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Who tutors
LSJ Courses?
The LSJ
only uses experienced professionals who work within the areas that
they teach. We have listed those who are established members
of our teaching team, either as lecturers on specific topics or
as personal tutors:
Nick
Barlay is the author of three highly acclaimed novels, Curvy
Lovebox, Crumple Zone and Hooky Gear, and was recently named as
a strong contender for Granta's twenty best young British novelists
of the last ten years. He is a freelance journalist, and has contributed
feature articles to newspapers and magazines, including Time Out,
the Guardian, and English Heritage.
He has written for consumer and trade magazines, local papers and
has also worked as a sub-editor. The son of Hungarian refugees,
he has worked with Hungarian television, making documentaries. Other
work includes award-winning radio plays, contributing a walk to
the Time Out Book of London Walks, and short stories for forthcoming
anthologies by Picador and X Press.
He has also taught journalism and creative writing at the University
of London as well as the London School of Journalism and has participated
in British Council literary tours.
Ross
Biddiscombe has experience at almost every level of print media,
including national newspapers, monthly magazines, daily and weekly
regional papers and specialist sports and trade magazines.
Ross has previously been the director of PR and communications at
two pan-European TV channels, National Geographic and Screensport,
is the author of six books on topics such as American football and
sports sponsorship in the UK and Europe and a marketing consultant
to various sports-based firms, including internet websites and publishing
companies.
Currently, Ross is working for the North American Sports Network,
writing for TV and sports trade magazines as well as consumer magazines
and newspapers and is co-authoring further books.
Peter
Carty is a very experienced editor and feature writer. He has
contributed to a wide range of magazines and newspapers including
The Independent, The Independent on Sunday, The Daily Telegraph,
GQ and Esquire. He researched and wrote a regular slot for The Guardian
for four years and was travel editor for Time Out, also for four
years, as well as writing numerous features for both of these publications.
The early part of his career was spent in financial journalism,
when he wrote for the Financial Times and the Investors Chronicle.
Angela Catto, born in South Africa, has been teaching
shorthand for fifteen years. She teaches shorthand for various journalism
courses around London, and provides LSJ students the opportunity
to become confident users of Teeline.
Carole
Dwyer has been a journalist for nearly 25 years. She worked
in both print and broadcast journalism in the UK and the United
States after completing her undergraduate degree. Her career began
on a weekly newspaper and progressed to daily newspapers and magazines.
She has worked as a reporter, a subeditor and a news editor, as
well as a news producer for a radio station in New York. Carole
has also completed an MBA and now works on a freelance basis and
teaches journalism at various universities.
Anders
Edenholm worked in various director and executive roles
in Gothenberg, Stockholm and Paris, then moved to CNN in London
in 1992 and spent 9 years creating and producing a wide variety
of programmes for television and radio. Anders was also involved
in setting up cnn.com and cnnfn.com and has wide experience in internet
based delivery.
In the past two years he has worked as a freelance journalist, broadcaster
and media consultant producing cultural and entertainment programmes
for radio and television, contributing regularly to a number of
magazines and newspapers and has created the strategy as well as
producing and implementing MarketTalk.
Gavin
Evans is currently a sports correspondent for BBC World
Service, reviews books for BBC Radio 5 and features regularly on
Radio 4. He currently writes for The Times, The Observer Magazine,
Esquire, Men's Health, The Express and many other publications.
Gavin
is author of five books, the most recent of which, Mama's Boy, will
be published in October 2004. He holds a PhD in Political Science
and a degree in Law.
Paul
Gogarty writes travel journalism for the Daily Telegraph,
Guardian, Sunday Times, Times, Daily Express and is travel editor
for Cosmopolitan.
For three years was a regular presenter on BBC 1's Holiday programme
and he is also an author (his latest travelogue, The Coast Road
- 3000 miles round the edge of England, was published on 17 June
and is the second in a trilogy on England and Englishness). In September
2003 he won two of the five writing annual prizes at the coveted
Guild of Travel Writers' Awards at the Savoy.
He currently mixes his travel journalism with writing books, giving
lectures, doing travel consultancy work and running the travel journalism
course at the LSJ. He is married with two children and lives in
Muswell Hill.
Andrew Knight began his journalism career in Scotland on
the Aberdeen Evening Express, where he won a number of writing awards,
including Young Scottish Journalist of the Year, and later became
the paper's features editor. He moved to BBC Scotland in Glasgow
in 1989, but returned to print journalism in the early 1990s and
spent five years as assistant editor of The Bath Chronicle, principally
responsible for the paper's features and entertainments coverage.
He has had widespread freelance writing experience and been heavily
involved in journalism training for the past 10 years with a variety
of newspaper groups. He held a full-time post as editorial training
manager for Trinity Mirror's Western Mail & Echo newspapers in Cardiff
for two years prior to becoming a full-time freelance tutor and
lecturer.
Adrian
MacLeod has been a trade journalist for 15 years, specialising
in the engineering sector. Adrian has been responsible for two magazine
launches and one re-launch. He has developed training material for
several different courses on topics including ethics, feature writing,
subediting and media law. Adrian is also an experienced trainer
in QuarkXpress and Photoshop.
Terry
McMahon completed an NCTJ pre-entry course and started work
in North Wales. Terry moved on to subediting in Chester before returning
to his native Liverpool, where he worked as a freelance with a press
agency. This included work for national dailies as well as regional
BBC TV and Radio work. He spent some years working solely in radio
before joining TV-am as a TV reporter, working across the country
and overseas.
