Alumni
Writers’ Access Support Staff Training Program
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2025 ALUMNI
Writers’ Access Support Staff Training Program
Aaron Ruttenberg | Alley Turner | A.R. Gamble | Bryce Marrero | Chloe Samillano | Colin Rothamel | Eleanor Cho | Jess Kim | Joey Lattarulo | Kadi Diallo | Kayla Yumi Lewis | Kyle Alexander | Manda K. Skelton | Mendel Bain | Puja Maewal | Rio Contrada | Rubén Mendive | Tiffany McDonald
Alley Turner is a Black writer from Newark, NJ who enjoys writing dramedies and dramas about dream chasers who defy expectations. She has worked as a production assistant on feature films and at music festivals in Atlanta and NYC. Prior to TV/film, she worked on Ebola response and prevention at CDC. Based in Los Angeles, she enjoys long walks at the grocery store, especially the sauce aisle.
Asia “A.R.” Gamble is a Black female drama/dramedy writer, born and raised in Los Angeles (yes, how rare). After earning her BA in theater with a focus on acting, Asia went on to work as an Executive Assistant in development and management, studied TV writing with Sundance Collab, and recently graduated from the 2025 Writers Guild Foundation's Writers’ Access Support Staff Training Program.
Bryce Marrero is an LA-born writer, director, and self-deprecating geek. He was a writer on Nickelodeon’s IT’S PONY, directed films for Hoorae Media and ShortsTV, and was in the Coverfly Top 1%. Currently, he’s developing a Sci-Fi film with Vital Pictures. Bryce loves to make people laugh, even when they beg him to stop.
Chloe Samillano is a Manila-born, Riverside-raised queer writer (and occasional filmmaker) with a background in social impact work. Their stories explore inequality, power, and hope within systems and relationships. She has received fellowships from ARRAY, BAVC Media, and Lambda Literary, and was mentored by Samantha Militante (Reservation Dogs) through Unlock Her Potential.
Colin Rothamel is a comedy writer, ’90s lover, and unofficial pop music historian. Growing up gay in Bible-thumping Texas, he abandoned studying Jesus to worship more significant figures in history: the Spice Girls. Now based in LA, Colin has worked on productions for CBS, Netflix, and The CW, and will produce his dark comedy web series this spring.
Eleanor Cho is a Korean American writer, director, and graduate of the USC School of Cinematic Arts. She worked as a Writers’ PA at HBO, as an Assistant Editor for Beyoncé, and is currently working for showrunner Angela Kang (THE WALKING DEAD). She took part in the Werner Herzog Film Accelerator, GFS x Dolby Institute’s “Finish the Script”, and was a finalist for NBC Writers on the Verge.
A queer, multi-racial writer/performer, Jess Kim uses satire and dark comedy to question humanity’s obsession with maintaining social status in a world beyond our control. Whales could flip a yacht at any time! She won the 2022 SNL Award at The Groundlings, has written and performed in many a sketch comedy show, and accidentally organized Los Angeles rock climbing gyms into a union.
Joey Lattarulo is a writer and filmmaker from a haunted house in Oceanside, CA. After trialing lives from Neuroscientist to New Yorker, he moved to LA and found his way back to storytelling. In his work, he integrates his science background, life experiences, and passion for world-building. Joey believes tragedy and optimism are required to understand the crazy shit we call the human condition.
Kadi is an LA-based writer and self-taught animator originally from Harlem. Obsessed with stories, Kadi spent most of her childhood either drawing cartoons or fighting for the remote as one of nine children in a raucous West African home. Since then, Kadi has worked as an assistant on various scripted, news, and late-night TV shows like SNL. She is currently a creative department assistant at Netflix.
Kayla Yumi Lewis is a Korean-American writer from Silicon Valley with a BFA from NYU. Her debut YA pilot, PARKED IN AMERICA, premiered at SXSW '21 in the episodic category and won the Pitch-a-thon. PARKED screened at 8 more festivals including SeriesFest, where she won the Best Writer (Drama) Award and the Level Forward Impact Award. She currently works in development at Uzo Aduba's Meynon Media.
