Melody Horrill (born in the United Kingdom, emigrated to Australia in 1976[1]) is a journalist, former TV presenter and media/communications manager. She is the author of a memoir A Dolphin Called Jock (Allen and Unwin 2022) which details how she discovered trust and love through an appreciation of nature through her remarkable friendship with a wild dolphin called Jock in Adelaide's Port River. The interaction helped her move past a childhood and youth dominated by domestic violence. She is now a passionate advocate for the dolphins of the Port River.
Early life and dolphin volunteer work
editHorrill emigrated from England to South Australia with her family as a young child, growing up in a challenging family environment. In April 2021, Horrill penned an article[1] for the Weekend Australian magazine, where she recounted a difficult childhood with domestic abuse.
At university, Horrill began doing voluntary work with Adelaide's Port River dolphins, encouraged by lecturer Mike Bossley. They, together with some other students, went on to form the then-Australian Dolphin Research Foundation to help protect and promote awareness of the dolphins. As she developed her media career, Horrill created a dolphin sponsorship program, secured TV sponsorship and raised community awareness across South Australia through ongoing media stories. She organised school and community group visits and worked with a SA bakery to secure a sponsorship agreement where bread carried a picture of a rare albino dolphin.[2]
Horrill also produced a documentary, Dance with a Dolphin, about a solitary Port Diver dolphin called Jock, which she then took to CNN International – it was aired across the world. The work of the Foundation and the documentary helped convince the then-State Government to declare the Adelaide Dolphin Sanctuary in 2005.[3][2]
Media career
editHorrill made her small screen debut in 1995 on a Channel 10 wine show,[3] before moving to Whyalla for a reporting gig with Central Television (now Southern Cross Television), and then becoming a freelance journalist at ABC-TV in Adelaide. Next, she worked for Nine as the environment reporter, before making the switch to Ten. She reported for the local and national news, and also produced a number of environmental documentaries focusing on South Australian environmental issues, including the dolphin documentary. These documentaries were shown on both the Network Ten and internationally on CNN.[4] In a 2020 interview, she described that experience: “CNN Atlanta picked up one and flew me over to the US to present it to an international audience. It resulted in the formation of Australia's first Dolphin Sanctuary in the Port River – perhaps my proudest moment.”[3]
In 2004 Horrill joined Seven News in Adelaide, where she was both a weather presenter and reporter until late 2013 when she decided not to renew her contract to “explore new horizons”. After a period in Darwin where she worked as a media consultant, she joined 3AW in Melbourne, and then the Australian Bureau of Meteorology as a media and communications manager assisting in natural emergencies such as the 2019/20 bushfires.[3]
Her concern for the declining dolphin population in the Port River led her to write the Weekend Australian article mentioned above[1] and undertake a number of other media interviews, including ABC Adelaide[5] and Melbourne's 3AW[6] to highlight the dolphin situation and the need for more research and more protection to address the issues. In her article and interviews, she described how in her case, the connection to the dolphins had healed her as a person following her traumatic childhood.
Publication of personal memoir and other recent work
editIn May 2022, Australian publishers Allen & Unwin published Horrill's personal memoir, entitled A Dolphin called Jock.[7] The book describes her childhood and youth dealing with extreme domestic violence and tells how her relationship with Jock and the other dolphins of the Port River helped her recover from these traumatic experiences. A Dolphin called Jock is being published in September 2023 by Canada-based Greystone Books in 2023 under the title The Dolphin who Saved Me in the American, Canadian and United Kingdom markets. [8]
As of May 2023, Horrill was involved in related follow-up activities, including further writing, as a non-Executive Director of the Dolphin Research Institute, and a member of the Jane Goodall Institute's international Cetacean Committee.[9]
On August 21, 2023, Horrill, speaking for the JGI committee, commented on the recent death of the orca Tokitae (Lolita). Horrill said:[10]
"We are devastated that Tokitae will never receive what she was entitled to from the start – her freedom. Her death is a tragic reminder that no dolphins, whales, or porpoises should ever be kept in captivity for the purpose of entertainment. These highly intelligent, sensitive mammals deserve a natural life in the wild, free of exploitation."
References
edit- ^ a b c Horrill, Melody (10 April 2021). "Finding Sanctuary: How Adelaide's Port River Dolphins Saved Me". www.theaustralian.com.au. Retrieved 13 April 2021.
- ^ a b "Catching up with old friends of the Port River dolphins". Whale & Dolphin Conservation Australia. 9 April 2021. Retrieved 14 April 2021.
- ^ a b c d McDonald, Patrick (26 September 2020). "Do you remember Adelaide's most legendary TV newsreaders and weather presenters?". www.adelaidenow.com.au. Retrieved 14 April 2021.
- ^ Dolphin Befriends Researchers
- ^ "Afternoons with Sonya Feldhoff, interview with Melody Horrill". ABC Radio. 12 April 2021. Retrieved 14 April 2021.
- ^ 3AW (14 April 2021). "Melody Horrill with Denis Walter, 14 Apr, 2021 - Nights with Denis Walter - Omny.fm". omny.fm. Retrieved 15 April 2021.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ Horrill, Melody (2022). A Dolphin Called Jock. Sydney: [Allen & Unwin]. ISBN 9781761067358.
- ^ Mem: 10902864. "Koalas, climate and real-life 'Succession': Australian nonfiction offerings at LBF | Books+Publishing". Retrieved 29 May 2022.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ Horrill, Melody. "Melody Horrill LinkedIn page". LinkedIn. Retrieved 11 May 2023.
- ^ "JGI Statement on the passing of Tokitae in Miami Seaquarium". Jane Goodall Institute. London, United Kingdom. 21 August 2023. Retrieved 26 August 2023.