Read about John Safran net worth, age, wife, children, height, family, parents, salary, and radio/tv shows as well as other information you need to know.
Introduction
John Safran is an Australian radio personality, satirist, documentary maker and author. He is well known for combining humor with religious, political and ethnic issues. First gaining fame appearing in Race Around the World in 1997, Safran went on to produce a series of documentaries, and television shows and host radio programs.
Safran is also famous for his television stunts, which include placing a fatwa on Australian television host Rove McManus, sneaking nine young men into an exclusive Melbourne nightclub by disguising them as members of American nu-metal band Slipknot, running through Jerusalem wearing nothing but the beanie and scarf of St Kilda Football Club, driving a remote-controlled seagull with a cigarette onto the Melbourne Cricket Ground, and his confrontation with A Current Affair host Ray Martin.
He currently works as a journalist; he released his latest book, Puff Piece, in August 2021. As of 2002, Safran had been a regular host of Melbourne community radio station 3RRR (Triple R) on its morning show “Breakfasters”. Additionally, he co-hosted the weekly radio show Sunday Night Safran on the national youth radio station Triple J with Father Bob Maguire. After a lengthy hiatus in late 2008 due to a busy filming schedule, Sunday Night Safran returned to the airwaves on 12 July 2009. The program ended at the end of 2015.
Early life
Name | John Safran |
Net Worth | $5 million |
Occupation | Radio personality, Satirist, Documentary maker, Author |
Age | 50 years |
Height | 1.75m |
John Michael Safran was born on August 13, 1972 (age 50 years) in Melbourne, Australia. He is the son of Jewish parents. His maternal grandparents were Polish Jewish Bundists. Safran’s mother, Gitl, was born in Uzbekistan as they were fleeing their home country for Australia. She died in 2003. His paternal ancestors were German Jews and left shortly before the rise of Nazi Germany. He has one older sister, Margaret.
Safran grew up in Balwyn North and attended North Balwyn Primary School, Balwyn High School and Yeshivah College from Year 8 onwards. He describes himself at Yeshivah, an all-boys Orthodox Jewish school, as being “the least religious kid in the most religious school in Australia”. He studied journalism at RMIT University after school. He eventually dropped out without completing his degree and began work in advertising for Clemenger Harvie. During this time he also worked as a copywriter for Mazda, Village Roadshow and Sea World, where he wrote the company’s jingle.
John Safran formed the hip-hop group Raspberry Cordial with his friend Chris Lumsden during his final year in high school. They played to some success, receiving high rotation airplay on the city’s community radio, playing many gigs in Melbourne and coming second in the RMIT Battle of the Bands competition. Their debut album was Melbourne Tram, of which Safran apparently has hundreds of unsold cassettes in his bedroom to this day. After winning a government youth music initiative, they followed up with Taste Test, of which 500 copies were pressed. Of those only 93 sold, so the remaining 407 had to be crushed. He said that the world just “wasn’t ready for white rappers then” and Raspberry Cordial “broke down the wall that Eminem’s been able to walk through.”
Career
John Safran’s first experience of national fame came via Race Around the World, a television competition for young documentarians run by ABC. In his audition tape, Safran was required to submit ten seconds of Black, but instead, he submitted ten seconds of Black Sabbath.
Safran started the race off timid and tame, being locked inside an Osaka subway station in his first entry. However, he quickly broke what he called the “fear barrier” to film his now-famous segments. He ran streaking naked through the streets of Jerusalem wearing only the scarf and beanie of his favourite football club, St Kilda to prove that God is Jewish (St Kilda’s only Grand Final win fell on the same day as Yom Kippur).
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He was baptized and placed a Voodoo curse on his ex-girlfriend in the Ivory Coast. He snuck into Disneyland via a work area and attached information plaques he made about founder Walt Disney to a display (highlighting little-known Disney “facts” such as Walt Disney’s alleged early support for Adolf Hitler) and got a Catholic priest to review death metal music.