Kyle Alexander is a former college football champion turned screenwriter, based in Inglewood, CA. When he's not writing his next comic book fan-fiction or ruining kid's days on Call of Duty, Kyle works as a writer and story producer for a small production company focused on social justice issues, using his experiences to fill his stories with heart, humor, and a smidge of social commentary.
Manda K. Skelton is a veteran and TV drama/fanfic writer who knew that no matter what she did in her life, there would always be magic. Whether it was growing up in small-town Texas and sneaking banned Harry Potter books into her local library or joining the Navy as a firefighter to help pay for her MFA in Screenwriting at USC, she writes about characters trying to find their place in the world.
Mendel Bain is a screenwriter and former cop with a background in special education. A Morehouse and ArtCenter grad, he tells grounded, character-driven stories across genres from thrillers to Westerns, often exploring race, power, and social systems in America.
Puja Maewal is an LA-based drama writer and director from Texas. She previously worked in television in India and enjoys crafting stories that span cultures and continents. Her films have screened in over fifty film festivals internationally, and she has earned recognition from the WGA, DGA, Student Academy Awards, and BAFTA. A Fulbright Scholar, Puja has a B.A from Yale and an MFA from UCLA.
Rio Contrada is a writer, director and nihilistic flower child from Northampton, Massachusetts. A queer Italian Jew and community organizer, his work explores intersectionality in a dramedic, surrealist tone. His debut feature, starring Debbie Allen, is set to premiere at Dances with Films this June. His writing has placed in Austin Film Festival, Screencraft and the Black List’s Top Pilots List.
Rubén Mendive is a queer Mexican immigrant and comedy writer who grew up undocumented on Chicago’s South Side. He’s an alum of the WGF Writers' Access Support Staff Training Program, the NHMC Series Scriptwriters Program, and Lena Waithe’s Hillman Grad Mentorship Lab. He also hosts La Lista: A Latinx Writers Podcast, an interview series spotlighting diverse voices in media.
Tiffany McDonald is a Jamaican writer who slyly dodged her family’s quiet expectation to become a surgeon. Now a graduate of The Peter Stark Producing Program at USC, she has worked in film/TV development at production companies for many years. She loves writing drama and horror and is an avid karate practitioner. Occasionally, her parents still suggest that it’s not too late to become a doctor.

2023 ALUMNI
Writers’ Access Support Staff Training Program
Archana Shinde | Ashley Obinwanne | Del Potter | Filipa Ioannou | J. Gabriel Ware | Jazmyn Edmonds | Jon-Alexander Genson | Khadijah Iman | Kyle Harris | Maaman Rezaee | Madonna Diaz-Refugia | Rodrigo Carvalhedo | Saira Umar | Samuel Christopher Spitale | Stephanie Leke | Stephen Ra-Choi | Xuan Mai | Yeon Jin Lee
Indian born and raised, Archana is a graduate of Writers’ Access Support Staff Training Program ’23 and UCLA’s Professional Program in Screenwriting. Her feature and TV scripts have placed in Final Draft Big Break Competition, Austin Film Festival, and CineStory Feature and TV Contest. Her latest short, EARBUDS premiered at Tasveer - the world’s only Oscar-qualifying South Asian film festival.
Ashley Obinwanne is an LA-based writer and filmmaker who was born in New York and raised in Nigeria. She enjoys writing grounded, character-driven, dramas and dramedies about interconnected groups of people. Most recently, she served as the librettist, co-director, and producer on Better Off With You, a musical that had a sold-out performance at The 2024 Hollywood Fringe Festival.
Del Potter is an African American TV drama writer who was raised in a Paterson, NJ neighborhood with drug dealers and addicts who served as antagonists in his life. These antagonists also served as inspiration for Del’s introduction into storytelling.
After working in the NBA for a decade, Del went on to complete the UCLA TV Writer’s Program and regularly places in fellowships/contests.
