Ramaa Mosley

She is considered to be one of the most successful female commercial directors in the industry, winning multiple awards, including a Clio in 2018 for the Chevrolet "Goal Keeper" Campaign.

[10] The production company represents young directors ages 11 to 26 years old for work directing commercials, branded contented, web series, television, and films.

Their directors have recently completed campaigns for Beats Music Apps, Diesel, ESPN, American Girl, Vice, Tom's Shoes, Disney, and Skype.

New York-based distribution company Magnolia Picture inked a deal for The Brass Teapot, which Mosley shot in Upstate New York.

In Variety, chief international Film Critic Peter Debruge called the movie "a fresh riff on 'be careful what you wish for; fables".

Film Journal said of it "Few farces have started out with such an outlandish premise, but director Ramaa Mosley has complete conviction in it that, along with the engaging lead performances, keep the comedy percolating."

and of Mosley's directing of the actor's, Hollywood Reporter critic Frank Schenk says, "The two leads deliver highly appealing performances, with the comely Temple showing no reluctance to frequently doff most of her clothing and Angarano displaying an offbeat comic sensibility."

Even more impressively, she makes her low-budget enterprise look as slick as most midrange studio comedies, demonstrating herself a director with both imagination and technical ingenuity.

[27] Lost Child is a dramatic thriller about an army veteran (Fern) who returns home to the Ozarks to look for her brother (Billy) and finds an abandoned boy in the woods.

The script is based on an original idea that Mosley and Tim Macy developed five years prior to their collaboration on The Brass Teapot.

[citation needed] In February 2015, it was reported that Mosley is attached to direct Sometimes Thieves, a crime romance movie, written by Ryan Cannon, which she developed with producers Dallas Brennan and Jeff Elliot.

[citation needed] In October 2017, it was reported that Mosley is in development on the supernatural love story The Reason, about a high school student who wakes up from a car accident with superhuman powers.

")[citation needed] In the wake of the Chibok schoolgirl kidnapping in Nigeria, Mosley gained national recognition for raising awareness about the atrocity.

[33] In an interview with ABC News Mosley said she wept upon hearing of the kidnapping, and originally planned to travel to Chibok to cover the story, but later decided to campaign on social media instead, because of her young children.

[34] The hashtag had been started by Nigerian Ibrahim M. Abdullahi, echoing a phrase said by the former vice president of the World Bank, Oby Ezekwesili in a speech.

Mosley organized and attended five protest rallies in Los Angeles, drawing hundreds of people who collectively chanted the slogan.