Alan Yentob

Alan Yentob

Alan Yentob (left) and Grayson Perry at private view of Gilbert & George retrospective, Tate Modern
Born (1947-03-11) 11 March 1947
London, England, United Kingdom
Occupation Television executive, broadcaster
Spouse(s) Philippa Walker
Children 2

Alan Yentob (born 11 March 1947) is a British television executive and presenter. He has spent his entire career at the BBC from where he stepped down as Creative Director in December 2015[1] and served as chairman of the board of trustees for Kids Company from 2003 until the collapse of the charity in 2015.

Early life

Alan Yentob was born into an Iraqi Jewish family in London. Soon after he was born, his family moved to Manchester where his father ran a textile business, Dewhurst Dent, in which he still owns a 10% share.[2] He grew up in Didsbury, a suburb of Manchester, and returned to London with his family when he was 12 to live in a flat on Park Lane.[3] He was a boarder at the independent The King's School in Ely, Cambridgeshire. He passed his A Levels and studied at the Sorbonne in Paris and spent a year at Grenoble University. He went on to study Law at Leeds University, where he got involved in student drama. He graduated with a lower second class degree (2:2) in 1967.[4]

Career

He joined the BBC as a trainee in the BBC World Service in 1968 as its only non-Oxbridge graduate of that year. Nine months later he moved into TV to become an assistant director on arts programmes.[4]

In 1973, he became a producer and director, working on the high-profile documentary series Omnibus, for which, in 1975, he made a film called Cracked Actor about the musician David Bowie. In 1975, he helped initiate another BBC documentary series, Arena, of which he was to remain the editor until 1985. The series still returns for semi-regular editions as of 2014.

He left Arena to become the BBC's Head of Music and Arts, a position he occupied until 1987, when he was promoted to Controller of BBC 2, one of the youngest channel controllers in the BBC's history. Under Yentob's five-year stewardship BBC 2 was re-vitalised and he introduced many innovations in programming such as The Late Show, Have I Got News for You, Absolutely Fabulous and Wallace and Gromit's The Wrong Trousers.

In 1993 he was promoted to Controller of BBC 1, responsible for the output of the BBC's premier channel.[4] He remained in the post for three years until 1996, when he was promoted again to become BBC Television's overall Director of Programmes.

This appointment was only a brief one, however, before a re-organisation of the BBC's Executive Committee led to the creation of a new post, filled by Yentob, of Director of Drama, Entertainment and Children's. This placed Yentob in overall supervision of the BBC's output in these three genres across all media – radio, television and Internet. He occupied this post until June 2004, when new BBC Director-General Mark Thompson re-organised the BBC's executive committee and promoted Yentob to the new post of BBC Creative Director, responsible for overseeing BBC creative output across television, radio and interactive services.

He has been frequently criticised by the writer and comedian Victor Lewis-Smith.

He also began to present BBC programmes. These have included a series on the life of Leonardo da Vinci and, from 2003, a new regular arts series, Imagine. One episode of Imagine has Yentob explore the World Wide Web, blogging, user-created content, and even the use of Wikipedia, exploring people's motives and satisfaction that can be had from sharing information on such a large scale. His own blog, created during the making of the episode, was subsequently deleted and purged. In 2007, Yentob appeared as the 'host' of the satirical Imagine a Mildly Amusing Panel Show, a spoof Imagine... episode focused on the comedy panel game Never Mind the Buzzcocks.

Yentob's reputation was affected when it was revealed that his participation in some of the interviews for Imagine had been faked. Yentob has been warned not to do this again, but otherwise not disciplined, much to the disgruntlement of some who have seen more junior staff lose their jobs for lesser misdemeanours.[5]

In July 2009 he was revealed to have accumulated a pension worth £6.3m, giving an annual retirement income of £216,667 for the rest of his life. This is one of the biggest pensions in the public sector.[6] He has been on the Board of Trustees of the Architecture Foundation.

On 16 March 2010, Yentob and Nigella Lawson opened the new Jewish Museum London in Camden Town.[7]

He is paid a declared salary of £183,000 by the BBC, but additional income from the BBC for presenting and other roles is reputed to earn him an extra £150,000, bringing his BBC income to an estimated £330,000.[8]

He has been involved with several charities, including the posts of Chairman and Trustee of Kids Company.[9]

In 2005, Yentob was awarded an Honorary Doctor of Letters from De Montfort University, Leicester.

Yentob resigned as the BBC's Creative Director on 3 December 2015 in the wake of allegations that he had sought to influence the BBC's coverage of the Kids Company scandal.[10]

Family

Yentob is married to Philippa Walker, a television producer.[11] He has two children, Isabella and Jacob.[12]

Kids Company

Yentob's role as chairman of the board of trustees for Kids Company has come under close scrutiny since the collapse of the charity in early August 2015. He has been accused of multiple shortcomings in oversight and financial management, and of failing to ensure that he avoided a conflict of interest with his position at the BBC. It has been alleged that he intervened there in an attempt to deflect criticism of Kids Company and its founder Camila Batmanghelidjh. Yentob has vigorously defended his actions and stated in August that he was "not remotely considering" resigning over his behaviour.[13] Yentob resigned on 3 December 2015.[10]

