He has created short films for Channel 4 and production company Blink, and featured in two BBC Radio 4 programmes with his son Arthur.
[6] In 2014, Ganjei received coverage from Daily Express, The Independent, Metro, and BBC Radio 5 Live for auctioning some twigs on eBay[2] alongside other unusual items like handwritten "Fresh Prince of Bel Air" lyrics.
[7] The same year, he published Babak Ganjei's Roadhouse, a graphic novel based on the 1989 Patrick Swayze film Road House.
[8] In 2017, Channel 4's short-film series Random Acts featured Ganjei's satirical animated comedy Taste of Your Own Food, about dating in supermarkets.
[11] The concept for the book originated when Ganjei was retweeted by comedian Rob Delaney, and was consequently followed on Twitter by a number of film producers.
[14][15] In 2021, fashion boutique Browns showed a selection of Ganjei's neons and works on paper in their Shoreditch store in an exhibition called Honey Wagon.
This consisted of word art paintings inspired by awkward or embarrassing text messages people have sent, and was shown in November 2024 at pop-up galleries in London and Edinburgh.
[16][4] He is noted for his text-based paintings, which Dazed described as "reading like fragments of a diary or notebook while often exposing the mechanisms of their own production ('This art takes about 15-20 min') or revealing snippets of dialogue from his interior monologue ('I'm in the bush outside and I really love you')".
Gosling also described his illustrations of acts playing London's Vision festival, including Camera Obscura, Fat White Family, Holy Fuck and Jens Lekman, as "sweet doodlings".