After "a number of diversions", including working overseas, in 1989, and began working with the
Otago Daily Times in
Dunedin. for 17 years until 2021.
Controversial views His views have occasionally been controversial. An example was his tongue-in-cheek satire piece describing Paul Henry's "
Breakfast for Canterbury", which was broadcast by
TVNZ following the
2010 Canterbury earthquake. The piece began: "As dawn broke over the ruined city, God decided to punish the urbanites one more time. He sent them
Paul Henry and his Breakfast television team. Billed as Breakfast for Canterbury, the Auckland TV people came down once more to feast on the already well-gnawed bones of injured Christchurch." In 2012, van Beynen published
Trapped, an account of experiences of the
2011 Christchurch earthquake. He made trenchant comment on, and took a controversial position in relation to the
David Bain retrial, arguing that David was guilty and the jury got it wrong. Van Beynen was accused of approaching a juror, which led to criticism of him by an official of the
High Court and media outlets. Years later, Van Beynen wrote and narrated a ten-episode
podcast covering the
Bain murder case, "
Black Hands". The podcast was launched on 20 July 2017. He also wrote and narrated a one-episode sequel podcast, released on 17 September 2017, in response to critical comments about him by former judge
Ian Binnie in a radio interview with
Kim Hill. ==Awards==