British media company executive (born 1960)
Dawn Airey
|
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Born
| Dawn Elizabeth Airey
(
1960-12-15
)
15 December 1960
(age 63)
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Citizenship
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Occupation
| media executive
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Employer
| Channel 4
&
Getty Images
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Known for
| |
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Title
| non-executive director
|
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Partner
| Jacqueline Lawrence
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Dawn Elizabeth Airey
(born 15 November 1960) is a British media executive, sports administrator and independent company director.
She is the Chancellor of
Edge Hill University
, and chairs the
Barclays
FA Women's Super League
and
Championship
board, the
National Youth Theatre
and the educational platform Digital Theatre+. Airey is a non-executive director of
Channel 4
,
Getty Images
,
Grosvenor Estates
and
Blackbird
.
She is best known for her tenure between 1996 and 2002 at
Channel 5
, as the inaugural Director of Programmes, and subsequently Chief Executive, and has held senior positions at
ITV plc
,
Sky UK
,
Yahoo!
and
Getty Images
.
Early life
[
edit
]
Airey was born in
Preston, Lancashire
.
[1]
She was educated at
Girton College, Cambridge
, where she studied geography.
[2]
Career
[
edit
]
Airey began her career as a management trainee
[2]
at
Central Independent Television
in 1985. In 1989 she was promoted to the position of Director of Programme Planning and was appointed to the Central broadcasting board. When the ITV Network Centre was established in 1993, she moved to London to become the combined network's first Controller of Children's and Daytime Programmes.
In 1994, she was appointed Controller of Arts and Entertainment at
Channel 4
,
[2]
where it was reported
[3]
that her forthright manner had earned her the soubriquets "Scary Airey" and "Zulu Dawn" and her commitment to popularism was deemed by one colleague as "vulgar".
[3]
Airey joined
Channel 5
in 1996, the year ahead of its launch, as the first director of programmes.
[2]
It was during her tenure that she agreed with an interviewer's description of the channel's core strengths as "films, football and f***ing" but added that it was about much more.
[4]
She was subsequently appointed as chief executive of the channel in 2000.
[2]
In 2002, amid rumours that
ITV plc
was reportedly pursuing her to become its chief executive.,
[2]
Airey surprised the television industry by instead accepting a position at the satellite broadcaster,
BSkyB
.
[5]
overseeing all non-sports channels, their programming and all advertising sales. In 2006, she became Sky's managing director of Channels and Services with added responsibility for third party channels, joint ventures and networked media.
Airey departed BSkyB to head up an independent production business backed by private investors however she was only with the company for a total of eight days before it was announced that the venture did not have sufficient cash to continue trading.
[6]
Soon after, in May 2007, she was reunited with
Michael Grade
, joining
ITV plc
as Director of Global Content,
[7]
running the broadcaster's production and global sales division.
But within a matter of months she had again been poached by
Channel 5
to become chairman and CEO, with a remit to increase profitability and audience share. This she did. RTL's decision to exit UK broadcasting and sell the company to
Richard Desmond
's Northern & Shell saw her elevated to the role of President of RTL-owned
CLT-UFA
.,
[8]
[9]
[10]
where she served between 2010 and 2013.
[11]
[12]
In August 2013, she joined
Yahoo!
as senior vice-president of Yahoo EMEA (Europe, the Middle East and Africa).
[13]
[14]
She was in the post until September 2015.
[15]
[16]
Airey was chief executive officer (CEO) of
Getty Images
photo agency from October 2015
[17]
[18]
to 31 December 2018, at which time she became a non-executive director member of its board.
[1]
In March 2023 Airey was appointed Chancellor of
Edge Hill University
.
[19]
In 2019,
The Football Association
appointed Airey as chair of the new joint Barclays FA Women's Super League and Championship board.
[20]
The 12-strong board, including six women, was established by the FA as part of its commitment to growing the women's game.
It was during Airey's tenure that the FA agreed a landmark three-year broadcast deal with the BBC and Sky that delivered more access to live women's football than ever before.
[21]
In 2021, she also served as a member of the Government's Expert Panel for a Fan-Led Review of Football Governance, led by the former Sports Minister
Tracey Crouch
. The review called for the creation of an independent regulator for the game, alongside greater powers for supporters and an improved "owners and director's test" for those seeking to control local clubs.
[22]
Directorships
[
edit
]
Airey chairs the joint Barclays FA Women's Super League and Championship board (2019-) and the boards of the
National Youth Theatre
(2011-)
and the educational platform Digital Theatre+ (2019-).
She is a non-Executive Director of Channel 4 (2021-), cloud video platform
Blackbird (software)
(2019-), Grosvenor Estates (2019-) and Getty Images (2015-).
Previously she has held positions on the boards of
UK Film Council
, the
British Library
,
easyJet
,
Thomas Cook
and
LoveFilm
.
Honours
[
edit
]
Airey is a Fellow and a Vice President of the
Royal Television Society
and a Fellow of the
Royal Society of Arts
.
