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Mo Goes to Washington

I got a call from Donelle Blubaugh, Director of Education at PBS, inviting us to present Departures: L.A. River at SILVERDOCS. She said that the screening was part of the Adobe Youth Voices Initiative and that she was trying to organize a panel of young producers to present projects. I immediately thought of Mo.

Mo Goes to Washington

I met Mo a few years back working at the IML creating remixes of Pac-Man that used South L.A as a maze, and he was already a force to reckon with. Seriously. As Donelle put it to me when she met him in D.C., "Mo is the smartest and most idiosyncratic 17-year old I have ever met in my life."

Mo has the strategic intelligence of a diplomat, but, as he is the first to tell you, diplomacy is not really his strong suit. This is partly because being catapulted from Bangladesh to the inner city of Los Angeles as a child taught him to be blunt, partly because he's an impulsive teenager, and partly because he's been diagnosed with Asperger syndrome.

Mo Goes to Washington: Explaining Departures

The secret of my relationship with Mo is that, from the very moment I met him I have taken him very seriously. Mo has a deep appreciation and understanding of media and has a keen capacity for analysis. He's also an incredibly hard worker, and gave Departures: L.A. River his all. So I wanted to reward him and his work with a trip to D.C where he could shine bright and be among peers.

Mo Goes to Washington: 1st Day

Mo is still a teenager though, and needed a chaperone if he was going to represent us all the way in DC. Who better to go with him than Justin Cram.... our red headed stranger!

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