Video| Design| Content
Founded in 2023, with the belief that creative media can catalyze positive change, The Bronze Rose is a media design studio committed to advancing equity through strategic communications. We collaborate with mission-driven organizations to produce thoughtful videos, articles, and digital platforms that improve outcomes in education, health, and entrepreneurship.
Our collaborators include grassroots initiatives, nonprofits, and regional leaders, all working to address systemic barriers in historically underserved communities. Through these partnerships, The Bronze Rose helps amplify critical narratives, drive audience engagement, and support capacity-building with tailored media strategies.
Culture & Authenticity
Our video production services includes authentic and compelling storytelling. First we start with:
Research and create a culturally authentic and professional script, then we will:
storyboard
design animated graphics
record professional audio and narration
Use drone photography and full HD or 4K video depending on your needs.
We will design your video ad for social media or broadcasting on television to give your company an authentic voice!
Entrepreneurship & Social Impact
At The Bronze Rose, we don’t just create media — we partner with enterpreneurs seeking to create a postive social impact where your mission blooms.
We partner exclusively with social impact brands ready to tell bold stories by creating videos and more!
🎤 podcasts
🎥 video series
🗓️ newsletter and app.
Innovation
We offer stories to help you succeed! Our innovative storytelling is backed by analytics. We use the latest tools and metrics in order to track audience engagement:
📈 Engagement Rates (Podcasts, videos, apps)
👥 Audience Growth — especially among key social demographics (BIPOC, Gen Z, Values-Driven Buyers)
💬 Impact Sentiment Analysis (Are we changing hearts, inspiring action?)
📝 Social Impact Stories — qualitative interviews and user feedback
🌎 Advocacy Actions Tracked
AI for Good: Navigating the Future of Media, Art, and Sustainability
Artificial Intelligence (AI) is rapidly reshaping how we create, distribute, and consume media. From climate modeling and equitable storytelling to revolutionizing creative processes in film and digital art, the potential for AI to advance both social impact and environmental sustainability will rely on innovative minds. As this technological wave expands, scholars at UC Berkeley urge us to move forward with caution, ethics, and a respect for human creativity. Ruha Benjamin, Professor of African American Studies at Princeton University and Founding Director of the IDA B. WELLS Just Data Lab urges us to re-imagine a new social reality so that all humanity can access healthcare and equitable resources, yet this will entail putting people before profit.
AI for Social Impact and Environmental Consciousness
At the UC Berkeley School of Information, projects like Carbon AIQ—developed by graduates of the Master of Information and Data Science program—are already demonstrating how AI can serve sustainability goals. The tool simplifies and organizes data around carbon offsets, aiming to enhance transparency in climate solutions. This initiative won the Sarukkai Social Impact Award for its transformative potential in the environmental sector.
Similarly, at Berkeley’s AI Policy Hub, faculty advocate for design frameworks that embed ethical values into AI systems from the ground up. "Sustainable AI is about merging social values with ethical AI design to accelerate both practical applications and cultural change," notes Lewis, co-director of the Hub.
AI Meets Art: Ethical Creation in the Digital Era
As AI-generated images, scripts, and film edits become more prevalent, artists and media scholars are increasingly concerned about copyright infringement, plagiarism, and the erasure of human labor. These concerns are particularly relevant in media and digital art fields where originality and authorship are legally and culturally significant.
Professor Nicole Starosielski of Berkeley’s Department of Film & Media explores the environmental implications of digital infrastructures, but also speaks broadly to AI’s impact on creative media:
“AI can be a powerful tool for visual storytelling, but its power must be channeled responsibly. We need new cultural contracts—frameworks that recognize both the material and intellectual labor behind media production, and that ensure artists retain control over their work.”
Her work on the Sustainable Subsea Networks project reflects this ethos—urging scholars and technologists to acknowledge the ecological and cultural footprints of digital innovation, including the carbon costs of data centers and the risks of unchecked generative tools.
