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Jeanne Horak

London

Food and Travel Blogger at Cooksister

Award-winning food & travel blogger and photographer since 2004. South African by birth, Londoner by choice! https://t.co/DVuyDScGe2

Articles

  • 1 month ago | london-unattached.com | Jeanne Horak

    Last Updated on May 27, 2025 A new exhibition features 350 mudlarked items found in the River Thames, providing an absorbing insight into London’s past by both satisfying and piquing visitors’ curiosity.

  • 2 months ago | msn.com | Jeanne Horak

    Microsoft Cares About Your PrivacyMicrosoft and our third-party vendors use cookies to store and access information such as unique IDs to deliver, maintain and improve our services and ads. If you agree, MSN and Microsoft Bing will personalise the content and ads that you see. You can select ‘I Accept’ to consent to these uses or click on ‘Manage preferences’ to review your options and exercise your right to object to Legitimate Interest where used.

  • 2 months ago | msn.com | Jeanne Horak

    Microsoft Cares About Your PrivacyMicrosoft and our third-party vendors use cookies to store and access information such as unique IDs to deliver, maintain and improve our services and ads. If you agree, MSN and Microsoft Bing will personalise the content and ads that you see. You can select ‘I Accept’ to consent to these uses or click on ‘Manage preferences’ to review your options and exercise your right to object to Legitimate Interest where used.

  • 2 months ago | london-unattached.com | Jeanne Horak

    Last Updated on April 6, 2025 Perched somewhere between a jukebox musical and a covers night, Punk Off (formerly titled Pretty Vacant) is a nostalgic, energetic and unapologetically loud look back at the origins, context and influence of punk music. Featuring a cracking 4-piece band with some impressively authentic vocals, it successfully evokes the energy and music of a pivotal moment in time but never quite succeeds at achieving its full potential.

  • Mar 16, 2025 | cooksister.com | Jeanne Horak

    In an era where the message of “every person for themselves” seems to be the rallying cry of more and more political manifestos and empathy for those less fortunate than ourselves is on a downward spiral around the world, what are the chances of an inventor creating a product with a worldwide potential market – and then refusing to patent it so as to allow it to be reproduced as widely as possible? Seems like a fairy tale, doesn’t it?

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