logo
Glamorous footy presenter lifts the lid on the 'devastating' effect of being 'silently shut out' by TV giants

Glamorous footy presenter lifts the lid on the 'devastating' effect of being 'silently shut out' by TV giants

Daily Mail​21 hours ago
Footy reporter Tiffany Salmond has claimed her 'silent shut-out' by television bosses has been 'devastating', as she addressed questions about why she has disappeared from TV screens over the past six months.
The Kiwi NRL presenter, who has previously worked as a freelancer for Fox Sports, RNZ and Sky, last week explained to her Instagram followers that she believed TV chiefs have overlooked her because they felt she was 'too bold' and 'disruptive'.
Recently, Salmond has worked as a touchline correspondent, covering NRL games for the New Zealand Warriors.
But after being asked by many fans where she had gone this season, she revealed she did not choose to leave footy media, but was instead 'sidelined', and claimed she has not been given a reason why.
On Tuesday, Salmond addressed more questions about why she has been absent from TV screens.
'The truth is there was no incident. No mistake. No warning - just dropped and erased,' Salmond wrote.
She followed up on comments she shared in an Instagram video last week on her X account, explaining that she felt she has been snubbed from TV roles, 'without reason'
'I wasn't let go because I failed. I was cut off while thriving, connecting, performing and being embraced by the audience.'
Salmond had previously expressed her thanks to her fans, revealing she had received a lot of heartfelt messages, both asking why she was no longer on their screens while also sending her messages of support.
'There was nothing to fix, no feedback to apply, no bridge to mend.
'And yes, people lose jobs every day but this was not that. This was not a restructure. Not a performance issue. Not a scandal or a clash behind the scenes.
'It was a silent shut-out and it's been devastating. Professionally, because I loved what I did. Personally, because I was never given a reason.
'And while the speculation and gossip has been exhausting, the truth is simple: I was dismissed quietly. Without respect and without reason.'
The comments section on the post was filled with messages of support, with one writing: 'Keep your chin up mate, one door closes so another one opens.'
'You'll bounce back,' another wrote. 'Sorry that happened to you. Your commentary was amazing.'
She added that the experience has been 'incredibly isolating'
Salmond also took to Instagram to write: 'I know I've always shown up smiling. I've kept it light, positive and intentionally composed. But the truth is, carrying all of this alone - without protection or support - has been one of the hardest, most devastating chapters of my life.
'It's been deeply painful. Incredibly isolating, and every day has been a quiet battle to not let it break me.'
She added: 'What makes this particularly painful is knowing I didn't just "lose a job" or miss out because I wasn't good enough.
'It's knowing I was right for it. I had it. The connection, the performance, the audience support.
'That clarity is what's made the silence feel so cruel and misaligned. The pain isn't about ego, it's about injustice.'
In 2024, Salmond had found herself at the centre of a high-profile media couple's split.
Fox Sports presenter Jake Duke was dumped by Seven reporter Grace Fitzgibbon after he reportedly received an unexpected call from Salmond early one morning in February last year.
Salmond is understood to have told friends that she did not know Duke was in a relationship with Fitzgibbon at the time.
Daily Mail Australia revealed that Fitzgibbon had been left 'devastated and heartbroken' after Duke, her boyfriend of three years, had reportedly received calls from Salmond.
She later moved out of Duke's apartment in Sydney's northern beaches, following an argument with the Fox Sports presenter.
Salmond had also blasted online criminals in May after they created a deepfake AI video using a picture of her wearing a bikini.
Last week, Salmond had explained she believed television chiefs had opted not to 'evolve and make space for someone like her' because of her personality.
'It's been nearly a year since I was last on air,' she said in a video published on her Instagram account, which has over 41,000 followers.
'And I keep thinking surely the noise will die down and that you will all forget and will all move on. That's how I knew with certainty that something was deeply, deeply wrong here. I know I don't fit the traditional demand of what a TV presenter is supposed to be here but I think that's the whole point?
'Isn't that why so many of you have been demanding my return? Because you could see something real in me, you could feel the authenticity through the screen.
'I'm not any of those cliches, I'm all of it. And that's confronting to a system that thrives on predictability and control.
'So instead of evolving and instead of making space for someone like me they would rather remove the destruction altogether.
'Because if someone like me can show up fully as herself and thrive, then the whole system has to shift.
'I have proved that you can break the mold. That you can show up differently and be rewarded for it. While that's exciting for a visionary - to the gatekeepers, it's terrifying.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Whoopi Goldberg returns to The View to COMPLAIN about multimillion-dollar gig after being blasted for Iran comments
Whoopi Goldberg returns to The View to COMPLAIN about multimillion-dollar gig after being blasted for Iran comments

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Whoopi Goldberg returns to The View to COMPLAIN about multimillion-dollar gig after being blasted for Iran comments

