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I have known Rob Hosking for 20 years and I have fond memories of having worked with him during my twelve-year tenure at the National Business Review (NBR). He was a good friend and a great journalist. The following report appeared in the NBR website on Wednesday, January 23, 2019.
One of NBR’s longest-serving journalists and best-loved columnists, Rob Hosking, has died in Wellington after a year-long battle with cancer.
Rob began writing for NBR in 1996 after a three-year stint at technology magazine Computer World and became a distinctive voice in Wellington’s political and economic discourse, his coverage of events often laced with a mix of deep background knowledge and a playful turn of phrase.
The Order Paper
He filed the first copy for his weekly political column, Order Paper, in 2005 and what was to be his final contribution just last month.
Entitled The strange year of ultra-cautious politics, it examined the unusually subdued beginnings of the Labour/NZ First coalition government.
NBR publisher Todd Scott said journalism had lost a “good bugger” and a great man.
“Rob was always so proud of the relevance, respect, trust and growing mana of the NBR newsroom and our innovative embracing of digital disruption. He would often boast how people in Wellington were taking notice. He may have hardly met a deadline but his analysis was always worth the Editor’s grief. Terrible at graphics and attaching pics, he would nail the narrative in a balanced, considered and professional manner.”
Thinking Man’s Journalist
Wellington-based colleague Grant Walker said Rob was “a thinking man’s journalist” who saw things that others couldn’t see.
He was regarded with tremendous respect by his fellow journalists and by politicians on both sides of the political divide.
Rob Hosking in full flight on one of his favourite topics – conservatism.
As well as his paid journalistic work, Rob embraced social media with Twitter and posted regularly on his own blog.
He pinned a link to a December 2018 blog post to the top of his Twitter page. It was a “Thought for the Day” in praise of libraries and second-hand book stores.
Libraries and Second-hand Bookstores
Rob loved libraries but derived particular joy from second-hand bookstores and even dreamed about them.
He wrote: “I like to think of this as a kind of premonition of a heavenly afterlife – especially one which also comes with a well-stocked shelf of single malts.”
Picture of Rob Hosking from NBR