Early life Ovčáček was born on 13 January 1979. He studied at the Archbishop's High School in Prague, but dropped out at the age of 16 after dying his hair green in a protest against the school environment. Ovčáček graduated from the Ecological Gymnasium.
Early career In February 2015, the '''' server's GhostBuster column reported that Ovčáček had written 443 articles in two years between 2002 and 2004, while working for
Haló noviny, which reflected his fascination with communism.
Government Office of the Czech Republic Ovčáček worked in the press department of the Government Office of the Czech Republic during
Jiří Paroubek's tenure as prime minister. Ovčáček served as the deputy director of the department and became Paroubek's press spokesman, but was dismissed in 2007 after Paroubek lost trust in him. In his book
Plnou parou v politice (), Paroubek accused Ovčáček of slandering him in the tabloid media. Other commentators criticised Ovčáček's journalism over his alleged bias, extending to expressions of personal revenge. During the
2013 Czech presidential election,
Deník Referendum editor Patrik Eichler accused Ovčáček of bias against
Jiří Dienstbier Jr. as a ČSSD candidate.
Spokesman for Miloš Zeman Ovčáček was appointed press spokesman for Miloš Zeman in December 2013. His predecessor Hana Burianová initially remained as director of the press department of the presidential office, until Ovčáček replaced her in this position in May 2014. Ovčáček was the subject of criticism for his methods in the role. frequently attacking Zeman's opponents and critics in coarse terms and comparing them to fascists. In September 2021, Patrik Schober, executive board member of the
Public Relations and Communications Association (PRCA), said that Ovčáček "lies, divides society and deliberately labels", and criticised his high salary, while Czech media commentator Ondřej Kubal said that Ovčáček's behaviour did not correspond to the function of the president's spokesperson. In 2015, Ovčáček was involved in the "Hitler is a Gentleman" case, in which he and Zeman made negative statements about Czechoslovak journalist
Ferdinand Peroutka.
Later career When
Petr Pavel took office as
president of the Czech Republic in early 2023, Ovčáček resigned as presidential spokesperson and was replaced by Markéta Řeháková. In April 2023, he started working as an editor and commentator for the social website
Život v Česku. ==Social media use==