RYOT

RYOT

RYOT /ˈrət/ (or, riot) is an American immersive media company founded in 2012 by Bryn Mooser, David Darg, Molly DeWolf Swenson and Martha Rogers, based in Los Angeles. It specializes in documentary film production, commercial production, virtual reality and augmented reality.

Quick Facts Founded, Founders ...

In April 2016, RYOT was acquired by HuffPost.[1] In May 2021, RYOT was acquired by Apollo Global Management alongside other Verizon Media properties for $5 billion. The transaction was closed on September 1, 2021.[2]

History

Founding and early years

Bryn Mooser and David Darg met in Haiti during the weeks after the earthquake of January 2010. Both were in the country doing humanitarian work, Mooser with Artists for Peace and Justice, to build a school, and Darg with Operation Blessing, to build water and sanitation systems. After working alongside each other and becoming friends, Mooser and Darg had the idea to create a baseball league for the young boys of the Tabarre neighborhood of Port-au-Prince.[3][4]

Soon after, Mooser and Darg returned home to America, brought on Molly DeWolf Swenson as COO, and launched RYOT News as “the first news site linking news to action.”[citation needed]

Founding investors are Canadians Martha Rogers and Gareth Seltzer, and other notable funders include Todd Wagner and Jason Calacanis.[citation needed]

Celebrity activists Olivia Wilde, Ian Somerhalder, Ben Stiller and Sophia Bush were early supporters of RYOT. Olivia Wilde and Elon Musk have been Executive Producers on multiple RYOT Films.[citation needed]

Founding Directors of the company alongside Mooser and Darg were Stash Slionski and Stacey Leasca while the first reporters included Benjamin Roffee, Vanessa Black, Stefan Todorovic, Tyson Sadler and Christian Stephen.[citation needed]

Mooser and Darg documented their work with the young boys in Haiti in their Tribeca award-winning film Baseball in the Time of Cholera, which follows the rise of the Tabarre Tigers and the concurrent outbreak of cholera in Haiti. The film played at film festivals and finished with a Congressional screening in Washington, D.C.[5] A year later, Mooser and Darg, debuted their third film at the 2013 Tribeca Film Festival, a documentary short titled The Rider and The Storm, which chronicles a New York surfer who lost everything in the Breezy Point fires during Hurricane Sandy.[6][7][8]

2015-present: VR and later productions

Executive-produced by Olivia Wilde and Paul Allen, Body Team 12 profiles a young Liberian health worker who collects the bodies of the dead in Monrovia at the height of the Ebola outbreak in 2014. It debuted on HBO in February 2016.[9] On Her Shoulders, a documentary about Nadia Murad's fight against ISIS, debuted in competition at Sundance Film Festival in January 2018, where it won a Directing award for a U.S. Documentary.[10]

The Painter of Jalouzi was the first documentary to be shot entirely on an iPhone 6S Plus.[citation needed]

RYOT began producing 360/VR videos for other media organizations, advertisers and nonprofits in 2015. In their first produced 360/VR films for partners such as The New York Times,[11] NPR,[12] The Associated Press,[13] Huffington Post[14] and Sierra Club.[15]

RYOT is credited as the first company to capture in 360 video,1. An active war zone (Syria), a disaster zone (Nepal), underwater with wild dolphins (Bahamas), and is the first company to produce VR news and comedy series on a major network (Hulu).[citation needed]

Divisions

RYOT Studio is Verizon Media's in-house branded content agency.

RYOT Films creates content in traditional & immersive formats across film, TV, digital, and VR, producing content for clients.

RYOT Lab is Verizon Media's technology and innovation hub for emerging technologies, in partnership with Verizon Lab.[citation needed]

Awards and nominations

RYOT Films was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary (Short Subject) for Body Team 12 in January 2016. Body Team 12 was also honored at the Tribeca Film Festival,[16] the Mountainfilm Festival, the Palm Springs International Film Festival, and the Austin Film Festival for Best Documentary Short.[citation needed]

Filmography

More information Year, Film ...

Virtual reality filmography

More information Year, Film ...

References

  1. "Verizon's AOL's Huffington Post acquires virtual reality studio RYOT for $10 to $15 million". TechCrunch. 20 April 2016. Retrieved 2019-09-04.
  2. "Verizon to offload Yahoo, AOL for $5 billion". Reuters. 3 May 2021. Retrieved 2021-05-03.
  3. "The Little League at the End of the World". Esquireaccessdate=January 29, 2015. November 29, 2012. [verification needed]
  4. "Baseball in the Time of Cholera". Huffington Post. April 18, 2012.
  5. Bischof, Jackie (April 18, 2013). "At Tribeca, Profiling Life After Sandy". Wall Street Journal. Retrieved May 11, 2015.
  6. Anderson, John (February 1, 2013). "Documentaries Thrive in Sandy's Ruins". New York Times. Retrieved May 11, 2015.
  7. "'Body Team 12': HBO Documentary Films Acquires Short Doc". The Hollywood Reporter. 10 November 2015. Retrieved 2016-02-18.
  8. Hipes, Dominic Patten,Patrick (2018-01-28). "Sundance Film Festival: 'The Miseducation Of Cameron Post', 'Kailash' Land Grand Jury Prizes – The Complete Winners List". Deadline. Retrieved 2018-01-30.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  9. Archer, Dan and Katharina Finger. "Walking in another’s virtual shoes: Do 360-degree video news stories generate empathy in viewers?," TOW Center for Digital Journalism (MARCH 15, 2018).

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