Ian Masters (b. 1947) is an Australian-born American broadcaster, BBC-trained journalist, author, screenwriter, and documentary filmmaker. He created and hosts Background Briefing, a public-affairs radio program and podcast devoted to foreign policy, national security, intelligence, and American politics. Over more than four decades on the air, he built one of the most durable franchises in American public-interest broadcasting, and he did it from outside the institutional structures of network television, major newspapers, and the think tank world. His career offers a study in how an independent broadcaster can sustain serious coverage of international affairs across the end of the Cold War, the September 11 attacks, the Iraq War, and the return of great-power rivalry, all while the commercial radio industry around him moved toward ideological entertainment.
Masters comes from one of the most productive media families Australia has produced. His mother, Olga Masters (1919-1986), worked for decades as a country and suburban newspaper journalist before publishing her first book of fiction at age 63. In the four years before her death she became one of Australia’s most acclaimed writers, with The Home Girls, Loving Daughters, and Amy’s Children securing her a permanent place in Australian letters. His father, Charles Masters, taught school. The couple raised seven children, and six of them made careers in media and the arts. Roy Masters (b. 1941), the eldest, coached rugby league at the top professional level before becoming a sports columnist for The Sydney Morning Herald. Quentin Masters (b. 1946) directed and produced films from London. Chris Masters (b. 1948) became the most decorated investigative reporter in Australian television; his Four Corners report “The Moonlight State” triggered the Fitzgerald Inquiry and brought down the government of Sir Joh Bjelke-Petersen in Queensland. Sue Masters produced landmark Australian television drama, including Brides of Christ and SeaChange, for the ABC and Channel Ten. Deb Masters also worked as a producer. The family constitutes a genuine dynasty, with influence running across journalism, literature, sport, film, and television drama.
Within this family, Ian Masters took a path none of his siblings chose. He trained at the BBC, absorbed the British public-service broadcasting tradition, and then left both Australia and Britain for the United States. He settled in Los Angeles in the late 1970s, arriving in a media market dominated by entertainment but home to KPFK-FM, the Pacifica Radio outlet that had served as a platform for dissenting and noncommercial voices since 1959. In 1980 he launched Background Briefing on KPFK as a weekly Sunday program. The title borrowed the vocabulary of the diplomatic and intelligence worlds, and the borrowing was deliberate. Masters conceived the program as something like an open-source intelligence briefing for citizens, a weekly hour in which the people who knew the most about international security would explain what they knew to anyone who cared to listen.
The timing favored him. The program began as the Cold War entered its final and most dangerous decade. The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, the collapse of détente, the Euromissile crisis, the Reagan defense buildup, and the nuclear freeze movement all generated public appetite for informed discussion of strategy and arms control. Much of the activist broadcasting on the left treated these subjects through the lens of protest. Masters treated them through the lens of expertise. He brought diplomats, defectors, military analysts, scholars, and former intelligence officers to a Pacifica audience more accustomed to movement voices, and he asked them about throw-weights, verification regimes, Soviet succession politics, and the internal logic of deterrence. He covered subjects that fell into the gap between commercial media, which found them too technical, and activist media, which found them too compromising. Strategic nuclear doctrine, intelligence failure, and the inner workings of authoritarian states became his recurring terrain.
While the conventional host poses as a stand-in for the uninformed listener and asks the guest to start from zero, Masters approaches the guest as an informed interlocutor. His questions often run a minute or longer, synthesizing the history of an issue and the competing interpretations of it, before he asks the guest to confirm, refine, or dispute his account. Critics of the method note that it can crowd the guest. Its defenders note what it makes possible: conversations that begin where most broadcast interviews end, with specialists pushed past their talking points into the disputed territory of their fields. The method presumes a listener willing to work, and over four decades Masters found enough of them to sustain the program.
The history of Background Briefing also tracks the history of American alternative media and its troubles. Pacifica Radio passed through repeated financial crises, governance wars, and purges from the 1990s onward, and KPFK suffered with the rest of the network. The program expanded from weekly to daily distribution in 2009, reaching more than forty stations and a national podcast audience. Masters later resigned from KPFK amid the station’s turmoil and produced the program from his home in Santa Monica, distributing it as an independent podcast and through KPFA in Berkeley and other affiliates. He returned the program to KPFK at the beginning of 2025 after the station instituted reforms under interim management. Through all of it he kept editorial control, financing the program through listener support and independent syndication rather than institutional patronage. The arrangement cost him reach and money. It bought him autonomy, and autonomy was the asset he refused to sell.
In 2022 the Los Angeles chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists honored Masters with its Distinguished Journalist Award for Audio, a recognition of more than forty years of sustained public-affairs work. In 2005 he married the British-American actress Christina Pickles (b. 1935), known for St. Elsewhere and Friends, a union that placed the most determined anti-entertainment broadcaster in Los Angeles inside the entertainment world’s family circle.
The comparison with his brother Chris clarifies what Ian Masters is and is not. Chris Masters broke stories. He gathered evidence, named names, and brought down a state government. Ian Masters broke almost nothing. His contribution lies elsewhere, in curation and interpretation: the construction of a forum where expert knowledge reaches a general audience before it hardens into conventional wisdom, and where the listener hears the argument inside the expert community rather than its press release. In this he resembles Brian Lamb (b. 1941), the founder of C-SPAN, another broadcaster who bet that an audience existed for substance delivered without theater. Masters made the same bet with a sharper focus on intelligence, diplomacy, and war, and from a far more precarious institutional perch.
