📰 A Current Affair, Channel 9, and the AUD $900,000 Claim
Fact, Fiction, or a Failure of Basic Journalism?
A Current Affair on Channel 9 recently aired claims that a Balinese builder named “Made” is owed AUD $900,000 by Lux Property.
It was presented to the public as if this were an established fact.
But when even the most basic commercial and construction realities are applied, the story begins to collapse almost immediately.
🏗️ The First Question That Should Have Ended the Story
Let’s start with the most obvious question:
What builder in Bali — or anywhere in Indonesia — builds first and hopes to be paid later?
The construction industry in Bali operates almost universally on advance payments.
Builders require upfront funds for:
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Materials
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Labour
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Subcontractors
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Logistics
Progress payments are made before work proceeds, not after.
The idea that a local builder would extend nearly AUD $1 million in unsecured credit, build projects entirely out of his own pocket, and then simply wait to be paid is economically absurd.
That alone should have been the first red flag for any journalist claiming to conduct investigative reporting.
❓ The Question That Matters
So the real question is simple:
Did Made ever extend Lux Property a line of credit approaching AUD $900,000 and build completed or substantially completed projects without being paid?
Yes or no.
If the answer were yes, proof would be straightforward:
📌 Show the project locations
📌 Show construction records
📌 Show invoices
📌 Show bank statements showing no advance payments
📌 Show progress reports matching physical construction
None of this was shown.
Instead, the story relied entirely on untested claims and emotional narrative.
That is not journalism.
That is theatre.
🔍 What A Current Affair Failed to Disclose
Now let’s move to what the program did not tell viewers.
The builder Made was introduced to Lux Property by KINNARA (sometimes misspelled Canara), an Asian real estate platform whose CEO Adrian Campbell was bought out of the Marina Bay City Lombok project by Lux in 2025 for millions of dollars.
After receiving that buyout, Kinnara allegedly:
⚠️ Denied the buyout
⚠️ Refused to transfer shares and digital assets
⚠️ Continued marketing as if it still owned the project
⚠️ Engaged in what Lux describes as a campaign of character assassination
This context was central.
It was not disclosed.
💰 The Next Critical Question
Is Made’s legal action against Lux being funded or coordinated by Kinnara?
Yes or no.
Lux states the answer is yes, and claims evidence exists showing that:
📌 Kinnara introduced Made to Lux
📌 Kinnara is funding and coordinating the legal action
📌 The claim forms part of a broader post-buyout attack
This is not a minor detail.
It is material.
It was absent from the broadcast.
🚫 Why Was the Builder Terminated?
Another question the program did not ask:
Why was Made terminated by Lux in 2025?
According to Lux:
⚠️ Made was terminated from three projects
⚠️ Audits allegedly showed:
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Overcharging
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Inflated progress reports
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Large advance payments taken
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Work not completed in line with payments
Lux further alleges that Made owes Lux approximately AUD $1.2 million for work paid for but not delivered.
That reverses the entire narrative.
Instead of:
“Lux owes a poor Balinese builder AUD $900,000”
The allegation becomes:
“A builder was advanced significant funds, failed to deliver, was terminated, and is now part of a coordinated legal and media attack.”
That is not a nuance.
That is the entire story.
🧾 What Was Never Verified
A Current Affair did not:
❌ Verify construction sites
❌ Verify payment structures
❌ Verify advance payments
❌ Investigate Kinnara’s role
❌ Disclose the buyout conflict
❌ Ask who funded the legal action
❌ Ask why the builder was terminated
Which raises an unavoidable question:
Was this investigative journalism — or low-effort tabloid storytelling?
🕵️ What Real Journalism Would Have Asked
Real investigative journalism would have asked:
🔍 Where are the projects allegedly built on credit?
🔍 Who funded the legal action?
🔍 Who introduced the builder?
🔍 Why was he terminated?
🔍 Where are the bank transfers?
🔍 Where are the construction records?
If the claim were true, proving it would be easy.
If it is false, exposing it is even easier.
The failure to perform these basic checks does not just weaken the story.
It discredits it.
⚠️ Narrative Laundering
When media organisations stop verifying facts and start amplifying untested claims from parties in active commercial disputes, they stop serving the public.
They start serving private agendas.
This is not journalism.
It is narrative laundering.
And when a national broadcaster cannot distinguish between fact and a coordinated commercial attack, the public has every right to ask:
















