Vitali Vitaliev


Vitali Vitaliev is a Ukrainian-born journalist and writer who has worked in Russia, the United Kingdom, Australia and Ireland.

Biography

Vitaliev was born in 1954 in Kharkov, Ukraine. He graduated from Kharkov University in French and English, working as an interpreter and translator before becoming a journalist in 1981. He worked as a special correspondent for Krokodil magazine in Moscow when he appeared as Clive James' 'Moscow Correspondent' on Saturday Night Clive. On 31 January 1990, he and his family 'defected', moving first to London, then taking up residence in Australia. After a few years there, he moved back to the United Kingdom, living in London. He is now back in London again after spending some time in Edinburgh and Dublin. Vitaliev's books were translated from English into German, Japanese, Russian, Italian, Finnish, French and some other languages. In June 2018, Vitaliev was appointed Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society of Great Britain.

Journalism

Vitaliev was the first Soviet journalist to publicly expose organised crime, the so-called Soviet Mafia, as well as the existence of prostitution, political prisoners and Soviet neo-Nazis. It was largely due to all those ground-breaking investigations and the resulting threats from both the criminal underworld and the KGB that he was forced to defect.
Vitaliev then worked for newspapers in Australia and the UK; and for the Irish magazine Village. In the UK he has written for Punch, The Listener, The Observer, The Spectator, The Independent, London Courier, The Sunday Times and The Sunday Telegraph. At different times, he was a staff writer and/or regular columnist for The Guardian, The European, The Glasgow Herald, The Australian, The Age, The Canberra Times, South China Morning Post, The Daily Telegraph, The Sunday Herald Sun and some other newspapers and magazines. In 1997-98, he worked as Associate Editor of Transitions magazine, in 2006-07 - as Editor-at-Large of Entrepreneur magazine and from May 2007 was Features Editor of E&T magazine - until his retirement in July 2020.

Television, Radio, Film

Vitaliev has written and presented several television documentaries for Channel 4, ABC and the BBC, including "Tasmania", "Moscow Central", "Vitali's Australia", "My Friend Little Ben" and The Train To Freedom – a program in the series Travels With My Camera. He has been a regular on BBC TV's "Saturday Night Clive", broadcasting from Moscow and later from Melbourne live via satellite, and a guest on After Dark and Have I Got News for You. For almost 3 years, he appeared regularly in Europe Direct, BBC World's magazine program on weekday evenings. His appearances on BBC Radio 4 include Breakaway, Excess Baggage, "Midweek", "Start the Week","In Our Time" and his own series "Eye on the East". In 2007, he was a researcher and script-writer for the multi-award-winning BBC comedy quiz TV show QI. In October 2010, Vitaliev's factual drama film treatment "The Pavlovsk Station" made it to the shortlist of ten in the prestigious "Inspired by Science" film treatment award competition at London Screenwriters Festival. In 2016, his latest novel was optioned by a Hollywood-based film production company. Recently, Vitali wrote and presented a 30-minute BBC Radio 4 programme "The Life of Dental Losses", first broadcast on the 16th of March, 2017.

Awards

In the West, Vitaliev has won several literary and journalistic awards, including The Royal Melbourne Show Journalism Award in Australia, RTS Award for the best TV entertainment Show of 2007 in the UK and was appointed Nieman Fellow in Journalism in 1990. In 2009, he was shortlisted and "Highly Commended" in the UK Columnist of the Year category of the PPA Awards.
In July 2010, he was declared Winner of the USA Trade Association & Business Publications International Awards in three categories. In spring 2010, "Life as a Literary Device" made it to The Independent newspaper's list of Top Ten Best New Books. In April 2011, he was again shortlisted for a prestigious PPA UK Columnist of the Year Award, and in summer 2012 won another TABPI for the best regular magazine column. In 2013, was shortlisted for a BSME Award for the Best Feature Idea.
In 2014, won another TABPI Award for Best Regular Column, with the following judging comments: "Extraordinarily well written, crafted around unique technology topics and written in a personal way. Terrific entry."
In 2015, he was shortlisted again for the PPA Award in the "Columnist of the Year" category and won the GOLD TABPI AWARD for the best regular column for his "After All" column in E&T, with the following judging comments: "Vitali Vitaliev is a brilliant writer, with a huge depth and breadth of knowledge and is on top of his game in this column format where he uses his storytelling skills superbly. You cannot put his columns down until you have soaked up every word". Year 2016 saw him shortlisted for a PPA Award in the "Columnist of the Year" category and winning again another USA-administered GOLD TABPI AWARD for the best regular column, with the following judging comments:"Engaging and approachable, Vitali's storytelling skill is exceptional. The dry humor, descriptive and simple language makes it not only easy, but enjoyable to read. I would have been happy had the column been double the length."
Years 2017 and 2018 were both marked two more PPA Columnist of the Year shortlistings.
In June 2018, Vitaliev was appointed Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society of Great Britain and in July of the same year won the SILVER TABPI AWARD for the best regular column, with the following judges' comments: "Outstanding column... appealing to the 'real' people... Fabulous tone of voice."
In September 2018, Vitali got shortlisted for a BTJA in the Features Writer of the Year category for his feature on the DMZ "The Zone of Fear and Hope"BTJA website, , and in November 2018 came second in the Best Consumer Feature category of the 2018 Caribbean Travel Media Awards for his "Migrants of the Caribbean" feature in Geographical magazine.

Books

In progress, to come out in 2020/21:
Sleeping Towers and Socialist Turnips. In search of the fragments of Soviet Utopia in Britain, Amberley publishers
Vitali's Bumper Book of Travels, Thrust Books
Atlas of the World's Territorial Curiosities, Jonglez publishers
Life as a Literary Device, paperback edition, Thrust Books''

Anthologies