Toward Responsible Creative AI
In tandem with Professor Starosielski’s insights, faculty at Berkeley’s Center for Responsible Decentralized Intelligence and Haas School of Business are promoting frameworks that protect the intellectual property rights of creators while enabling AI to augment—not exploit—artistic expression.
One solution gaining traction is the integration of blockchain and provenance-tracking systems that can verify the origin of AI-generated media. This not only supports fair compensation but helps consumers and curators identify whether a work was created by a human artist, an algorithm, or a hybrid collaboration.
Berkeley’s Genevieve Smith, Director of the Responsible AI Initiative, adds:
“The intersection of AI and digital media is where we must lead with transparency and care. Systems should not only disclose their sources, but also compensate artists whose styles or datasets are used—whether implicitly or explicitly.”
One framework that offers a robust ethical approach is the book, Value Sensitive Design (VSD) Shaping Technology with Moral Imagination, written by Batya Friedman and David G. Hendry. VSD argues that we must design technology using both our moral and technical imagination, embedding human values—such as justice, dignity, and privacy—at every stage of the innovation process. This means not only involving direct stakeholders like artists and audiences, but also anticipating long-term impacts on society and indirect stakeholders like future generations of creators. Techniques like stakeholder analysis, value scenarios, and multilifespan timelines can help ensure AI tools support rather than undermine human creativity.
By adopting these principles, researchers and technologists are modeling what it looks like to build ethical, equitable, and sustainable futures in creative industries increasingly influenced by AI.
Media Innovation with A Moral Imagination
Scholars are not calling for a halt to AI innovation in the arts—they’re calling for its ethical evolution. From documentary filmmakers seeking to amplify marginalized voices to digital artists working with climate themes, AI can become an ally in building more inclusive, transparent, and sustainable media ecosystems.
Through public policy, legal scholarship, and interdisciplinary research, innovators are shaping the future of AI in media—one that respects creativity, centers equity, and uplifts the planet.
Chicanos are Changing the Way We Eat
Chicanas and Chicanos in California have always been at the forefront of culinary innovation, reshaping the gastronomic landscape by infusing traditional Mexican flavors with a contemporary twist that reflects the fusion of American and Mexican cultures. This culinary evolution is exemplified by establishments like Taqueria Sol Azteca, nestled in the heart of Rohnert Park, CA, which has been a culinary cornerstone since its inception in 1992. The year it was launched is significant since Mexicans and the Latinx community a strong demographic contributing to its cultural richness and diversity.
Why Mexican Women Are Fantastic Entrepreneurs
For those of us who are Mexican, our grandmothers and great-grandmothers were most likely impacted by the Mexican Revolution of 1910-1920 whether they lived in Mexico or in the US Southwest during that tumultuous time. Many of us have memories of growing up listening to stories of Las Adelitas—Mexican female soldiers who juggled the duties of defending themselves during the war and who saved many lives as healers, nurses, cooks, and mothers to their children. Women on either side of the Rio Grande made significant strides in opening up a socio-cultural space where they could be heads of their households, and enter professional careers. Some became entrepreneurs motivated to provide for their families yet also to exert their independence. In the aftermath of the Mexican Revolution, a seismic shift rippled through the country, reshaping its social, political, and economic landscapes. While history often focuses on the valor of male revolutionaries, the resilience and entrepreneurial spirit of Mexican women, like Las Adelitas and figures like Josefa Ortiz de Dominguez, emerged as a beacon of strength and progress
Client Testimonial:
“You are truly amazing!!!! After just one conversation you knew exactly what I needed in a website design. With all your creative efforts you put together exactly what I stand for, thank you so much for all your hard work!”❤️
Embrace your Company’s Creativity
Let your authentic voice shine across all of your media platforms. With over 1.5 billion websites out there, it's your unique story that sets you apart from the rest.
Meet Cenaida Guzmán owner of Nanie Changing Lives . Her entrepreneurial story led her to a path of health and wellness. Now, she is helping others to heal naturally.
