Dunleavy worked in the New York bureau of
Rupert Murdoch's Australian newspapers. Journalist
William Shawcross, in his biography of Murdoch, wrote that Dunleavy was "a good-looking, hard-drinking, womanising, roustabout swashbuckler with an astounding gift for turning dross into lively cliché, drear facts into purpled prose." Dunleavy was named metropolitan editor in 1980 and held that position until 1986. Dunleavy was persuaded by Murdoch to transfer to the new
Fox network (also a Murdoch property) in 1986, and was involved in creating the United States tabloid television format in the 1980s. He became a regular reporter for
A Current Affair (produced and aired by
Fox Television Stations, and syndicated to non-Fox stations), and for the short-lived primetime newsmagazine
The Reporters (which featured much of the same people and staff as
ACA; unlike
ACA, it aired as part of Fox's primetime lineup).
ACA lasted from 1986 to 1995, after which Dunleavy returned to the
New York Post as a columnist. ==Stories==