Paul Henry signs off - for now

After two years of early starts, Paul Henry is looking forward to not having to get up in the middle of the night.

"The funny thing about the whole thing, is you pace yourself don't you?" he said on Friday morning's show - his last.

"If someone said, 'Actually we're going to do one more week,' I just think I'd stab myself in the heart."

Corrections Minister Judith Collins, one of his final guests, told the host the show is "really hot" in prisons.

"It's because you're often in trouble," she said, presenting him with a papier mâché
likeness of himself, made by an inmate in Invercargill.

"I think the prisoners can see a kindred spirit in me," Henry replied. "I'm a prisoner in a different way. I'm a criminal, I just haven't been locked up."

"They apparently quite like me, because I'm often in trouble too," the controversial MP concurred.

Paul Henry, as a bird popping out of an egg
Paul Henry, as a bird popping out of an egg (Newshub.)

Back in 2017

Friday might mark the end of Paul Henry the show, but the team behind it promises the man himself will be back on air in 2017.

Henry, with co-hosts Ingrid Hipkiss and Jim Kayes, dramatically improved TV3's ratings in the mornings, particularly in the crucial 25-54 demographic.

Next year will see the 6am slot taken by Duncan Garner's The AM Show. Producer of both, Sarah Bristow, says she hopes Garner will build on what Henry has achieved over the past two years.

"We are super proud of what we've achieved in such a short timeframe, and we look forward to building on that momentum in what is our next venture in the mornings - The AM Show," she told Newshub.

The grand experiment

Earlier this year, at the 2016 NZ Radio Awards, Henry took out the Sir Paul Holmes Broadcaster of the Year title.

"So much of the success of the show is down to Paul," says Ms Bristow.

"His energy, passion and high standards are astounding. He is such a versatile performer, easily transitioning between fits of laughter and carrying out some of the best interviews ever conducted in New Zealand media."

Paul Henry was more than just a TV show, being simulcast on RadioLIVE. Ms Bristow says it was a challenge to create a show that worked on both formats.

"There was no blueprint for this kind of programme anywhere in the world, so we were really going with our gut instinct. Our audience in New Zealand has been treated to what is a world first, and I'm so proud of how many Kiwis have tuned in on our various platforms each and every day."

Ms Bristow says Henry will be back "in some form or other" next year.

The AM Show hits the air in February.

Newshub.