I left university without any clear idea of what I wanted to do. At first I wanted to be a novelist, but soon discovered that I found sitting by myself all day with my thoughts far too lonely. Armed only with the knowledge that I liked writing and languages, I moved from the UK, where I’d grown up with a Czech mother and Slovak father, to Prague, the city my mother hails from, to teach English. I quickly discovered teaching was not for me, but at a loss as to what else I could do with my degree and experience, I carried on.
In my mid-twenties I discovered podcasts and started consuming them in large quantities, finding that they combined my love of fascinating stories, sound and the spoken word with an intimate, personal medium that I could consume while still looking at the world around me. It took me a while to realise that journalism was about a lot more than just news and politics, but once I did, I knew that radio journalism was where I wanted to go. Eventually I got some freelance work with Radio Prague, and after writing a few pieces, I was lucky enough to be offered a job here. I’ve never looked back.
articles by the author
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UNESCO weighs in on Vyšehrad railway bridge saga
Prague’s Vyšehrad Railway Bridge has long been in need of repair - and the dispute over how those repairs should be carried out has recently intensified.
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Ukrainian teenagers slipping through the cracks
Ukrainian teenagers are apparently far less integrated than their younger counterparts, with the vast majority of adolescents not attending secondary school.
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“He has returned a degree of dignity to the post”: Pavel’s first 100 days in office evaluated
Saturday marks Petr Pavel’s first 100 days as president of Czechia. What have been his biggest successes – and his biggest failures?
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Steroid abuse among young people in Czechia on rise
According to the Czech police, there has been a sharp increase in the number of young people taking steroids. Experts say that social media plays a significant role.
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Sharing food with strangers: Tables in shape of heart surround Prague’s St Vitus Cathedral
Hundreds of people gathered at Prague Castle on Monday to sit at tables arranged in the shape of a heart around St. Vitus Cathedral and break bread with their neighbours.
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81 years since Lidice massacre: the village whose name became known across the globe
Hundreds of villages in World War II became the target of Nazi massacres and were razed to the ground. But perhaps none became more famous than the Czech village of Lidice.
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“The magical thing” about Prague in the 90s: Adam Trachtman on his new graphic novel
Immersion is the new and cool-looking graphic novel by Adam Trachtman that details his adventures as he joins the hordes of young Westerners heading east in the early 90s.
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“No evidence that physical punishment changes children’s behaviour” says head of UNICEF CZ
The Ministry of Justice announced last week that it plans to enshrine the inadmissibility of physically punishing children in law, in an effort to change societal norms.
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The dog urinals from Brno that are conquering the world
Brno, Prague, Warsaw, Budapest, and Calgary – these are some of the cities where an ingenious invention by two Moravian dog owners has spread, preventing unsightly stains.
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Striking art project on prominent Letná wall highlights stigmatisation of sex workers
Until June 6, the spaces in the wall below Letná running parallel to the Vltava river are being occupied by Markéta Garai’s exhibition With(out) Care.
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