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Celebrating 10 Years 

About

Since 2014, OMG Media Solutions has provided clients nationwide with media, entertainment and technology strategy consulting services.  Our team of entertainment, media and technology engineers utilize advanced technology to deliver high quality results.  Our clients continue to renew their contracts annually, evidencing the quality of our work in helping them increase revenue and improve operational efficiency and effectiveness.  This past February, we opened OMG Studios in St. Paul’s Creative Enterprise Zone – a thriving district of creativity and innovation (just off I-94/Vandalia).  OMG Studios, the only Black-woman-owned space of its kind in Minnesota, headquarters its own innovations.

Partnership Opportunities 2024 & 2025

OMG Studios' Youth Band Camp

Youth Innovation Lab Mission

To provide a creative outlet for youth for music, art and literary expression, development, and education.

Your partnership enables us to make these valuable music and art programs available to marginalized youth at no cost. 

Media Kit

Beloved Community Juneteenth Reckoning with Truth "Where Do We Go From Here?" Film Screening Tour / Community Discussion

Co-produced by OMG Studios and the Minnesota Humanities Center, this documentary challenges our understanding of slavery, its impact on Minnesota, and how we reconcile our past by taking viewers on a present-day journey to Ghana, to the quarters of Harriet and Dred Scott, and into conversations with current and future scholars.

Community screenings feedback requested that we take this show on the road throughout Minnesotans.

Film Screening Request Form

Innovation Lab 2025

OMG Studios Innovation Lab is an interactive and evolving music, art and literature immersion project that will function as a cultural content creator hub. Participants will create a wide array of multimedia, inspired by the Twin Cities’ rich music and art culture.

Mission Statement

To provide a creative outlet for youth for music, art and literary expression, development, and education.

Media Kit

Music Monuments logo-color

Enlightenment New Year presents Minneapolis Sound Divas

Minnesota has a unique sound called The Minneapolis Sound.  This production tells tell story of the DIVAS of the Minneapolis Sound.  The show will be developed with a live studio audience and filmed for TV.

Media Kit (coming soon)

Juneteenth Film 2025 Partnerships

OMG Studios’ sixth Juneteenth film explores “are we really free?” taking viewers on a historical storytelling of important events that shaped the narrative making black people “less than” in society.

“All Americans should acknowledge, honor, and recognize the suffering and perseverance of enslaved people in this country, and acknowledge ancestors who did so much to build this country.” -Bryan Stevenson, Equal Justice Initiative

  • For over three centuries, enslaved Black people were denied the autonomy to choose their own names. In 1870, the first census after Emancipation afforded formerly enslaved Black Americans the opportunity to exercise their newfound liberty and express their deeply rooted hope for the future by officially recording their chosen family names.
  • Juneteenth has been observed in Texas for 159 years, but its roots are just as deep in a small village in Nacimiento, Mexico telling the story of  John Hood, born into slavery, of African American, Indian and Spanish decent.  In the north-central section of the Mexican state of Coahuila, it sits just 115 miles from the Texas border, 450 miles from Houston, and 500 miles from Galveston. It is village hours away, yet closely connected to the tradition of Juneteenth welcomed runaway enslaved people since 1850.  Nacimiento de los Negros is Spanish for “birth of the blacks.”
  • War Within War: Lincoln and the U.S.-Dakota War of 1862 . . .American Civil War (April 12, 1861-May 26, 1865)  In early 1862 a federal investigator cautioned President Lincoln that mass corruption within Minnesota’s system of Indian Agencies would lead to disaster if left unchecked. The president, consumed by the battle to preserve the Union, ignored the warning. When the U.S.-Dakota War broke out eight months later, Lincoln told Minnesota’s governor Alexander Ramsey, “Attend to the Indians… Necessity has no law.” The war and its aftermath—U.S. victory, Dakota internment, the largest mass hanging in American history, and the forced removal of the Dakota from their homelands—solidified Minnesota’s place in the Union, even as it set the stage for the Indian Wars to come, and tragically altered the lives of thousands of Dakota people for generations to come.
  • The story of GEORGE BONGA (THE FIRST BLACK MAN IN MINNESOTA) -George Bonga was a 19th century fur trader of black and Native American heritage. He lived along the shores of Lake Superior, one of the Midwestern Great Lakes. Fluent in French, English, and Native American languages, Bonga served as an interpreter during Indian-U.S. negotiations and worked for the American Fur Company before establishing his own trading post. Bonga was born on August 20, 1802 near the present-day city of Duluth, Minnesota. His grandparents were Marie Jeanne and Jean Bonga, who as slaves lived at the prominent fur trading depot of Fort Michilimackinac in the northern Michigan territory. George’s father Pierre Bonga travelled to Minnesota as a fur trader and married Ogibwayquay of the Native American Ojibwe nation. Bonga was educated in Montreal, Canada and returned to Minnesota to carry on the family business along with his two brothers

Media Kit