OUR CLIENTS
ROCSI DIAZ
Rocsi Diaz knows how to turn an idea into a platform. Born in Honduras and raised in New Orleans, she broke into radio in Dallas and Chicago before landing the co-host spot on 106 & Park (2006-2012), where she became a familiar face to millions. She then moved into entertainment journalism as a correspondent on Entertainment Tonight, earning a Daytime Emmy as part of the team. Through it all, her voice—clear, real and unapologetic—has been about keeping it authentic and inspiring others to tell their story loud.
ZAYA WADE
Zaya Wade is a rising voice who’s doing more than just making headlines — she’s shaping culture. Born in 2007 to Dwyane Wade and raised by his family with Gabrielle Union, Zaya came out as transgender in 2020 and immediately turned that moment into a platform of empowerment and visibility.
Now she uses her experience as a model, advocate, and public-figure teen to chart a new path: stepping into style and substance, from walking for Miu Miu at Paris Fashion Week to co-founding the digital community Translatable (launched with her father) to support LGBTQ+ youth and their families.
In short: Zaya’s story isn’t just about transitioning — it’s about taking ownership of one’s identity, using platform with purpose, and proving that influence can be both bold and rooted in authenticity.
DWYANE WADE
Dwyane Wade proves that greatness isn’t just born—it’s built through grit, vision and evolution. Coming out of Chicago, he rose to star status at Miami Heat after being picked 5th overall in the 2003 NBA Draft. He helped the Heat win three championships (2006, 2012, 2013) and became a household name for clutch performances.
But he didn’t stop when the final buzzer sounded. Wade has shifted into business, media, advocacy and ownership—proving the story doesn’t end at retirement, it expands.
RICKY WILLIAMS
Ricky Williams is the kind of story that reminds you both the hustle and the healing matter. A dominating force at the Texas Longhorns — where he smashed NCAA rushing records and won the 1998 Heisman Trophy — he carried that raw talent into eleven seasons in the NFL, surpassing 10,000 yards.
But Williams didn’t just ride the wave: he chose a different lane. From stepping away at the peak of his career, to diving into holistic healing, yoga and cannabis entrepreneurship — he turned his narrative into one about transformation.
He proves this: success isn’t just about the stats, it’s about knowing when to change the game and lead with what you genuinely believe in.
GABRIELLE UNION
Gabrielle Union is the kind of creative who takes a spark and turns it into something real. She broke out from TV sitcoms into teen-movie hits like Bring It On and 10 Things I Hate About You, then made the transition to lead roles, author, entrepreneur and activist.
Whether delivering compelling performances, launching hair-care and baby-care brands, or speaking out on justice, she’s built a story of power, purpose and evolution. She proves that your narrative doesn’t stop after the first success—it grows, pivots and impacts.
LARRY JOHNSON
Larry Johnson turned an exceptional talent into undeniable impact. At Penn State Nittany Lions, he smashed through defenses and in 2002 rushed for 2,000+ yards — earning unanimous All-American honors and the Maxwell, Walter Camp and Doak Walker Awards.
Drafted 27th overall in the 2003 Kansas City Chiefs’s first round, he became the engine of their offense — including back-to-back monster seasons (1,750 yards in 2005; 1,789 in 2006) and set an NFL mark with 416 carries in a season.
Johnson’s story isn’t just about numbers: it’s about embracing opportunity, delivering at the highest level, and showing that when you lean into your strengths you can raise the bar.
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