London, England, United Kingdom
Two films I recently cut: a 52-minute character-led documentary for ZOE's YouTube channel, and a 47-minute documentary for an international news broadcaster that went out simultaneously on broadcast and YouTube. Both were long-form, built around real people and stories that weren't obvious at first. Despite the different worlds, my approach stayed the same. **Broadcast** A decade cutting documentaries and factual films for Discovery+, Amazon, Fox and Viacom Studios. Comfortable with high volumes of footage and fast turnarounds. **Branded documentary** ZOE, Jamie Oliver, VOY. Clients who need something that holds an audience without feeling like an ad and who trust the judgement to get there, including on the decisions that cost something to make. On the ZOE film, the brand's largest single media spend, there was a full shoot day that didn't serve the story. The case was made to lose it entirely and it went out exactly as cut. Clients include: ZOE, VOY, Jamie Oliver, Wieden+Kennedy. Member of the British Film Editors (BFE). Based just outside London, available for remote or in-person collaboration. Working on something that needs this kind of thinking? Get in touch.
Long-form branded documentary editor shaping a story-led film for a leading health and nutrition brand.
Documentary Editor on a 47-minute long-form film following amateur storm-chasers, forecasters and scientists during the 2025 Typhoon season. Responsible for crafting the narrative, building tension and creating emotional payoffs across a high-risk, observational story.
Short branded documentary series for a leading health and wellness brand, centred on honesty, vulnerability and emotional truth. Becoming a Better Man, is a raw, personal film following former Special Forces Sergeant Jason Fox as he confronts years of denial and eventual burnout before making the decision to rebuild from the inside out. The work focused on shaping a sensitive, emotionally complex story with care: finding the right balance between restraint and impact, building trust with the audience, and letting difficult moments breathe without forcing sentiment. The result was a cinematic, human film that spoke directly to men who recognise the struggle but rarely see it reflected honestly.
Branded documentary film following Jamie Oliver welcoming Georgian chef Guram Baghdoshvili into his home for a traditional Georgian Supra feast. The focus wasn’t just the food, but the feeling around it — the generosity, culture and connection that comes from cooking together and sharing a table. My role was to shape the edit so it felt warm, unforced and genuinely human, letting moments between Jamie and Guram lead the story rather than over-explaining or over-producing it. The result was a relaxed, cinematic film that captured the spirit of Georgian hospitality and left space for inspiration to land naturally with the audience.