Education
Mariusz Szczygieł graduated in journalism and political science at the University of Warsaw in 2000.
Mariusz Szczygieł graduated in journalism and political science at the University of Warsaw in 2000.
At 16, he began writing for the weekly-paper Na przełaj. In spite of communist-era censorship, he published a shocking collection of reportages titled The Shrift, which were about gay and lesbian youth in Poland. As a television presenter of the popular program Na każdy temat (On Every Topic), Szczygieł was the first person in Poland to publicly speak the word "orgasm" on screen.
In 2002, he stopped working for television Polsat and concentrated on writing for Gazeta Wyborcza.
Presently, he is the first assistant manager of the weekly supplement Duży Format and assistant manager of its reportage-section. His work is cited in every anthology of contemporary Polish journalism.
Most notable are his studies of the Czechoslovak, and especially Czechoslovakian, culture and life-style. His popular book Gottland (2006), is - according to Adam Michnik - the first cubistic reportage of the world.