JOURNALISM

 

Juliet is an award-winning freelance journalist working for the Guardian/Observer, Times, Telegraph and BBC Radio amongst other national and international media. For print, audio and online, she writes particularly on health and social issues,  travel, people, culture, heritage and the arts. She is the editor of biannual drink and travel magazine, Tonic.

Juliet started her career at BBC Television – on Tomorrow’s World, Breakfast Time and Newsnight – before spending two years as a foreign correspondent for BBC Radio based in Jakarta, Indonesia, covering everything from illegal gold mining in the Sumatran jungle to the conflict in East Timor and government-level stories in the wider region.

She has travelled in 60 countries and on all seven continents, dancing in a park in Pyongyang, creeping up on musk ox in the Russian arctic, and interviewing – abroad and at home – a fascinating and diverse range of people.

Her interest in health – physical and mental – has led to articles and radio programmes about conditions spanning depression and dementia, cancer and Covid-19.

She writes occasional comment pieces, as well as features on social issues giving voice to those with lived experience alongside experts and innovators

From Rembrandt to Rego, Samuel Pepys to Shirley Hughes, Juliet’s Arts journalism encompasses reviews, interviews, and ‘in the footsteps’ features.

Juliet has worked as an editor in print and online and her work has appeared in a wide range of outlets including: The Guardian, Telegraph, Times, Standard, i Paper, Independent, Daily Mail, South China Morning Post, Spectator, BBC Radio, Studio International, Vice, Wanderlust, Country & Town House, Adventure.com, Discover Britain, English Heritage Magazine, CNN, Spears, The Australian, and many more.