Visual Storytelling for Public Education

An essential tool for any organization to engage its audience, these visual storytelling projects encompass interactive story maps, animated explainers, and marketing videos.

National Wildlife Federation

Director

The National Wildlife Federation has been advocating for the responsible development of offshore wind that centers marine life and community concerns for over 10 years. A short program film that shares NWF’s trip to Scotland to visit the world’s first floating offshore wind farm off the coast of the North Sea in Aberdeen, Scotland.

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National Wildlife Federation

Creative direction, storyboarding

Hunters and anglers have seen firsthand the impacts of climate change on fish and wildlife habitats, populations, and patterns. This latest collaboration with the National Wildlife Federation Outdoors team explores how the sporting community can play an important role in advocating for responsible wind and solar development on public lands.

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National Wildlife Federation

An interactive storymap that connects climate change with increasing temperatures and public health.

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National Wildlife Federation

This storymap highlights how climate change is fueling hurricanes, floods, wildfires, algal outbreaks, droughts, and heatwaves that threaten people and wildlife alike.

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Department of the Interior

This storymap identifies ongoing water resource and access issues on the Navajo Nation.

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Department of the Interior, Office of Environmental Policy and Compliance

This ongoing and growing exhibit of curated objects, artifacts, and artwork from the Bureau of Indian Affairs Museum explores the relationship between subsistence and environmental justice.

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National Wildlife Federation

Creative director, scriptwriting, storyboarding

Over 6,000 everyday products are made with oil and gas. We can drastically reduce the emissions from making these items by trapping and reusing the carbon dioxide released in those processes. Learn more about why this is an important step in fighting the climate crisis.

National Wildlife Federation

Creative director, scriptwriting, storyboarding

Globally, humans release 35 billion tons of carbon dioxide a year. Along with natural climate solutions, new technological solutions like direct air capture can help us fight climate change by removing carbon straight out of the air and lowering our historic emissions.

National Wildlife Federation

Creative director, scriptwriting, storyboarding

Building renewable and cleaner forms of energy generation will mean nothing if we don’t have sufficient transmission infrastructure to carry it from source to user. To meet our climate goals – and provide affordable, reliable renewable energy to communities – we have to modernize and expand our current electric transmission capacity.

National Geographic

Creative director, storyboarding

Described by Sir David Attenborough as one of the planets “richest treasure-houses”, Borneo is home to an incredible array of plants and wildlife, making it one of the most bio-diverse regions in the world. From dense, luscious rainforests to reefs teeming with life and rich diverse indigenous culture; there is nowhere quite as magnificent as Borneo.

National Geographic

Creative director, storyboarding

The land of fire & ice is ruled by nature. From glittering glaciers to steaming geothermal lagoons and the spectacle of the aurora borealis; a world of wonder awaits during an expedition to Iceland.

Anthropause

Podcast appearance on behalf of National Wildlife Federation

The 27th United Nations Climate Change Conference or Conference of the Parties (COP27) kicked off on November 6th in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt. Raunak Mainali, Isaac Ssentumbwe, Aidah Nakku, and Lindsay Kuczera dialed in our Anthropause hotline to talk about various topics. Lindsay talks about critical minerals and their role in the clean energy transition.

National Geographic

Creative director, storyboarding

South America’s southern frontier is where nature grows wild, jagged peaks define the landscape and turquoise lakes shimmer like glass. The sheer size of Patagonia is enough to make any intrepid explorer gaze in awe, and you can explore it for yourself with National Geographic.