Filmmaker Ryan A. Cole is on a quest to become one of the greatest filmmakers of his time. With an impressive resume of film credits and awards—from the Student Emmy he won for work on an internship while in college, to receiving the 2022 American Black Film Festival’s Fan Favorite Award—he is well on his way. Cole, who grew up in New Jersey and Texas, began his filmmaking career in 2002, at age 15, when he attended the prestigious New York Film Academy’s filmmaking camp for high school students in Los Angeles, California. During the six-week intensive camp, students received instruction in all facets of film production. Cole credits his time at the camp as one of the most influential experiences that shaped his work as a filmmaker. After completing the film camp, and while still a student in high school, Cole established his own film and video production company, Point Bird Productions, under whose moniker he would begin to produce his own films. After high school, Cole attended Howard University, where he received a BA in Film Production in 2009. While at HU, he was involved in more than one hundred film-related projects, including student films, commercials, and public service announcements. In 2008, while a student at Howard University, Cole produced and directed his first full-length feature film, The Rhythm of Struggle, for which he was awarded, a record, three Howard University Paul Robeson Awards for Best Actor, Best Editing, and Best Music Video. In 2009, Cole released a short film, One-Way Ticket, which he wrote, produced, and directed, and which garnered another Paul Robeson Audience Choice Award. Also in 2009, Cole participated in a creative internship program at NBC, where he and the other interns conceived an idea for a web-based, reality show, titled “Interns,” about a group of interns and their plan to create a viral video. Upon completion, the show became the most visited link on the NBC website and, eventually, aired after an episode of Saturday Night Live. For their work, Cole and his fellow interns received an Emmy Award for Best Student Production. In 2012, Cole relocated to Los Angeles, California, where he has since worked on numerous film productions— both his own projects, as well as on other projects. In 2018, he served as Lead Producer for Bill Duke on his documentary "Never Stop". Cole is currently developing the first season of an animated web series, “The Whippersnappers” and is also in pre-production on an animated, fantasy short film inspired by his nieces, titled “Rain.”
  • Writer (4 Credits)
    Black Cloud
    Television Script
    Cancellation Celebration
    Animation
    The Whippersnappers | Gelatin 4 Ya Melanin
    Animation
    The Whippersnappers | Pilot2022
    Animation
  • Producer (3 Credits)
    Cancellation Celebration
    Animation
    The Whippersnappers | Gelatin 4 Ya Melanin
    Animation
    The Whippersnappers | Pilot2022
    Animation
  • Director (3 Credits)
    Cancellation Celebration
    Animation
    The Whippersnappers | Gelatin 4 Ya Melanin
    Animation
    The Whippersnappers | Pilot2022
    Animation
  • Acting (2 Credits)
    Cancellation Celebration
    Animation
    The Whippersnappers | Pilot2022
    Animation
Birth Date
August 4, 1987
Birth City
Philadelphia
Current City
Hollywood
Hometown
Sugar Land
Gender
Male
Ethnicity
Black
Eye Color
Brown
Zodiac Sign
Leo
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