Although Anthony Churchill himself is a figment of the imagination, he symbolizes in this context, some of the leading British style commentators who grew up in the late 60s and early 70s taking formative inspiration from the ‘angry young men’ of English theatre and the visionary excitement of Carnaby Street and the King’s Road.
Coming from honest working class roots somewhere in an unfashionable area of North West England, Anthony worked after leaving school, in a gents outfitters, and attend the local polytechnic, where he took evening classes in journalism, interior design and photography.
He was awarded a scholarship to a leading English university where he gained a 2:1 joint honours degree in media and culture.
Anthony had been expected to gain a first class degree but declared that it would have been 'too vulgar in it's ostentation' and preferred to apply his surplus energy in the offices of President of the Union and Debating Society, as well as being Editor of the student newspaper.
He has become most famous as the author of several best selling coffee table books on good taste and life syle as well as being a frequent television and radio broadcaster.
He published a hugely popular series of essays on social and cultural observation during the late 1990s which were the origins of many of the descriptive social expressions which followed him from the 90s into the 'noughties'.
He is a columnist for two Sunday broadsheet newspapers as well as being an executive consultant for a London advertising agency and two Manchester based P.R. firms.
Anthony Churchill is a man of taste and wisdom befitting his age and experience.