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Abigail Radnor

By

Abigail Radnor,

Abigail Radnor

Opinion

What I learnt one summer

July 14, 2016 12:32
2 min read

My first ever work experience was at Tatler magazine. Not the most natural fit for a Jewish girl from south Manchester and I have to admit I was somewhat surprised when I received a letter asking me to come for an interview for a two week placement. Although not as surprised as the managing editor who interviewed me and was horrified to realise I had schlepped all the way to London for a 15 minute meeting for a job with no pay.

I suspect someone had hurriedly read my CV, which I had sent to numerous magazines at the time in an effort to get some experience, and mistaken my SK8 postcode for an SW8 one. Now here was an 18-year-old who had gone to great efforts and expense for an opportunity to work for nothing for two weeks. And so, despite the way I pronounced bath, glass and grass, I was in.

It was, unsurprisingly, a culture shock. During my two weeks I witnessed the late, infamous Isabella Blow strip as she selected her outfit from the fashion cupboard; I was asked what a Jew was by one intern and I smiled and nodded at the others who confessed they only read Tatler to see their friends featured in the society pages. In a way I could relate - I did the same with the Jewish Telegraph (I was too provincial for the JC at that point in my life).

Yet what I witnessed during those two weeks in between the photocopying and the fashion director's bosoms was something weirdly familiar. It actually reminded me of being on Habonim Dror summer camp. In and amongst the coiffed blonde hair and the double-barrelled surnames, Tatler had something of a zionist socialist Jewish youth group about it.