The next three years were spent working on Radio Shropshire and
Radio Merseyside before returning to freelancing and work at Granada
Television in Liverpool and Manchester. Terry has reported on such
major events as the Hillsborough tragedy, Lockerbie, The China Crisis
and the Kegworth plane crash. Sports events covered include Liverpool,
Everton and Tranmere Rovers games in print and broadcasting as well
as the Grand National at Aintree.
Kenneth
Morgan OBE was Director of The Press Council and its successor,
the Press Complaints Commission, for twelve years. Earlier he was
General Secretary of the NUJ. A journalist for over 50 years, he
worked on newspapers and newsagencies in the north of England, Manchester,
London and Cairo. Ken was a trustee of Reuters for fifteen years,
a former Governor and Honorary Secretary of the English-Speaking
Union of the Commonwealth, and is an associate Press Fellow of Wolfson
College, Cambridge. A consultant to the Thomson Foundation, he has
advised governments and press councils in Fiji, Ghana, Mauritius,
Sierra Leone and former Yugoslavia on press legislation, regulation,
codes of conduct and ethics.
Paul
Nathanson is a veteran Fleet Street jounalist who was media
editor on Campaign, England's equivalent to America's Ad Age. For
eight years he was showbiz and media correspondent at The Mail on
Sunday. Since leaving the Mail on Sunday, Paul has been writing
for The Times, Financial Times, Evening Standard and Express weekend
magazines. Paul also worked in Public Relations as a senior consultant
at Lowe Bell Communications (now Bell Pottinger Communications).
He is still active in public relations, working on corporate and
consumer accounts.
Tony
Padman has been a freelance journalist
for seven years specialising in news and features. He writes for
several publications including The London Evening Statndard, The
Universe (London's Polish daily newspaper) and various local papers,
and has over the past year concentrated on celebrity interviews.
He combines his freelance work with teaching journalism, both at
Birkbeck College and the LSJ.
Sian Pattenden joined Smash Hits at 18 and was
the youngest Staff Writer ever. After editing the yearbook in 1992,
she left to become freelance.
She has written for Q, Popworld.com, Face, Big Issue, Hit Movies,
TV Hits, Minx, Face, Elle, Sky, Mixmag, NME, Guardian Guide, Attitude
and as music editor for Just Seventeen. More recently she has written
books to accompany Pop Idol and a book on Gareth Gates - both ended
up in the top three Sunday Times' bestseller list for 2002.
Charlie
Ryrie began on local newspapers then moved to features on a
national daily, before turning freelance. She writes for several
of the national broadsheets and many magazines, predominantly general
and investigative features about environmental/ecological issues
and garden-related subjects, with forays into other areas. Charlie
has worked in the US, as well as the UK, and is currently involved
in a long-term project documenting a sustainable development in
India. She has written regular columns for newspapers and magazines
on landscape design and sustainable architecture as well as organic
gardening, and for several years edited EcoDesign, a magazine devoted
to ecological building. She has also written books on water and
about plants and gardens.
Giles
Trendle spent over ten years in Beirut reporting for, among
others, The Economist, The Sunday Times, CNN and CBS radio. As both
a print and broadcast journalist Giles covered the Lebanese civil
war and the Western hostage saga. Giles has also been involved in
major documentary shoots - including one for the BBC with Clive
Anderson in which he appeared as Clive's guide and translator in
Beirut. He has more recently written, directed and filmed documentaries
on guerrilla warefare in south Lebanon, Depleted Uranium in Iraq
and the Palestinian refugee issue. Giles also writes on asymetric
warefare in today's world. Giles has his own website here.
Femke
van Iperen started working in London in 1996 as a freelance
camerawoman. After completing a Film and Video degree at the London
School of Printing and Distributive Trades she worked in television
and corporate video production. Her first job was for Sky TV on
Princess Diana’s funeral and she filmed around Asia and Europe
for top corporates such as Ernst & Young. She worked for Reuters,
CNBC, Carlton 021, the Travel Channel and other broadcasters before
also moving into print as a journalistsix years later. She works
as a feature writer and editor on a variety of trade and local publications,
and provides live camera experience for LSJ students.
Malvin
van Gelderen started as a graphic designer followed by work
on trade publications at Haymarket Press. The next 14 years as Art
director on leisure, specialist and woman's interest at IPC Media.
Malvin has also worked as designer of newspapers and colour supplements
at the Daily Mirror, The Sun, Express Newspapers and a specialist
with Quark Xpress and Photoshop. He now runs a Photo Library and
design consultancy.
Lorna
V started her career as a staff
writer at Planned Savings magazine, moved on to help launch and
establish PR Week, a trade paper. Working as Sell Out Editor for
Time Out, Lorna covered a range of subjects including fashion and
style, interiors, gadgets, health, fitness, beauty, shopping and
lifestyle. She also wrote for other sections of the magazine. Lorna
now works as a full-time freelance writer, working for the Evening
Standard, Daily Telegraph, Real magazine, FT magazine, amazon.co.uk
and is a contributing editor for FHM Collections.
Krystyna
Wareing's editorial experience includes subediting national
tabloid and broadsheet press as well as suburban newspapers.
She was a reporter at a news agency and a freelance writer, with
a regular column in the consumer magazine, Electronics Today International.
As editor and chief subeditor at Thomson Business Publishing, which
produced a range of full-colour professional magazines.
Krys won the company's Service Excellence Award for Outstanding
Achievement in Journalism. She has worked as Subeditor on New Scientist
magazine and was part of the editorial team at the UNESCO International
Centre for Engineering Education, where she helped set up their
publications base. Apart from LSJ lectures, Krys is a Tutor
and member of the Tutor Steering Group with the National Union of
Journalists, an Honorary Adviser for the newly launched east London
newspaper Bangla Mirror.
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