

The five-star Country Club, the centrepiece of the community, includes social, recreational and educational facilities, with a function room and bar, gym, cinema, library, billiards room, computer room, workshop, art room, indoor heated lap pool, spa, sauna, large outdoor pool, lawn bowls and floodlit tennis courts. Seachange Village Arundel opened in 2009 and comprises architecturally designed two and three-bedroom homes, of which 25 per cent remain available, ranging in price from $374,000 to $687,000. In addition to the friendly community at Seachange, the couple love their Gold Coast location for another big reason – you guessed it, the weather. Mr Bury started out in radio at age 16 and was a weatherman with Today from 1982-1991, retiring in the late ’90s after some time at Channel 7 and with Brisbane’s 4BC radio. Get into an over 50s active community and make the most of this exciting period of your life.” “My advice to them is don’t let yourself become isolate. “Seniors are vital in the community and have so much to give,” he said. While Mr Bury admitted to missing his television and radio work, he said the couple enjoyed an active lifestyle. “Seachange is unique and something very special.” “We thought we could move to a similar village in Sydney but could not find anything that even came close,” Mr Bury said.

The two were living in the over 50s community when they decided to move back to Sydney, but nothing in the southern state could compare with what they’d loved about Seachange, and when a chance rose to return, they seized it. Meet the Team Lesli Foster Weeknight Anchor Lorenzo Hall Weeknight Anchor Topper Shutt Chief Meteorologist Eric Flack Chief Investigative Reporter. He then moved to Cadillac where he grew up. Mr Bury and wife Margaret now call Seachange Village Arundel home, having moved in recently – for the second time. Northern Michigan born and raised Meteorologist Michael Stevens was born in Reed City and lived in Evart for the first 5 years of his life.
CHANNEL 9 WEATHERMAN TV
He was praised by Catherine Zeta Jones, and TV anchors around the world were so impressed by his mind-blowing effort that they tried to outdo him, but with little success.MANY people will remember TV weatherman Brian Bury, who injected a unique energy into his role with Channel 9’s Today breakfast show throughout the 1980s.įor Mr Bury, presenting the weather was more than reading a set of forecasts, it was a chance to have fun, and he was known for the wacky bow ties, coloured glasses and crazy antics he used to spice up his reports. Liam was interviewed by Wales Online, BBC Radio 5 Live, Canadian breakfast television and beyond, as well as featuring in Time magazine, the New York Times, MTV and Perez Hilton. His flawless pronunciation of the 58-letter place name - the longest in Europe - garnered a total of more than 20 million views on YouTube and Facebook within a week and dominated the media around the world. In September 2015, Liam became an overnight global sensation after saying Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch - a village in north west Wales - in his evening weather forecast. His in-depth knowledge of weather allows him to take complex ideas and communicate them in an engaging way that is accessible to all. Liam is a fully qualified meteorologist, having completed the Met Office's IFC forecaster course. Liam's adaptable style of presentation means that he broadcast across many BBC channels, including BBC One, as well as reading the Shipping Forecast on BBC Radio 4. Previously, he worked for nine years as a Broadcast Meteorologist at the BBC Weather Centre in London, where he broadcast regionally, nationally and internationally.

Liam has just written a children's non-fiction weather book called Weather, Camera, Action!: A Meteorologist's Guide to the Sky for 7-11 year olds, which was released on 29th September 2022. Liam Dutton is Channel 4 News' Weather Presenter and has 19 years of live broadcasting experience, on TV, radio and online, to millions of people.
