Hubbry Logo
Lis HowellLis HowellMain
Open search
Lis Howell
Community hub
Lis Howell
logo
7 pages, 0 posts
0 subscribers
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Lis Howell
Lis Howell
from Wikipedia

Lis Howell is director of broadcasting at City, University of London, running the broadcasting and television journalism programmes, and also deputy head of the journalism department.[1] She is a journalist who went on to become a senior executive in British television and also writes murder-mystery novels.

Early life and education

[edit]

Howell was born in Liverpool in 1951 and was educated at the Liverpool Institute for Girls and the University of Bristol, where she read English Literature. She got a diploma in teacher training from Leeds Trinity & All Saints and soon after was offered a reporting job by Radio Leeds.

Career

[edit]

In 1977 she became the first woman reporter at Border Television and, two years later, went to Granada Television, then Tyne Tees Television from 1981 to 1984. She then decided to quit journalism, opting to become the village postmistress at Mawbray, in northern Cumbria, opening a small restaurant in the adjoining barn and having a baby, Alex, in 1984.

The following year she worked her way back into television, by suggesting to Border TV a programme on a mother and her baby living in a remote country area, which led to a series, Border Babies.[2] She did another series of six shows and was then offered the job of Border's Head of News, the first woman to be appointed to the job. She was later deputy programme controller and in 1989 was joint winner with ITN of a Royal Television Society award for coverage of the Lockerbie air disaster, where she broke the story and organised the incoming footage from the scene.

She became Managing Editor of Sky News later that year and was sent to Saudi Arabia to organise the company's coverage of the first Gulf War.

She was appointed director of programmes in 1992 for breakfast television channel GMTV, which launched on 1 January 1993,[3] and quickly became the subject of controversy over what was termed the "F Factor".[4][5] After a Sunday Times journalist was given access to production meetings she was quoted in the press for saying that television presenters needed to be fanciable. Soon after, in February 1993, with a financial crisis hitting the new channel, she was sacked by the newly installed chairman, Greg Dyke.[6][7]

Two months later (April 1993) Howell became director of programmes at the newly launched satellite television channel UK Living (later renamed Living TV), largely geared to women viewers and set up by four UK and US television companies and later run through the newly-set-up Flextech. She subsequently became vice president of Flextech with responsibility for the channels Living, Trouble, Bravo and Challenge.

She quit in 1999 over policy issues and went to Harvard Business School to take the Advance Management course.[8] She also set up a mainly-women's website, bowlofcherries, which among other things organised events in central London.[9][10][11] It is now being revamped as a directory for women contributors to television and radio.

Teacher, media commentator, judge

[edit]

Howell joined the City University journalism department as a visiting lecturer in television in 2002,[12][13] started the postgraduate programme on Television Current Affairs in 2003, later becoming Director of Broadcasting while running both the current affairs and broadcast journalism courses. The City broadcasting courses turn out 200 postgraduates a year from their domestic courses and another 90 international students. Most domestic students get production jobs within the established news broadcasters (for instance, BBC, ITV, ITN, Channel Four, Sky News and CNN).

As a media commentator, Howell has appeared on several television and radio programmes, such as Thinking Aloud and The Media Show on BBC Radio 4, and written for Broadcast magazine and the Financial Times Creative Business special reports.[14] She has also written articles about her work – for instance, launching a website[15] and becoming a university lecturer[16] – and been quoted on the skills needed by television presenters.[17][18]

Howell is a member of the Local Network TV Committee, chaired by Greg Dyke, which was set up in October 2010 to look into the creation of local television channels. She was chair of the Edinburgh International Television Festival in 1999 and has chaired a judging panel for the Royal Television Society's journalism award from 2006. She has also been a judge for, among others, the UK's Muslim News Awards for Excellence. She is a member of Bafta.

