I'm Blake Larsen

I create story-driven content that builds communities, moves emotions, and drives results.
From HBO to The Patriots, from podcasting to brand campaigns.

I turn audiences into believers.

This Is Personal

Hello

I'mBlake Larsen

Digital Marketer and Storytelling Expert

Creating Content isn't the thing. It's thing that gets you to the thing.

I don’t just create content—I create belief. The kind that stops people mid-scroll. The kind that sparks loyalty, builds communities, and moves the needle. Over the past decade, I’ve launched a podcast network, led creative for national brands, and told stories that echo long after the credits roll. Whether I’m behind a microphone, a camera, or a strategy deck, I’m not chasing attention—I’m chasing that FEELING. I co-founded Mary & Blake Media with a mic, a laptop, and a story to tell. Today, it’s a multi-platform storytelling brand with award-winning shows, viral campaigns, and a global community. My creative has reached millions, been featured by global networks, and helped brands—from Fortune 500s to independent creators—find their voice in a crowded digital world. I'm not just a creative. I'm a showrunner. A team-builder. A strategist who knows when to lead from the front and when to hand someone else the pen.

Trusted By

Dunkin' Brands

Real estate branding, franchise storytelling, and retail legacy.

HBO

For a fan-driven campaign that turned absence into art.

ADS Inc.

Where strategy meets precision in defense and tech.

STARZ

For a promo that made passion go viral.

The New England Patriots

Content that connects champions to fans.

NBC10 WJAR / CBS12 WPRI

Local broadcasters, global reach.

The Work That Speaks

WHY MEANING BEATS METRICS, EVERY TIME (WRITING SAMPLE)


 “Story isn’t a flight from reality but a vehicle that carries us on our search for reality—our best effort to make sense out of the anarchy of existence.”

— Robert McKee

We live in a world drowning in content. Scroll long enough and you’ll find infinite distraction. Shiny pixels. Clickbait. Manufactured outrage. And behind it all: brands gasping for attention, begging for likes, shouting louder just to be heard above the noise.

But here’s the truth:

The world doesn’t need more content.



It needs more meaning.

That’s why story still wins. And always will.

Not because it’s flashy. Or SEO-optimized. Or algorithmically engineered. Story wins because it’s human. Because it’s how we make sense of who we are, what we fear, what we hope for, and what we’re willing to fight for.

Story is what pulls us closer. It’s what turns customers into believers, viewers into communities, brands into identities. It is the oldest technology in the world—and the only one that still works every single time when done well.

I’ve seen the proof. I've seen a fan campaign about a vanished mother go viral. I’ve watched podcast trailers bring listeners to tears before they ever heard an episode. I've turned data platforms into tour guides of possibility. Because the story beneath the surface was there—aching to be told.

We don’t remember mission statements. We remember moments. We remember the feeling of the first scene, the way the voice cracked at the right time, the poster that made us feel seen. That’s story.

And in case you're wondering—yes, it works in business too.

I've pitched to C-suites and sat in edit bays. I’ve built brands from backyards and advised companies with billion-dollar budgets. I’ve led teams through pressure cookers and brainstormed breakthrough ideas over coffee. Every time, the breakthrough didn’t come from another slide deck. It came from the story. When we found the truth people could feel, that’s when everything clicked.

So if you're asking: does story still matter in a world of AI, metrics, funnels, and feed fatigue?

My answer is simple: it matters more than ever.

Because the world is more chaotic than ever. People don’t just want to be sold—they want to be understood. They want to believe. They want to feel again.

And that’s what story does.

It’s not fluff. It’s not filler. It’s not “nice to have.”

It’s the engine.

The brands that win are the ones who tell the truth—and tell it beautifully. Who make us feel seen. Who know that connection isn't a KPI, it's a currency.

So no, I won’t chase trends. I won’t settle for noise. I won’t help brands say more while meaning less.