Filipa Ioannou is a Cypriot American writer and stand-up comic. Before moving to LA, she worked as a journalist covering wildfires, murders and extremely petty crimes (think guy getting mugged for his laxatives) in the asbestos-filled newsrooms of various crumbling daily papers. After a mystery health scare left her briefly unable to walk, she was forced to get real about what she wanted from life, disappoint her immigrant father yet again and pursue her dream of writing for TV. She loves to write joke-dense comedy and atmospheric mystery and horror and in 2021, became an inaugural recipient of Cord Jefferson’s Susan M. Haas TV Writing Fellowship.
J. Gabriel Ware is a journalist and a TV news producer from Detroit. He worked at ABC News, where he field produced for Good Morning America and World News Tonight with David Muir. He covered the George Floyd protests, the Harvey Weinstein trial, and COVID-19.
Jazmyn Edmonds, one of seven siblings, grew up in a chaotic blend of Shameless meets Cheaper by the Dozen. She found solace in creativity, writing poetry and crafting stage plays. Embracing her inner Lydia Deetz, she nurtured a love for the unusual. A versatile storyteller, Jazmyn crafts supernatural thrillers and heartwarming dramas. Connect to bring her stories to life!
Growing up a misfit in small-town Illinois with a tough Mexican immigrant mom, Jon went to horror to make sense of his fears and insecurities. After serving as an Army MP and earning a BA in Creative Writing, he made for LA. Where he’s developed two pilots in the Veterans Writers Program, completed the WGF Support Staff Training Program, and served as Writers' Assistant on CBS's FBI: MOST WANTED.
Khadijah Iman is a Black Indigenous screenwriter from Boston, MA. She’s passionate about telling queer-led stories in the genre, procedural, and drama space - often exploring grief, identity, and social tensions. She’s a 2023 Writers’ Access Support Staff Training Program alum, a self-taught piano and drum player, and obsessed with Horror and classic Disney Channel Original Movies.
Kyle is an east-coast-based writer specializing in comedy that highlights flawed but well-meaning characters in absurd situations. In 2020, he was selected as a participant in the NBC Late Night Writer Workshop and in the 2022 Warner Bros Comedic Voices program.
Growing up as a queer woman in Iran, Maaman developed a dark sense of humor that fueled her film career. After being a political prisoner, she became a refugee in the US. With an MFA in film, she taught at the University of New Mexico before moving to LA. Her feature script was a Sundance finalist and a quarterfinalist at AFF and Slamdance. Her shorts have screened at Oscar-qualifying festivals.
Madonna Diaz-Refugia got her start writing jokes for drag queens in Philly and now lives in Los Angeles where they write about mental illness and being queer in the Filipinx-American community. She was part of the inaugural class of the Mentorship Matters Fellowship and studied at the Upright Citizens Brigade Theater in New York. Her work has also been featured on Reductress and WFMU.
Mai is a writer and queer first gen Vietnamese - American who aims to redefine the American Dream through stories that honor the complexity of queer, refugee, and AAPI communities. They have learned to embrace the chaos while working on sets of Dear White People, The Terminal List, and Killers of The Flower Moon. Currently, Mai is the assistant to LaToya Morgan at TinkerToy Productions.
Rodrigo Carvalhedo is a Brazilian, queer writer-director, passionate about magical realism. His pilot Enchanted Isle, based on his hometown myths, won the UCLA TV Comedy Award and garnered interest from studios. He created his award-winning short film Wishful Thinking as his real-life coming-out letter to share with his family. Carvalhedo aims to keep telling stories that build bridges of empathy.
Saira Umar is an Asian American writer who combines her multi-ethnic background with her interests like reading, musical theater, art and psychology. The stories she writes have themes of identity, culture, family, and following dreams, set in a hopeful world.
Currently, she's a PA at Titmouse. She's written for PBS Kids and was a semi-finalist for the Disney & Universal Animation Writing Programs.