Lis Howell novels

[edit]

Howell has written six murder mystery novels, drawing on her experience as a television director, teacher, church-goer and member of Bart's Choir and Bart's Chamber Choir in London.[19]

  • After the Break. Hodder & Stoughton, 1994. ISBN 0-340-61698-9. ISBN 978-0-340-61698-7.
  • The Director’s Cut. Hodder & Stoughton, 1995. ISBN 0-340-61699-7. ISBN 978-0-340-61699-4.
  • A Job to Die For. Hodder & Stoughton, 1997. ISBN 0-340-61700-4
  • The Flower Arranger at All Saints. Constable & Robinson, 2007. ISBN 978-1-84529-470-0. ISBN 1-84529-470-X
  • The Chorister at the Abbey. Constable & Robinson, 2008. UK ISBN 978-1-84529-473-1. US ISBN 978-1-56947-508-9.[20]
  • Death of a Teacher. Robert Hale, 2010. ISBN 978-0709091608.

References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Lis Howell is a British journalist, television executive, and academic known for her influential career in broadcasting, particularly her leadership roles in shaping breakfast television at GMTV and news operations at Sky News, as well as her later work founding and directing journalism programs at City, University of London. Born Lisbeth Baynes in Liverpool in 1951, she graduated from Bristol University with a degree in English and earned a Postgraduate Diploma in Education from Trinity and All Saints College in Leeds, before entering journalism as a reporter at Radio Leeds in 1973. Her early television career included roles as a reporter and presenter at regional ITV companies Border TV, Granada, and Tyne Tees, followed by a period in the mid-1980s when she stepped away from broadcasting to run a village post office and restaurant in Mawbray, Cumbria, while raising her daughter. She returned to the industry as an independent producer for Border Television and was appointed Head of News there, where she led coverage of the Lockerbie air disaster that earned her an RTS award in collaboration with ITN. This propelled her to national roles, including Managing Editor of Sky News in 1989 and Director of Programmes at GMTV in 1991, where she oversaw the launch of the new ITV breakfast franchise and was described at the time as the most powerful woman in ITV. Howell continued in executive positions, serving as Director of Programmes for UK Living and later as Senior Vice President at Flextech, responsible for multiple cable channels including Living, Trouble, Challenge, and Bravo. She later pursued further executive education at Harvard Business School and established her own online business before joining City, University of London in 2002 as a visiting lecturer in television. There, she developed the Postgraduate Diploma in Television Current Affairs Journalism and rose to Director of Broadcasting, shaping training for future television journalists while also contributing as a consultant, festival chair, and commentator on industry issues. In addition to her broadcasting and academic work, Howell has authored several murder mystery novels, many set within the television and media world, including titles such as The Flower Arranger at All Saints, After the Break, The Director’s Cut, and A Job to Die For.

Early life and education

Early life

Lis Howell was born in Liverpool in 1951. Born Lisbeth Baynes, she grew up in the city, where her father worked as a technical manager for Dunlop. She attended the Liverpool Institute for Girls for her secondary education. During her first year at the school, future politician Edwina Currie served as her table prefect while in the sixth form.

Education and entry into journalism

Lis Howell graduated from the University of Bristol, where she studied English Literature. She subsequently obtained a Postgraduate Diploma in Education at Trinity and All Saints College in Leeds. She entered journalism as a reporter at Radio Leeds, which is part of the BBC network. Sources also describe her starting role in the field as a producer and reporter at BBC Radio Leeds. This position marked her initial professional involvement in broadcasting before she progressed to television roles.

Career in broadcast journalism

Early career in radio and regional television

Lis Howell began her career in journalism as a reporter at BBC Radio Leeds in 1973, gaining foundational experience in radio news production and reporting. She transitioned to regional television in 1977 as the first woman reporter at Border Television. In 1979, she moved to Granada Television as a television reporter and presenter, followed by a similar role at Tyne Tees Television from 1981 to 1984. These early positions provided hands-on experience in broadcast reporting and presentation across the north of England. After a break from broadcasting to run a village post office and restaurant in Cumbria, Howell returned as an independent producer for Border Television and was appointed Head of News there. She led coverage of the Lockerbie air disaster, earning an RTS award in collaboration with ITN.

Managing Editor at Sky News

In 1989, Howell was appointed Managing Editor of Sky News, marking her entry into national broadcasting roles.

