Posts Tagged katter

I was a bigger story than Oprah this weekend!

Well, only in my local paper.  But headlines get hits so that explains my motives :-)

Roanne Johnson, lovely NQ Confidential writer from the Townsville Bulletin gave me a call on Friday to chat about the Walkley awards and my 2010 Nikon-Walkley Australian Portrait Prize.  I had a GREAT time at the awards and having my ‘gorgeous’ wife with me was a real treat!

Here’s a clipping from the paper, click on it to view a larger readable size or click here to grab the page PDF.

Click pic for a larger version

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Strewth, I’m the subject of a Bob Katter press release!

Big night for me tomorrow – my wife and I are heading to the Crown Casino in Melbourne for the  Walkley Awards where I’ll collect my 2010 Nikon-Walkley Australian Portrait Prize!  Will be awesome to catch up with a lot of my news colleagues from around Oz and it’s also VERY rare for me to get in a full tuxedo so that should be fun (or funny depending on how you look at it).

Independent Member for Kennedy Bob Katter MP today issued a press release about my award and he discusses his thoughts about the pic and its relevence to the federal election campaign.  The full PDF of the release is available here or you can click on the image below to read a JPG version.

Click photo to view a readable version

I’ve also been on ABC local radio today where I was interviewed by presenter Paula Tapiolas.  You can listen to an MP3 of the interview here (Cam’s interview on ABC Radio) and visit the ABC website here to see their blog/story about my Walkley along with an extra pic.

Tomorrow morning I’m live on Melbourne talkback radio MTR1377 with ‘shock-jock’ Steve Price.  You can listen to me make a fool of myself (hopefully not!) live online at this link.  Hit the ‘Listen Live’ button for all the fun!

And here’s my winning pic fyi…

Click photo for a large version

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I don’t believe it, I’m a Walkley award winner!

I guess I’ve earned the right to blow my own trumpet, at least for today.  Last night I was honoured to win the 2010 Nikon-Walkley Australian Portrait Prize at a presentation in Sydney.  I’ve never entered a photo competition as, to be honest, I have never really found made the time.  This year I was prompted by fellow snappers Peter Wallis and Derek Moore to enter a couple of my Bob Katter pics in Australia’s equivalent to the Pulitzer Prize, the Walkley Awards.  There are a few news clippings floating around the web – here, here, here

Clipping from today's 'The Courier-Mail'

The Courier-Mail reporter Peter Michael assisted me to pen this entry statement that was included with my entry.

Kingmaker Bob Katter has almost become a caricature of himself with his maverick reputation, ten gallon hat, and cowboy boots.

Everyone in Katter Country, the vast electorate of Kennedy, knows the wily 65-year-old MP where he boasts a cult like status enjoying three-quarters of the two-party preferred vote.

But in the rest of Australia, the lawmaker who is likely to cast a deciding vote in Australia’s cliffhanger election is virtually unknown.

For insight into his political pedigree before turning Independent in outrage at rural de-regulation by the National Party, his dining room is dominated by a huge portrait of Red Ted Theodore, one of the giants of the Labor movement.
There’s also an impressive collection of bayonets and old Enfield rifles above a swag of war medals in the silver cabinet.

Love him or loathe him, Bob Katter is today one of the most powerful men in Australian politics.

“In some parts of my electorate the Coalition is about as popular as a black snake in a sleeping bag.

“Equally, in other parts a Labor supporter is as rare as a feathered frog on the Murranji Track.
“I simply want to go with whoever offers the best deal for the bush.
“I’ve been screaming into the wind for years. It’s time for a get square.”

I had the opportunity to photograph Katter as he arrived in Townsville on a light plane after travelling from his Charters Towers home on the day after the federal election.  He had brought his grand-daughter Kate, 11 along for the ride.  Katter was glued to the phone and Kate, being a little cold, threw on Katter’s jacket and ten gallon hat.  Sitting with her lanky grandad between the ladies and gents bathrooms in the tiny aerodrome hanger she seemed excited to be thrust into the limelight.

The next day I headed out to Katter’s home in Charters Towers where I sat down to tea and lamingtons in the family lounge room.  Katter, once again glued to the phone, threw a leg over the lounge chair and with his Enfield rifles proudly displayed on the wall I thought this was a perfect reflection of Katter, ‘the unknown’.

Photographs: Cameron Laird (0418 238811)

Shot for News Limited group

Published in The Courier-Mail, The Australian, Daily Telegraph, Herald Sun in the week following the federal election.

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