Background
Hayton was born on 2 November 1947 in the town of Keighley in Yorkshire, England.
Hayton was born on 2 November 1947 in the town of Keighley in Yorkshire, England.
Hayton was educated at Fyling Hall School, an Independent school near Robin Hood"s Bay, North Yorkshire.
Hayton began his broadcasting career as a pirate radio DJ, joining British Broadcasting Corporation Leeds in 1968. In 1974, he became a reporter for British Broadcasting Corporation News, covering a wide range of domestic and international news stories. He had a distinguished 37-year career at the British Broadcasting Corporation, reporting from Tehran, Iran as the 1979 Revolution took place, becoming a British Broadcasting Corporation correspondent in Washington District of Columbia He also reported from Eritrea during the war with Ethiopia and from Beirut during the civil war in the 1980s, narrowly escaping injury when the car he had been travelling in was blown-up by a land mine shortly after he had got out.
From 1988 onwards, Hayton presented the British Broadcasting Corporation"s One O"Clock News nationally, as well as becoming one of the main co-presenters of both the British Broadcasting Corporation"s Six O"Clock News and the Nine O"Clock News programmes.
In 1989, after the latter programme"s change of presentation, he became one of its main solo presenters. Following this, he left national news to become the main presenter of British Broadcasting Corporation North West Tonight, but soon returned to the main news to present on British Broadcasting Corporation World and, eventually, British Broadcasting Corporation News 24.
In addition, he hosted a mid-90s British Broadcasting Corporation daytime quiz show entitled "The Great British Quiz", which had previously been hosted by Janice Long. In 1989 Hayton narrated Video 125"s "Chiltern Take Two" drivers eye view video.
In September 2005, Hayton resigned from British Broadcasting Corporation News 24 six months into a year"s contract, citing differences with co-presenter Kate Silverton.
The Daily Telegraph, without substantiation and quoting an unnamed "insider", reported that he turned to Silverton during a break and said "I don"t like you". The Daily Mirror quoted another British Broadcasting Corporation "insider" as saying that Silverton is "..pushy beyond belief. Behind her big superficial smile she can be a really aggressive, manipulative monster who always gets what she wants." Hayton merely cited "incompatibility" with Silverton as his reason and when his managers refused to move Silverton to another time slot he left.
Silverton was later in the peculiar position of having to go through the morning"s paper review live on air the morning the story broke, avoiding any discussion of the story and chiding her new co-anchor when he looked to refer to lieutenant
Hayton said that he left the British Broadcasting Corporation "without bitterness or rancour". Silverton continued to present on News 24 in the same weekly time slot alongside Simon McCoy.
In retirement, from 2007 onwards Hayton has been the regular host of Head2Head a BrightTALK internet broadcast for Skandia in which he holds court between two financial figures.