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Tristan Davies

British newspaper editor From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Tristan Davies
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Tristan Davies is a British newspaper executive and former newspaper editor.

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Davies was educated at Douai School in Woolhampton.[1] He studied at the University of Bristol, then trained in radio journalism, but took employment for a London newspaper.[2] He joined The Independent in 1986, soon after its launch.[3] He initially worked on the listings section, then took various posts in arts and features. He left in the mid-1990s, to spend two years working on The Mail on Sunday's Night & Day magazine.[2]

Davies returned to The Independent in 1998,[3] and became editor of the Independent on Sunday in 2001 in succession to Janet Street-Porter. In 2005, he oversaw a change in format from broadsheet to tabloid,[2] while in June 2007, he oversaw a major redesign, which saw the paper reduced to a single section, plus a magazine. He remained editor until January 2008, becoming the longest-serving editor of the Independent on Sunday.[4] The Guardian suggested that he had resigned as he was unhappy with budget cuts imposed on the newspaper.[3]

In February 2008, Davies became executive editor of The Sunday Times with special responsibility for design, and was launch editor of the paper’s website and digital editions.[citation needed]

Davies rejoined The Mail on Sunday as assistant editor in 2012, and was appointed deputy editor in August 2016, taking office that September.[5]

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