I have been working in factual television for over nine years. I am an experienced producer, director and camera operator and have worked across a variety of documentary programmes for Channel 4, ITV and the BBC.


I started my TV career working full time at Turn on TV as a runner and researcher making fly-on-the-wall series like ‘Tourist Police’ for Channel 4.


In 2002 I became a freelance assistant producer and worked mostly at one company, called Mosaic Films, where I worked across a range of popular programmes. My first AP job for Mosaic was on an observational documentary series for ITV1 called ‘The Tube’ about life on London’s Underground system.


The series was a success and I was given the opportunity to produce and direct my first film. Called ‘Busking Underground’, it was commissioned for ITV’s current affairs strand Metroland and followed the ‘X Factor’ style auditions and first few weeks of Transport for London’s new licensed busking scheme.


With my first film a success I went on to direct and produce more films at Mosaic including a second series of ‘The Tube’, which won the Royal Television Society award for ‘Best Independent Producer’. Soon after that I went to film at the Royal Botanic Gardens for the 12 part series ‘A Year at Kew’ commissioned for BBC2 through BBC Wales. The series was very popular; each episode attracting an audience of over 2 million people on average.


Recently I‘ve worked with a presenter for the first time, filming 5 episodes of the ITV1 series ‘No Place Like Home?’ with Catherine Gee.


If you’d like to know more about some of the programmes I’ve made, have a look on the productions page or you can always contact me.