My Mom Works At The Internet
A 7-year-old badges into HQ, spins in a chair during standup, and tries to explain what 'the cloud' is.
Kids shadow their parents for a day and ask the questions adults are too polite — or too afraid — to ask.

From corporate offices and construction sites to hospitals and film sets, viewers get an inside look at what different careers actually look like — through the curious, honest, and often hilarious perspective of kids.
As they tour the workplace, try the job, and interview their parents and coworkers, the show reveals not just what people do for a living, but how work shapes their lives and families.

Founder of Salary Transparent Street — the viral interview series that's racked up 3M+ followers by asking strangers one of the most uncomfortable questions in America: "how much do you make?"
Hannah turned salary transparency into a movement. Now she's pointing the mic at the next generation — and letting them do the asking.
Three concepts in development. Each one a different industry, a different kid, the same wide-open curiosity.
A 7-year-old badges into HQ, spins in a chair during standup, and tries to explain what 'the cloud' is.
Hard hats, knuckle bumps, and a kid asking the foreman why everyone wears the same boots.
Tiny scrubs, a stethoscope, and a teddy bear that needs surgery — stat.
The curiosity, honesty, and cuteness of a child is a gamechanger in a corporate environment. They ask what we won't.
Parents + Kids + Work = stories about why we work, what we sacrifice, and what we're proud of. Not just what we do.
Long-form for streaming. Short clips for social. Lesson plans for schools. One IP, every distribution channel.
Usable in classrooms, career days, and on educational platforms. Sponsorable by every industry on screen.
Bring Your Kid To Work is produced in partnership with The Destination Channel, a studio that has won five Emmy Awards for turning specific human stories into broadcast-quality television.






The pilot slate is in production. Follow along, get in touch, or just say hi — we'd love to hear from you.