Jonah Sachs

[2] Sachs is the co-founder and former CEO of Free Range Studios, a brand-consulting agency for social brands and causes with campaigns based on storytelling.

Sachs attended Wesleyan University, where he served as editor-in-chief of the school’s newspaper for two semesters.

After graduation, Sachs moved to Washington, D.C., where he reconnected with his childhood friend Louis Fox, and they decided to form Free Range Studios together with the goal of offering social causes the same kind of communication tools that corporate brands have in the media space.

[4] The Meatrix (released November 2003), a spoof on the blockbuster movie The Matrix, is a film about factory meat farming.

[9] Sachs and his work have been featured in The New York Times,[10] The Washington Post, CNN, FOX News, Sundance Film Festival, NPR, The Colbert Report, and Fast Company magazine,[11] which named him one of the 50 most influential social innovators.