Samuel C. Spitale is a storyteller, screenwriter, and author of the graphic novel How to Win the War on Truth. Growing up gay in the Deep South, he enjoys writing fish-out-of-water comedies that critique society, often through a lone voice of sanity in an insane world. He’s a former Development Manager for Star Wars collectibles, a Moth Story Slam winner, and a one-time puppet show performer.
Raised on teen soaps and hardcore music, Stephanie Leke is a first-generation Cameroonian-American writer and producer. She writes female-driven stories centering Black women existing in spaces they’re traditionally erased from. Currently in nonfiction, her recent credits include Mary J. Blige’s My Life (Amazon), Harry & Meghan (Netflix), and the Pharrell Williams Lego biopic, Piece by Piece.
Stephen Ra-Choi is a Korean-American writer who spent most of his childhood stuck behind a church pew, drawing comics or writing short stories that were highly inappropriate for a pastor’s kid. After writing a pilot inspired by his now 95-year old grandmother, Stephen was named winner of the 2023 ScreenCraft Screenwriting Fellowship and runner-up of the 2023 Script Pipeline TV Writing Contest.
Yeon Jin Lee is a Korean-American filmmaker. She's currently a showrunner’s assistant on the upcoming CBS series Watson and film STAR TREK: SECTION 31. After five years as a computer scientist at NASA, she left Silicon Valley to pursue filmmaking full-time. She is an alumna of the USC School of Cinematic Arts, The Black List Feature Lab, and Almanack Screenwriters.

2022 ALUMNI
Writers’ Access Support Staff Training Program
Anpa’o Locke | Christian Mejia | Da Eun Kim | Diarra McCormick | Isabel Meza-Roquebert | Jewel Powell | Lydia Caradine | Malaika Jules | Michelle Driscoll | Olivia Woodward | Peter Lee | Rachel Yang | Reed Tsuda | Renee Ross | Shanice Williamson | Sherin Shetty
Anpa'o Locke is an Afro-Indigenous writer, filmmaker and curator who is Húŋkpapȟa Lakota and Ahtna Dené (Village of Tazlina), born in the Standing Rock Nation. She currently resides in Albuquerque, New Mexico. She was a 2023 Native Lab Sundance Institute Fellow and 2022 Full Circle Sundance Institute Fellow. She received her degree in Film Studies from Mount Holyoke College.
Christian Mejía is a Mexican-American writer who tells intimate working-class stories about chasing the American dream as if it was a scrappy dog that stays slipping through the fence. Perpetually a step behind, his protagonists slog through the muddy bogs of class mobility in their journeys to reach the ivory tower, only to discover they lost the keys along the way.
Da Eun is a writer of magical, heartwarming stories of eclectic households & communities. Before pursuing an MFA in Film & TV Production at USC, she was a software engineer at Google with a BS and MS from Stanford University. Outside of film, she hosted a weekly podcast called bamboo & glass.
Diarra McCormick is a screenwriter and playwright who expresses her pain in a comedic and dramatic way, which is showcased in her original TV pilot, Homebound, based on Hurricane Katrina. Her full-length stage play called, Black People Problems, is based on the notion that black people are still mentally enslaved. McCormick is an Air Force veteran and has an M.F.A. in Screenwriting from LMU.
As a queer Latina, Isabel's writing focuses on putting a satirical spin on coming-of-age narratives and social critique, drawing from her real life experiences. Most recently Isabel has worked as a Writers’ Production Assistant in a development room for Amazon, having had the privilege of learning from writers who have all lead their own rooms.
Malaika Jules is a writer and stand-up comedian known for her humorous takes on urban subcultures. A former rapper, she has performed in dive bars and festivals. Her poetry appears in public art instillations and has been commissioned by the MTA and the City of Inglewood. A 2022 American Woman Playwriting Fellow, her one-woman show 90’s Hip Hop Raised Me won an award at the 2023 Fringe Festival.
