Bryn Mooser (born September 20, 1979 in Los Angeles) is a humanitarian and filmmaker best known for co-founding RYOT, an immersive media company that specializes in virtual reality documentary.
Upon graduating from Bennington College, Mooser joined the Peace Corps in Gambia for agriculture and forestry. In 2010 after the Haiti Earthquake hit, he became Haiti Country Director for Artists for Peace and Justice (APJ) and helped build Haiti's largest Cholera center as well as APJ's secondary school in Port-au-Prince, which now educates 2,400 Haitian youth per year.
While in Haiti, Bryn directed and produced his two first documentary shorts, Sun City Picture House and Baseball In The Time Of Cholera, produced by Elon Musk and Olivia Wilde. His latest documentary, Rider And The Storm, premiered in April in New York City, his third consecutive world premiere at TriBeCa Film Festival and third film in a row to qualify for an Academy Award.
Mooser also directed and starred in Esquire Network's Brotherhood series.
Mooser was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short in January 2016 for his work on Body Team 12.
Mooser is the co-founder of RYOT News - a news site that connects every news story to actions. Bryn was named one of Esquire Magazine's "2012 Americans of the Year" for his work in Haiti as well as a "Hollywood Maverick" by Details magazine for his documentary work in crisis and disaster zones. Bryn also consults celebrities on their philanthropic goals. Before working in Haiti, Bryn served in the Peace Corps in West Africa and hitchhiked from Bangkok to Berlin. Bryn grew up in Los Angeles, New York City, Maine and Zimbabwe and speaks Creole, Mandinka and parts of other African languages.