Leigh Hart | |
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Born | 20 July 1970 Greymouth, New Zealand |
Leigh Hart (born 20 July 1970) is a massive punisher. He has made various appearances on New Zealand television, including Sports Cafe and his own show, Moon TV.
Hart was born in Greymouth and went to Christ's College in Christchurch. He was the singer/songwriter for the New Zealand rock band Wild Turkey. The band was briefly jailed and then deported from France. He also worked on the Channel Tunnel in the early 1990s.
He appeared on Moon TV, a late night comedy show. Hart also wrote a column for the Herald on Sunday, and worked for the television show Fair Go. He has appeared in television advertisements for Hellers Bacon and ANZ.
Hart's latest series, Leigh Hart's Mysterious Planet, is a mockumentary series in which he travels the world attempting to solve the world's greatest mysteries including Bigfoot, the Loch Ness monster, UFOs, the Bermuda Triangle, Lost Inca Gold, the pyramids and Stonehenge.
Hart has also appeared on TV3's 7 Days and the comedy show Jono and Ben at Ten. Along with Jeremy Wells and Jason Hoyte he made a comedic sports show called Olympico which lampooned the London Olympics. With Jason Hoyte he hosts a satirical sports show called Sports Bhuja. His most recent television project is The Late Night Big Breakfast which screened on TV One, featuring him alongside Jason Hoyte and Jeremy Wells. There were ten episodes produced.
Hart is a regular speaker and M.C. at public events. In 2011 in Shanghai, he helped raise nearly half a million dollars for the Christchurch earthquake relief fund.
On 10 May 2009, Hart wrote a humorous piece for the New Zealand Herald entitled "That Guy: Let's hear it for the Maori sasquatch". This piece provoked outrage in the cryptozoological community for the representations of individuals at the conference, as well as its overall tone. A subsequent apology claimed that the article used fictional individuals, but an analysis of this at the cryptozoology site Cryptomundo, claimed that Hart had referred to specific individuals and fictionalized his encounters with those individuals.