Michelle Christine Anastasia De la Rosa Driscoll, or Michelle for short, is a gay, Dominican comedian originally from Harlem, NY. She graduated NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts and is a Gates Millennium Scholar and a NALIP Emerging Content Creator. She performs comedy in LA and has over 10 million views on TikTok. She loves all things comedy, New York, and is a sucker for a good medical drama.
Olivia Woodward is a citizen of the Caddo Nation with a passion for telling Indigenous stories. She started in theatre and is taking the skills she learned from her time as a stage manager, production manager, performer, and writer to the screen. Her work approaches life through an Indigenous lens, which can be serious with a healthy dose of humor.
Growing up, Peter was determined to pursue a different path than his poet father. But after confronting his mortality, Peter embraced his love of writing. He was featured on This American Life to chronicle the fitting of a prosthetic arm, has written for the DreamWorks Animation series Jurassic World: Chaos Theory and is currently a Staff Writer on a TBA Nickelodeon adventure series.
Rachel Yang is a dramedy writer and former journalist with bylines in Entertainment Weekly, Reductress, and more. Shaped by being a 1.5-generation immigrant and moving as a kid from China to Southern Upstate NY, she often writes about Asian American misfits grappling with identity amid larger-than-life situations. Most recently, she was the Showrunner/EP's Assistant on TRACKER (Season 1).
Reed Tsuda is a writer who grew up in Hawaii, Japan, and Guam and studied in Italy. He leans into his in-depth knowledge of casting and his multicultural perspective to create enthralling, character-driven dramas that examine the intersections between Pacific Islands, Japan, and the West. In his spare time, he enjoys exploring the history of ancient civilizations and playing the cello.
Renee Ross is a demisexual writer, performer, and fly auntie from Baltimore, MD. After working as a teacher, she realized that the same lessons she taught her students about following their dreams also applied to her life, so she began studying improv, sketch, and television writing. Her character-driven stories wrestle with themes of self-exploration, identity, and the art of the grind.
After writing and producing a short film and a web series, Shanice escaped the law (firm) and leaped into the film and tv world. She raised two amazing sons before moving to LA to pursue the dream. Her scripts have placed in several competitions and fellowships, including WASSTP and Circle of Confusion’s Writers Discovery Program. She currently works as a Writers’ Assistant and Script Coordinator.
Born in New Jersey with family all over the world, Sherin Shetty is an eclectic soul. When she's not working on a project, you can catch her inhaling a cheeseburger, watching a New York Rangers game, or working her way through a cookbook. Sherin prides herself on her work ethic, her fearlessness, and her fun-loving personality; she takes the work seriously but never herself.

FALL 2021 ALUMNI
Writers’ Access Support Staff Training Program
Aisha Rupasingha | Branden Kelly | Clarence Moore | Cristina Gonzalez Cibrian | Daniella Balarezo Hernandez | Darriel McBride | Derek Buss | Diem Nguyen Winter | Don Rutledge | Elliott Feliciano | Ida Yazdi | Jenna Mahmoud Bosco | Jess Morse | Jon Higgins | K. Dawn-Dumas | Lindsey Muszkiewicz | Manny Valdivia | Melissa Long | Neeti Joshi | Parker Lemal-Brown | Praxis Fernandez | Sohany Singh | Wilandrea Blair | Yousif Nash
Aisha Rupasingha grew up in 10+ places on this planet--and has no idea what to call home. She's Sri Lankan-American, of Muslim and Buddhist heritage. Her stories are as nomadic as she is—rooted in many peoples, places, languages, and cultural nostalgias. She most recently served as a freelance writer and script coordinator on Wonderoos for Netflix Jr.
Born in San Antonio, Texas, Cristina Cibrian comes from a big Mexican-American & Cuban family. Passionate about writing Latinx character’s inspired by her loved ones, she graduated from USC’s School of Cinematic Arts. Recently, she worked for Ilana Peña, who become a mentor. Cristina has an original pilot in development with CBS Studios and another project with Marsai Martin’s Genius Productions.
