‘Loving the orange wave’: Sandilands claims surprise new alliance


One Nation has denied it is working with Kyle Sandilands. Photo: AAP/TND
Sacked shock jock Kyle Sandilands has revealed he has spent the past few months working with Pauline Hanson and One Nation.
Since losing his job, the former KIIS FM radio host claims he was “working on getting their messaging across, which I think has been well received”.
He revealed the surprise new political alliance in an interview with the Game Changers Radio podcast, in a clip pre-released to News Corp.
However, One Nation has denied the claim, with spokesman James Ashby telling news.com.au that Sandilands was “not working for One Nation” in any official or unofficial capacity.
Ashby did, however, add that Sandilands was “a legend” and that Hanson had reached out to him when “s**t hit the fan” with his former employer.
The feeling is apparently mutual, with Sandilands telling the podcast, released on Friday morning, that he was “loving the orange wave” and Hanson was “one of my favourite people now”.
“She is really a surprise,” he said.
He added later: “I spent time with both of them (Hanson and Barnaby Joyce), and they’re very inspirational.
“They’re not what everyone thinks they are … a lunatic racist party of country bumpkins that think that the world should change.”
He said he had taken the One Nation leader “to meet some folks she didn’t know”.
“Not my gangster friends,” he said. “But just more of the upper society types who have also expressed a great interest in her messaging.”
Sandilands said on Wednesday night he was relieved to have reached an end to the legal fight with his former employer.
In an ASX announcement on Wednesday, ARN media said it would pay Sandilands $12 million, with $3 million payable as soon as July.
Outside his home later that day, Sandilands said he was relieved to put the ordeal behind him.
“It’s quite daunting to have that hanging over your head,” he said.
“I could have dragged it on for like a year and a half.”
Instead, he hopes to use his free time investing in his next project.
“It means I can get back to work, rather than annoying my wife. I’m just happy to get out of here in the morning and back to work,” he said.
“I’m just building my own platform … I don’t care if it’s hugely successful or it just keeps the people that were retrenched employed.”
That project may be buoyed by the $1.5 million in advertising services on ARN’s partner platforms that he is owed under the settlement.
In exchange, however, the radio network will be entitled to a 19.9 per cent share of any new venture for three years.
Sandilands is also prohibited from engaging with any of ARN’s direct competitors for up to nine months from the settlement date.
Source: AAP
Meanwhile, Hanson this week prompted fierce debate with her speech to the National Press Club after she took aim at radical Islam, transgender ideology, media outlets that she claimed treated her unfairly and other institutions.
In her address on Wednesday, Hanson rejected accusations One Nation is a racist party and said it was common sense to oppose what she described as the “failed policy of multiculturalism”.
One Nation has said migrants would still be free to speak their own languages at home if it were to win government, but they would need to be Australians first and put their ethnicity or creed second.
The One Nation leader is also making hay out of a stunt that interrupted her National Press Club speech, declaring she “quite liked” a left-wing campaign group’s depiction of her in pixelated meme sunglasses.
GetUp! has claimed responsibility for a banner that unfurled during Hanson’s debut address on Wednesday, accusing the One Nation leader of accepting a $100,000 pay rise while opposing wage increases for workers.
The stunt was counterproductive, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said.
The National Press Club apologised to Hanson and said two people entered the venue on Tuesday afternoon to install a drop-down screen without permission.
Hanson claimed someone “on the inside” might have given GetUp! access to install the banner, but the club said none of its staff or contractors had any involvement.
-with AAP
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