he impressed Bruce Gyngell, who saw him as the ideal presenter for his multi cultural I.M.B.C television Network which launched in Melbourne and Sydney in 1980. Then he was a presenter for SBS World News, then as a newsreader for the Nine Network, and later Ten News.
When George first presented Ten News in 1991, he presented the weeknight bulletin solo before being joined by Nikki Dwyer the following year. He left the Ten Network in September 2011, and became a "free agent" after a restructuring of Ten's newsroom saw him shifted to the weekend national evening bulletin.[3]
References
External links
- Profile at Network Ten
- George Donikian on TwitterLua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).
Media offices | ||
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Preceded by | Ten News at Five Adelaide Presenter with Rebecca Morse 4 February 1991 – 21 January 2011 |
Succeeded by Belinda Heggen |
Preceded by | Ten News at Five Melbourne Presenter with Helen Kapalos 24 January 2011 — April 2011 |
Succeeded by Mal Walden (Monday-Thursday) |
Preceded by | Ten News at Five Melbourne Presenter with Helen Kapalos (Friday) April 2011 – September 2011 |
Succeeded by Mal Walden |
Preceded by | Ten Evening News Melbourne Weekend Presenter April 2011 – September 2011 |
Succeeded by Natarsha Belling & Matt Doran |
Preceded by
Originator
|
SBS World News Australia Presenter 1980–1988 |
Succeeded by Mary Kostakidis |
Preceded by
originator
|
Ten News Saturday AFL bulletin (Melbourne & Adelaide) March 2007 – September 2010 |
Succeeded by Ten Evening News Weekend |
- Use dmy dates from July 2013
- Use Australian English from May 2011
- All Wikipedia articles written in Australian English
- Articles with hCards
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- Ten News presenters
- Australian television newsreaders and news presenters
- Australian sports broadcasters
- Australian people of Armenian descent
- Australian people of Greek descent
- Australian soccer chairmen and investors
- Living people
- 1951 births