Resume
SCREENWRITER (2023-2025)
For the past two years, I’ve been balancing life as a screenwriter and full-time dad—juggling nap schedules with narrative arcs, and rewrites with school runs. It’s been a crash course in patience, precision, and the art of keeping an audience (and a toddler) engaged. Writing for the screen has sharpened my dialogue, honed my pacing, and made me obsessed with emotional truth. Being a parent? That’s taught me empathy, negotiation, and how to sell an idea fast—sometimes to a very skeptical audience. Now, I’m looking to channel all of that into copywriting as a new creative avenue—where storytelling meets strategy, and every word has to earn its keep.
WEDDING VIDEOGRAPHER (2013-2023)
For about 10 years, I ran a wedding videography company called Best Part Films, capturing some of the most important and emotional moments in people’s lives. It was gratifying, but also came with tight timelines, high stakes, and the responsibility of getting everything right the first time, because there were no do-overs. I wore every hat: team leader, shooter, editor, client manager—sometimes even therapist. It taught me how to think fast, solve problems on the fly, and stay calm when everything around me was chaos. But after a decade, I felt it was time for a new chapter. I’ve closed that book, grateful for all it taught me. That same instinct for storytelling, eye for detail, and ability to deliver under pressure? It’s what I bring into every brief and every line of copy now.
LIBRARY TECHNICIAN (2012-2013)
When I first moved to America, my first job was as a library technical services associate at Collin College. Not exactly glamorous, but it taught me the value of precision and patience. I spent hours cataloging books, fixing metadata, and ensuring everything was in the right place, because someone would notice if it wasn’t. It was quiet work, but detail-heavy and surprisingly collaborative behind the scenes. Looking back, that job trained a part of my brain I now rely on in copywriting: how to organize information, spot the small stuff that matters, and structure language so it serves people. Turns out, filing books and writing headlines have more in common than you'd think.
education
HARVARD BUSINESS SCHOOL - Entrepreneurship Essentials
COLLIN COLLEGE - Video Production
HENNA-TECK INTERNATIONAL COLLEGE