Sam de Brito height - How tall is Sam de Brito?
Sam de Brito was born on 1969 in Sydney, is an Australian journalist. At 46 years old, Sam de Brito height not available right now. We will update Sam de Brito's height soon as possible.
Now We discover Sam de Brito's Biography, Age, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is He in this year and how He spends money? Also learn how He earned most of net worth at the age of 46 years old?
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Sam de Brito Age |
46 years old |
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Born |
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Birthday |
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Birthplace |
Sydney |
Date of death |
12 October 2015, |
Died Place |
North Bondi |
Nationality |
Sydney |
We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on .
He is a member of famous Journalist with the age 46 years old group.
Sam de Brito Weight & Measurements
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Weight |
Not Available |
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Not Available |
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Not Available |
Dating & Relationship status
He is currently single. He is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about He's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, He has no children.
Family |
Parents |
Not Available |
Wife |
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Sibling |
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Children |
Anoushka de Brito |
Sam de Brito Net Worth
He net worth has been growing significantly in 2021-22. So, how much is Sam de Brito worth at the age of 46 years old? Sam de Brito’s income source is mostly from being a successful Journalist. He is from Sydney. We have estimated
Sam de Brito's net worth
, money, salary, income, and assets.
Net Worth in 2022 |
$1 Million - $5 Million |
Salary in 2022 |
Under Review |
Net Worth in 2021 |
Pending |
Salary in 2021 |
Under Review |
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Source of Income |
Journalist |
Sam de Brito Social Network
Timeline
His sister is journalist Kate de Brito, who in October 2015 left News Corp, where she had been online news editor, Head of Digital and author of the long-running agony aunt column "Ask Bossy", to become editor-in-chief of Mia Freedman's women's interest website, Mamamia; She returned to News Corp as editor-in-chief in January 2017.
On 12 October 2015 Sam de Brito was discovered dead in his Eastern Suburbs home.
De Brito publicly supported the pick-up artist movement, and in 2014 argued that mass murderer Elliot Rodger was motivated by mental illness, not a hatred of women.
On 20 May 2014, he wrote a Sydney Morning Herald article entitled "What we can learn from Tara Moss's rapist". In the article, De Brito identified and published a photograph of the man who had raped author and feminist Tara Moss, although Moss had never named her assailant in her memoir The Fictional Woman. After complaints from readers, the article was removed from the Sydney Morning Herald website.
De Brito attended Waverley College where he was bullied, and later became a bully himself. "When I was in Years 5 and 6, I copped it savagely for reasons I still don't entirely understand but suspect were linked to me being somewhat bookish, articulate and effeminate..." de Brito wrote. "The pattern continued in Years 7 and 8 at my new high school but seemed to settle on my ethnicity – being a wog, 'f***ing off back to my own country' etc."
He made a cameo appearance in 2013 as a "Shopkeeper" on the TV comedy series Housos.
De Brito criticised Australian feminists, arguing that they fail to engage ordinary people. In 2013 he argued that "having a laugh and taking the piss is a mighty effective way of shrugging off life's many worries", chiding women for failing to respond favourably to men's jokes. "The most powerful, effective feminists I know don't live on Twitter railing against stupid beer ads and rape scenes in Game of Thrones – they compete against and beat men. They don't demand equality – they assume it," he wrote in 2014.
"I have a pretty healthy following but I doubt they'd read me if I was at The Oz. Too many big words," de Brito told journalist Caroline Overington in a 2011 interview. "I would be nowhere without the vehicle of Fairfax behind me."
In a 2011 interview with Caroline Overington, de Brito stated "I think a lot of people confuse sexism with misogyny. I'm definitely sexist, but most people are. I've written more positive columns about feminism than any other mainstream male journo in the country in the last five years. A lot of feminists don't seem to like that – a yobbo in their playground."
"My daughter is the most important thing in my life now," he said in 2011. "Everything runs second to her, which is quite a change of pace for a pathological narcissist." In 2014, he wrote, "I had spent my life waiting for someone I could love unconditionally, who I would always be there for. I'd thought it would be a partner or a lover, but in fact it was my child."
De Brito wrote extensively about his daughter, who was born around 2010, and the collapse of his relationship with her mother.
De Brito was the author of five books. No Tattoos Before You're Thirty is an advice guide to the author's yet-to-be-born children, published through Penguin; Building a Better Bloke is a humorous self-improvement guide drawing from his experiences and feedback from his blog, published in August 2008 also through Penguin. No Sex With Your Ex followed in 2009 – an advice guide for young people concerning drugs and alcohol, socialising, body image, sex, relationships & dating, and violence.
Picador published his novels The Lost Boys (2008) and Hello Darkness (2011). Both follow the laddish adventures of Ned Jelli, a thinly veiled version of the author.
The blog has been live since August 2006, allegedly registering more than 130,000 reader comments and more than 20 million page impressions. In December 2006 it was voted best Australian and New Zealand blog in The Weblog Awards. In December 2007, the blog was runner up in the same competition.
In 1998 de Brito wrote, directed and starred in the comedy film Revenge, Inc with Daniel Einfeld, a writer on the Australian television game show Who Dares Wins. He went on to be a scriptwriter until 2004, penning episodes of Australian TV dramas including Water Rats, White Collar Blue and Stingers.
In 1975, having divorced de Brito's father, his mother married broadcaster Sean Flannery, to whom she remained married until Flannery's death from cancer in 2011. Gus de Brito died in 1999.
De Brito was a member of an accomplished Australian media family. His grandfather William Blake was a reporter for The Truth in Melbourne and Adelaide, and his mother Julie co-founded what became the company Media Monitors in the late 1970s with broadcaster Ian Parry-Okeden. His maternal uncles Peter Blake, Terry Blake and Patrick Blake are, or were, journalists, as are his cousins Sarah Blake (daughter of Terry) and Emma Blake (daughter of Patrick).
Sam de Brito (30 January 1969 – 12 October 2015) was a Sydney-born author and writer for The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age who wrote the blog All Men Are Liars.
De Brito's father was the South African-born journalist Gus de Brito, who emigrated to Australia in the early 1960s. In South Africa, the elder de Brito had written about the emerging black civil rights movement; and in 1972, as a reporter for Sydney tabloid The Daily Mirror, he wrote a major feature article about Aboriginal rights activist Gary Foley. Later, Foley recalled the article "overnight had created instant notoriety … for me", but that he had developed "an unlikely friendship" with the journalist who wrote it.