Today's Out Spotlight is an English economist, journalist, and presenter for the BBC. Today's Out Spotlight is Evan Davis.
Evan Harold Davis was born April 8, 1962 in Malvern, Worcestershire and grew up in Ashtead, Surrey. He attended Dorking County Grammar School, which in 1976 became The Ashcombe School, Dorking. Davis then gained a First in Philosophy, Politics and Economics at St John's College, Oxford from 1981 to 1984, before obtaining an MPA at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. While at Oxford University, he edited Cherwell, the student newspaper.
Davis began work as an economist at the Institute for Fiscal Studies, and while there he was briefly seconded to help officials work on early development of the Community Charge system of local government taxation (better known as the Poll Tax). In 1988 he moved to the London Business School, writing articles for their publication Business Strategy Review. He returned to the Institute for Fiscal Studies in 1992, writing a paper on "Britain, Europe and the Square Mile" for the European Policy Forum which argued that British financial prosperity depended on being seen as a bridgehead to the European Union.
In 1993, Davis joined the BBC as an economics correspondent. He worked as economics editor on BBC Two's Newsnight program from 1997 to 2001. In the mid-1990s he was a member of the Social Market Foundation's Advisory Council; he is a member of the British-American Project for a Successor Generation.
As the BBC's economics editor, he was responsible for reporting and analyzing economic developments on a range of programmes on BBC radio and television, particularly the Ten O'Clock News. He also had a role in shaping the extensive BBC coverage of economics across all the corporation's outputs, including online.
Davis also wrote a blog for the BBC website entitled Evanomics in which he "attempts to understand the real world, using the tool kit of economics". Subjects he discussed included road pricing, care for the elderly, Gordon Brown's Budget and how to choose wine.
Davis has won several awards including the Work Foundation's Broadcast Journalist of the Year award in 1998, 2001 and 2003, and the Harold Wincott Business Broadcaster of the Year award in 2002. In 2008, Davis was ranked first in the Independent on Sunday's "pink list" of the hundred most influential gay and lesbian figures in British society.
In mid-2007, Davis was a guest presenter on the Today program for two weeks. In April 2008, he moved from BBC Economics Editor to join the Today program as a full-time presenter replacing Carolyn Quinn. In 2009, Davis said that one of the best things about presenting on the radio is that "you can look things up on Wikipedia while on air".
On top of his duties at Today, Davis also presents The Bottom Line, a weekly discussion program on Radio 4 as well as Dragons' Denon (US equivalent- Shark Tank) BBC Two.
In July, it was announced that he would replace Jeremy Paxman as presenter of Newsnight starting in this fall. His last appearance as a presenter on Today was this past Friday.
In 1998, Davis' book, Public Spending, was published by Penguin. In it, he argued for the privatization of public services as a means to increase efficiency. Davis' second book was published in May 2011 by Little, Brown, with the title Made in Britain: How the Nation Earns Its Living.
Davis is openly gay and lives with his partner Guillaume Baltz, a French landscape architect.
You guys all cracked me up with your questions for Austin. I especially love the dropped comment about liking to eat Special K, LOL.
ReplyDeletedestiny said...
ReplyDeleteYou guys all cracked me up with your questions for Austin. I especially love the dropped comment about liking to eat Special K, LOL.
The best one was M&M's - "How much did you hate Heath Ledger?" I'd wager Austin danced a little jig when he died.