Frank Warrick
Francis Michael Warrick OAM (1944 – 11 May 2021) was an Australian journalist and newsreader and TV game show host.[1] BiographyWarrick began his career in radio as a disc jockey in Toowoomba in 1963 with AM radio station 4GR,[2][3] and in 1965 he was the first voice heard on the new Gold Coast AM radio station 4GG.[4] Warrick joined Seven Brisbane as a newsreader in 1976 and served in the position until his retirement in 2001, including a role as co-presenter of 13 years opposite Kay McGrath. In 1991, prison escapee Harold John McSweeney surrendered to Warrick and a television helicopter crew on the Queensland Darling Downs, purportedly to avoid being shot by the Queensland Police.[5] Warrick hosted the game show The $1,000,000 Chance of a Lifetime in 1999—before the program was taken over by sports journalist Sandy Roberts. Warrick was also a regular host on the Australian documentary series The World Around Us. In 1994, Warrick was awarded the OAM for "services to the media, to environment, and to the community".[6] He died aged 76 on 11 May 2021 following a five-year battle with dementia.[7] References
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