AP in the News

Latest

Sandy MacIntyre to lead all of AP’s video business

AP Vice President and Director of News for International Video Sandy MacIntyre, based in London, is photographed in the Associated Press Washington Bureau, Friday, March 15, 2013. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

Sandy MacIntyre

LONDON (AP) -- The Associated Press on Monday promoted Vice President Sandy MacIntyre, AP's international video chief, to lead the news cooperative's global video business, including its operation in the United States.

Sandy MacIntyre

MacIntyre, an AP vice president since 2010, will immediately assume the title of director of global video news, responsible for the newsgathering and production of 250 video journalists worldwide and 50 others who contribute to the video report.

As the AP’s top video news executive, MacIntyre will oversee AP’s two video hubs in Washington and London and will liaise with AP video customers around the globe. His promotion was announced by Senior Vice President and Executive Editor Kathleen Carroll.

“Sandy’s excellent leadership of the international video news operation is well known – indeed, legendary,” Carroll said. “He has been a force for competitive, compelling video news since he helped forge AP’s entry into television in 1994.” 

For a decade at U.K. broadcaster ITN, MacIntyre ran its daily foreign news coverage and spent considerable time in the world’s hot spots, including the Mideast and the wars in the former Yugoslavia. He has also directed video coverage of six Olympic Games and six World Cups.  Most recently, as AP’s director of international video news, MacIntyre led the news portion of a sweeping digital transformation’s worldwide video to high definition.  MacIntyre, 50, will work to more closely align AP’s new U.S. video product’s U.S. and international video production for a variety of products and platforms. A native of Scotland, MacIntyre studied journalism at Edinburgh Napier University and is an alumni of Columbia Journalism School’s Punch Sulzberger Program.

The Associated Press, founded in 1846, delivers fast, unbiased news from every corner of the world.

Contact us