By RADIO GIRL
Sexism, it would seem, is the current topic de jour. Whether it’s Julia Gillard making headlines worldwide for her attack on Tony Abbott, or Tracey Spicer delivering a scathing letter to a former employer that demanded she take “two inches off her hair and two inches off her arse,” sexism and whether it plays a role in our lives has become a hot button topic.
For me, it’s easy. I’ve no doubt that I work in one of the most sexist industries still operating – radio. Even as I write this I’m not sure if I will submit it or attach my name to it, knowing the kind of reaction I will get from the industry I am still a part of.
For the past six years I’ve worked my way up, from a stint in a small country town, progressing on to bigger markets and eventually capital city radio. I have worked in pretty much every department; copy (ads), announcing, panelling, producing and managing. I’m proud of how hard I have worked and what I have been able to achieve. And for 90% of the time I have loved it. The other 10% is full of stories that sound like something from a 1960s soap opera:
– The General Manager who hired me over the phone then told me, to my face, he wasn’t sure if he would have hired me in person.
– Being asked if I was hormonal, if my marriage was okay, and if there was something else going on in my life when I had a dispute with a work colleague.
Top Comments
Good on you for writing about something that is so prevalent in the radio industry. It's the old catch 22 - say something and you are out of a job. Don't say anything and you are enabling the boys club. Either way - life isn't pleasant.
As a journalist in NZ, I reckon the whole media industry is pretty male-dominated. I worked at a magazine where I was sexually harassed and it was disgusting. But, there's this one ex-TV sports presenter who is well-known for beating up his girlfriend pretty badly (on numerous occasions), standing trial and handling the whole thing really poorly.
Guess who hired him when no-one else in the industry would. Radio!