Former journalist and editor of The Sun and founder of Kitchen Table Partners
David Yelland (born 14 May 1963) is a former journalist and editor of The Sun and founder of Kitchen Table Partners, a specialist public relations and communications company in London, which he formed in 2015 after leaving the Brunswick Group LLP.[1]
Early life and education
Born in Harrogate, Yorkshire, Yelland was adopted at birth by Michael and Patricia Yelland of York.[1] He has a younger brother, Paul. Yelland subsequently traced his birth father, now deceased.[1][2] Yelland's natural mother was a children's writer from Harrogate, who died before he could meet her.[1] In childhood he suffered alopecia and after wearing a series of wigs he decided to go without them when he was 31 and living in New York.[1]
Yelland's first journalism post after university was at the Buckinghamshire Advertiser.[1] He was a trainee with Westminster Press, then part of Pearson, and worked on a series of regional papers including the Northern Echo and the North West Times in Manchester.[4] Yelland was hired as business editor on The Sun in 1992 by editor Kelvin MacKenzie,[6][7] and became deputy editor of New York Post in 1995,[1] as well as a speech writer for Rupert Murdoch.[7]
His editorship was largely liberal and in an interview with The Guardian towards the end of his editorship he described himself as "a progressive liberal". He did the same in an interview with Tim Burt in the Financial Times in 2002 which ran on the front of the media section. Yelland says his favourite headline was "Is this the most dangerous man in Britain?" about Tony Blair, and his worst moments were publishing topless photos of Sophie Rhys-Jones (now the Countess of Wessex)[6][9] and running a front-page editorial asking whether Britain was being run by a "Gay Mafia", a front page he has since acknowledged was a mistake and contrary to his personal views.[4] During his editorship he regularly feuded with Piers Morgan of the Daily Mirror.[4][10] Yelland appeared on the BBC Today programme and wrote an opinion piece in The Guardian on 29 September 2013 arguing for reform of the press and for the Royal Charter on its future to be adopted.[11]
Yelland has written a children's novel about a 10-year-old who tries to hide his father's alcoholism, titled The Truth about Leo,[14] which was published by Penguin Books in April 2010.[15][16]
Yelland is now married to Charlotte Elston, director of communications at BBC Worldwide.[17] On 30 September 2012 they announced the birth of their daughter in The Times.
Yelland said in 2009 that he checked into rehab for alcoholism in 2005 and has not drunk alcohol since.[14] He said his novel was written both for children and adults, and a further theme is that of a young boy who has lost his mother. The book is dedicated to the memory of Tania, and to Max.