Ted Young (journalist)

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Ted Young (born 1961) is a British journalist and current editor of Metro.[1] He was appointed to the role in 2014.[2] Earlier in his career he was night editor for The Sun, editor of London Lite, editor of MailOnline and online editor of the New York Daily News.

Early life[]

Young was born in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. The son of a diplomat, he grew up in Nigeria, India, Iceland and Seychelles. He was educated at Eastbourne College in East Sussex and Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge.[2][3]

Newspaper career[]

Young has worked for the Harrow Observer (1983), The Northern Echo (1985), Today (1988), Daily Mail (1995), The Sun (1999), Daily Express (2002), London Lite (2005–2009), MailOnline (2009–2012), the New York Daily News Online (2012–2014) and Metro (2014–present).[2]

Richard Desmond incident (Daily Express)[]

In 2004 Young left the Daily Express after allegedly being punched by its then-owner Richard Desmond. Desmond, who denied attacking Young, was reportedly unhappy that a story about the death of 1960s pop star Carl Wayne had not been included in the newspaper.[4] Young took the Daily Express to an employment tribunal in 2005 but a settlement was reached the day before the hearing was due to begin. The terms of the settlement were not made public but press reports claimed Young was paid "a six-figure sum".[2][5]

New York Daily News Online[]

Young was hired as editor of the New York Daily News Online by the newspaper's then editor-in-chief and fellow Briton Colin Myler in May 2012.[6]

During Young's time as web editor, it became the second most-visited newspaper website in the US, surpassed only by The New York Times.[7] Young received press attention during 2012's Hurricane Sandy for managing to edit the New York Daily News overnight despite a power cut and flooding to its offices in New York City.[8]

Metro[]

Young was appointed editor of Metro in April 2014, replacing Kenny Campbell. [9] A month before he joined the newspaper, parent company DMGT separated production of Metro newspaper and www.metro.co.uk, moving management of the website to MailOnline. This meant Young's editorship would be focused entirely on the print and tablet editions. A different editorial team was established to run the website.[10]

Following a series of changes under Young, including a redesign and an expansion of its publication regions, Metro became the highest circulation newspaper in the UK in March 2018. [11]

Young was asked to appear before the UK Parliament's Home Affairs Select Committee in April 2018, alongside other national newspaper editors, as part of its inquiry into the relationship between the media and hate crime in British society. He told MPs that Metro newspaper had tried to reduce racial tensions following terror attacks. Young told the committee: 'Mistakes happen but we definitely as a paper try to be proactive in promoting racial harmony and a sense of national togetherness, especially in times of crisis.' [12]

Personal life[]

Young is married to Marie-Benedicte Fournier, who is originally from the Hautes Alpes, France. The couple have two children, a son, Christopher Pierre, and daughter Sophie. They live in London.

References[]

  1. ^ "The Sun is toppled as Britain's biggest newspaper". The Economist. London. 2018-03-22.
  2. ^ a b c d "Metro's Ted Young: 'Our job is as an anchor, telling the basic story'". The Guardian. London. 2015-10-18.
  3. ^ Nicola Padfield (4 April 2014). "New York". Blogs from the Master, Fellows and students. Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge. Retrieved 30 May 2018.
  4. ^ "Desmond punched me, claims former Express man". The Guardian. London. 2005-08-23.
  5. ^ "Express settles with former executive". The Guardian. London. 2005-08-24.
  6. ^ "'Daily News' hires Ted Young, former editor of Mail Online, to edit its website". Politico. Virginia, USA. 2012-05-02.
  7. ^ "Daily News touts ranking: No. 2 U.S. newspaper site". Politico. Virginia, USA. 2014-01-30.
  8. ^ "With Offices Out, NY Daily News Keeps Publishing". US News and World Report. Washington DC, USA. 2012-11-02.
  9. ^ "Kenny Campbell steps down after 15 years as editor of Metro". Press Gazette. London, UK. 2014-04-14.
  10. ^ Sweney, Mark (2014-03-05). "Metro website to be folded into Mail Online". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2017-06-16.
  11. ^ "The Sun is toppled as Britain's biggest newspaper". The Economist. London. 2018-03-22.
  12. ^ "Daily Express helped create 'Islamophobic sentiment', admits newspaper's editor". The Independent. London. 2018-04-25.

External links[]

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