What I will do is this:

Tell the story. The real one. The one that scares you a little because it’s too honest. The one that makes your team say, “Oh. That’s us.” The one that turns your product into purpose and your platform into something people talk about when they’re not being paid to.

This is why story still wins. Because it’s not a flight from reality—it’s the only thing that makes sense of it.

And I’m here to help you tell it.

— Blake Larsen

VIDEOS THAT IGNITE (VIDEO EDITING)



DESIGNS THAT DIDN'T JUST PROMOTE - THEY PROVOKED (GRAPHIC DESIGNS)

 


🎨 Case Study: “The Leftovers” Inspired Graphic Design (in partnership with HBO)


🎯 The Challenge:

We were tasked by HBO to help promote the third and final season of The Leftovers by starting a fan driven movement. As such, we made a design that was visual tribute to a show centered on grief, existential mystery, and human connection—while adapting its core concept of sudden absence into a deeply personal and emotionally grounded piece. The goal was to echo the tone of the show without directly mimicking its branding, and to create a design that could live as fan art, podcast artwork, or promotional material.


💡 My Role & Process:

Since we were invited by HBO to help promote the third and final season of The Leftovers— we decided we were not starting off with a traditional campaign, but with something more elusive and ambitious: a fan-driven movement. One rooted in emotion, mystery, and meaning. The ask was simple but profound—create a visual that could stir the soul, echo the existential tension of the show, and feel as personal as a memory.

So I made it personal.

I served as the concept artist, photographer, and designer. I began with a real photo of my wife, son, and daughter on a crisp autumn day—then removed myself. In my place, I rendered a galaxy-filled silhouette: a void wrapped in stars. It wasn’t just absence—it was cosmic dislocation. The kind of loss that doesn’t announce itself, but settles in quietly and never fully leaves.

Rather than dramatize pain, I leaned into stillness. Smiles remained. The warmth of the season glowed. Life continued. And yet, something vital was missing. The aesthetic was inspired by the show’s title sequence—where ordinary moments are punctured by conspicuous absence—but this was no mimicry. It was homage, fused with autobiography.

The color grading and composition were sculpted to feel like a living memory: intimate, cinematic, and just a little bit broken. The result was a portrait that could pass for fan art, podcast key art, or official HBO promotion—but at its core, it was something rarer: a visual confession.


📈 The Result:

The final piece struck a chord. Fans of The Leftovers, close personal contacts and even HBO responded with emotional resonance—many saying, “I didn’t even notice at first that someone was missing—until I did. Then I couldn’t unsee it.” That reaction was exactly the point. It invited viewers to experience absence the way grief often arrives in real life: quietly, then all at once.

But the impact didn’t stop there. The concept quickly took off within the Leftovers fan community, sparking a viral trend where others began recreating the visual—editing their own family photos to include the silhouette of someone missing. It became not just a piece of art, but a shared language of grief and remembrance that spread across forums and social platforms. 

HBO wanted promotion and fan art to help the little engine that could. But, more than fan art, this project became a deeply personal, widely shared statement about presence, loss, and the visual power of storytelling. It now serves as the signature image of our Leftovers podcast—and a bridge between the fictional and the real, the visible and the vanished.





🎬 Case Study: The North Remembers – Fire, Fury, and the Fall of a Queen


🎯 The Challenge: 

As Game of Thrones approached its seismic finale, most critics were overwhelmingly negative—citing character betrayals, rushed plots, and tonal whiplash. And while those critiques weren’t without merit, The North Remembers with Mary & Blake set out to offer something different: an honest analysis of the story as it was, not as we wished it had been. We aimed to create a visual that reflected that mission—an image that didn’t sugarcoat, didn’t rage-bait, but invited a deeper, more nuanced look at the chaos of Season 8. Our goal was to distill all of that divisiveness into one unforgettable, unvarnished visual truth.


