Helen Pidd

Helen Pidd (born 1981) is British journalist who is a news writer for The Guardian,[1][2] succeeding Martin Wainwright as the paper's Northern Editor, based in Manchester, in Spring 2013.[3]

Helen Pidd
Born1981 (age 3839)
Hest Bank, Lancashire
Alma materUniversity of Edinburgh
OccupationJournalist
EmployerThe Guardian
Websitewww.theguardian.com/profile/helenpidd

Education and early life

Pidd was born in Hest Bank in Lancaster and went to school in nearby Morecambe.[4] She studied German at the University of Edinburgh before joining The Guardian. While at the University she regularly contributed to The Student newspaper.

Career

Pidd was a runner-up in The Guardian media awards best feature writer section the same year, and also co-founded Fest Magazine, an alternative Edinburgh Festival magazine, in 2002.[5]

Pidd began freelancing for The Guardian before her graduation in 2004.[5] Since joining the paper's staff, she has been the Berlin correspondent and worked briefly in Delhi before moving to Manchester in 2013.[6] She is also the author of Bicycle – Love Your Bike: the Complete Guide to Everyday Cycling. [7]

Awards and honours

While at University, Pidd won Student Journalist of the Year 2002 in The Glasgow Herald's media awards.

gollark: But if you're behind CGNAT - an increasingly likely possibility as there are only 4 billion or so IPv4 addresses - you can't port forward.
gollark: Well, it does, because countries meddle a lot.
gollark: Okay? That doesn't really matter.
gollark: We can only hope that people move to IPv6 soon. Maybe the increasing prices for IPv4 will help.
gollark: The point is that if you have *no* public IP you can't (usefully) port forward.

References

  1. Helen Pidd on Twitter
  2. Helen Pidd's articles at journalisted.com.
  3. David Prior, "Pidd aims to 'breathe new life' into Guardian coverage", Prolific North, 14 January 2013.
  4. Pidd, Helen (6 June 2019). "nah - i never say I'm from Lancaster. I always say Morecambe cos it's where I went to school and Hest Bank was nearer there. Plus Jon R is actually a bit famous". Twitter.
  5. "Profile: Helen Pidd". ed.ac.uk. University of Edinburgh.
  6. Helen Pidd at The Guardian website.
  7. Juttla, Sonia (15 June 2010). "How to get on your bike". telegraph.co.uk. The Telegraph. Archived from the original on 22 January 2020. Retrieved 21 January 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.