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2 Minutes With ... Ramaa Mosley, CCO of Adolescent Content

On 'Honest Yearbook,' WLDKAT, moving to Vermont, and the joy of fermentation

Ramaa Mosley is co-founder and chief creative officer of Adolescent Content, a global Gen Z creative consultancy and content studio. Mosley is an advocate, director and writer who made her first film at the age of 16, winning the United Nations’ Global 500 UNEP award.

Named one of Shoot Magazine’s Top 10 Female Directors, Mosley has directed feature films, TV episodes and hundreds of award-winning commercials, building a career showcasing genuine human stories.

We spent two minutes with Ramaa to learn more about her background, her creative inspirations, and recent work she’s admired. 


Ramaa, tell us…

Where you grew up, and where you live now.

I was born in New Orleans, raised in Ojai, California, lived in Venice, California, and now call Manchester, Vermont, home.

How you first realized you were creative.

I was really good at bossing people around when I was a little. At age 6, I was forcing neighborhood kids to get married in elaborate pretend-weddings that I staged with homemade dresses and bouquets. By the time I was 7, I was writing plays and casting my friends in them. I was constantly making performance art. I loved writing stories. My grandparents had some friends over to their house when I was 8 years old, and I performed one of my plays and someone said, “She’s SOO creative”—that’s when I realized there was a word for my obsession. I didn’t know there was a career in it, though, until I was 9 years old and I hyper-focused on the screen and read the credit “director” on a movie. From that point on, I knew that was what I wanted to be.

A person you idolized creatively early on.

Mira Nair opened borders for me with her storytelling. I saw the connection of storytelling as a tool for change.

A moment from high school or college that changed your life.

In high school, I directed a music video for an unsigned band. I received a call from Steve Golin at Propaganda because he wanted to meet me. I had no idea who he was, but because of him, my video was shared widely with various production companies. However, I didn’t sign with Propaganda. I signed with Johns and Gorman because the EP gave me a crystal.

A visual artist or band/musician you admire.

Lauryn Hill.

A book, movie, TV show or podcast you recently found inspiring.

A book I’ve found inspiring lately is titled Sapiens; a podcast, How I Built This; TV show, The Mandalorian.

Your favorite fictional character.

My favorite fictional characters have to be E.T. and La Femme Nikita.

Someone or something worth following in social media.

Shameless plug, but @AdolescentContent is worth following because we listen, donate, share, march, fight and educate on issues that matter.

How Covid-19 changed your life, personally or professionally.

Covid has been a tragedy, but I’m fortunate that these few years in the pandemic have created opportunities for me professionally and personally. Adolescent Content, which I co-founded in 2013, is a Gen Z ad agency and content studio representing Gen Z BIPOC and LGBTQ+ creators around the globe. We have been doing  “virtual productions” since we first launched. When Covid hit, we had the technical know-how and infrastructure to support brands and other ad agencies that needed content made quickly and remotely. The work we did in 2020 with over two dozen remote/virtual productions launched Adolescent into another level and changed our business greatly. Last year was one of our busiest and most expansive years yet.

Personally, my daughter graduated high school and started college during the pandemic, and my son grew a foot taller while in Zoom school stuck in his room in Los Angeles. In October 2020, we visited our daughter at college in Vermont with my son. We ended up in Manchester, Vermont, and drove by a high school that was in session—kids with masks were running around on sports fields, and wandering the school was just a remarkable sight. My son turned to us and asked us if he could go to school there. We said yes and two weeks later we moved to Vermont. Up until Covid and the shift to remote work, I couldn’t imagine leaving Los Angeles. I would have never been that impulsive nor willing to untether from the epicenter of film/TV. The freedom to move and have my home base be in a place that is just so verdant and beautiful has been really good for my family. It has meant that I spend a lot of time on airplanes, but when I come home to Manchester it feels really calming.

One of your favorite creative projects you’ve ever worked on.

One of the many fun aspects of Adolescent Content is that we get to partner with other ad agencies and serve as their Gen Z extension. We worked with TBD (Jordan Warren and Rafael Rizuto, now the CCO of BBH) on a campaign about bullying. Our directors Shea Vaughan Gabor and Claire Jantzens were able to support the creative team as Gen Z creatives themselves. The end result I feel was very moving and also a wonderful example of partnership in both ideating and content making.

Video Reference
Honest Yearbook | Bullying Prevention | Ad Council

A recent project you’re proud of.

During the lockdown, we helped launch WLDKAT, a CBD beauty brand that is female-fronted. Working with a female founder, and as a female founder myself, it was powerful—we wanted her to succeed. We helped create a campaign that rolled out with digital and social content and helped drive real sales results, which is what was needed.

I’m proud of the work our strategy team did because it brought creative into strategic thinking. I’m proud of the executions our creative team developed for the campaign because it put the storytellers at the center. I’m proud of the content that our directors and photographers made because they fell in love with the product, adopted it as their own, worked with very limited budgets and made work that was both individualistic and cohesively part of the vision of the campaign.

Video Reference
WLDKAT | Natural Habitat

Video Reference
WLDKAT | Case Study

Someone else’s work that inspired you years ago.

Ousmane Sembène’s work I studied in college and really inspired me because he battled racism and lack of funding and made work that changed the face of foreign films. I felt that his work, especially Black Girl, explored people that are generally not seen in films—the immigrant becoming the nanny, for example. His work inspired me to tell untold stories.

Someone else’s work you admired lately.

Ava DuVernay.

Your main strength as a creative person.

I’d have to say one of my main strengths as a creative is being sensitive to how to create human connections.

Your biggest weakness.

On the other hand, one of my weaknesses is being too sensitive.

One thing that always makes you happy.

One thing that makes me happy is fermentation. I love making sauerkraut, probiotic soda and fermented hot sauce in my free time.

One thing that always makes you sad.

Something that makes me sad is wishing I had been a better sister to my brothers when we were little.

What you’d be doing if you weren’t in advertising?

If I wasn’t in advertising, I’d be a spy or a chef. I love reading cookbooks. For the past three years, I’ve been fermenting and studying fermentation, and I love it. I think it’s the process of coming up with an idea for a meal, making it and then sharing it with friends and family that excites me.

2 Minutes With is our regular interview series where we chat with creatives about their backgrounds, creative inspirations, work they admire and more. For more about 2 Minutes With, or to be considered for the series, please get in touch.

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