💡 My Role & Process: 

I crafted a poster that didn’t whisper—it roared. At the heart stood Daenerys, cloaked in black, framed by a crimson battlefield. Looming behind her: the unmistakable three-headed dragon sigil of House Targaryen, rendered in a jagged white silhouette that tears across the canvas like fire through parchment.


This wasn’t just iconography—it was ideology. The Targaryen sigil enveloping Daenerys asked the question: was she ascending as the dragon’s true heir—or being consumed by its legacy of fire and blood? The bold red-and-white palette, textured like aged propaganda, evoked revolution. The design dared viewers to confront their own feelings about her descent into darkness.


The podcast title sat subtly in the corner, a steady voice beneath the chaos—signaling that The North Remembers was about interrogating the show.


📈 The Result:

✅ Became the defining visual of our Season 8 launch
✅ Drove high fan engagement and shares across social media
✅ Cemented our reputation as bold, unflinching voices in the fandom

“This isn’t fan art—it’s a thesis.” – Listener Comment

This design demanded attention. It framed our coverage as not just a recap, but a reckoning—with power, legacy, and the woman who flew too close to the sun on dragon wings.





🎬 Case Study: The Potterverse – Reimagining Wizarding World Podcast Branding


🎯 The Challenge: 

The Harry Potter podcast universe is saturated—with most designs relying on familiar Hogwarts motifs, magical icons, or cluttered collages. We needed something bold. Something that cut through the noise. The goal? Create podcast artwork for The Potterverse with Mary & Blake that instantly told listeners: this isn’t your average fan recap. This is where deep dives, sharp analysis, and cinematic storytelling meet.


💡 My Role & Process: 

I wanted this to stand apart the moment someone saw it. So I broke from the visual tropes of the genre and leaned hard into minimalist, modern design. Using Harry’s silhouette—just the glasses, wand, and lightning scar—I created instant recognition through restraint. No castles. No owls. No floating candles. Just iconography distilled to its purest form.

To infuse energy, I sliced the frame with a bold diagonal—layered in deep Gryffindor reds and golds—and set the title text along the band, breaking traditional podcast layout rules. The upper left corner bears our studio’s anchor seal, branding it as unmistakably Mary & Blake.

This wasn’t just podcast art. It was a flag. A statement. A sorting hat moment in visual form: if you know, you know. And if you're ready for something deeper—you’re home.


📈 The Result:

The design stopped thumbs. Fans and first-timers alike commented on how instantly different and premium it felt.

✅ Spiked visibility across podcast platforms

✅ Frequently cited in reviews and fan messages as a reason for clicking play 

✅ Became a visual cornerstone for The Potterverse brand, inspiring future segment art and social campaigns

“It looks like a serious film critic made a Harry Potter podcast. And I love that.” — Listener Review

In a world full of wands and whimsy, this design made one promise: expect more.





🎬 Case Study: The Rings of Power – A Sacred Visual for a Mythic Narrative


🎯 The Challenge: 

Entering the vast and hallowed world of The Lord of the Rings, we knew that any branding for our podcast, The Rings of Power with Mary & Blake, had to be reverent, cinematic, and worthy of Tolkien’s legendarium. With Amazon’s adaptation stirring both anticipation and scrutiny, we needed to establish immediate credibility and resonance. Our artwork had to signal depth, beauty, and emotional immersion—setting us apart in a crowded space while honoring one of the greatest mythologies ever written.


💡 My Role & Process: 

I anchored the design in one of Tolkien’s most powerful visual symbols: the glowing Two Trees of Valinor. Rather than default to rings, swords, or maps, I chose an image that would stir deep recognition in lore-loving fans and evoke awe in newcomers. The trees radiate light and life, set against a celestial backdrop of smoky twilight and divine stillness.

But the image held a hidden tension. Rising above the radiant trees is a subtle formation of shadow and cloud—shaped, almost imperceptibly, into the looming silhouette of Sauron. That dark figure watches from above, symbolizing the creeping return of evil even in the face of divine beauty. It’s a quiet visual foreshadowing—a reminder that in Tolkien’s world, light is always under siege by shadow.

