I started my broadcasting career at the BBC in the UK. In radio, I worked for BBC 5-Live and BBC stations in the West Midlands, while in television I reported for Midlands Today and BBC News 24.
After moving to West Africa, I made features and documentaries for BBC Radio 4 and the World Service. From Switzerland, I filed for Monocle 24, and I have worked for The Economist Radio from Singapore.
I have edited and ghost-written books for multi-national corporations, a Nobel-prize winning scientist and the Palace of the Sultan of Brunei.
Nowadays, I mainly write articles and share writing tips for magazines and websites.
As editor and founder of SWAG, an online literary magazine for writers in Singapore, I was lucky enough to interview these globally-bestselling authors.
My work has also appeared:
For BBC News Magazine: Are children given too many toys?
For BBC Online: Dutch Airline’s Inaugural Flight to Douala Left High and Dry
For BBC Radio:
For BBC World Service: The movie Critical Assignment stars an all-African hero created for a beer advertisement.
For BBC Woman’s Hour: Meet the Cameroonian "Queen of the Mountain", a elite athlete and farmer.
And...
For the UN's news service, IRIN: Oil Pipeline Ruins Fishing, Creates Unrealistic Expectations
For World Scientific Publishing, I worked as editor on the English-language translation of two popular science books by Professor Gerard t’Hooft, winner of the Nobel Prize for Physics: Playing with Planets and Time in Powers of Ten.