Sandra Sully has opted for a sassy new look as she approaches her sixties.
The 59-year-old debuted her changed style on Tuesday evening when she presented Channel 10’s news bulletin.
The news anchor showed off her youthful tousled hairstyle, with full bangs and flowing, layered platinum locks in a longer style.
Sandra also showed off her figure in a fitted blazer with a deep V-neck that showed off a hint of bust.
She also showed off her curvaceous physique in tight pants, looking fresh and much younger than her years.
Sandra Sully has opted for a sassy new look as she approaches her sixties. Previously pictured
The 59-year-old debuted her changed style on Tuesday evening when she presented Channel 10’s news bulletin (pictured)
Sandra also showed off her figure in a fitted blazer with a deep V-neck that showed off a hint of bust
The television star normally has a more conservative look and often wears her hair in a bun and in less revealing ensembles.
Sully, who has been a TV journalist for 30 years, has always adhered to a strict health regime.
“I have been health conscious all my life,” the presenter recently told the channel Daily telegram.
‘I like to sweat. “I don’t like to exercise where I don’t get hot and sweaty,” she continued.
‘The adjustment for me over the past ten years has been accepting that my body is getting older because it keeps telling me so.’
The television star normally has a more conservative look and often wears her hair in a bun and in less revealing ensembles
Sandra added that she has adjusted some of her workouts to adapt to her body as it changes.
“Pilates really got me back on track,” she explained of the updated routine in recent years.
Sully says she avoids fried foods and has long been eating whole foods to stay fit and healthy.
‘I’m not one for fried food. I have developed more of a savory tooth than a sweet tooth. So I try to avoid cheese and dips. Rice is the new chocolate,” she told the publication.
‘When I was covering the late news for so long, I had to make sure I ate well because the hours were hard enough. I knew if I had to take care of myself inside.’
The journalist told the ABC that women were judged differently to men in the media and that people had focused on her appearance for years.
‘I became increasingly aware of the double standards by which women were judged. What you wear, how you present yourself, what your hair looked like, your makeup,” she said.
‘We were judged much more severely than men and so that was an extra kind of obstacle that had to be overcome.’
Sully, who has been a TV journalist for 30 years, has always adhered to a strict health regime