Daniella Balarezo (she/they) is a writer and performer from the borderlands of El Paso Texas, and Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua, Mexico. BoogieManja and Magnet theater alumn and UCB Diversity Scholarship recipient. Her latest short film screenplay with co-author Hannah Hollandbyrd recently won a Femme Frontera grant
Derek is a gay Filipino-American writer in West Hollywood by way of SF. He’s previously worked in a writers room as the showrunner’s assistant on The Sex Lives of College Girls. Derek is drawn to drama and procedural stories about flawed love-to-hate and hate-to-love AAPI and queer characters. Outside of writing, Derek plays on an all-inclusive competitive rugby team and collects whiskey.
Don Charles is a stand-up comedian and TV writer from Texas. He performs all over Los Angeles, while his newsletter has been featured from Business Insider to MFA journals. www.dnchrls.com
Jenna Mahmoud-Bosco is a mixed race filmmaker, actress and loud-mouthed Jersey girl. Her comedic, socially relevant narratives center women of color, immigrants and marginalized communities. She most recently worked as writer's assistant for a new high-budget Netflix show. When she’s not filmmaking, you can find her laughing with friends and pontificating about New York City.
Jess is a mixed-race, autistic woman who is regularly called "sir" in public. She writes comedies about being a fish out of water, even when you're in the water. Jess pulls humor from her most traumatic experiences, from suing her powerful employer to that time in fourth grade when she got stuck in a baby swing during her sister's softball game.
Lindsey is an animator and storyteller. She is passionate about critical media representation and defying genre expectations. As a lifelong artist, she aspires to create the kind of diversity touted but too often unrealized within visual development, helping remind us that people don't need their differences to be the highlight of our films in order to be included in them.
Manny is a film and television writer. A native Angeleno, born and raised in Boyle Heights, he graduated from Cal State Fullerton, followed by the UCLA Writer's Program. Manny's participated in the 48 hour film competition 8 times, winning Best Film twice. A proud graduate of the Writers’ Access Support Staff Training Program, he recently worked as a Writers’ Assistant in his first writers’ room.
Melissa is a published author with a passion for creating diverse and inclusive character-driven stories in supernatural and sci-fi worlds. She's a master at crafting romantic tension and chemistry on the page and isn't afraid of a steamy love triangle. Her background in politics and social justice work inspires themes, backstories, and worldbuilding for the immersive stories she creates.
Neeti is an NYC-based film school graduate with a background in digital advertising, business of entertainment/media/tech, and web programming. She writes through the lens of dark, absurdist humor, and with transgressive female characters. One of her strengths is that she has always been able to translate her feelings into scripts, so she can process those feelings via a fictional realm.
Parker Lemal-Brown is a writer, producer, and lyricist who worked in the writers room for BRIDGERTON S3 (Netflix) and wrote on GREASE: RISE OF THE PINK LADIES (Paramount+). He did creative development for Shondaland, eOne, Netflix, and Amazon. His original musical sold out at Hollywood Fringe 2024. Parker is a Creative Executive at Roadmap Writers and a Narrative Strategist for startups worldwide.
Phoenix Ríszing is a multidisciplinary artist from The Bronx. She graduated from Marist College with a Bachelors in English Writing and is a Gates Millennium Scholar, U.S Fulbright Alumni, John Lewis Fellowship Alumni, and Dear Fellowship Alumni. She taught in South Africa, was awarded the City Corps Artist Grant and became a Bronx Council on the Arts BRIO award winner for Performing Arts in 2022.
Praxis Fernandez is a Dominican-American Writer/Filmmaker based in New York. She holds a BFA in Film & Video from SVA and a Master's in Visual Effects Compositing from NYU. Her start in the trenches as a Wardrobe P.A., prepared her for her eventual transition to post-production, where she's spent the last decade as an Editor and GFX-VFX Artist across various genres in both fiction and reality TV.
Flint-raised and LA-based, Wilandrea Blair writes about complex Black women with humor, heart and a hint of badassery.
