💸 Earn Instantly With This Task
No fees, no waiting — your earnings could be 1 click away.
💸 Earn Instantly With This Task
No fees, no waiting — your earnings could be 1 click away.
Start Earning
At the 68th Grammy Awards, the Los Angeles Tribune’s presence on the red carpet reflected more than a moment of visibility — it marked a milestone in the organization’s expanding role within narrative-driven media.
Representing the Tribune were Alisha Magnus-Louis (Chief Strategy Officer), Parisa Rose (Chief Operating Officer), Giloh Morgan (Vice President of Special Projects), Becca Brasil (Media Partner), and Moe Rock (Chief Executive Officer). Together, the leadership team attended during a year in which the Tribune’s publishing division earned Grammy recognition for its work in long-form audio storytelling.
The nominated project, You Know It’s True: The Real Story of Milli Vanilli, published by Los Angeles Tribune Publishing, revisited one of pop culture’s most debated chapters with historical context and human nuance — reinforcing the Tribune’s editorial commitment to storytelling that extends beyond headlines.
Fab Morvan — one half of the public face of Milli Vanilli alongside the late Rob Pilatus — had originally been recruited by producer Frank Farian to serve as the visual frontmen for music Farian produced. The group’s subsequent Grammy win and highly publicized revocation became one of the most consequential controversies in modern recording history.
Reintroducing that legacy into the Recording Academy’s formal process was not merely a creative undertaking; it required institutional credibility, strategic navigation, and disciplined advocacy. For decades, the Milli Vanilli chapter stood as one of the industry’s most cautionary narratives. That a project centered on that history could return to the Grammy ballot signaled more than nostalgia — it reflected a willingness to revisit complex cultural memory through documentary craft and long-form storytelling.
The path was not linear, and the outcome was far from assumed. Yet the nomination demonstrated that even the most scrutinized chapters of pop history can be reframed through careful execution and narrative depth.
Parisa Rose, co-author of the book and current Chief Operating Officer of the Tribune, played a central role in shaping that narrative. In coverage by Los Angeles Times, she was noted for having “helped Morvan reckon with parts of his background he had long buried” — a description that underscored the project’s emotional depth and its emphasis on human complexity rather than sensationalism.
In a recent feature by Rolling Stone Middle East, Moe Rock was described as the “architect of the nomination,” a producer said to be “inspired by the impossible.” The characterization aligned with the Tribune’s publishing philosophy: pursuing culturally intricate projects others might deem improbable and positioning them within established institutions through strategic execution.
The leadership team behind the project reflects a cross-disciplinary blend of media, finance, and record production expertise. Giloh Morgan, Vice President of Special Projects and one of the audiobook’s producers, is a platinum-certified producer best known for the Billboard Hot 100 Top 10 hit “Dance with Me,” bringing established recording industry credentials into the Tribune’s audio division. Alisha Magnus-Louis, also a producer on the project and now Chief Strategy Officer of the Tribune, joined the organization following a successful career on Wall Street, including tenure at JPMorgan – a background that informs the Tribune’s strategic expansion within media.
Moe Rock also received individual recognition as a producer on Black Shaman by Marc Marcel, placing him among the few producers recognized across multiple categories in the same year – reflecting the Tribune’s cross-disciplinary engagement across publishing and spoken-word production.
Becca Brasil, a member of the Recording Academy and longtime Tribune partner, was also present, underscoring the Tribune’s continued integration within professional media and recording circles.
The Recording Academy’s continued recognition of audiobook and spoken-word categories reflects a broader industry shift — one that elevates narrative craftsmanship alongside musical performance. For the Tribune, the acknowledgment signaled institutional validation of its long-form storytelling model and its ability to operate within the Grammy ecosystem at multiple levels.
While the red carpet offered visibility, the deeper significance of the evening rested in what it represented: that a modern publishing institution can bridge journalism, documentary audio, and cultural storytelling at the highest levels of the recording industry — even when the narrative involves chapters long considered closed.
The nomination did not erase history. It reframed it.
As images from the night captured the Tribune leadership on the red carpet, the underlying message remained consistent — storytelling, when approached with depth, strategic resolve, and institutional credibility, belongs on the industry’s most visible stages.
💸 Earn Instantly With This Task
No fees, no waiting — your earnings could be 1 click away.
Start Earning