His segments scored well with both the judges and the public audience, and Safran topped the viewer poll. He was, however, disqualified for a segment taped in a confessional booth (the program forbade hidden camera footage), the disqualification of the segment and subsequent loss of points meant that he finished last in the first season of Race Around the World. After this brush with fame ABC commissioned two 30-minute TV pilots from Safran.
One pilot called John Safran: Media Tycoon focused on the media industry, airing in 1998. It became famous for a segment, involving the host of the tabloid current affairs TV show A Current Affair, where Safran harassed him in the style characteristic of A Current Affair by sorting through his bin, which was later satirized by comedian Shaun Micallef. Ray Martin had set up members of the Paxton family.
John Safran and one of the victims, Shane Paxton, turned up to Ray Martin’s home. Martin and his wife Dianne physically threatened Safran. Martin’s wife ripped apart Safran’s Papier Mâché hat and Ray grabbed Safran by the collar, prompting Shane Paxton to intervene. Martin was in contact with ABC and specifically warned Safran in the segment that he’s spoken to Roger Grant the then Head of Corporate Affairs at ABC.
Martin’s connection with this executive at ABC is suspected to be a reason the series never made it to air. The Ray Martin segment was later played on Media Watch, John Safran: The Lost Pilot, and YouTube. In 2014, Martin still appeared bitter about the incident, calling Safran a “serial pest”.
The second pilot was titled John Safran: Master Chef. This pilot focused on the food industry. Notably, it featured a cooking segment where Safran prepared a beef dish. The twist comes when he arrives in an abattoir and shows detailed footage of cows being slaughtered to complete the dish. Though all were unsuccessful, the pilots became hits via the Internet among university students.
John Safran also recorded a parody of Baz Luhrmann’s song “Everybody’s Free (To Wear Sunscreen)” entitled “Not the Sunscreen Song” which includes lines such as “Never live in Adelaide, it’s a hole” and “Remember, you can’t get pregnant the first time you have sex”. It peaked at No. 20 in 1998 and was nominated for an ARIA. In Triple M’s 2005 Gre atest Songs Ever Written and Performed Since the Beginning of Time poll, “Not the Sunscreen Song” came in at #706 – one spot above “Superstition” by Stevie Wonder.
Safran also presented segments for the Seven Network’s now-defunct Late Report, some were also screened in the United Kingdom with Channel 4’s Disinformation program. Safran attained police attention for a stunt to try and coerce cricketer Shane Warne into breaking a “no smoking” clause in an advertising contract with a nicotine gum manufacturer. Safran drove a remote-controlled seagull with a cigarette onto the MCG pitch during a match. He was arrested for “pitch invasion”, but the charges were dropped.
In 2002, John Safran launched his documentary series John Safran’s Music Jamboree. On one occasion Safran and his crew stormed the courtyard of his former school and amid shocked religious students and teachers, he and his crew began to dance to the song “Footloose”. He was also able to gain entry into an exclusive Melbourne nightclub by dressing up nine men as the band Slipknot. Screened on SBS on Saturday nights, it opened Safran’s work to youth 12 to 20 years old, who had not seen the original Race Around the World material. The show impressed the Australian Film Institute so much that it won an AFI award in 2003 for “Best Comedy Series”
In August 2004 he debuted his new show John Safran vs God, also on the SBS television network. The first seven episodes were typical Safran informative satire. The series’ finale featured Safran being exorcised of demons that had supposedly possessed him during his dabblings with world religions. The exorcism was performed by well-known Christian fundamentalist Bob Larson. In an interview with an Australian radio personality, Safran said that he “felt something was going on”, and that “there was something about the expression on my face”.
In an interview on Andrew Denton’s Enough Rope program, he claimed that he had no memory of the events during the exorcism, and stated that the footage shown on the show was merely the most interesting from hours of footage. John Safran vs God won a 2005 AFI Award for “Best Comedy Series”. Before the exorcism, Safran went to Mozambique to have a curse, previously placed on the Australian national football team by a now-deceased witch doctor, lifted.