Director of Programmes at GMTV

Lis Howell was appointed Director of Programmes for GMTV in October 1991, ahead of its launch on 1 January 1993 as the new ITV breakfast franchise holder replacing TV-am. She described the role as "the best job in television" due to building a new station from scratch. Her appointment was notable as the first time a woman had been made programme chief of a major UK television station. Howell aimed to differentiate GMTV by emphasizing topical hard news in a fast-paced, engaging style, with innovations such as reading news from a table rather than a desk, encouraging human-interest interviews alongside hard news, and developing the "F-Factor" format. She targeted a middle-of-the-road tone—more pacy and entertaining than BBC Breakfast but lighter than some alternatives. GMTV launched to disappointing audience figures amid financial difficulties and management changes. Howell resigned in February 1993, after six weeks on air, frustrated that the output resembled "TV-am rewritten" rather than a full reinvention. Her brief tenure highlighted her as a pioneering female executive in UK breakfast television.

Consultancy and later executive roles

After leaving GMTV in February 1993, Howell was appointed Director of Programmes at UK Living (later Living TV) in April 1993, as one of the founders of the new satellite channel. She later became Senior Vice-President at Flextech Television, overseeing channels including Living, Trouble, Bravo, and Challenge. In 1999, she resigned from Flextech and completed the Advanced Management Program at Harvard Business School. In 2000, she founded bowlofcherries.com, serving as chief executive of the lifestyle website for people over 35, featuring contributions from TV presenters and journalists and hosting events. Howell also consulted for Community Channel. In 2014–2015, she served as Special Adviser to the House of Lords Select Committee on Communications for its report on women in news and current affairs broadcasting. She later focused on academia while continuing advisory and judging roles in broadcasting.

Academic and training career

Teaching and leadership in journalism education

Lis Howell joined City, University of London in 2001, marking her transition from broadcast journalism to academia. She began teaching as a Visiting Lecturer in Television in 2002, where she initiated the Postgraduate Diploma in Television Current Affairs Journalism and tutored emerging news journalists through the university's diploma programme. Her early teaching focused on explaining core broadcast techniques to beginners, drawing on her industry background while adapting to the pedagogical demands of higher education. Howell created the MA in Television Journalism and headed the MA courses in Broadcast and Television Journalism within the Department of Journalism. She also served as Acting Head of the Journalism Department during her tenure. From 2009 to 2018, she was Director of Broadcasting, overseeing the broadcasting and television journalism programmes. She additionally held the role of Head of Postgraduate Studies from 2016 to 2018. Howell retired from City, University of London on April 30, 2018 and holds the title of Professor Emeritus of Journalism. During her academic career, she organised three biennial Women on Air conferences at the university to address gender representation in broadcast news.

Contributions to media and journalism

Publications and commentary

Lis Howell has contributed to scholarship and public discourse on gender representation in broadcast media primarily through academic publications and commentary focused on the under-representation of women as expert contributors in UK news and current affairs programming. Her work began in earnest after she observed near-exclusive use of male experts during BBC Radio 4's election coverage in 2010, prompting her to publish the comment piece "The Airwaves are not Fair Waves" in Broadcast magazine. This led to the launch of the Expert Women campaign in partnership with Broadcast, for which she provided monthly opinion pieces and data analysis between 2012 and 2013 to highlight and address the issue. Her research findings appeared in peer-reviewed outlets, including the 2016 article "Pushy or a Princess?: Women Experts and British Broadcast News," co-authored with Jane B. Singer and published in Journalism Practice, which analyzed monitoring data showing male experts outnumbered females by an average ratio of 4.4:1 on flagship UK programs in the early 2010s—a gap wider than the roughly 2.5:1 ratio of men to women in senior societal roles. The study drew on interviews with journalists and questionnaires with women experts to identify contributing factors, such as journalists' preference for reliable known contacts under time pressure and women's concerns about appearing "pushy" or "overconfident" if they actively sought airtime. Howell co-authored the book chapter "Seeking Women’s Expertise in the UK Broadcast News Media" with Suzanne Franks, published in the 2019 edited collection Journalism, Gender and Power, which presented longitudinal monitoring results from City, University of London journalism students showing gradual progress, with the overall male-to-female expert ratio narrowing to around 3:1 on several programs by 2015–2016. The chapter concluded that more women are available and capable of serving as experts than broadcasters typically choose to feature, and stressed the need for continued efforts until ratios better reflect societal expertise distribution. Her ongoing research and commentary have sustained attention to these themes, including later studies documenting persistent disparities and the stall in earlier gains toward gender parity in expert appearances. Howell has also appeared as a commentator on related media issues, such as discussing women's experiences of online trolling and gender-based criticism on BBC Radio 4's Woman's Hour.

