Adriana García is a visual artist and strategist in the journalism space.
As a 2017 JSK Fellow at Stanford University, she focused on hyperlocal community communications.
Later, at Spaceship Media, García moderated thousands of women in conversations across political divides and spearheaded the use of visuals to deliver fact-based, shareable information to a small border community in Arizona.
She was part of the Pulitzer Prize winning team at The Times-Picayune in New Orleans for coverage of Hurricane Katrina.
García is a graduate of Arizona State with a BS in Design and a BFA in Art.
"Collaborating with MediaStorm feels less like a service and more like a creative partnership. Their ability to untangle complex challenges and craft visuals that speak on multiple levels is both rare and refreshing. Brian and Brow bring not only expertise, but an infectious energy that makes the entire process a joy."
CatchLight’s Impact Report details the results of the organization’s mission to cover local communities and create social change.
Melissa, a single mother from California, suddenly lost her vision. Her disability makes Melissa dual eligible, meaning she qualifies for both Medicare and Medicaid.
Ann lives in a home for women with developmental disabilities. Bound to a wheelchair and non-verbal, Ann’s disabilities make her dual eligible, meaning she qualifies for both Medicare and Medicaid.