Who We Are
Brittany Scott Smith is an Emmy® Award–winning television director, producer, and writer. She has served as Supervising Producer on The Nightly Show with Larry Wilmore (Comedy Central) and Co-Executive Producer on The Rundown with Robin Thede (BET).
Her directing credits include “A Black Lady Sketch Show” (HBO), the election special “Wilmore” (Peacock), Helpsters and “Hello Jack! The Kindness Show” (Apple TV+), as well as the iconic children’s program “Sesame Street”. Smith made her feature directorial debut with “All I Didn’t Want for Christmas” (VH1), starring Gabourey Sidibe, Loretta Devine, Kel Mitchell, and Andrew Bushell.
Her work has earned multiple award nominations, including a Children’s Emmy® Award for Best Directing for a Multiple-Camera Program. Known for her versatility across comedy, scripted, unscripted, and children’s programming, Smith has contributed to successful series across platforms, including HBO, Peacock, BET, Comedy Central, and Apple TV+.
In addition to her creative work, Smith consults with media companies on development and production, shaping original IP, refining creative strategy, and guiding projects from concept through execution across film, television, and digital platforms.
Kristen Everman Correira is a two-time Emmy®–nominated writer, producer, and media executive whose work spans comedy, scripted television, live events, podcasts, and original content development.
She served as Head of Development and Co-Founder of Swimsuit Competition, the production company she launched with comedian and host Samantha Bee, where she oversaw development and production across television, podcasts, and live comedy. In this role, Correira spearheaded original projects and partnerships with top-tier talent and executive produced Your Favorite Woman, a multi-city national comedy tour.
Correira’s producing credits include Co-Executive Producer on The Rundown with Robin Thede (BET), Producer on Full Frontal with Samantha Bee and Not the White House Correspondents’ Dinner (TBS). Her writing and early producing work includes Come Here & Say That (Fusion), Difficult People (Hulu), and Odd Mom Out (Bravo).
She began her career at The Daily Show with Jon Stewart (Comedy Central) and on the Academy Award–winning film Precious: Based on the Novel “Push” by Sapphire.