Young became a
continuity announcer for
BBC Radio Scotland in 1989. In 1992, she moved to
Scottish Television as a presenter of
Scotland Today, which resulted in her chat show
Kirsty. She left
Scotland Today in 1996 to become a relief presenter for
The Time, The Place and appeared on the
Holiday programme. She co-hosted a consumer show,
The Street, on
BBC Two. In March 1997, she joined the news team of the new terrestrial channel
Channel 5, presenting its flagship news programme
Channel 5 News. In 1999, Young competed in the first
Celebrity Stars in their Eyes, winning the competition with her
Peggy Lee impersonation, singing the hit "
Fever". Young then left Channel 5 to join
ITV in 2000 and briefly hosted the quiz show
The People Versus. In 2001, she became a
co-presenter of the
ITV Evening News. Later the same year, after giving birth to her first child, she decided to return to Channel 5 to again front
Channel 5 News from 14 January 2002. In 2004, Young made an appearance on
Room 101, during which she nominated
cowboy boots,
Britney Spears,
Brazilian waxes and
'baby on board' stickers among her pet hates. In June 2006, Young was announced as the new presenter of the long-running
BBC Radio 4 programme
Desert Island Discs, replacing
Sue Lawley; she began on 1 October 2006. According to the odds given by bookmaker
William Hill she was an outsider for the job at 20/1. She returned to
Five News on 28 September 2006, but in 2007 Young announced that she would be leaving Channel 5 News in the autumn, following ten years as its head anchor since the programme's inception on the same day as Channel 5's launch (30 March), a decade earlier. On 29 August 2007, she presented her last show. On 29 September, a month after leaving Channel 5, the BBC announced that Young would succeed
Fiona Bruce as the presenter of
Crimewatch. She presented the show from January 2008 until December 2015. From 11 January 2010, she presented a four-part BBC TV series entitled
The British Family. In March–April 2011, she presented the TV series
The British at Work. On 31 August 2018, it was announced that Young would be stepping down from
Desert Island Discs "for a number of months" to receive treatment for a form of
fibromyalgia, and that
Lauren Laverne would deputise during this period. In July 2019, Young announced that she was to stand down as the host of
Desert Island Discs, saying: "Having been forced to take some months away from my favourite job because of health problems, I'm happy to say I'm now well on the way to feeling much better. But that enforced absence from the show has altered my perspective on what I should do next and so I've decided it's time to pursue new challenges". The BBC's director of Radio and Education,
James Purnell, called Young a "wonderful host". It was confirmed that Lauren Laverne of
Radio 6 Music would be continuing in Young's role "for the foreseeable future". On 2 June 2022, Young presented
Platinum Beacons: Lighting up the Jubilee,
BBC One's live coverage of the lighting of more than 1,500 beacons to celebrate the
Queen's
70-year reign. Young fronted the later part of the BBC's television coverage of the
state funeral of Elizabeth II at
St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle, on 19 September 2022. She received praise for her closing monologue at the end of the broadcast. Until 2025, Young has presented
Young Again on BBC Radio 4, in which Young interviews notable guests about what they would tell their younger selves. == Personal life ==