Moriah Brown
Moriah Brown is a half Mexican-American / African American quadruple-threat; Producer, Actress, Model, Creative Director, Singer, and Dancer. She was born in East Los Angeles, Montebello. The oldest of 5 kids and the first child to Carol Navarro and Troy Brown (Both previously working as talent in the entertainment industry.) Her parents had always put her in print work starting at the young age of 5. Starting off at a young age, and already speaking fluent Spanish, Moriah got her first commercial agency signing with Osbrink Talent. Her first jobs included working with brands such a Barbie Mattel, and Disney merchandise. As she got older and into middle school, her parents gave her a break to be a normal kid. After college, Moriah took on her interests in acting and modeling again. Since 2011, Moriah Brown was best known for being a print model on international campaigns with brands like, Color Pop Cosmetics, ModCloth, Wet N' Wild, and Moira Cosmetics, just to name a few. Her beginning stages of acting included landing international and national commercials featuring big brands like, MGM Resorts, Subaru Legacy, Reebok, Sketchers, Facebook, and ScottsLawn. In 2016 Moriah hosted a web series placed on Rocsi Diaz' site, called BLOGLIFE where she interviewed the hottest blogger/vlogger influencers on the web! Her resume also includes hosting The Distiller Show; a broadcasted culture cultivated music video show that aired on UTB Hollywood Network with millions of viewers in China. Moriah has her own produced YouTube channel called DareYou2DreamTV; where she directs and hosts the show to showcase her inspirational interviews on a variety of upcoming talents. Her latest breakout roles include; Neflix series, "Raising Dion", Facebook Watch, "Turnt", BETs' "The Comedy Get Down". More than just an actress, Moriah see's herself continuously creative directing, producing, and writing!
Movies
855 women joined the war to fix the three-year backlog of undelivered mail. Faced with discrimination and a country devastated by war, they managed to sort more than 17 million pieces of mail ahead of time.