Sunday, December 22, 2024

Sandra Sully doesn’t look like this anymore!

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Sandra Sully has opted for a spicy new look as she approaches 60. 

The 59-year-old debuted her changed up style as she presented the Channel 10 news bulletin on Tuesday night. 

The news anchor showed off her youthful shag hairdo, with a full fringe and flowing, layered platinum locks in a longer style. 

Sandra also flaunted her figure in a fitted blazer that featured a deep V-neck that revealed a hint of bust. 

She also put her shapely physique on show in a pair of tight trousers, and was looking fresh and much younger than her years. 

Sandra Sully has opted for a spicy new look as she approaches 60. Pictured before
The 59-year-old debuted her changed up style as she presented the Channel 10 news bulletin on Tuesday night (pictured)
Sandra also flaunted her figure in a fitted blazer that featured a deep V-neck that revealed a hint of bust

The television star normally has a more conservative look, often wearing her hair up in a bun and in less revealing ensembles. 

Sully, who has been on TV for 30 years as a journalist, has always stuck to a strict health regime. 

‘I’ve been health-conscious my whole life,’ the presenter recently told the Daily Telegraph. 

‘I like to sweat. I don’t like exercising where I don’t get hot and sweaty,’ she went on. 

‘The adjustment for me the last 10 years has been accepting that my body’s getting older because it keeps telling me.’

The television star normally has a more conservative look, often wearing her hair up in a bun and in less revealing ensembles

Sandra added that she has changed up some of her workouts to accommodate her body as it changes.  

‘Pilates has really got me back on track,’ she explained of the updated routine in recent years.  

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Sully says she avoids fried items and has eaten ‘wholefoods’ for a long time to stay fit and healthy. 

‘I’m not someone for fried foods. I’ve developed more of a savoury tooth than a sweet tooth. So I try and avoid cheese and dips. Rice is the new chocolate,’ she told the publication. 

‘When I did the late news for so long I had to make sure I ate well because the hours were hard enough as it was. I knew if I had to look after myself on the inside’. 

The journalist told the ABC that women in the media were judged differently to men and people had been focusing on her looks for years.

‘I became increasingly aware of the double standards that women were being judged. What you wear, how you presented, what your hair looked like, your make-up,’ she said. 

‘We were judged far more harshly than men and so that was an extra kind of obstacle to overcome.’ 

Sully, who has been on TV for 30 years as a journalist, has always stuck to a strict health regime

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