Whoopi Goldberg whined that her multimillion-dollar job co-hosting The View can 'feel like hell,' after returning from a two-week break following backlash over her controversial comments on Iran. The 69-year-old delivered the self-pitying remark at the start of Tuesday's episode, as she and her fellow hosts were met with an especially raucous round of applause. 'Let us say this to you: Thank you for that, because sometimes this gig can feel like hell,' she said, moved by the display. 'And sometimes you feel like people are just angry at you all the time. So, to get a welcome like this this morning, we really appreciate it.' Goldberg had returned to The View on Monday for the first time in two weeks, following a trip overseas and the show's annual weeklong summer hiatus. Before she left, she faced blowback for insisting to her fellow panelists that living in the United States as a black person is just as bad as living in Iran. She appeared to shrug off the controversy by attending a ceremony in Sicily, where she discussed the 'challenges' of being a celebrity. While her salary has not been disclosed publicly, an insider told The US Sun in 2022 that she earned a cool $8million as The View's highest paid host. Goldberg, who has appeared on the show since 2007, is worth an estimated $60million. Her frequent off-the-cuff remarks have gotten her into hot water over the years, including her June 18 comments that human rights violations in Iran were on par with the treatment of marginalized groups in the US. The response on social media was swift ruthless, with comics Bill Maher and Adam Carolla also weighing in to pan the star. After appearing to reference the criticism on Tuesday, viewers again tore into the star. 'Out of touch celebrity says $8 million a year to co-host the View can be hell,' one commenter wrote on X. 'Then donate [your salary] buffoon,' another added. 'Of course it sometimes feels "like hell" for Whoopi. She thinks she's immune from feedback to the garbage takes she and her co-hosts bring to The View?' a third asked. 'What arrogance.' In 2019, Goldberg told The New York Times that she viewed her hosting gig just 'a job.' 'These are not conversations that I'm having with my friends,' she said. 'If they were, we'd be doing it differently. My friends and I can talk about things in-depth in a different way than you can on television.' In November, she claimed she was still on The View after so many years because she needed the money, before comparing the situation to those of millions of other working Americans. 'I appreciate that people are having a hard time,' she said. 'Me, too. I work for a living. If I had all the money in the world, I would not be here, OK? So, I'm a working person, you know?'

I still get in a flap if I try to be a social butterfly
I still get in a flap if I try to be a social butterfly

Times

time3 hours ago

  • Times

I still get in a flap if I try to be a social butterfly

During my 30-year secondment to the chattering classes, I've mastered most of their fancy ways. I'm unfazed by cutlery or dress codes, know not to take wine to dinner parties and that when someone says they 'must' have you over they rarely mean it. But in one sense I've never left Doncaster. At a large party where you're standing with a glass of wine, how do you move seamlessly and politely between groups? I was invited for the first (and probably last) time to the Spectator summer party, a grand affair of 500 guests from the media-political nexus. I knew plenty of people, perhaps too many, which led to a particular social anxiety. I'd be in one conversation when a colleague or friend would pass by. Should I turn from my current companion to speak to them or just wave? I didn't want the original person to think I was binning them for someone more interesting. (This was a party where eyes were focused mainly over other people's shoulders.) Nor did I want to be thought too busy hanging around stars to greet a friend. • Move over DJs — poets are the latest party must-have Then there's the agony of finding yourself talking to a top-ranking guest, a Tory grandee or TV celebrity, knowing you're too low-ranking to hog them and terrified they are thinking 'go away, woman, I've just spotted Kemi Badenoch'. Do you retreat first — risking rudeness — or just assume they will segue when ready? I lay awake that night, toes curling at all my likely gaffes. Maybe this is why the Spectator party has a lavish bar but no food, so after a certain point no one cares. One of the downsides of using Lime rental bikes is leaving your possessions in the front basket. (I've found in those I've hired a takeaway and a scary-looking doll.) Returning from the pool, I forgot about my swimming bag and only realised the next morning, when I saw the next Lime user had dumped it outside on the wall. I rushed out to find it had been rifled. My swimsuit, posh hair conditioner and padlock were still there, but some arse had nicked my goggles and towel. No, not my special swimming towel! A thick, colourful handwoven thing I'd bought in Istanbul. A towel worthy of thieving even when stinking of chlorine. It is pathetic to mourn a piece of cloth, but I do — and if I ever see it down the pool … 'You're getting like your parents,' said my husband, as I chewed a gummy containing a mushroom called lion's mane, which allegedly improves brain function. (Recommended by a doctor friend, so it must be true.) I also take gummies for more lustrous hair, plus an expanding array of vitamins, although I've given up collagen because it makes me gag and I can't see how drinking it will make it magically reappear under my skin. • Inside the world of extreme wellness: Booze, coffee and a steak diet My husband was alluding to the remedies my working-class, very un-alternative parents took. My father: garlic pearls and ginseng. My mother: copper bracelets and other odd arthritis cures advertised at the back of The People's Friend. 'Wellness' nonsense long preceded Gwynnie. With age, you do think: well, it can't hurt, so why not. Until you are wolfing down gummies like the sweeties they really are. And my parents lived to 89 and almost 99. My book of the summer is Drayton and Mackenzie by Alexander Starritt. Every year, some big-name author is said to have written the 'state of the nation' novel, and it is invariably a sententious, boring slog. But this tale of two very different young men who together build a company is sweeping, clever, deeply researched and very funny. Starritt carries heavy issues — the 2008 economic crisis, business, tidal energy (!) — lightly, but depicts lighter matters — sex, friendship, male insecurity — with true depth. It is also that rare thing, a book that is positive (but clear-eyed) about those fashionably maligned beings, men.

Hull FC agree two-year deal for Rhinos prop Lisone
Hull FC agree two-year deal for Rhinos prop Lisone

BBC News

time4 hours ago

  • BBC News

Hull FC agree two-year deal for Rhinos prop Lisone

Hull FC have signed Leeds Rhinos prop Sam Lisone on a two-year deal from the 2026 season 31-year-old Samoa international has been ever-present in Super League for the Rhinos this Zealand-born Lisone joined the Headingley side in 2023 from Australian club Gold Coast Titans, where he played alongside Hull FC prop Herman Ese'ese."I've spoken to Herman quite a bit about the move and [head coach] John Cartwright told me how much he wanted me to come to the club over the phone," Lisone told Hull FC's website., external

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store