Advocacy and industry influence

Lis Howell has significantly influenced the UK broadcast industry through her advocacy for greater gender balance in the representation of experts on news programmes. As founder and director of the Expert Women Project, launched in 2014 at City, University of London (now City St George's, University of London), she has conducted ongoing monitoring of six major flagship news programmes to track the ratio of male to female authority figures and subject specialists appearing on air. The project has documented substantial progress, with the number of women experts rising by at least 40% since its start, and the initial disparity—where men appeared four times more often than women—improving to roughly double in recent surveys. This work is widely credited with transforming the landscape of UK television news by encouraging broadcasters to become more competitive in addressing gender imbalances, leading to initiatives such as new training programmes at ITN and the BBC, expanded expert databases, and the BBC's 50:50 Project launched in 2017 to promote parity across content. Howell further shaped industry policy and debate as Special Adviser to the House of Lords Select Committee on Communications in 2014/2015, contributing expertise to its report on Women in News and Current Affairs Broadcasting. She has organised multiple Women on Air conferences at City, University of London, including biennial events that drew high-profile participants such as government ministers, BBC executives, prominent journalists, and editors from monitored programmes, fostering dialogue on gender representation and attracting media coverage. In 2024, the Expert Women Project marked its tenth anniversary with a conference that highlighted continued advancement alongside persistent challenges, with men still appearing roughly twice as often as women; Howell noted that broadcasters had actively responded to the project's findings to improve their statistics. Her influence extends to ongoing commentary and judging roles within the industry. As a member of the Royal Television Society, she regularly chairs panels for the Television Journalism Awards, and she has been a frequent contributor to discussions on broadcasting issues through appearances on BBC Radio 4 programmes and other outlets. Through these efforts, Howell has helped drive long-term cultural and operational shifts toward greater inclusivity in UK broadcast journalism, with the Expert Women Project expanding internationally and inspiring similar monitoring work elsewhere.

Personal life

Family and personal interests

Lis Howell has a daughter named Alexandra, born in Carlisle during her years living in Cumbria. She describes herself as a "confused churchgoer," with Anglican traditions playing a significant role in her personal life. She serves as churchwarden at St Andrew's, Thornhill Square. These interests in church matters and village community life have influenced her creative pursuits outside her media career. In earlier years, Howell had a long-term monogamous relationship with freelance reporter Ian Proniewicz, the father of her daughter, though they never married at that time. More recently, her partner Richard Parker has supported her by providing theological and liturgical research for her mystery novels.

Later years

In her later years, Lis Howell retired from her full-time academic position at City, University of London on April 30, 2018, and assumed the title of Professor Emeritus of Journalism. She continues to direct the Expert Women project, which monitors and reports on the representation of female authority figures across six major UK flagship news programmes. Howell has remained active as a commentator on broadcasting and journalism issues, and she regularly chairs judging panels for the Royal Television Society's Television Journalism Awards. In 2019, she co-authored a book chapter titled "Seeking women's expertise in the UK broadcast news media" with Suzanne Franks in the volume Journalism, Gender and Power published by Routledge. Howell has also pursued a career as an author of cozy mystery novels, writing the Suzy Spencer series set in the fictional Cumbrian town of Norbridge. The series includes titles such as The Gardener in the Graveyard (published September 2023) and Killer by Candlelight (scheduled for May 2025).

References

Add your contribution
Related Hubs
User Avatar
No comments yet.