Branded Content
Rive: Spotify used Rive for Spotify Wrapped 2025 January, 2026
Rive: Duolingo creates new role bridging design and development July, 2024
Rive: Introducing Layouts October, 2024
Adobe: Digital marketing metrics your business should be using August, 2023
Adobe: Guide to email marketing segmentation August, 2023
Figma: 18 Designers Predict UI/UX Trends For 2018 December, 2017
Figma: Learn how a Microsoft designer built an Icon Library in his spare time August, 2018
Figma: Figma prototyping — now with transitions (ghostwritten) February, 2018
Journalism
Women's Health: 5 Genius New Ways To Use Matcha January/February, 2017 print issue
Time Out SF: The Best Antique Stores in San Francisco September, 2016
Pitchfork: How Music On TV Actually Works, According to 'The Leftovers' and 'FNL' Music Supervisor April, 2017
NYLON: Pop Collective Snow Angel Are A Group You Need To Know March, 2017 print issue
NYLON: Inside The Music Festival That Feels More Like A Fever Dream June, 2017
KQED Arts: Rdio Was My Sound Salvation August, 2016
KQED Arts: Jessica Jones: A Bad-Ass Female Family Tree December, 2015
Bandcamp Daily: Kadhja Bonet's Debut Album Channels 1970s Soul October, 2016
Bandcamp Daily: Jay Som, "Turn Into" July, 2016
Paste Magazine: Sofi Tukker — Soft Animals Review August, 2016
Public Storytelling
Happy Endings is a monthly competitive reading series that challenges “happily ever after” with a “however.”
This is how it works: The emcees choose a few unbiased judges from the audience. Then five readers go onstage, tell a story up to eight minutes long, and the judges choose a winner.
I read a story titled “What’s A Little Bodily Fluid Between Friends?” under the Bad Beginnings theme. (I did not win, though my friends said I won in their hearts.)
Listening Sessions is a live storytelling event for music enthusiasts.
This is how it works: Four selectors each play a recorded piece of music and then tell a personal story connected to their song selection.
Set at Zoo Labs recording studio in Oakland, CA, I chose the song “Fourth of July” by Sufjan Stevens and told a five-minute story — a comedic retelling of what it was like illegally spreading my mom’s ashes with my siblings.
If I Told Napoleon is a Bay Area literary collective that publishes chapbooks, hosts readings, and meets weekly to critique each other’s current projects.
This is what happened: I contributed a poem titled “Alejandro Marguia Eats A Bacon-Wrapped Hot Dog Before Getting Into A Lyft” to one of their chapbooks, If I Gave A Cookie To Napoleon (Issue No. 3, Winter 2015).
The collective hosted a zine release party at Wolfman Books, an independent bookstore in Oakland, CA, where I read the poem to a condensed crowd.