Biography:
Freelance journalist based in Hanover and Munich | Prefers to work with different media (photo, video and text) and likes stories with an investigative element. Writes on social movements, social inequality, migration and group-focused enmity. |...
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Focus:Photographer, Photojournalist, Journalist, Videographer, Reporter, Politics, Video Editor, Documentary, Multimedia, News, Video, Film, Photography, International News, Freelance, Civil Rights and Social Inequality, Humanitarian, Assignments, Investigation, Multimedia Journalist, Editing, Storyteller, Political Journalism, Digital Journalism, International Stories, Visual Producer, Digital Media, Digital Media Production, Reportage
Covering:Europe,Middle East,
Skills:Research, Audio Recording, Adobe InDesign, Apple Final Cut Pro, Photo Editing, Web Design, Multimedia Production, Photojournalism, Video Editing, Crime Journalism, Visual Producer, News Writing, WordPress, Photoshop
When the Covid-pandemic reached Germany people reacted very different to the new reality. While a huge amount of society called for solidarity and some people started organizing supportive groups, others turned to conspiracy theories. For centuries esoterics have been part of German society. Those that were already active in the scene gathered and a very diverse crowd rallied on squares in cities, driven by irrationality. In Hannover more than 1000 people took part in early demonstrations. Historically antisemitism has always been on the rise in times of crisis. When it was at first unclear who would take a leading role, soon antivaxxers, the far-right and especially so called „Reichsbürger“ used the chance of an audience.