“Everything is copy.”

— Nora Ephron

Need an extra set of eyes or ears in your writer’s room?

Here’s how we can work together.

  • I’ve written and structured 30-minute narrative episodes for the following podcasts: They Got Acquired, Business X-Factors, Life in Transition, and Invisible Lions.

    At the Salt Institute for Documentary Studies, I learned how to structure stories for NPR segments: 10, 7, and 3 minutes or less. I’ve also written scripts for YouTube shows, online course videos, and audio and TV ads.

    Listen to some of these work samples here.

  • I’ve helped dozens of businesses with rebrands, ad campaigns, content marketing, product naming, and more.

    While I don’t take on a ton of this type of work anymore, I make an exception from time to time for companies and causes that I really believe in.

  • I’m currently working on a half-hour workplace comedy TV Pilot, with plans to adapt it into an audio show. I’m also enrolled in a TV comedy writing program, which I will graduate from in 2024.

Let me be the Tina to your Amy.

The world likes to categorize writing into neat, tidy capitalistic boxes.

Copywriting. Marketing copy. SEO copy. Advertising copy. Content writing. Brand content. Product copy. Scriptwriting. Screenwriting. Writing for the ear.

Did that. Uh huh, and that. Oh yeah, annnnd that too.

I used to be embarrassed by my windy career path that collected titles like I was in the decathlon of copywriting. But here’s what I now explain to folks about my writing career: I’ve written a LOT of clear, engaging copy for other people’s voices.

With over eight years of experience under my belt, I’m exceptionally good at capturing nuance, emotion, and personality with words. The term “marketing” makes me wince a little — but only because humanist values now guide my work.

I’m not into helping people get more clicks, views, downloads, or followers. I DO love helping creators connect authentically with their audience (and I’ve found that naturally leads to everything I listed above).

Making beautiful art is time well-spent. And it’s a gift to both the world and the artist to highlight it.