Kyle Sandilands vows to take fight to ARN after cancellation: ‘I’m not done, not by a long way’

Kyle Sandilands warns former ARN bosses he’ll fight decision after Kyle and Jackie O Show is officially cancelled

Headshot of Wenlei Ma
Wenlei Ma
The Nightly
Kyle and Jackie O
Kyle and Jackie O Credit: Supplied

Kyle Sandilands has thrown down the gauntlet against former bosses ARN after the Kyle and Jackie O Show was officially cancelled this morning.

“I don’t accept it,” the controversial shock jock said in a statement. “My lawyers told them last week this would be invalid. And guess what? It is.”

Sandilands appeared determined to fight. He warned, “I’m not done. Not by a long way.”

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ARN, which owns KIIS FM, told the ASX this morning that it had terminated its contract with Sandilands and his company Quasar Media, “As a result, the Kyle and Jackie O Show will no longer be presented”.

ARN had two weeks earlier axed its contract with Jackie “Jackie O” Henderson. Sandilands’ and Henderson’s deals, signed in late 2023, were collectively worth $200 million over 10 years.

This current drama between Sandilands, Henderson and ARN kicked off on February 20 when Sandilands berated Henderson on-air for her interest in astrology as a reflection of what he claimed was her lax work ethic.

The bruising exchange between the two revealed a deep fracture in their relationship, and Henderson did not return to the program after that.

On March 3, ARN released an extraordinary statement to the ASX that it had terminated Henderson’s contract and given Sandilands 14 days to “remedy” a breach.

“Let me tell you what actually happened here,” Sandilands said today. “Jackie and I had a blue on air. That’s it. The kind of thing we’ve done a hundred times in 25 years. And ARN took the situation and decided to try and burn the place down.

“They sacked Jackie. They suspended me. They wouldn’t even let me pick up the phone to call her or anyone else on the show.

“Then — and this is the bit that gets me — once they’d made it impossible for the show to go on, they turn around and say, ‘You didn’t fix it. You’re fired’.”

Sandilands said during the two week period of his suspension, he had done “everything ARN asked”, and offered to go back on air, to work with Henderson or to work with someone else, and had been rebuffed.

“They didn’t want to fix this,” he continued. “They thought they saw a chance to get out of the contract they signed with me a year ago, and they ran with it.

Jackie-O pictured leaving her home in Clovelly after Kyle Sandilands was sacked by ARN Media following his on-air clash with his co-host.
Jackie-O pictured leaving her home in Clovelly after Kyle Sandilands was sacked by ARN Media following his on-air clash with his co-host. Credit: Newswire

“ARN knew exactly what they were getting when they signed my deal. They’ve worked with me for over a decade. They knew how I work, they knew the show, and they were happy to pay for it — because I delivered”.

It’s that last claim that has become the sore point in the relationship between Sandilands, Henderson and ARN.

When the radio duo renewed their contracts with ARN in 2023, they were the reigning king and queen of the Sydney market, and the amped up payday was to compensate them for a planned national expansion, starting with Melbourne, followed by Brisbane and the rest of the country.

While the two were well established and popular in Sydney, Melbourne was hostile to their well-known antics and brash and controversial style of broadcasting.

After a shaky launch in Melbourne at the start of 2024, the show never recovered despite attempts to tweak the level of offensive content. In the last ratings period, the Kyle and Jackie O Show was ranked eighth.

The previous KIIS FM Melbourne breakfast presenters, Jase Hawkins and Lauren Phillips, who had been shafted to make way for Sandilands and Henderson, have consistently outperformed the Sydney pair in radio ratings surveys.

Sandilands’ and Henderson’s failure in Melbourne put a pause on syndicating the show to other markets.

There was also the added pressure of a long-running activist campaign against the show which had targeted the network’s advertisers.

In its financial year 2025 results, ARN posted a 23 per cent decline in underlying EBITDA and a 10 per cent drop in revenue, which included a 16 per cent slump in metro advertising. The company rolled out hundreds of redundancies in the past two years.

While Sandilands in his statement today categorised the inciting February 20 incident with Henderson as “a blue” that they had had “a hundred times” before in their long professional relationship, the tenor and veracity of it was clearly different.

Henderson was visibly hurt by Sandilands’ attack. Radio insiders have said it’s likely the public clash was brought on and exacerbated by the changed fortunes of the show, and the pressure of the failed Melbourne experiment.

Sandilands said in an earlier statement that he had apologised to Henderson. “Jackie told me she was hurt, and I accept that. We never needed lawyers or ASX announcements to sort things out. I believe we could have sorted this out too, if ARN had given us the chance,” he said.

Kyle and Jackie O before the break up.
Kyle and Jackie O before the break up. Credit: instagram/supplied

When Henderson’s contract was terminated by ARN on March 3, the company said Henderson had informed it she could no longer work with Sandilands.

Her statement three days later said she was seeking legal advice.

“I am deeply saddened by the events of the past week and the possibility of the show ending. This has come as a shock to me, as it has to everyone else,” she said. “I want to make one important point clear: I did not quit or resign.”

Over the years and across two different networks, the Kyle and Jackie O Show had been a magnet for trouble, especially for its scandalous stunts and lurid content.

This week, the Australian Communications and Media Authority imposed further licence conditions for five years on ARN as a direct result of programming on the Kyle and Jackie O Show.

ACMA cited “repeated breaches of the decency provisions” of the Commercial Radio Code of Practice.

The government body investigated complaints against the broadcast and found nine instances of breaches in 2025 which included an on-air guessing game in which Sandilands and Henderson played clips of urinating staff members.

The ACMA report also referred to episodes with graphic comments about menstruation and oral sex, and offensive descriptions of sex positions, as well as masturbation and pornography websites.

These shows were broadcast between 6am and 10am.

ACMA said the further conditions will apply to the Kyle and Jackie O Show as well as any other program which featured Sandilands or Henderson.

“To date, ARN management have been unwilling or unable to control the content that has gone to air, ACMA chair Nerida O’Loughlin said in a statement.

“These additional licence conditions mean further breaches will attract strong enforcement action that was not otherwise available to the ACMA.”

Enforcement actions include up to the suspension or cancellation of KIIS FM’s broadcasting licence.

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