Alphabet City
“Even though I had two journalism degrees, I just started thinking, ‘How can I get all the tools in my toolbox?’”
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Liv Wynter is an artist, performer and activist who lives in Southeast London. At poetry nights, rap battles and art galleries, she has performed works that are tender and powerful, often dealing with surviving trauma. She recently resigned as artist-in-residence at the Tate due to remarks on sexual harrassment by the Tate’s director, and what she called “invisible inequalities of the institution.” www.livwynterartist.co.uk
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“I think one of the things that journalism has suffered most from over the last decade is the lack of innovative business minds actually staying in the industry. It’s not like I want to get rich, but I want to make a living. And you’ve got to be a hustler to do that.”
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“Artists are always making the future. Drawing blueprints and maps of what could be. And also recording history. Pop and rock musicians, hip-hop artists: they are telling stories that might not otherwise get recorded.”
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“Not waiting ’til tomorrow to do what you want to do, not being so afraid that you forget to live while you’re alive, that’s super important.”
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Zahra Hankir is a London-based freelance journalist who is currently editing a book of essays by Arab women reporters for Penguin. She also works as a content specialist for Facebook.
info_outline“I think one of the things that journalism has suffered most from over the last decade is the lack of innovative business minds actually staying in the industry. It’s not like I want to get rich, but I want to make a living. And you’ve got to be a hustler to do that.”
This week’s guest is Lauren Razavi, a 25-year-old freelance journalist, managing director of the editorial consultancy Flibl and tutor for Guardian Masterclasses.