David Koch announces he is leaving Sunrise after 21 years

Seven Network says a replacement for the breakfast television host has been selected and will be announced on 5 June

Australia’s longest-serving breakfast television host, David “Kochie” Koch, has announced his departure from the Seven Network’s Sunrise program, after hosting the show for 21 years.

Koch announced his retirement on Monday, having clocked up a record 16,000 hours of live television during more than 5,300 shows and some 50,000 interviews.

The 67 year-old became emotional as he told Monday morning viewers he had “a bit of news”.

“I have decided to hang up the boots as co-host of Sunrise,” he announced, before paying tribute to his colleagues, co-host Natalie Barr, sports reporter Mark Beretta, producer David Walters and his boss Kerry Stokes.

In a statement, the television host said his colleagues had allowed him to be himself and thanked them for “their understanding when I’ve stuffed up – which is more often than I’d like to admit – and for their constant encouragement and respect”.

He said that “after 20 consecutive premierships in the breakfast TV ratings game, I’m frankly finding it harder to get off the ground to take those marks and I think it’s time to bring [in] the next generation.”

Koch said he would be focusing his post-Sunrise life on his family and the family business interests in Pinstripe Media and the Ausbiz business channel.

“As everyone knows, I’m a finance nerd so you’ll still see me pop up every so often on RBA board meeting days or covering other big financial news, but as a guest rather than host,” he said.

Seven said Koch’s replacement had been appointed and would be announced on 5 June.

Stokes, Seven West Media’s chairman, said Koch had “played a central part in turning around the fortunes of the network”, which has been in fierce and constant competition with Nine’s Today breakfast show, and its longtime host Karl Stefanovic.

“I wish David and his wife Libby the best after what has been a rigorous work schedule, which has also included many pro bono roles in the sports and charity arenas,” Stokes said in the statement.

The network’s director of news and public affairs, Craig McPherson, said Seven had “plucked [Koch] from relative obscurity” two decades ago.

“What started as a most unlikely presenter soon became a unique success story that others simply could not counter or mimic, as is often the way,” McPherson said.

“He excelled across all strands of the tapestry of live television, three-and-a-half hours day in, day out for a record-breaking 21 years.”

Koch’s final appearance on Sunrise will be on 9 June.

Contributor

Kelly Burke

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Raw footage from Bruce Lehrmann’s Channel Seven interview subpoenaed in defamation case
Lawyers for Network Ten are examining footage from Spotlight interview as they prepare to defend themselves against Lehrmann’s defamation case

Christopher Knaus

17, Jul, 2023 @1:52 AM

Article image
Channel Seven says Pauline Hanson still welcome after Koch Christchurch accusation
Sunrise presenter David Koch says terrorist manifesto ‘reads like One Nation immigration and Muslim policy’

Amanda Meade

18, Mar, 2019 @5:01 AM

Article image
Sun sets on David Koch’s 21 years of breakfast television with farewell extravaganza | Weekly Beast
Anthony Albanese, Kevin Rudd and the Beaconsfield mine disaster survivors among huge cast as ‘Kochie’ signs off. Plus: Peter Gleeson rescued from retirement

Amanda Meade

09, Jun, 2023 @2:47 AM

Article image
Local drama on life support as TV networks threaten to pull the plug
Commercial networks want local content quotas dropped, but producers and advocates say Australian stories are vital

Amanda Meade

01, Mar, 2020 @9:43 PM

Article image
Children's TV should be left to the ABC, Australian networks say
Channels Seven, Nine and Ten call for local drama quotas to be relaxed as audiences move online and to on-demand services

Amanda Meade

02, Oct, 2017 @6:00 AM

Article image
Streaming services outspend free-to-air TV on making Australian drama for first time
The $446m budget for dramas on subscription services is now more than double the $208m spent on free to air programs

Amanda Meade

09, Nov, 2022 @7:00 PM

Article image
Daily Mail throws tabloid tantrum over Brooke Boney and Australia Day | The Weekly Beast
Today show presenter’s remarks recast as an ‘astonishing rant’. Plus: management revamp at Sky

Amanda Meade

17, Jan, 2019 @11:05 PM

Article image
Logie awards 2023: Crazy Fun Park beats Bluey, Sonia Kruger takes gold and Tony Armstrong’s back-to-back win
Host Sam Pang cracks joke at celebrities including Sam Neill, Karl Stefanovic and Jonathan LaPaglia – and takes a shot at broadcaster Channel Seven

Wenlei Ma

30, Jul, 2023 @9:42 PM

Article image
The Weekly Beast: how Sunrise angered a South Australian fire-ravaged community
The ABC gets its own Canberra reshuffle, 7:30 in anti-vax scare, J-Brecht’s John Howard dreams come true, this year’s big ticket television – and more

Amanda Meade

07, Jan, 2015 @4:15 AM

Article image
My Kitchen Rules is back – impossible to ignore, not always easy to like
The eighth Australian season of Seven’s highly successful export includes an ‘angry man’ cartoon villain and a couple of proud Tasmanians

Amanda Meade

30, Jan, 2017 @11:08 PM