In 2017, she was News International's visiting professor of Media Studies at
Brasenose College
,
Oxford University
and in 2018 was given an Honorary Doctorate of Arts by
Edge Hill University
for her outstanding contributions to the media industry. She holds a degree from the
University of Cambridge
.
Personal life
[
edit
]
Airey lives with her civil partner Jacqueline Lawrence (Founder and Chair of The Elma Trust, a non-profit organisation) in West London and Oxford.
[23]
The couple have two daughters.
[
citation needed
]
She describes herself as a monarchist and a supporter of “the modern royal family”, singling out the work ethic and "phenomenal" dedication to the arts of
Prince Edward, Duke of Edinburgh
, royal patron of the
National Youth Theatre
, of which Airey is chair.
[24]
Her views stand in contrast to her position of two decades ago when she told
The Guardian
that the concept of the monarchy had become “anachronistic”.
[25]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
a
b
"Dawn Airey"
. Retrieved
9 August
2020
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
e
f
Guardian Staff (23 September 2002).
"Timeline: the rise and rise of Dawn Airey"
.
The Guardian
. Retrieved
10 August
2020
.
- ^
a
b
http://625.uk.com/channel5/
The Sunday Times
, (30 March 1997)
- ^
"The astute businessman who gave us Kirsty and Cheggers"
.
The Independent
. 28 October 2000
. Retrieved
9 August
2020
.
- ^
Reece, Damian (21 September 2002).
"ITV foiled as Dawn Airey signs for Sky in £1m-a-year deal"
.
Daily Telegraph
.
ISSN
0307-1235
. Retrieved
9 August
2020
– via www.telegraph.co.uk.
- ^
"Marketing Week | marketing news, opinion, trends and jobs"
.
- ^
"Dawn Airey to join ITV | ITV PLC"
. Archived from
the original
on 14 June 2011
. Retrieved
24 November
2009
.
- ^
Sweney, Mark (27 August 2008).
"Five insists Airey will start in October"
.
The Guardian
. London.
- ^
"Five chairman leaves in shake-up"
.
BBC News
. 11 August 2010
. Retrieved
10 August
2020
.
- ^
Tara Conlan and Mark Sweney
"Channel Five 'bloodbath' as Richard Desmond culls seven directors"
,
The Guardian
, 11 August 2010
- ^
Rowley, Emma (4 April 2013).
"TV high-flier Dawn Airey leaves TV giant RTL"
.
Daily Telegraph
.
ISSN
0307-1235
. Retrieved
10 August
2020
– via www.telegraph.co.uk.
- ^
"Dawn Airey to leave RTL"
.
The Guardian
. 4 April 2013
. Retrieved
10 August
2020
.
- ^
Williams, Christopher (20 August 2013).
"Television exec Dawn Airey gets Yahoo! Europe job"
.
Daily Telegraph
.
ISSN
0307-1235
. Retrieved
10 August
2020
.
- ^
"Dawn Airey to run Yahoo operations in Europe, Middle East and Africa"
.
The Guardian
. 20 August 2013
. Retrieved
10 August
2020
.
- ^
Sweney, Mark (10 September 2015).
"Dawn Airey quits as Yahoo's European boss after two years"
.
The Guardian
.
ISSN
0261-3077
. Retrieved
10 August
2020
.
- ^
Williams, Christopher (10 September 2015).
"Yahoo! Europe boss Dawn Airey out after two years"
.
Daily Telegraph
.
ISSN
0307-1235
. Retrieved
10 August
2020
.
- ^
"Dawn Airey takes over from Jonathan Klein as Getty Images boss"
.
Financial Times
. 20 September 2015.
- ^
Jackson, Jasper (21 September 2015).
"Dawn Airey joins Getty Images as CEO"
.
The Guardian
.
- ^
"Sport and media executive and trailblazer Dawn Airey announced as Edge Hill's new Chancellor"
.
Edge Hill University
. 31 March 2023.
- ^
9 July 2019,
"Dawn Airey heads new FA Board to help continue growth of women's football"
.
Women in Football
.
- ^
Wrack, Suzanne (21 March 2021),
'A huge step forward': WSL announced record-breaking deal with BBC and Sky
.
The Guardian
.
- ^
24 November 2021,
"Fan-Led Review of Football Governance: securing the game’s future"
. Department for Digital, Culture, Media & Sport, Government of UK.
- ^
"TV boss Dawn Airey speaks for the first time about her child with"
.
Evening Standard
. 10 November 2006
. Retrieved
9 August
2020
.
- ^
Bourdillon, Roxy (17 January 2024).
"Dawn Airey: 'I came out late, but it has always been my intention to make up for lost time'
"
.
DIVA
. Retrieved
17 January
2024
.
- ^
Norton, Nicola; Fleming, Amy (1 June 2002).
"Part 2: 'Being a citizen, not a subject'
"
.
the Guardian
. Retrieved
12 September
2022
.
External links
[
edit
]
Media offices
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Preceded by
|
Chief Executive: Five TV
October 2000 ? April 2003
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Succeeded by
|
Preceded by
|
Chief Executive: Five TV
October 2008 ? 2010
|
Succeeded by
|