Emily Maitlis facts for kids
Quick facts for kids
Emily Maitlis
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Maitlis in 2010
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Born | Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
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6 September 1970
Education | Queens' College, Cambridge (BA) |
Occupation | Journalist, news presenter |
Notable credit(s)
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BBC News BBC London News Newsnight BBC News at One BBC News at Five BBC News at Six BBC News at Ten BBC Weekend News LBC Global |
Spouse(s) |
Mark Gwynne
(m. 2001) |
Children | 2 |
Emily Maitlis (born 6 September 1970) is a British journalist and former newsreader for the BBC. She was the lead anchor of the BBC Two news and current affairs programme Newsnight until the end of 2021. She has since been a presenter of the daily podcast The News Agents on LBC Radio.
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Early life and education
Maitlis was born in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, to British Jewish parents; her paternal grandmother was a Jewish refugee who fled Nazi Germany. She is the daughter of Professor Peter Maitlis FRS, Emeritus Professor of Inorganic Chemistry at the University of Sheffield, and Marion Basco, a psychotherapist from Cambridge.
Her mother studied French and Spanish at St Hugh's College, Oxford. In September 1958, her mother taught French at Cambridgeshire High School for Girls (since 1974 Long Road Sixth Form College).
Maitlis was brought up on Park Avenue in Sheffield, South Yorkshire, with her two older sisters, Nicky and Sally. She was educated at King Edward VII School, Sheffield, and studied English at Queens' College, Cambridge. At university she took part in The Marlowe Society, in productions such as Doctor Faustus, directed by Clare Venables, with Stuart Crossman, and Dominic Rowan. She gained a 2.1 degree.
Career
Early radio and television work in the Far East
Maitlis initially wanted to work as a theatre director, prompted by her love for drama, but instead went into radio broadcasting. Prior to working in news, she was a documentary maker in Cambodia and China. She worked for the NBC network and was based in Hong Kong.
She spent six years in Hong Kong with TVB News and NBC Asia, initially as a business reporter creating documentaries, and then as a presenter in Hong Kong covering the collapse of the tiger economies in 1997. She also covered the transfer of sovereignty over Hong Kong with Jon Snow for Channel 4. She moved to Sky News in the UK as a business correspondent, and to BBC London News when the programme was relaunched in 2001.
BBC career
During 2005, Maitlis appeared as the question-master on the game show The National Lottery: Come And Have A Go. She was a regular presenter on the BBC News Channel for a decade between 2006 and 2016, alongside Ben Brown and Jon Sopel. She also presented BBC Breakfast and from May 2006 until July 2007 presented STORYFix on BBC News, a light-hearted look at the week's news set to up-beat music. In July 2007, she was appointed as a contributing editor to The Spectator magazine, an unpaid post. This had been approved by her immediate manager, the head of BBC Television News Peter Horrocks, but the decision was subsequently overturned by his superior, the BBC News director Helen Boaden. In 2012, Maitlis presented the US 2012 election coverage on BBC One and the BBC News Channel alongside David Dimbleby, when incumbent US President Barack Obama and Mitt Romney were fighting for the presidency of the US. In 2016, she presented a news discussion programme called This Week's World on BBC Two, late afternoon on Saturdays.
Maitlis was a main presenter of Newsnight on BBC Two, alongside Kirsty Wark and Emma Barnett. She first joined the programme as a relief presenter in 2006, working her way up to be lead anchor of the programme following the departure of Evan Davis in 2018. After each show, before bed, she answered emails from viewers. In April 2019, she published Airhead: The Imperfect Art of Making News, a book describing how television news is produced. As of 2019 she was the only Newsnight presenter not to have attended a private school.
..... The interview was broadcast on the BBC's Newsnight programme on 16 November 2019. Due in part to the disastrous fallout from Prince Andrew's performance during this interview, he resigned from his royal duties.
In February 2020, her interview with Prince Andrew won Interview of the Year and Scoop of the Year awards at the 2020 RTS Television Journalism Awards. Maitlis was an executive producer on A Very Royal Scandal (2024), a film about the interview. Also released that year was Scoop, adapted from a book of the same name by Sam McAlister, a former BBC producer.
