"Martin Dunn" is a British people/British journalist and former newspaper editor.

Dunn attended Dudley Grammar School, then started his journalistic career on the Dudley Herald. In 1977, he moved to the Birmingham Evening Mail, then the Birmingham Post, and the Daily Mail. After a period as a freelance, he joined The Sun (United Kingdom)/The Sun in 1983, as the papers' New York correspondent. In 1988, he became the Deputy Editor of the News of the World, and the following year, Deputy Editor of The Sun.

He left the News International group in 1991 to take up a post as Editor of Today (UK newspaper)/Today, where he spent two years, before moving to become Editor of the Boston Herald, and almost immediately Editor-in-Chief of the New York Daily News. In 1996, he moved on to Channel One Television, then worked for DMG New Media and DMG Front of Mind. In 2003, he again became Editor-in-Chief of the New York Daily News, leaving in 2010 after his wife, Debbie Hickman, had become ill with cancer. Hickman died in January 2014.

More Martin Dunn on Wikipedia.

The possibilities here are really just beginning.

It brings a tear to the eye, doesn't it? ... It's so moving to see how many people are prepared to make sacrifices for those who lost everything.

In 35 years, I can't recall anything quite like this. I know journalists over the years might get a bottle of scotch from someone, but I've never known it the other way around, where someone says, 'I can control accurate and inaccurate stories in return for a huge amount of money.' It's the most extraordinary thing.

Aerosol cans explode like a bomb. When they are subject to heat they become very dangerous.