Kyle and Jackie O have been taken off air indefinitely as a result of the massive backlash against last Wednesday’s rape debacle, where a 14-year-old girl revealed on air that she had been the victim of sexual assault. And Sandilands has said through his management that he is “unable to perform his duties on-air at this time”, without elaborating.

The announcement follows five days’ condemnation of the program and Austereo for even airing a segment where an underage girl was fitted to a lie detector machine in front of her mother and quizzed on her sexual habits - let alone with the horrifying consequence of revealing that she had been raped when she was 12, and that her Mum knew all about it.
The network’s decision is an extraordinary demonstration of the power of public opinion, with websites, talkback radio and Twitter being consumed with the issue over this past few day. The comments ran overwhelmingly against Kyle and Jackie O and Austereo, not to mention the girl’s mother, who is being investigated by the Department of Community Services. The Austereo statement says:
“Kyle Sandilands’ management has advised Austereo that he is unable to perform his duties on-air at this time. Further, following a great deal of consideration and having consulted Jackie O and all stakeholders, Austereo has formed the view that it is in the interest of all parties, for the Kyle & Jackie O Show to go into recess until we have completed an across-the-networks review of the principles and protocols of our interaction with our audience. This review commenced last Wednesday 29 July 2009.”
The statement dates the actions of the network’s review at Wednesday in a bid to show that they were taking the issue seriously from the moment it happened.
They certainly have now, albeit belatedly. And it’s clearly because the flak that they’ve copped from the public has come in the form of a tidal wave, and has shown little sign of abating.
The original piece published on this website by Paul Colgan on Wednesday condemning the segment received more than 200 comments in the first couple of hours.
When Colgan tracked Sandilands down in New Zealand and asked him to write a piece for The Punch to explain himself, the readers turned on the shock jock, with more than 500 comments received by the following morning, many of which were so defamatory or riddled with hate-filled profanity that they could not be published.
The explanation was seen by most readers as woefully inadequate, and an exercise in blame-shifting.
Sponsors had not pulled out of the show but were starting to get uneasy, as Tim Burrowes revealed on Mumbrella on Friday about Optus, a big Austereo advertiser which said it was “appalled” by what transpired.
But it wasn’t the threat of losing money that forced the network’s hand. The credit for that lies with the readers and listeners, who demonstrated in their own words that, this time, Kyle and his program had definitely gone too far and should not be allowed to get away with this without sanction.
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