Nas Daily’s cover photo
Nas Daily

Nas Daily

Media Production

Bring people together.

About us

We are the crew behind the billions of views and millions of followers on Nas Daily. Storytelling is in our DNA and we have figured out how to reach audiences and keep them engaged. If you have a story to tell, we can't wait to help you make videos that simplify, explain and open conversations.

Industry
Media Production
Company size
11-50 employees
Headquarters
New York
Type
Privately Held
Specialties
social media, Content Marketing, and Storytelling

Locations

Employees at Nas Daily

Updates

  • Nas Daily reposted this

    We are honored to work with H.E. Cardinal Jaime Spengler, who is widely considered the most senior Catholic religious leader in Latin America. He recently recorded a short video reflecting on Laudato Si’—Pope Francis’ landmark encyclical on care for our common home. In the video, Cardinal Spengler speaks about the moral and spiritual call for Christians to care for creation and to protect the most vulnerable who are often most affected by environmental degradation. His message highlights how faith communities across Latin America—and around the world—can play a vital role in advancing stewardship of the Earth, God's creation. This video is part of a broader initiative led by The Interfaith Center for Sustainable Development (ICSD) to produce a series of compelling short videos on creation care featuring prominent faith leaders. The project is being produced by Nas Daily’s 1000Media, one of the world’s leading digital storytelling and video production teams, known for creating engaging content that reaches global audiences. By combining the moral voice of faith leaders like Cardinal Spengler with high-quality storytelling, the project aims to inspire millions of people to see environmental responsibility as a shared spiritual commitment. We are grateful for the Episcopal Conference of Latin America- Consejo Episcopal Latinoamericano y Caribeño (Celam)-- for the collaboration on this video. CELAM brings together Catholic bishops from 22 nations in Latin America and the Caribbean.

    • No alternative text description for this image
  • He went back to see his mom. Long before Nas Daily existed, before the travels, the videos, and the audience, there was a moment that shaped everything. Nuseir was born on a night when a snowstorm shut down the city. His father couldn’t make it. There were no phones, no roads, no help. For two days, it was just a mother and her newborn son. That kind of love doesn’t show up on camera, but it quietly shapes who we become. At Nas Daily, we often explore the stories behind the systems and moments that change the world. This one is smaller but it might be the most important of all.

  • Let's go back to 1948. Most people know one version of 1948. Very few know the other. Nearly 1 million people lost their homes around that year and their story is rarely told. History isn’t binary. It’s layered, uncomfortable, and often incomplete. At Nas Daily, we tell the stories that don’t fit into a single narrative. This video is one of them.

  • Iran and Israel in the 1960s. This feels impossible today. But it was normal once. In the 1960s, Iran and Israel weren’t enemies. There were daily flights, not rockets. Students, oil pipelines, shared universities, and even shared lives. Most people alive today never learned this part of history. At Nas Daily, we explore the moments when the world took a different path and ask what changed. This video is one of those moments.

  • The death of the dollar. In 1971, the way the world viewed money changed forever. Most people didn’t notice at the time but everyone has felt it since. Over the decades, money started buying a little less each year. Saving became harder and prices rose faster than wages. A system built on trust replaced one built on limits. We tend not to question systems we grow up inside. We adapt to them, defend them, and assume this is simply how things work. At Nas Daily, we explore the stories behind the systems that quietly shape everyday life. This video explains one of those moments.

  • I talked to the largest slave owner in the world... And "normal" doesn't mean right. Every generation looks back and wonders how the previous one justified what they did. Sure, they had their reasons, their logic, their consensus. We do the exact same thing today. We draw lines between what deserves empathy and what doesn't. We defend them with the same confidence people used 200 years ago. The uncomfortable truth? Future generations will judge us the same way. At Nas Daily, we make videos that ask questions people avoid. This one made us stop and think. What are we defending today that won't be legal tomorrow?

  • The nicest prison in the world. Greenland built a prison where inmates carry their own keys. They cook their meals, go to school, work real jobs. And yes, they can walk out the door during the day. Imagine that. Their system is built on one idea: you can lose your freedom without losing your dignity. Most prison systems around the world only isolate. But Greenland's model treats rehabilitation as a community effort. Inmates stay connected to normal life while serving time. The results? Lower reoffending rates and stronger reintegration into society. It's a reminder that designing better systems often works better than enforcing harsher ones. Around the world, we debate prisons every year. Greenland simply redesigned theirs. When dignity becomes policy, not just principle, the system works. Nas Daily tells stories from around the world that show what's possible when systems are redesigned. Follow us for more.

  • The one time Jesus got angry. Jesus only got angry once in his entire life. He walked into the holiest place in Jerusalem and saw people turning it into a marketplace. So he flipped tables. Made a whip. Chased everyone out. Not because he lost control. Because something sacred was being violated. Here's what most people miss about that moment: Being peaceful doesn't mean being passive. The leaders who actually build something worth protecting understand this. They know when to stay calm and when to draw a line. They know the difference between keeping the peace and letting standards erode. They know some tables need to be flipped so the right people can sit down. This is one of the most powerful stories we've told at Nas Daily. It's been 2,000 years and the lesson still hits. Watch the full video to see why conviction matters more than comfort.

  • How can Muslims get to heaven? Universal stories don’t work because of context. They work because of emotion. That’s why parables outlast trends because they strip everything down to truth. We shared a Muslim parable across our platforms, and it went viral. Not because the people in the story are Muslim. Because people are human. A man standing before God… A forgotten act of kindness… A fate changed by the smallest decision. Stories like this resonate because they remind us: What you do when no one’s watching matters more than what you do in the spotlight. If your brand wants storytelling that makes people stop, feel, and remember, Nas Daily can help you do exactly that.

  • This Muslim basically invented Math and we don’t even know his name. 1,200 years ago, Baghdad was the center of the world. Al-Khwarizmi gave us algebra, algorithms, and the concept of zero. Muslims built telescopes, drew the most accurate maps, and pushed the boundaries of what humans knew. Then something shifted. The focus moved from innovation to conflict. Today? Almost zero Nobel Prizes in science from the Muslim world in the last decade. This isn't just a Muslim story. It's what happens to ANY culture, company, or person who stops building what made them great. You can't coast on legacy. Innovation isn't inherited. It's either continued or it dies. Your business is no different. Every day you're not building, you're coasting. And coasting is just falling with style. We built the past. Now build something that matters. If you need help building your story, let Nas Daily turn it into content that makes people stop, think, and actually care.

Affiliated pages

Similar pages

Browse jobs