In 2019, Maitlis was amongst the highest paid BBC news and current affairs staff, receiving a salary between £260,000-£264,999. From 2020, Maitlis presented the BBC podcast, Americast, with Jon Sopel, the BBC's North America editor. The podcasts originally focused on the 2020 election and contain analysis as well as an array of interviews from across the political scene. Americast received positive reviews and performed well, becoming one of UK's most listened to podcast of any genre.
Post BBC career
On 22 February 2022, Maitlis announced her resignation from the BBC after signing with Global, the parent of LBC. She launched a daily podcast and joint radio show again with ex-BBC journalist, Jon Sopel. In an address at the 2022 Edinburgh TV Festival, Maitlis cautioned journalists about self-censorship in the name of being reluctant to take on populist critics.
The News Agents, a daily podcast from Global Media presented by Maitlis, Jon Sopel, and Lewis Goodall, was launched on 30 August 2022. The opening edition, titled Trump – Prison or President?, focused on the FBI investigation into Donald Trump's handling of presidential documents, with Anthony Scaramucci, the former White House Director of Communications, appearing as a guest.
In May 2023, Maitlis was featured in a two-part Channel 4 documentary called Andrew: The Problem Prince; which explores the events leading up to Prince Andrew's infamous Newsnight interview of 2019.
In November 2023, Maitlis was named as an executive producer on A Very Royal Scandal with Maitlis being played by Ruth Wilson and Michael Sheen as Prince Andrew.
Maitlis hosted overnight coverage of the 2024 United Kingdom general election for Channel 4 alongside Krishnan Guru-Murthy.
Allegations of partiality
In a Newsnight discussion concerning Brexit on 15 July 2019, a viewer alleged that Maitlis had been "sneering and bullying" towards columnist Rod Liddle. Maitlis had accused Liddle of writing columns containing "consistent casual racism week after week", and asked Liddle if he would describe himself as a racist. The BBC Executive Complaints Unit upheld the complaint against her, agreeing that she had been "persistent and personal" in her criticism of Liddle, thus "leaving her open to the charge that she had failed to be even-handed" in the discussion between Brexit-supporting Liddle and his anti-Brexit opponent Tom Baldwin. The Complaints Unit did not find that Maitlis had failed to be even-handed. Conservative commentator Douglas Murray described the segment as "more of a drive-by shooting than an interview".
On 27 May 2020, the BBC said that Maitlis's introduction to Newsnight the night before, which discussed the allegations that the Prime Minister's chief adviser, Dominic Cummings, had contravened lockdown restrictions, "did not meet our standards of due impartiality". The BBC said in a statement: "The BBC must uphold the highest standards of due impartiality in its news output. Ms Maitlis started the show by declaring that Mr Cummings had 'broken the rules'." She did not present Newsnight on that day, asking to take the night off. On 3 September 2020, a report by the BBC's Editorial Complaints Unit also ruled against Maitlis in the matter, stating Maitlis's comments "went beyond an attempt to set out the programme agenda" and that the "definitive and at times critical nature of the language" had "placed the presenter closer to one side of the debate" and thus "did not meet the required standards on accuracy or impartiality".
In February 2021, Maitlis was criticised over lacking impartiality after sharing a tweet by Piers Morgan which condemned the government. Conservative Party politician Andrew Bridgen said the BBC journalist appeared to be ignoring impartiality guidelines. In her August 2022 MacTaggart Lecture at the Edinburgh TV Festival, Maitlis reflected on the incident, saying that BBC editors were initially complimentary. In the lecture, Maitlis also questioned the promptness with which the BBC apologised. The following day, after a complaint from the Prime Minister's office, the BBC apologised and removed the segment from its streaming service.
Personal life
Maitlis is married to investment manager Mark Gwynne, who is Catholic, from rural Waters Upton in north-east Shropshire. They met while working in Hong Kong. They live in Kensington, London, and have two sons.
Maitlis is a keen runner and a WellChild Celebrity Ambassador. She speaks fluent French, Spanish, and Italian.
Maitlis presented the 2012 World Jewish Relief's annual dinner at Guildhall, London. While her parents were Jewish, she has said that she is "not very practising".
Awards
In 2012, Maitlis received an honorary doctorate from Sheffield Hallam University. She won Broadcast Journalist of the Year at the 2017 London Press Club Awards and the Network Presenter of the Year award at the RTS Television Journalism Awards in 2019 and 2020. She received the German Hanns Joachim Friedrichs Award in 2020.