Interventions at the BBC

Yentob has acknowledged that he stood in the studio of the Today programme while Batmanghelidjih was being interviewed in July, later saying that he wished to hear what she had to say and was not attempting to intimidate staff. He also telephoned a senior member of staff at Newsnight, asking the programme to "delay a report critical of financial management at Kids Company", and telephoned the Radio 4 presenter Ed Stourton before a report in The World at One. The BBC Trust, under chairwoman Rona Fairhead, is investigating these interventions, although senior BBC management are reported to have reassured the Trust that they did not compromise editorial independence at the BBC.[14]

"Descent into savagery"

Yentob has acknowledged signing an email from Kids Company to the government which sought millions in further funding by suggesting certain communities in London might "descend into savagery"[15] if Kids Company ceased its operations. The email, which was subsequently leaked to BuzzFeed News and the BBC's Newsnight programme,[16] spoke of "looting, rioting and arson attacks on government buildings" and warned of possible sharp spikes in "starvation and modern-day slavery".[15] It said that these concerns were "not hypothetical, but based on a deep understanding of the socio-psychological background that these children operate within".[15] Yentob claimed this email "was not intended in any way as a threat."[17]

Appearance before select committee

On 15 October 2015 Yentob and Batmangheldijh made a joint appearance before a parliamentary select committee investigating the charity's collapse. Their performance was widely described as disastrous. In the New Statesman, the political commentator Anoosh Chakelian said they were a "duo of epically proportioned egos" who made "as little sense – and as many accusations – as possible"[18] before the panel of MPs. In The Daily Telegraph, the parliamentary sketch writer Michael Deacon called their appearance the "single weirdest event in recent parliamentary history"[19] and wrote of "three solid hours of bewildering excuses, recriminations and non sequiturs". In the Daily Mail, the journalist Quentin Letts described Yentob as cutting a "mediocre, credulous figure" who failed in his "duty to resist 'dominant personalities'" such as Batmanghelidjh.[20]

Criticism from Commons Public Administration and Constitutional Affairs Committee

The PACAC report heavily criticised Yentob. Yentob was described as someone who condoned excessive spending and lacked proper attention to his duties. The BBC is also accused of poor leadership for failing to take action against him when he tried to make suggestions about the BBC's reporting of Kids Company.[21]

References

  1. " "Alan Yentob steps down as BBC creative director". BBC News.
  2. BBC Declaration of personal interests (PDF)
  3. David Lister (29 May 1999). "Profile: Alan Yentob: The insider's extrovert". Independent (London). Retrieved 22 December 2011.
  4. 1 2 3 Hunter Davies (9 March 1993). "He's in control: Alan Yentob decides what you will see on both BBC channels. He is far from a Corporation man, but then he's only been there for 26 years". Independent (London). Retrieved 22 December 2011.
  5. Hamilton, Fiona; Coates, Sam; Savage, Michael. "BBC row as Alan Yentob is let off for fakery – Times Online". The Times (London).
  6. Hamilton, Fiona; Coates, Sam; Savage, Michael. "Licence payers fund BBC chief's £8m pension". The Times (London). Archived from the original on 2011-05-10. Retrieved 3 August 2013.
  7. http://www.communitynewswire.press.net/article.jsp?id=6608731
  8. James Legge (6 June 2013). "Alan Yentob paid two salaries by the BBC". The Independent.
  9. http://kidsco.org.uk/download/Annual_Report_2013.compressed.pdf
  10. 1 2 "BBC's Alan Yentob resigns". BBC News. 3 December 2015. Retrieved 3 December 2015.
  11. Hamilton, Fiona; Coates, Sam; Savage, Michael. "BBC chief's son is stabbed by robber at family home – Times Online". The Times (London).
  12. 15 November 2004 The Alan Yentob Experience, Media, News, The Independent
  13. "BBC's Alan Yentob 'not considering' resigning over Kids Company claims". The Guardian. 7 August 2015. Retrieved 29 October 2015.
  14. "BBC Trust quizzes Tony Hall over Yentob’s Kids Company activities". The Guardian. 19 October 2015. Retrieved 29 October 2015.
  15. 1 2 3 "Kids Company Chair Signed Email Warning Of "Arson Attacks On Government Buildings" And "Savagery" If Charity Closed". Buzzfeed. August 2015. Retrieved 29 October 2015.
  16. "Kids Company: Leaked email warns of 'arson attacks on government buildings' if charity were to close". The Independent. 25 August 2015. Retrieved 29 October 2015.
  17. "Kids Company Alan Yentob confident backers of collapsed charity can continue to support children". The Independent. 12 October 2015. Retrieved 29 October 2015.
  18. ""Verbal ectoplasm": what happened at Camila Batmanghelidjh and Alan Yentob’s Kids Company hearing?". The New Statesman. 15 October 2015. Retrieved 29 October 2015.
  19. "Alan Yentob’s day of embarrassment over Kids Company... from £150 shoes to abusive limericks". The Daily Telegraph. 15 October 2015. Retrieved 27 October 2015.
  20. "Quentin Letts sees Kids Company charity boss and her cheerleader Alan Yentob face MPs". The Daily Mail. 16 October 2015. Retrieved 29 October 2015.
  21. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-35455157

External links

Media offices
Preceded by
Jonathan Powell
Controller of BBC One
1992–1996
Succeeded by
Michael Jackson
Preceded by
Graeme MacDonald
Controller of BBC Two
1987–1993
Succeeded by
Michael Jackson
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