Hello, my name is Adam Zaidan, I’m 22 and a Final Year Film and Broadcasting Student Hello, my name is Adam Zaidan, I’m 22 and a Final Year Film and Broadcasting Student here at Technological University Dublin. I’ve had a keen interest in broadcasting since I was a kid, particularly in the areas of Radio production and live Television production, and that’s why I wanted to get involved with this course.Over the last four years, I’ve taken part in film productions, documentary productionsand worked in mock-television settings here in TUD as well as in a real live sports television setting with ESPN during my time spent on Exchange in the University of Central Florida. More recently however, I chose to specialise in Radio Production, as that is the area I’d be most keen in getting involved with. In the first semester of my final year, I wrote, produced and edited a pilot podcast episode about Movember, called “Behind the Mo: More than a Moustache”, focusing on the specific stories and members in the Movember community, and during the second semester, I created an audio documentary called “The Hidden River Poddle”, which looks into the history of a Dublin river, right up to the present day.
Group / Individual Project title and your role: Individual Project: ‘BEHIND THE MO: [PILOT} EP 1 - More than a Moustache’, Writer, Producer & Editor.
Solo Audio Documentary: ‘The Hidden River Poddle’, Writer, Producer and Editor.
This audio documentary traces the River Poddle from its opening at Tymon Park in Tallaght to its hidden, underground course beneath the streets of Dublin, revealing how a small waterway shaped the city far more than people actually realise. Through historical narration, insight from history groups, county councils and lived memories, it uncovers the Poddle’s long reputation for flooding and repeated surges through Harold’s Cross and Kimmage in the late 20th century. The story moves between past and present,from childhood recollections of Poddle
Park, the mills the river once powered, the folklore of traditional Irish songs like Weile Waile and the modern engineering efforts to finally tame the river, which prevented flooding during Storm Sandra in January 2026. Adam, follows the river to its end, emerging from darkness into the Liffey at Wellingto Quay. The closing moments reveal a river that has always been small in scale but enormous in influence.