Andrew Gold | |
|---|---|
| Andrew Gold in London, 2025 | |
| Born | Andrew David Gold 21 March 1989 Watford, England |
| Alma mater | University of Leeds |
| Occupation(s) | Journalist, YouTuber, filmmaker, author, podcaster |
| Known for | YouTube |
| Father | Neil Gold |
| Relatives | Michael Gold (brother) |
| YouTube information | |
| Channel | |
| Years active | 2023–present |
| Genres | |
| Subscribers | 656,000 |
| Views | 63 million |
| Last updated: November 8, 2025 | |
| Website | andrewgoldheretics |
Andrew Gold (born Andrew David Gold in 1989) is a British journalist, YouTuber, filmmaker, author and podcaster. [1]
Gold was born in Watford at Watford General Hospital on March 21, 1989. Gold and his family moved to Carpenders Park after nine years of living in Elstree. He attended St John’s School, Merchant Taylor's and later studied English literature at the University of Leeds. [2] [3] His father is Neil Gold with a younger brother named Michael. [4] His father legally changed the family surname from Goldstein to Gold, hoping to avoid antisemitism. [4]
One of Gold's first jobs out of university that spurred his interest in filmmaking was working at the online division of The Sun . A fan of filmmaker Louis Theroux, Gold persuaded a Sun junior editor to use one of the publication's cameras to film Gold walking through Covent Garden with the subject of the video being how easy it was to get a date on Valentine's Day. [3]
Gold, in addition to speaking five languages, is a fan of the English football club Tottenham Hotspur F.C., and has described himself as "an atheist Jew." [1]
Gold has written for such publications as UnHerd , [5] Vice , [6] Jewish News , [4] HuffPost [7] and the BBC. [8]
Gold's documentaries have been broadcast on networks such as HBO and the BBC. [1]
In 2018, Gold produced his first BBC documentary, Exorcism: The Battle for Young Minds, after spending nearly six years in Argentina. [3]
In 2023, Gold launched his YouTube podcast entitled, Heretics. [1] [9]
Gold later revealed in the media the motivation for creating Heretics came after rejection by fifty production companies. [1]
In a 2013 HuffPost column, Gold, who is Jewish, defended the right of UK football fans to use the ethnic slur "Yid" when directed at players. [7]
On September 15, 2025, Gold shared a viral personal encounter on X that showed, in Gold's opinion, the patriotism of Indian people living in the United Kingdom. Gold said in the post that he went to an Indian restaurant and the owner, a Hindu man, would not let Gold pay for his meal after having seen him on YouTube. The owner then informed Gold that he had wanted to attend Tommy Robinson 's September 14, 2025 London rally protesting excessive immigration yet had to work. Gold also posted that he had wanted to take a photograph of the owner to put on social media. Despite the owner loving the idea, Gold ultimately decided against taking the man's photo for fear of reprisals. Jokingly, the owner told Gold that would be fine since he had insurance. Gold wrote in the post, "There are so many patriotic Indians in the UK. They love this country. I love them." [10]
In 2023, Gold was interviewed for The Atlantic by Helen Lewis who had been a guest on Gold's podcast; the episode was demonitized for violating YouTube's policies. Gold was critical of YouTube's demonetization policy. [11]
In 2024, Gold's non-fiction book The Psychology of Secrets: My Adventures with Murderers, Cults and Influencers was published by Pan Macmillan. [1] [12] [13]