Take note,Han Yi-seul-I (한이슬) Archives men.
Comedians Dave Hughes and Kate Langbroek are both hosts on KIIS FM, a radio station in Sydney, Australia. They do the same job, ribbing off each other as you do on an afternoon show, but Langbroek was getting paid significantly less than her male counterpart.
SEE ALSO: Women face pay inequality and have no path for advancement at Google, lawsuit claims"I found out last year that you get paid 40 per cent more than I do for doing this show," she said on air back on International Women's Day in March.
Hughes was aghast at the revelation, and said he felt "terrible." Up until that point, the pair had never discussed how much they get paid.
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"You don't need to feel terrible. It wasn't your fault. You were born with two oranges and a string bag," Langbroek added, referring to testicles.
According to News Corp, she raised the issue with KIIS FM management, who then paid her the same as her co-host for the rest of 2016. But Hughes' pay for 2017 had already been locked in, until he found out about the gap live on air.
So he took a pay cut, ensuring they would be both paid the same in future.
"I couldn't be happier. You deserve it," Hughes said. "Sometimes that might mean men might get paid less than what they might have got to make sure that what's fair is fair."
Hughes later revealed on Twitter that Langbroek would have quit her job had their pay not been at parity.
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The revelation came following a discussion about Lisa Wilkinson, a former co-host on Australia's Todayshow, who reportedly quit because she was getting paid half as much as her male co-host.
Pay disparity between genders also garnered attention at the BBC earlier this year in a report released by the broadcaster. It revealed a significant gap between male and female staff, and that two-thirds of high paid BBC stars, earning more than £150,000 ($198,000), were male.
So yeah, pay everyone fairly people. It's not hard.
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