John Safran and former Australian football team captain Johnny Warren were covered in chicken’s blood in the process. Subsequently, on 16 November 2005, Australia qualified for the World Cup for the first time since 1974. In 2005 and 2006, Safran co-hosted a television talk show entitled Speaking in Tongues with Father Bob Maguire, a Catholic priest who was featured in John Safran vs God. The 12-part series was broadcast on SBS Television and began on 7 November 2005.
Safran spent portions of 2007 in Los Angeles shooting a pilot entitled John Safran Saves America for American MTV in which he tried to convince emos to fight in Iraq, hit the couch with therapists who claim they can cure people of racism and attempted to become gay to increase his standing in Hollywood. Safran stated in an interview that he hasn’t heard back from the production company Reveille Productions whether the program has been purchased for production or not but as the months go on, “the answer isn’t getting any yesser”.
In 2009 John Safran’s Race Relations, an eight-part comedy documentary television series, was picked up by ABC. As part of this series, on 10 April 2009, John Safran took part in a devotional crucifixion, an annual event occurring on Good Friday in the Philippines. Safran was crucified in Barangay Kapitangan, Paombong, Bulacan, just outside Manila along with three other men and one woman. He had nails driven through his hands and feet and hung on the cross for five minutes before being taken down and given medical treatment in a nearby tent set up for treatment. It was nominated for a 2010 Logie Award in the category of Light Entertainment.
After discovering that a subject of his series Race Relations, “Mississippi’s most notorious white supremacist” Richard Barrett had been murdered, Safran returned to Mississippi to cover the trial. In 2013 Penguin Books published Safran’s memoir of his experiences on this trip, Murder in Mississippi (published as God’ll Cut You Down in the US). In 2014 he received a Ned Kelly Award for Best True Crime for the book. Safran writes for a number of newspapers, including the Sydney Morning Herald and Vice News.
John Safran has also written a book about extremism in Australia, titled Depends What You Mean By Extremist. It was published in May 2017. His investigation into Big Tobacco, Puff Piece was published in August 2021. It was shortlisted for the 2022 Prime Minister’s Literary Award for Nonfiction. His favorite board game is Scrabble. However, he prefers to play one-on-one compared with four or more players, as he considers that a one-on-one game is a “game of skill” instead of a “game of luck”.
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He also owns all the comprehensive Scrabble dictionaries. Furthermore, Safran has a Scrabble Rug, a Scrabble board costume, Michael Groves Special Edition Scrabble, Hebrew Scrabble, CD-Rom Scrabble, Keyring Scrabble and a Scrabble watch. John Safran was painted by Yvette Coppersmith and entered the 2009 Archibald Prize. The painting was a finalist. A portrait by Avraham Vofsi titled John Safran as David and Goliath was a finalist in the 2022 Archibald Prize. Safran thinks that religious education should be allowed in schools, and disagrees that it is brainwashing.
Wife
John Safran has no wife or kids as of April 2023. His first date was with a girl called Meg who he was doing work experience at the Australian Jewish News in Year 10. They saw Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade together. At university, he began a relationship with a Bolivian girl, but it ended because Safran was “obsessed with [his] creative work”, and at 19 Safran did not want the relationship to turn into something more serious. Safran was in a relationship with playwright Lally Katz but they later separated. As of April 2023, John Safran’s be is unknown to the general public.
John Safran net worth
How much is John Safran worth? John Safran net worth is estimated at around $5 million. His main source of income is from his primary work as a radio personality, satirist, documentary maker and author. John Safran’s average salary per month and other career earnings are over $400,000 dollars annually. His remarkable achievements have earned him some luxurious lifestyles and some fancy car trips. He is one of the richest and most influential media personalities in Australia. He stands at an appealing height of 1.75m and has a good body weight which suits his personality.
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