Her distinctions include:
- AFI grad
- 2024 HollyShorts Best TV Pilot Screenplay winner
- Academy Nicholl Fellowship Top 50
- Winner of the inaugural Women Write Now Fellowship by Kevin Hart’s LOL Studios and the Sundance Institute
- Awarded a development deal with NBCUniversal.
I am a son of Iraqi immigrants, an Air Force veteran, and a huge nerd. I grew up as the only Arab Muslim in Las Vegas, so I drowned myself in fantastical worlds to feel less of an outsider. I soon discovered that many people that look like me are always portrayed like the bad guy, so I write about Arab characters doing cool things in fantastical worlds, much like the characters I grew up with.

SUMMER 2021 ALUMNI
Writers’ Access Support Staff Training Program
Aaron Braxton | Alan Niku | Alex Cheng | Aline Mayagoitia | Angela M. Sanchez | Ashlea Archer | Atif Myers | Catherine Oyster | Daniela Labi | Donald Jolly | Emily Corpuz | Eric Pou | Gia King | Kanisha Williams | Luna De La Rosa | Luna Vasquez | Lynn Maleh | Mae Murray | Morgan Webber-Ottey | Omar Nava | Rachel Christian | Scout Comm | Spike Morales-Westlake | Tiffany Barker
I'm a creative force, excelling in screenwriting, playwriting and authoring. My work spans genres from award-winning dramas and comedies to horror and thought-provoking commentary. With a career marked by critical acclaim and numerous accolades, my impact extends across film, television, and theater. A true renaissance man and graduate of SDSU and USC, my talents are as diverse as my storytelling.
Alan Niku is a writer and MFA filmmaker from the only Persian-Kurdish-Assyrian-Jewish family in San Luis Obispo, California. He has written and directed comedic shorts, music videos, mockumentaries, and a Bollywood-style action flick shot in the back-alleys of LA. His dozen feature and TV pilot scripts include an acclaimed comedic pilot about the daily life of a mohel, or ritual circumciser.
Alex Cheng is an Asian American writer, comedian, radio producer, and filmmaker from Minnesota. He writes and performs comedy at the Upright Citizens Brigade Theatre in New York on shows like Asian AF, Harold Night, and Characters Welcome. He has also performed at the Kennedy Center. During the day, he produces and reports for NPR. He received his BA from Stanford University.
Angela (she/they) is a Mexican American writer whose stories are soaked in magic and center on themes of found family and beating the odds. They were recently staffed on Disney TV Animation’s 6-11 series PRIMOS. They've also written for PAW PATROL, RUBBLE & CREW, and AppleTV+’s STILLWATER among others. They co-edited an upcoming Latinx comics anthology, FROM COCINAS TO LUCHA LIBRE RINGSIDES.
Ashlea's writing career began as a teen playwright in a rural Bahamian church. When she moved to USA for pre-med, ghostwriting supported her. Later, as a science prof, a friend asked a life-altering favor: proofread a TV script. This favor led to a year of insatiably reading scripts, reverse engineering shows, and writing specs. It fit. Ashlea has worked for HBO, Netflix, Hulu, and Paramount.
Atif is from the Washington, DC area and was born to Moroccan and Jamaican parents. Atif’s stand up has over 200,000 streams on SPOTIFY. In terms of writing Atif was a writer for the CBS DIVERSITY SHOWCASE in 2018. Atif wrote the feature film TWICE BITTEN, that was released for streaming and theatrical in 2021 through BET films. In 2022 was a member of Warner Bros Discover Early Career Program.
Catherine Oyster is a script coordinator with credits on AGBO's action series EXTRACTION and teen action thriller OUTER BANKS. When she's not firing out script distributions, Catherine writes drama. Her choice of subject matter is like her choice of chocolate, dark. She explores themes of oppression and class, most recently in her sci-fi novelette THE HOSTESS, that she is adapting for the screen.