To match the show’s official style, I mirrored the Rings of Power logotype—delivering a premium, cinematic feel that seamlessly aligned with Amazon’s branding. The podcast subtitle, “With Mary & Blake,” was treated in a clean, elegant serif to ground the fantasy in a personal, relatable voice.

The compass-and-anchor emblem in the upper corner served as our creative signature—tying this artwork into the larger Mary & Blake portfolio and signaling both quality and trust.


📈 The Result: 

The design immediately resonated with fans of the show and Tolkien purists alike.

✅ Elevated our podcast’s visual identity above typical fan coverage
✅ Received praise for its beauty, symbolism, and emotional impact
✅ Cemented the show as a serious, insightful, and respectful voice in the Rings of Power discourse

“This looks like something Tolkien himself would have approved.” — Listener Feedback

This wasn’t just cover art—it was an offering. A visual invitation to step into myth, to feel awe—and to sense the shadows gathering beyond the light.






🎬 Case Study: Outlander Cast – Fire, Fan Quotes, and a Cinematic Campaign


🎯 The Challenge: 

In an oversaturated awards landscape where hundreds of podcasts vie for attention, we needed to craft an eye-catching "For Your Consideration" campaign that didn’t just ask for votes—it earned them. Outlander Cast had been nominated multiple times for The People's Choice Podcast Awards, but this year, we wanted to raise the stakes. Our goal: convey the emotional intensity of the podcast through visuals as cinematic and dramatic as the series itself.


💡 My Role & Process: 

I designed a hero poster built around a blazing, high-impact image of Jamie Fraser from Outlander—backlit by fire, stepping into danger. This wasn’t just key art—it was metaphor. Jamie walking into the flames mirrored the passionate storytelling, fearless criticism, and loyal community we’ve built over nearly a decade.

Overlaying this image, I layered real listener reviews in bold, staggered type: “Addicting,” “Can’t Get Enough,” “Essential.” These weren’t empty blurbs—they were social proof, curated to emphasize emotional connection and critical legitimacy.

The hierarchy of the text and the stark contrast between light and shadow drew attention where it mattered, while the campaign header—"For Your Consideration In All Categories"—framed the poster with confident authority.


📈 The Result: 

✅ Widely shared by fans on social media as a badge of loyalty and pride
✅ Helped Outlander Cast remain top-of-mind in the voting window
✅ Became the visual centerpiece of our awards campaign outreach

“This podcast is as addicting as the series.” – Listener Review

This piece turned a vote request into an experience. It made the case that Outlander Cast doesn’t just follow the show—it walks into the fire right alongside it.




🎬 Case Study: Mary & Blake Media – A Love Letter to Rhode Island Podcasting


🎯 The Challenge: 

After years of podcasting success and community growth, we were ready to compete for Best Podcast of Rhode Island in Rhode Island Monthly's annual “Best Of” awards. But the real challenge wasn’t just getting votes—it was capturing the heart of what our work means to listeners. We needed a campaign image that would represent not only our brand, but our bond—as partners in marriage, in storytelling, and in building a creative legacy from the Ocean State.


💡 My Role & Process: 

I designed a soft, emotionally resonant poster that placed Mary and me front and center—hand-in-hand, walking the Rhode Island coastline at golden hour. No mics, no headphones, no gimmicks. Just two people, chasing the sun and inviting others to come along.

At the top, a real listener quote reads: "Mary and Blake have a natural talent for making you feel a part of their podcasting community no matter where you are in the world." This sentiment became our message to Rhode Island: we may be a local brand, but our reach and impact are deeply human and global.

The design featured clean, modern typography, the trusted Mary & Blake compass-and-anchor seal, and the Rhode Island Monthly logo—anchoring us both literally and figuratively in the place we call home.


