I'm an energetic extrovert with over eight years of experience as an international emcee. I've hosted and moderated events across the world — boardrooms, conference stages, red carpets, wedding floors, birthdays full of ten-year-olds — and somewhere past my fiftieth event, I stopped counting and started noticing something more important: every single room still mattered to me.
This was never just a job I fell into. Holding a room — reading what it needs, giving it energy when it's flat, giving it focus when it's scattered — is work I take seriously, because the people in that room are trusting me with something real: their wedding day, their company's biggest announcement, their kid's birthday, the panel that's supposed to actually go somewhere instead of just filling time.
"It's more than an event, it's an experience."
That line isn't a slogan I picked because it sounded nice. It's how I actually approach the work. Whether I'm moderating a panel of executives, emceeing a gala on a red carpet, or running games at a five-year-old's birthday party, my job is the same underneath all of it: read the room, hold the energy, and make sure the people in it leave with something they remember.
My background is multicultural, and it shows up in how I host — I move comfortably between formal and playful, between a boardroom's pace and a dance floor's energy, because I've genuinely lived in both worlds. I show up prepared, I show up warm, and I show up ready to make your event one for the books.