His career also poses a question about the American media system he joined. Masters arrived from a public broadcasting tradition, the BBC’s, that treated international affairs as a core obligation. He found an American system in which that obligation had no secure home. Commercial radio would not carry it. Public radio carried it in fragments. The Pacifica network, his refuge, lurched from crisis to crisis. So he built the institution himself, one program, one listener pledge at a time, and kept it running for more than forty-five years. The achievement is partly journalistic and partly architectural. He constructed an independent platform for informed political discussion outside the universities, the networks, and the think tanks, and he proved it could survive on the loyalty of an audience that wanted history, evidence, and competing interpretation rather than speed and outrage. Whether such platforms can outlive their founders remains an open question. That one man sustained this one for so long, from a rented frequency on the left edge of the dial in Los Angeles, stands as a singular fact in the recent history of American broadcasting.
‘A quarter-century of levelheaded talk’
Sean Mitchel writes for The Los Angeles Times May 7, 2007:
ON a Sunday morning like any other, when so many Southern Californians are sleeping in or heading to the beach, Ian Masters, Australian expatriate, former BBC journalist, Hollywood dropout and indefatigable student of American foreign policy, has arrived at his post behind a live microphone in the political free-fire zone of KPFK-FM (90.7) on Cahuenga Boulevard.
Looking a bit bleary-eyed, Masters nevertheless has an air of authority about him. Dressed in a smart sports coat and pressed jeans, with a healthy shag of white hair and overseas accent, he reminds you of a former road manager for the Rolling Stones. “I didn’t get much sleep last night, my girlfriend was up sick,” he tells me moments before the clock in the studio reads 11 a.m. straight up, and he bends into the microphone to introduce today’s edition of “Background Briefing,” his brainy show about current events and geopolitics that he has been doing for 26 years.
Like many programmers in public radio, Masters gets no money — zero — for all the hours that go into producing a program that is considerably more ambitious and frequently more illuminating than such Sunday morning television fare as NBC’s “Meet the Press” and ABC’s “This Week With George Stephanopoulos.”
…He will cross this expanse of intellectual and political terrain armed with smart questions drawn from a store of knowledge and reasoned opinion that he does not hesitate to share. His interviews tend to be more conversational and more probing than most — a rare mix that eschews the kind of formal objectivity familiar to American broadcast journalism without lapsing into pure advocacy or rant. With his clear, understated voice set at an unwavering pitch, Masters seems to be pushing ever onward toward the heart of the matter…
“He has the ability to ask questions and provide a point of view that inspires people to go deeper into subjects,” says Andrew Davis, the Hollywood director of “The Fugitive” and “Collateral Damage” and a longtime friend who has used Masters as a consultant. “He sees linkages that other people don’t see.”
…The seeds of the program were sown in 1978, when Masters, then a film editor, was enlisted by cinematographer Haskell Wexler to help make the anti-nukes documentary “War Without Winners,” produced by a group of retired generals and admirals. The TV documentary was a response to “The Price of Peace and Freedom,” a 30-minute Pentagon-friendly film made by the hawkish Committee on the Present Danger, a group that included Paul Wolfowitz and George H.W. Bush.
To gather material, Masters went on an extensive fact-finding tour of Washington, D.C., and the Pentagon to find a justification for the U.S. to amass more nuclear weapons. If he was going to make an advocacy film, he wanted to know the arguments on the other side.
The experience left him with “all this knowledge and nowhere to go,” he says, until he got a call from someone at KPFK with the offer of a Sunday morning show. “Reagan was coming on,” Masters remembers. “And there was a genuine concern that we were moving toward Armageddon.”
The contacts he had made in government, the military and the intelligence agencies were the start of his compiling what he calls a great Rolodex, but those same official sources have made him an object of suspicion among some KPFK supporters who have accused him of being a government apologist and CIA stooge.
The fact that he is a white male, says one station insider, does not help Masters win support internally at multicultural KPFK — or at the Pacifica network, which does not distribute the program to the other four Pacifica stations.
Masters — who is 63, has been married twice, to an English and an American actress, and has a 22-year-old daughter — recently graduated from UCLA. While he has missed out on getting rich like many of his peers, he has kept interesting company along the way, sharing flats in London with Monty Python’s Eric Idle and Australian director Bruce Beresford, and working alongside Jonathan Miller and Lindsay Anderson at the BBC. He got to know Mick Jagger while working as an editor for Tony Richardson on the 1970 movie “Ned Kelly.”
…After attending the University of Sydney, he won a scholarship to film school in Paris during the New Wave but didn’t stay long. “It was a waste of time, very academic.” He quit and started shooting film for news agencies, including the BBC, where he became an editor.
He moved to Los Angeles in the early ‘70s, met Wexler and got work editing documentaries, including “The Secret Life of Plants.” He tried his hand at screenwriting and wrote one feature for 20th Century Fox, an adaptation of the Robert Ludlum espionage thriller “The Osterman Weekend” (1983), the last film directed by Sam Peckinpah. “That was a very unpleasant experience,” he says…
“We all know he’s always in money trouble,” says Wexler. “He lives very frugally.” When he is not preparing for the program, Masters gives lectures, moderates panels and develops movie projects. He also wants to become an American citizen after more than three decades living as a legal resident alien. “I want to vote,” he says.