📈 The Result:


✅ Strengthened fan connection by highlighting our personal story
✅ Reinforced our Rhode Island roots to new local audiences
✅ Became the signature image of our community-driven campaign
✅ Oh, and we won for the 7th year in a row

“No matter where you are in the world, this podcast feels like home.” – Listener Testimonial

This was a visual mission statement: we’re not just creating content—we’re creating belonging.










SOCIAL CONNECTION IS PROVIDING VALUE (SOCIAL VIDEOS & POSTS)

We are still riding high celebrating BHCC’s Class of 2025 

🎙️ Case Study: Wicked Rhody x Studio 10 Broadcast Series (2020)


🎯 The Challenge:

In the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic, local news stations were struggling to fill airtime with fresh, engaging content as live events disappeared and production slowed. At the same time, our niche podcast Wicked Rhody—focused on Rhode Island events and lifestyle—needed new ways to stay visible and relevant with audiences stuck at home.

The goal: Provide timely, uplifting content to a broadcast partner and elevate our podcast’s visibility across the state. A true win-win during uncertain times.

💡 My Role & Process:

As writer, director, and editor of this broadcast series, I pitched and delivered weekly content segments to NBC 10’s Studio 10 lifestyle program:

  • Scripted and directed weekly TV-ready segments featuring co-host Mary Larsen previewing local events—safe, socially-distanced, and uplifting.

  • Created a seamless content pipeline between Wicked Rhody and the station, aligning our podcast’s tone with broadcast needs.

  • Edited each segment with a broadcast-ready polish while maintaining our podcast’s charm and community vibe.

  • Strategically designed the segment to tease the full podcast, increasing listener conversion while adding value to Studio 10’s lineup.

This approach not only gave local TV fresh, hyperlocal content—but also allowed Wicked Rhody to break beyond the podcast bubble.

📈 The Result:

  • Secured a weekly on-air broadcast spot on one of Rhode Island’s top-rated local programs.

  • Boosted Wicked Rhody’s brand awareness statewide, contributing to a 15% increase in podcast listenership during the partnership.

  • Helped Studio 10 meet content demand with community-centered stories, reinforcing their reputation as a trusted local lifestyle show.

One producer later remarked: “This segment gave our viewers a reason to smile and something to do—we needed that in 2020.”



THE GOODBYE THAT GAVE US SOMETHING TO BELIEVE IN (PODCAST)

🎧 Case Study: The Leftovers Podcast – A Final Conversation with Damon Lindelof


🎯 The Challenge:

Close out a beloved fan podcast series with a meaningful, memorable finale that not only honors the emotional weight of The Leftovers but also gives the audience something rare: direct insight from showrunner Damon Lindelof. The goal was to create a powerful, intimate capstone conversation that transcended typical interviews and felt like a true farewell—for both the creators and the audience.


💡 My Role & Process:

As executive producer, writer, and host, I wanted this episode to feel like a spiritual coda. My approach focused on emotional storytelling, thoughtful pacing, and personal connection:

  • Crafted deep-dive questions around key themes from the show: faith, trust, truth, and letting go.

  • Balanced fan curiosity with creative industry insight—probing Damon on career lessons, the power of endings, and behind-the-scenes conflicts like Laurie’s controversial arc.

  • Created space for personal storytelling, both from Damon and from us as hosts, including an unscripted emotional moment that caught everyone off guard—and became the soul of the episode.

  • Added levity with lighthearted segments (Tony The Chicken, Departed celebrity rankings) to mirror the show’s blend of absurdity and depth.

This wasn’t just an interview. It was a conversation built on mutual respect and trust, with an eye toward legacy and closure.


📈 The Result:

  • Became the most downloaded episode of the series within 72 hours of release.

  • Sparked a wave of listener messages calling it “cathartic,” “perfect,” and “exactly the ending we needed.”

  • Damon Lindelof himself said, “This was one of the most meaningful podcast interviews I’ve ever done.”

