Holden Frith, The Week UK
Holden Frith is The Week’s digital director, a role in which he is responsible for digital strategy, product development and editorial direction. He also makes regular appearances on The Week Unwrapped podcast, speaking about subjects as diverse as vaccine development and bionic bomb-sniffing locusts. He joined The Week in 2013, spending five years editing the magazine’s website before moving into his current role. Before that, he was deputy digital editor at The Sunday Times, where he was part of the team that launched the newspaper’s digital subscription service – and was responsible for day-to-day production on the app and website. He has also been TheTimes.co.uk’s technology editor and the launch editor of Wired magazine’s UK website.
Holden has worked in journalism for nearly two decades, having started his professional career while completing an English literature degree at Cambridge University. He followed that with a master’s degree in journalism from Northwestern University in Chicago. A keen photographer, he also writes travel features whenever he gets the chance.
Latest articles by Holden Frith, The Week UK
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Kitty Hawk review: The department store of dining
The Week Recommends With a bar, cafe, restaurant and takeaway all at your disposal, you won't go hungry at this London eatery
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Lorne review: generosity on a plate
The Week Recommends Victoria's latest restaurant opening brings fine food and wine to an unloved part of London
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The Holy Birds restaurant review: Poultry takes wing
The Week Recommends There's more to life than chicken at London's latest attempt to revive the swinging spirit of the 1960s
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Dark star: Hunting the black truffle
The Week Recommends How to take part in a great culinary treasure hunt – and enjoy the fruits of your labour
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Fucina: Italian classics with the space to shine
The Week Recommends Marylebone's latest opening works wonders with well-sourced organic ingredients
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Mamalan: Beijing street-food comes to Shoreditch
The Week Recommends Enjoy cocktails, spiced dumplings and slow-cooked meat buns at Ning Ma's fifth restaurant
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Will personalised news narrow our minds not broaden them?
In Depth News algorithms that allow you to hear only the news you want to hear carry profound disadvantages
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Human Universe: the ascent of man – and Brian Cox, of course
In Depth New BBC2 science series gets better when David Attenborough's anointed heir comes down to earth
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Jamie's Comfort Food: a recipe for world domination
In Depth Forget 15-minute meals and school health drives. Jamie's Comfort Food is all about guilty pleasures
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Hotel India: new generation demands new kind of luxury
In Depth Calling time on the bell-boys, housemaids and even the guests at the Taj Mahal Palace hotel in Mumbai
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Should I Eat Meat? Dubious science spoils BBC2 dish
In Depth The answer to the question 'Is meat bad for you?' remains the same – Yes and No
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Our World War: a fitting swansong for doomed BBC3
In Depth Drama of a young man's refusal to join a British deserter's firing squad makes memorable TV
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Great British Bake Off: same recipe, same taste, same jokes
In Depth Move from BBC1 to BBC2 need not have scared fans: it remains as light and playful as spun sugar
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Secret History of our Streets tackles the Scottish question
In Depth BBC2's unexpected hit series reveals just how much Edinburgh and London have in common
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Utopia: as compelling as ever - and the body count is rising
In Depth Utopia retains a robust attitude towards violence as befits a drama with comic-book aesthetics
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Mobile news: readers on the rise but where's the revenue?
In Depth It's a story of missing clicks as social networking changes how we access news on the run
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The Honourable Woman: a far cry from Homeland's Carrie
In Depth Maggie Gyllenhaal displays an impeccable English accent and cool charisma in new BBC2 drama
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Hot Property documentary: not enough digging at BBC2
In Depth Sandy Toksvig-narrated programme fails to ask why housing has never been so unaffordable
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Into the Unknown: David Beckham’s motorcycle diary
In Depth Too old to play in the World Cup, Becks sets off for the jungle. But is he really tired of fame?
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A Very British Airline: serious documentary or cheesy souffle?
In Depth BBC2's British Airways insight is a bit of a letdown – especially for those who fly in the cheap seats
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Burning Desire: from those wonderful folks who brought you lung cancer…
In Depth In this revealing documentary, tobacco chiefs seem disturbingly reasonable in their pursuit of profit
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Longitude Prize 2014: a vote for the future of British science
In Depth Tonight's Horizon launches a new Longitude Prize to tackle the world's great problems
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Twitter is not dead – but it has lost its radical ambition
In Depth Twitter was once a network of equals - now it's dividing into a performing class and an audience
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New Battle of the Sexes will only end when internet grows up
In Depth Kirsty Wark documentary addresses online abuse but fails to tackle the witless misogynists
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