From an episode of Spin Cycle∙Presented by Jess Lilley and Charlie Lewis
Segment
Spin Cycle: Pauline Hanson and the Platform Economy
Jess Lilley and Charlie Lewis pull apart the long-running feedback loop between Pauline Hanson and Australia’s media ecosystem. They trace the arc from Hanson’s 1996 election in Oxley, through to One Nation’s 1997 launch and the years Hanson's political brand stayed alive via continuous coverage and “novelty” bookings.
Lewis and Lilley question entertainment and soft-focus television's repackaging of Hanson as a recognisable celebrity figure, as opposed to a fringe politician. They revisit her Reality Television run, and the Australian mainstream's treatment of Hanson as a “box office” guest.
Lewis and Lilley unpack the ethics of paying for access and amplification and their conversation sits with a hard question: With One Nation polling surging again and Hanson reappearing across podcast media, the trio asks whether attention itself has been the real amplifier and what responsibility media carries when provocation is designed to dominate the cycle.
"If you ignore it, you underplay it; cover it and you amplify it".
