Martin began working for
Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) in Sydney as a cadet in 1965. He was appointed the ABC's New York City correspondent in 1969.
Elton John,
Jim Carrey,
Michael Douglas,
Billy Crystal,
Jodie Foster,
Michael Crawford,
Paul Hogan,
Russell Crowe and
Madonna. He hosted
A Current Affair from 1994 to 1998 and went on to present three series –
Our Century,
The Great Debates and
Simply the Best – before returning to
60 Minutes to do special reports. In 2003 he resumed as host of
A Current Affair. It was announced in December 2005 that he would become the Nine Network's Senior Reporter. This quashed much speculation that he would return to
Four Corners at the ABC, as the fluctuating ratings for
A Current Affair had decreased. Over the past few years he has assisted in reporting with some major events including the Indonesian
tsunami disaster in 2005. Former
Today co-host
Tracy Grimshaw replaced Martin on
ACA at the beginning of 2006. He was then a senior correspondent for Nine Network. He has also hosted diverse television events, from the
Logie Awards,
Commonwealth Games,
World Cup Cricket,
1988 Bicentenary Spectacular and Federal and State Election nights to the aftermath of the
11 September terrorist attacks. From 16 September 2007, Martin took over as co-host of
Sunday, replacing
Ross Greenwood. Martin left the Nine Network in February 2008, allegedly due to differences with management over budget cuts and a timeslot change for the
Sunday program. On 28 March 2008, it was announced that Martin would lead the official broadcast of the
World Youth Day event in Sydney from 15 to 20 July 2008. In October 2008, Martin criticised the Nine Network and other commercial television operations during an address at the annual
Andrew Olle Media Lecture. The subject of Martin's criticism was an alleged "dumbing down" of journalism and news coverage. Since 2014, Martin has been the presenter for the
SBS series
First Contact. In 2015, he featured on the SBS Australian version of the popular international franchise genealogy television documentary series
Who Do You Think You Are?. In 2017, he hosted
Look Me In The Eye. In 2016 and 2017, Martin presented three primetime specials for the regional network
Prime7 focusing on major social issues impacting their viewing areas:
Ice: The Scourge of Regional Australia, ''Dark Secrets: Australia's Hidden Shame
, and It Won't Happen To Me.'' In August 2018, Martin was announced as a presenter on the
Nine Network's new travel series
Helloworld, which aired on 7 October 2018 and aired for the first two seasons. In 2020, during the first Australian
COVID-19 lockdowns, Martin presented the ABC comedy series
At Home Alone Together, a satire of lifestyle television with a pandemic theme. In 2024, Martin presented the three-part SBS series,
Ray Martin: The Last Goodbye. The series explores trends, rituals and practices surrounding death and funerals. == Controversy ==