I started out making splashy content for brands like Jack Daniel’s, Progressive, and New Balance—the kind of work that looks great on a reel and finally helps your parents understand what you do.

But when I shifted into full-time copywriting eight years ago, I hit reset with the NIH’s All of Us Research Program. Not flashy, but certainly foundational.

Working with a large government agency taught me how to distill dense, jargon-heavy health content into clear, human-first messaging. It sharpened my ability to express empathy with precision—and gave my work a bigger sense of purpose.

Since then, I’ve written for campaigns tackling mental health, opioid misuse, and public health equity, with a focus on government initiatives and nonprofits.

I’ve worked across just about every medium: social, print, web, radio, TV. I even ghostwrote a speech for the Attorney General once—which is wild, considering I still couldn’t tell you exactly what the Attorney General does.

My ideal creative team runs like the Seven Samurai (or The Magnificent Seven, if Spaghetti Westerns are more your bag): each person a master of their given craft. I bring big ideas, strategy, story—and just enough chaos to keep things interesting.

Recently relocated from LA to Boston with my wife and daughter. Neither are particularly impressed with me—but you might be.

Let’s make something real good together.