Virginia Trioli trashes memory of broadcaster Elizabeth Bond and tries to steal her legacy

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Beyond careless but standard for Trioli.

So many latter-day fembots think they're special and unique.

Countless women who've preceded them achieved so much with a quiet dignity and manifest absence of trashy showiness and vanity.

Here's some advice Virginia - be the best broadcaster you can be.

Military imposters who make false claims and grab gongs to which they are not entitled are subject to huge penalties.

Nothing will happen to Trioli, nothing ever does.

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Virginia Trioli has wrongly declared herself the first woman to be appointed as presenter of ABC Radio’s Melbourne Morning program on her first day as host.

The former ABC News Breakfast co-anchor went to air on Monday, replacing longtime host Jon Faine who retired on Friday after more than two decades in the 8.30am-midday gig.

Trioli opened the program by talking of the pride she felt being the first woman to be allotted the timeslot, which she said would mean something to the girls listening. The journalist spoke of her pride as she told “little girls” listening their voices belonged everywhere.

“I’m the first woman to ever be appointed to this program, and I am so proud of that,” Trioli said. “Particularly for what it means to every little girl riding in the back of the car to school this morning who might hear this. I can tell you, your voice belongs everywhere, so raise it up.”

ABC Melbourne tweeted out her quote before quickly issuing a correction at 9.21am which said: “Elizabeth Bond presented 3LO mornings after Terry Lane was sacked in 1977.”

Elizabeth Bond, who died in 2002, hosted the 8.30-11am program on 3LO for two years.

Trioli opened her maiden show with an interview with Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews just two days after announcing that political interviews were dead, telling Nine’s Entertainment’s newspapers they were a “waste of six minutes”.

The broadcaster and Mr Andrews discussed the NSW Labor Party, Faine’s farewell, religious freedom, the proposed congestion tax, climate protesters and tensions between the state and commonwealth government.

ENDS

Vacuous but connected and always on point with the politically correct, that's the Trioli story.

Who but Virginia could get away with this mind-blowing insight into shallowness?

 

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