Aengus Fanning (22 April 1942 – 17 January 2012) was an Irish journalist and editor of the Sunday Independent from 1984 until his death in 2012. Originally from Tralee in County Kerry, he was also a former editor of farming for the Irish Independent. Fanning was listed at number 31 on a list of "most influential people" in Irish society compiled for Village magazine.[1]
Fanning was boss and friend to the deceased journalist Veronica Guerin.[2] Fanning's family owned the Irish local newspaper The Midland Tribune.[3]
Fanning was a graduate of University College Cork (UCC).[4]
He also had a keen interest in sport, having represented Kerry in Gaelic football in his youth[3] - cricket was also a passion of his. He also played the clarinet, and was a jazz fan.[4]
Fanning took over editing the Sunday Independent in 1984 from Michael Hand. Under Fanning's leadership, the newspaper adopted what Irish newspaper historian John Horgan called a "new emphasis on pungent opinion columns, gossip and fashion" which resulted in the paper overtaking its main rival, The Sunday Press.[5] For a time, Fanning's deputy editor was journalist Anne Harris.[6]
In a 1993 interview with Ivor Kenny in the book Talking to Ourselves, Fanning described himself as a classical liberal who was opposed to both Ulster loyalist and Provisional IRA terrorism.[4] Fanning also expressed a strong advocacy of the free market, arguing that the goal of a good newspaper is to be as commercially successful as possible:
"If three or four papers out of 15 are successful and the others are not, they might say they're not driven by the market, they have some higher vocation: to serve the public interest or some pompous stuff like that. That's how they feel good about themselves. Fair enough, if that's how they want to explain the world. It's a grand excuse for relative failure... I think we live or die by the market, it will always win through."[4]
Fanning recruited a number of noted writers to contribute to the newspaper, including historians Conor Cruise O'Brien and Ronan Fanning,[3] journalists Shane Ross and Gene Kerrigan, poet Anthony Cronin[4] and novelist Colm Tóibín.[7] However, his editorship was not without controversy; the columns published by Eamon Dunphy and Terry Keane drew criticism.[3] Foley noted some Irish commentators criticised Fanning's Sunday Independent, claiming the newspaper was publishing "a mix of sleaze and prurience".[3]
Fanning also defended the controversial Mary Ellen Synon, who called the Paralympics games 'perverse'.[8] One of the more bizarre incidents occurred in 2001 when Fanning was involved in a fisticuffs with a colleague at the newspaper - operations editor Campbell Spray.[9]
Two of Fanning's three sons by his first wife, Mary – Dion and Evan – wrote for the Sunday Independent. He died of cancer in January 2012, aged 69, and is survived by his second wife, Anne Harris, also of the Sunday Independent.[10] [11]