Indira Naidoo is one of Australia's most admired and popular broadcasters. Throughout her career, Indira has hosted and reported for some of the country's more distinguished news and current affair programs including the ABC's Late Edition and as the anchor of SBS TV's award-winning late night news service, World News Tonight. She has reported for and presented The 7.30 Report, The Midday Report and ABC TV's Feedback.
Indira developed a cult following for her less serious appearances on McFeast, Roy and HG's Club Buggery, Good News Week, The Glasshouse, The Fat and SBS' Ashes cricket show Under the Grandstand with Steve Abbott.
Current work
Indira's wealth of experience makes her a highly sort after MC, guest speaker and conference facilitator.
Her recent events include guest speaker at the 2012 Randwick City Council Earth Hour Festival, Melbourne Convention and Visitors Bureau Roadshow, the Business Association of Victoria Women's Lunch, MC for the National Architecture Awards, the Rabobank Awards, Premier of Queensland's Export Awards and the Australian RIRDC Rural Women's Awards, host of the SMH Good Food Awards, co-host of the Asia Pacific Awards, facilitator at the New Rural Industries Australia Conference, Sydney Council Smart Green Apartments Launch and the Australian Human Rights Commission event.
Previous experience
Indira was a contestant in the inaugural season of Celebrity MasterChef and has been a panelist on The Project and The Circle on Network Ten. In 2010, she appeared as the newsreader in several episodes of the ABC's hit drama series Rake starring Richard Roxburgh and in late 2012 will be seen in Rake 2.
She has worked as a media spokesperson and strategist for consumer advocacy group Choice and as a Geneva-based sustainability communications consultant with the United Nations' trade development arm The International Trade Centre. In 2009, she was selected from 2000 applicants to be trained by former US President Al Gore as a climate change presenter.
Indira is a member of the International Slow Food Movement and has written on food and sustainability issues for The Sydney Morning Herald and Gourmet Traveller Magazine, and writes the Saucy Onion food blog. Indira's first book about urban food farming, The Edible Balcony, was published by Lantern Penguin in October 2011.
Indira was flawless, MCed with such warmth and engagement and sense of occasion. ... keep reading Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation