Everything about William Davis Journalist totally explained
William Davis, Knight, Order of Merit of Italian Republic, (born
6 March 1933), is a
journalist, broadcaster,
editor, company director, and founder of the in-flight magazine
High Life. In the early 1990s Davis became chairman of the British Tourist Authority and
English Tourist Board. Davis remains an active commentator, broadcasting and publishing books and writing articles.
Early life
William Davis was born in
Hannover, in 1933. He came to Britain aged 16 and adopted
British citizenship. At age 18, he was already a journalist and specialised in commentary about
economics and financial affairs.
Career
During 1954-1959, William Davis was on the staff of the
Financial Times, a British international business newspaper.
Lord Beaverbrook appointed Davis the City Editor (1960-1965) of the London
Evening Standard and then he went on to become Economics Editor (1965-1968) of the
The Guardian.
During this time Davis made regular appearances on the
BBC's live
Budget programmes presented by
Ian Trethowan. Davis provided live comment and analysis of the
Chancellor of the Exchequer's Budget speech as it was delivered in the
House of Commons. There were no microphones or cameras in
Parliament at the time, so details were relayed to the BBC studio via a
teleprinter.
Davis presented BBC North's financial programme
Prospect. He took the idea of popular financial journalism to
Grace Wyndham Goldie and developed the idea into
The Money Programme for
BBC2, which he also presented. Davis was one of the first presenters of the
Radio 4 programme
The World at One, a role he shared with
William Hardcastle.
In 1968 William Davis was elected editor of the satirical magazine
Punch and the rival publication
Private Eye dubbed him "Kaiser Bill".
Davis has been a Chairman and a Director of several publishing and travel companies. He founded and was Editor-in-Chief of, the in-flight magazine
High Life. In the early 1990s William Davis became chairman of the British Tourist Authority and
English Tourist Board.
Davis appeared as a contributor on
The Pound in Your Pocket a retrospective series of archive programmes shown on
BBC Parliament in 2007. The programme marked forty years since the devaluation of the
Pound by the British government on
18 November 1967. A subject covered by Davis is his book
Three Years Hard Labour: The Road to Devaluation.
Publications
The following are books written by William Davis:
- Three Years Hard Labour: The road to devaluation, 1968.
- Merger Mania, 1970.
- The Language of Money, 1973.
- Have Expenses, Will Travel, 1975.
- It's No Sin to be Rich, 1976.
- The Best of Everything (editor), 1981.
- The Rich, 1982.
- Corporate Infighter's Handbook, 1984.
- Fantasy: A Practical Guide to Escapism, 1984.
- The Innovators, 1987.
- Children of the Rich, 1989.
- The Lucky Generation, 1995.
- The Great Myths of Business, 1997.
- The Rich: A New Study of the Species, 2006.
- Caviar Dogs, 2008
Book: Merger Mania (1970)
The book
Merger Mania by William Davis was published in 1970 by London, Constable (English lanuage, non-fiction, ISBN: 0094566402 9780094566408).
Further Information
Get more info on 'William Davis Journalist'.
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