Daniela Labi is a Libyan-American drama writer born and raised in Silicon Valley. She worked in counterterrorism in DC, hydropolitics in the Middle East, and tech in San Francisco before finally finding her calling as a TV writer. Daniela’s writing has earned her spots in the Paramount/CBS Writers Mentoring Program. She’s currently staffed on CBS's S.W.A.T.
A Script Pipeline TV Writing finalist & GLAAD Media Award-nominated playwright, Donald Jolly began his career in the theatre. As a (gay) child of divorce in the '80s & '90s, Jolly was tugged between one parent's world of the Black Church & respectability and the other parent's world of interracial lesbian romance & rednecks. Today he writes quirky character-driven dramas about LGBTQ+ Black people.
Gia King is a Los Angeles-based writer who has worked on series including A Black Lady Sketch Show and Marvel's upcoming Agatha All Along. As a trans woman of color, she seeks to elevate marginalized voices in her work and write stories that would inspire her younger self and others like her.
Kanisha Williams (she/they) is a writer, researcher, and administrative professional from Huntsville, AL. In 2020, they completed a Bachelor’s degree in Sociology from the University of Chicago. Currently, they plan professional development workshops for music educators nationwide. Their professional goal is to help witty, empathetic queer and BIPOC-created content find its audience.
Luna Vasquez is a queer, nonbinary Latinx born and raised in Houston, Texas by two poor, Salvadorian immigrants. Television, cartoons especially, helped Luna throughout their rough upbringing and Luna wants to help pay it forward for future generations of queer POC kids who also look to fiction for comfort and catharsis.
Lynn Maleh is a Syrian-American writer/stand-up, selected for the Sony Pictures Television Diverse Writers Program. Prior, she worked as the Writers' Assistant on Waffles + Mochi and Act Your Age, on which she co-wrote an episode. She's performed on Netflix Is A Joke Fest and written for The Onion and Reductress. She co-runs Hilarious Habibis, the Hollywood Improv's first MENA standup show.
Morgan Webber-Ottey is a writer and recovering lawyer. After discovering that there’s a lot less “trial strategy over takeout” in the real world than on TV, she made the difficult decision to hang up her litigator hat and swap one form of self-flagellation for another: writing darkly satirical one-hour dramas.
Omar Nava is a Los Angeles-based writer who loves merging the “silly” and “smart” to craft hilarious family stories that are rich with empathy. He's participated in the CBS Diversity Sketch Comedy Showcase, worked for Will Smith's, Westbrook Entertainment, completed the WGF’s Writers' Access Support Staff Training Program, and taken part in Lena Waithe's Hillman Grad Writing Mentorship Lab.
They say writers should write what they know, so if you’re looking for an Indian-American writer who knows grits, bad decisions, & 10 different ways to sneak dirty words into your mehendi, Rachel Christian is the only woman for the job. An avid storyteller since she was old enough to ask how to spell “going to the store”, Rachel is a second generation Indian American writer with a love of sitcoms.
Scout Comm is a non-binary writer from Pittsburgh with seven years of experience creating and shaping stories. They currently work as the Script Coordinator on LONG STORY SHORT, a new Netflix comedy from BOJACK HORSEMAN creator Raphael Bob-Waksberg. Prior to that, they were the Script Coordinator on THE L WORD: GENERATION Q, co-writing the series finale alongside showrunner Marja-Lewis Ryan.
Spike hails from the rural border town of Del Rio, TX, where the hottest spot after 9PM is Applebee’s. After being selected for the WGF Support Staff Training Program, he served as the script coordinator for S1 of GOOSEBUMPS on Disney+. He has since become the current associate writer for S5 of BIG CITY GREENS on Disney Channel. Spike is a proud graduate from the University of Texas at Austin.
Bay Area-born Aaron Ruttenberg is a TV comedy/drama writer and Cal State LA film grad. His scripts have placed in the ScreenCraft Comedy Competition, and his short doc, Bound, won Best Short Documentary at a local Los Angeles festival. A former floater at Legendary, Aaron now works as a copywriter. He’s also a tarot reader, aspiring scuba diver, and trivia champ.