Three decades ago, we saw potential few did in this thing called the internet. With a little funding and a lot of blind ambition, we opened an office on the Sunset Strip and were hell-bent on creating streaming entertainment before folks knew what “bandwidth” meant.
Turns out, video on a 28k dial-up is more torture than entertainment.
As the dot-com bubble popped, we pivoted.
Big-shot brands, desperate to navigate the digital labyrinth, came knocking. We put them online because their agencies didn’t speak code and pixels.
We were now hired guns for new media.
Faces came and went, services evolved, and our footprint expanded, but the vision remained: to straddle the brink of the media revolution.
Today, it’s more of a counter-revolution. A return to evocative storytelling that matters to people instead of mindlessly appeasing the almighty algorithm. We move culture, without letting the dizzying speed of the internet coax us into chasing it.
This time, we’re not too early, we’re right on schedule.
We’re BRINK and we’re the future present of media.