January 23, 2025 7:29 pm EST

Alex Cullen has parted ways with the Nine network amid the ongoing fallout from his acceptance of $50,000 from The Block billionaire Adrian Portelli.

The Today presenter, 44, was given the sizeable sum after he was the first media personality to use Portelli’s self-applied nickname ‘McLaren Man’ live on air.

Cullen’s colleague and Today host Karl Stafanovic made the announcement on-air on Friday morning.

‘As most of you are well aware, our colleague Alex Cullen has not been on air with us this past week,’ a solemn Karl told viewers. 

‘There has been widespread reporting on the circumstances surrounding this, what I can say is that last night, Alex and Nine agreed that he would finish with the network.

‘Alex has, of course, been part of the Today family for five years now, he’s always ready with a smile and a laugh and without hesitation speaking for all of us here, we can say that we are going to miss him terribly, that’s for sure.

Alex Cullen has parted ways with the Nine network amid the ongoing fallout from his acceptance of $50,000 from The Block billionaire Adrian Portelli. Pictured: Today co-hosts Karl Stefanovic and Sarah Abo

‘Alex is a terrific fella, what you see is what you get and he has been a great mate to all of us over these years and we wish Alex, his wife Bonnie and his beautiful kids all the very best for the future,’ Karl concluded.

Portelli had grown tired of his long-used nickname ‘Mr Lambo’ and offered the cash reward to the first person to use his new moniker on air, with Cullen obliging on the Today Show on Friday.

The ill-advised stunt led to Cullen being suspended by Nine and he had not appeared on air since while the network investigate the payment, which has now been donated to charity by Portelli.

On Tuesday, Cullen resurfaced on social media as he shared a birthday tribute post to his daughters on Instagram.

He shared an array of sweet pictures of his twin daughters Audrey and Evie celebrating their sixth birthday.

The Today presenter, 44, was given the sizeable sum after he was the first media personality to use Portelli’s self-applied nickname ‘McLaren Man’ live on air. Pictured: Cullen 

Alex – who shares three children with his wife Bonnie – also shared pictures of his son Max, three, as he enjoyed some low-key family time on the special day.

In a caption, he gushed: ‘Happy birthday to my darling girls Audrey and Evie.’

While he made no mention of the Portelli scandal, he did get support from his followers, who took to the comments  to share their hopes he will soon return to air.

One wrote: ‘Happy birthday not watching channel nine till your back,’ while another said: ‘Missing you! You are just the best! Wake up Channel 9.’

A third commented: ‘Gorgeous girls. Can’t believe they’re 6 already! Just heard about all the work drama. Hope it gets resolved quickly.’

While a fourth penned: ‘Boycotting 9 until you’re back!’ and another added: ‘Happy birthday young ladies – hoping to see you back home on 9 really soon.’

His Nine co-stars Karl Stefanovic and Belinda Russell also gave birthday messages for his two daughters as they appeared to lend him their support.

During his absence from the Today Show, he has been replaced by Ctint Stanaway  reporting live from Melbourne for Nine’s coverage of the Australian Open tennis. 

Portelli has grown tired of his long-used nickname ‘Mr Lambo’ and offered the cash reward to the first person to use his new moniker on air, with Cullen obliging on the Today Show on Friday

The scandal kicked off when Portelli said he would pay $50,000 to the first media personality who used his desired new self-given nickname ‘McLaren Man’ on air as he hoped to ditch his unwanted nickname ‘Mr Lambo’.

Cullen was the first to use Portelli’s preferred new nickname, and The Block entrepreneur then posted what appeared to be a bank transfer of $50,000 to the presenter.

Accepting cash, gifts or benefits to undermine journalistic independence, and improperly using a journalistic position for personal gain, are both breaches of the journalism code of ethics as defined by the Media Entertainment and Arts Alliance  union. 

Nine’s suspension of Cullen went ahead despite Portelli’s claim that Cullen intended the money to be paid to charity all along, and posted details of $25,000 payments made on his behalf to both the Salvation Army and the RSPCA.

‘Alex Cullen… on behalf of you, mate, $25,000 to the Salvation Army and $25,000 to the RSPCA,’ Portelli wrote on Instagram. 

‘I’ve kept pretty quiet about what unfolded with Alex, but even before he’d heard from Ch9, we had a conversation where he expressed his desire to donate the money.

‘That speaks volumes about his character. Alex, you’re an absolute gentleman.

Alex was stood down by Nine over the stunt and hasn’t been on air, but broke his social media silence on Tuesday as he shared photographs from his twin daughter’s sixth birthday party 

On Tuesday, Portelli also defended Cullen and claimed he intended the money to be paid to charity, posting details of two $25,000 payments made to the Salvation Army and the RSPCA

‘If Ch9 let you go (though I really hope they don’t!), I’d be more than happy to collaborate with you on something. True class, mate!’

Max Markson, who has been a leading PR agent for 50 years, said although it was ‘not normal’ behaviour for a presenter to accept such rewards, he believed Cullen had clearly done so in a light-hearted fashion.

‘I am sure they didn’t think they were going to get the $50,000 but then they got it and unfortunately Alex has been stood down for the moment, which is crazy,’ he told Daily Mail Australia on Monday. 

‘He shouldn’t have taken the $50,000 obviously, but he’s given it back. I don’t think that’s the reason they did it, they did it as a joke, obviously.’

Mr Markson did not think it would do Cullen’s TV career any lasting damage and predicted that he will be back on air within seven days.

Nine insiders also told Daily Mail Australia that the stunt could have been beneficial for the network and Portelli, if Cullen had advised the promoter that, as a journalist, he was unable to accept any payment for making the comment on-air. 

Portelli first received the unwanted nickname ‘Mr Lambo’ after turning up to a 2022 auction of popular house makeover show The Block in a yellow Lamborghini. 

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