  • Cemented our podcast’s legacy as not just a fan companion, but a trusted platform for real human connection.

THE EVENT THAT PROVED PRESENCE DOESN'T NEED A BALLROOM (LIVE EVENT)


🎉 Case Study: Outlander Cast – Virtual Finale Party (Season 5)


🎯 The Challenge:

How do you transform a beloved in-person fan event into a meaningful, shared experience during a global pandemic? Our goal was to maintain the emotional connection and excitement of our annual Outlander finale party—without a physical venue, and with a global audience stuck at home.


💡 My Role & Process:

As co-creator and executive producer, I led the concept, production, and promotion of a fully virtual event across YouTube, Facebook, and Twitter—turning crisis into creative opportunity.

  • Pivoted quickly from a 300+ person live event in Rhode Island to a multi-platform livestream watched worldwide.

  • Coordinated exclusive interviews with cast members Lauren Lyle, Tim Downie, and Duncan Lacroix, plus bloggers and superfans.

  • Directed real-time audience engagement through live Q&A, fan predictions, and emotional countdown moments from our home studio.

  • Engineered a show flow that balanced fan celebration, exclusive access, and authenticity—with emotional honesty about the year’s challenges.

This wasn’t just a livestream. It was a fan-first, community-driven experience at a time when connection was needed most.


📈 The Result:

  • Reached over 60,000 fans live and on replay across platforms within the first week.

  • Garnered comments like, “This made me feel like I wasn’t alone—thank you for giving us this night.”

  • Became a template for virtual fan events for other TV companion podcasts navigating pandemic pivots.

  • Reinforced the brand's emotional trust with fans: real people, real love for the show, real community.

NOT JUST A STUDIO. A RECKONING (SOCIAL & TECH ANNOUNCEMENT)






📱 Case Study: Halt and Catch Fire x Studio Reveal Social Promo


🎯 The Challenge:

We needed to announce the launch of our brand-new podcast studio in a way that would break the mold of the typical “room tour” or static reveal. The goal wasn’t just to show off new gear—it was to celebrate the creative journey, connect with our audience emotionally, and use our signature storytelling style to stand out on social media.


💡 My Role & Process:

As the writer, director, editor, and social strategist, I created a mashup-style announcement that blended fan-favorite TV moments with our personal growth story.

  • 💡 Concept: We reimagined a scene from Halt and Catch Fire, replacing all original audio and cutting a new version of the scene to make it feel like Donna, Joe, Gordon, and Cameron were eagerly anticipating the reveal of our new studio. This wasn’t just an homage—it was a playful reflection of how our community felt: “When’s the new space dropping!?”

  • 🎙️ Production:

    • Recut and re-voiced scenes from the show

    • Added atmospheric Scottish music for cinematic effect

    • Filmed using an iPhone 14 Pro Max, showing you don’t need fancy gear to make something beautiful

    • Color graded the final reveal sequence with vibrant, saturated tones to convey creativity, energy, and passion

  • 🛠️ Narrative Arc: From humble beginnings in our Providence apartment dining room (2012), to a closet studio, to a basement, and finally—our dream creative space. This gave longtime followers a moment of nostalgia and new followers a reason to care.

  • 💬 Social Copy:
    “What happens when Blake’s favorite characters from #HaltAndCatchFire are waiting for the new studio just as much as everyone else?! THE BIG REVEAL OF COURSE! Welcome to the newest evolution of #MaryAndBlakeMedia.”


📈 The Result:

  • +37% increase in engagement over our previous highest-performing post

  • 💬 Fans commented things like: “This is the most creative studio reveal I’ve ever seen” and “I’ve never felt so invested in someone else’s space!”

  • 🧠 The blend of fandom, humor, nostalgia, and personal storytelling made the reveal deeply shareable and memorable, helping us reconnect with our audience post-pandemic


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BLAKE LARSEN
508.294.9131
Cranston, Rhode Island

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