Clay Rivers has communicated stories as an advocate, author, artist, and actor for over three decades. His varied adventures as a forty-eight-inch-tall Black man give him a wealth of experience to share. Clay is keenly aware that for a message to resonate with its intended audience, it must first connect with their head and heart. And the most lasting connections always begin with a compelling story.
Clay is the founder and president of Our Human Family (OHF), a 501(c)(3) charitable organization that advocates for racial equity, allyship, and inclusion via its digital and print publications, by creating and offering workshops and panel discussion groups, targeting vital educational programs for sponsorship, hosting guest speaker events, and much more.
Rivers and Our Human Family, Inc. have also launched the new digital periodical OHF Weekly and the tony print publication OHF Magazine. He serves as the editor-in-chief of both. The publications’ articles reflect Rivers’ nonfiction writing aesthetic, entertaining with sharp wit, enlightening with subtle revelation, and inspiring via quiet whispers. In the fall of 2020, in response to the murder of George Floyd, Rivers and his editorial team published Fieldnotes on Allyship: Achieving Equality Together, a handbook to prepare people who are unsure of where, when, or how to get involved in the work of racial equity and allyship.
OHF recently launched Allyship 101: The Basics, an in-person, immersive learning experience that posits that people can make an effective impact against racism right where they are, if they are willing to grow in education and awareness. OHF also believes that people will abandon their race-based worldview when they want to change, when they believe change is possible, and when they know how to change.
In August 2025, the OHF editorial team published its second anthology, Fieldnotes on Fortitude: Resilience in Resistance, a guide to nurturing the bonds between our individual resilience and communal resistance to rampant cruelty and chaos. The chapters are written to give insight into what’s happening now and why, and to provide strategies to push back not just to restore what is being lost, but to reimagine what can be done better.
Clay’s credo of self-acceptance while embracing life’s challenges is a constant thread in his work, sometimes laid out for all the world to see and at other times veiled. His essays have appeared in The Daily Dot, The Mighty, the popular and innovative Medium publications Crossin(G)enres and The Mission, and most notably, The New York Times. His essays have amassed a passionate and devoted following, disarm without force, inform without condescension, and issue a joyful call that inspires readers to become better versions of themselves.
Rivers has penned three nonfiction books: Walking Tall: A Memoir About the Upside of Small and Other Stuff, The Raindancer: Finding Joy in the Storm, and 3 Things I Know: Facing and Embracing Life’s Challenges. Each takes a different look at how to effectively mine the best from life’s most trying circumstances with a positive attitude while holding one’s head high. His foray into fiction, Christmas Is, is a homage to the great holiday movies we’ve come to know and love. The novel can be best described as a mashup of Elf, It’s a Wonderful Life, and The Lion King, but without the singing animals.
As an award-winning art director for Walt Disney World Resort Design, The Disney University, The Disney Stores, Disney Imagineering, and Disney Consumer Products, Clay’s aesthetic is rooted in the classic principles of design that zero in on connecting with targeted audiences.
Clay has appeared in countless Walt Disney World productions, numerous television and film appearances, and the beloved Radio City Christmas Spectacular. True to form, his offerings have been consistent and authentic interpretations of his directors’ visions.
Clay lives in Orlando with his family and is always up for good conversation and a Manhattan.
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