Gabo Arora

He has directed, produced and pioneered a series of virtual reality documentaries (Clouds Over Sidra, Waves of Grace,[2] My Mother's Wing)[3] for the United Nations that have premiered at film festivals, featured at the World Economic Forum in Davos, screened at the White House, and have exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art's inaugural program on immersive storytelling.

His VR experience, "The Last Goodbye", commissioned by Steven Spielberg's Shoah Foundation, premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival, with the LA Times calling it "game changing" and "transcending all the typical barriers of rectangular cinema.

He's been featured in the book The Fuzzy and the Techie[9] by Scott Hartley and his work has been covered widely in the Guardian,[10] Vice News,[11] Wired,[12] TED, NPR and PBS Newshour.

More than a year after the Nepal earthquake, Sabita must balance the pain of picking up the pieces after the devastating quake and fulfilling the everyday duties of a fractured home, all while trying to keep her dreams for her future active.

The eight-minute documentary follows the daily life of a family in Gaza, after the loss of two sons in 2014 when Israel shelled UN Relief and Works Agency school shelters.

[17] The Last Goodbye[18] is an immersive experience following Holocaust survivor Pinchas Gutter as he makes his final pilgrimage to Majdanek, a former Nazi extermination camp in occupied Poland.

The Last Goodbye, co-created by Gabo Arora and Ari Palitz, is a co-production by the Shoah Foundation, Here Be Dragons, MPC VR and OTOY.

The Day the World Changed is the first-ever interactive VR memorial experience to pay tribute to those effected directed by nuclear warfare spanning back to 1945.

By utilizing testimonies from actual survivors and various data visualization, the 20-minute experience accurately showcases the devastating effects of atomic weaponry both physically and emotionally.