Our Advocacy Campaigns

Advocacy work driven by a single principle: putting disabled people in positions of power can transform the industry, influence policies, and ensure equitable representation for all.

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billboard placements.

Greenlight Disability

A photograph of three people talking and laughing. The woman on the far left is South-Asian and has long dark hair. She wears glasses, a colorful top and sits in an electric wheelchair. The man in the middle sits on a sofa and wears a light blue shirt. Next to him sits a person with short hair dyed blonde and brown. They wear a red top with a white cardigan and lightning bolt earrings.

The Issue

Over 25% of Americans have a disability, and collectively, $21 billion in discretionary income each year. Yet they remain a massively underserved audience on screen.

The Answer

Greenlight Disability showcases the value of entertaining disability films and TV shows by highlighting an untapped market of disabled audiences eager for entertaining content that resonates with their experiences.

TK

cities featuring our campaign.

TK

billboard placements.

Hire Disabled Writers

A photograph of three people talking and laughing. The woman on the far left is South-Asian and has long dark hair. She wears glasses, a colorful top and sits in an electric wheelchair. The man in the middle sits on a sofa and wears a light blue shirt. Next to him sits a person with short hair dyed blonde and brown. They wear a red top with a white cardigan and lightning bolt earrings.

The Issue

Disabled creatives can face a perpetual employment limbo in Hollywood – rarely considered for projects that don’t feature disability, and when they are, only sought out for consulting.

The Answer

A multi-pronged effort designed to break down those employment barriers by providing both artists and the industry with equitable and innovative solutions that put more disabled people in positions of power.

TK

cities featuring our campaign.

TK

billboard placements.

Disability Is Diversity

A photograph of three people talking and laughing. The woman on the far left is South-Asian and has long dark hair. She wears glasses, a colorful top and sits in an electric wheelchair. The man in the middle sits on a sofa and wears a light blue shirt. Next to him sits a person with short hair dyed blonde and brown. They wear a red top with a white cardigan and lightning bolt earrings.

The Issue

Entertainment industry players rarely consider disability in their strategy around diversity, equity, and inclusion, leaving the country's largest minority out of the conversation.

The Answer

Pressure entertainment industry players to explicitly include disability in every conversation and strategy, raise the profile of disability as an essential pillar of diversity, and celebrate the diversity that exists within the disability community itself.

TK

cities featuring our campaign.