In a city known for reinvention, few companies have captured the momentum of Miami’s modern creator economy quite like The Move Miami.
What began as a bold leap of faith by founder Andrew Loranger, known to many simply as “Drew,” has rapidly evolved into a podcast and content production studio in South Florida. In less than two years, The Move Miami has gone from an unknown startup to a studio working with entrepreneurs, athletes, celebrities, creators, and global media brands alike.
Located in the heart of Wynwood, The Move Miami represents something bigger than a podcast studio. It reflects the transformation of Miami itself, a city increasingly becoming a destination for founders, creators, entertainers, and modern media companies looking to build influence at scale.
From Finance to a Creative Pivot
For Andrew Loranger, the journey into media was anything but traditional.
Before launching The Move Miami, Loranger spent over a decade in the mortgage industry, building a successful career in finance. But while many viewed him as successful in that space, Loranger saw a larger shift happening online, with attention becoming the new currency.
Using Instagram and personal branding as a business development tool long before many professionals understood its power, he developed a reputation for turning content into real-world business outcomes. That understanding would later become the foundation for The Move Miami.
“When I launched this studio in November 2023, I had zero production experience,” Loranger shared in a founder message published by the company. “I’d never even held a camera before.”
Despite having no formal media background, Loranger made a full transition into the content world, investing entirely in the vision. What followed was rapid growth.
Rapid Growth and High-Profile Clients
According to The Move Miami, the studio reached its first 50 recording sessions within months of opening. Soon after, recognizable names and major brands began entering the space. By mid-2024, the company says clients connected to platforms and organizations, including ESPN, Netflix, and Comedy Central, had booked productions through the studio.
Public-facing content and studio showcases have also featured appearances from high-profile personalities, including Shaquille O’Neal, Rick Ross, Gary Vaynerchuk, Logan Paul, and Theo Von.

Today, The Move Miami has expanded into a multi-set production facility featuring over a dozen uniquely designed recording environments, live event capabilities, and full-scale post-production services. The company states it has now filmed thousands of podcast episodes and generated billions of views through client content distributed across social media platforms.
But insiders familiar with the studio often point to something beyond the equipment as the reason for its rise: culture.
Unlike traditional production studios that focus purely on technical execution, The Move Miami positioned itself around energy, community, and creator experience. Clients regularly describe the environment as collaborative, fast-moving, and creatively charged, an atmosphere that mirrors the city surrounding it.
Wynwood as Miami’s Creative Hub
That positioning has allowed the company to become deeply embedded in Miami’s growing media ecosystem at a time when the city itself is experiencing a cultural evolution.
Over the past several years, Miami has attracted an influx of entrepreneurs, investors, athletes, entertainers, and digital-first businesses relocating from cities like Los Angeles, New York, and San Francisco. Wynwood, in particular, has emerged as a creative and entrepreneurial hub where content, branding, nightlife, art, and business increasingly intersect.
The Move Miami sits directly within that movement.
Its location inside Wynwood places the studio within the broader transformation of the neighborhood into a globally recognized creative district, one heavily influenced by developer and entrepreneur Moishe Mana, whose long-term vision helped reshape Wynwood into a center for art, media, technology, and culture.
Building Miami’s Modern Media Headquarters
For Loranger, the mission appears less about building a traditional studio company and more about creating infrastructure for the next generation of creators and modern brands.
As podcasting, personal branding, and long-form media continue to become central to business growth, studios like The Move Miami are increasingly serving as modern media headquarters for entrepreneurs, executives, athletes, and public figures looking to control their online narrative.
That trend has only accelerated the company’s momentum.
From startup founders recording investor-facing content to celebrities filming viral interviews and branded media campaigns, The Move Miami has quietly become a creative production brand emerging from South Florida’s new media economy.
And while the company’s rapid growth has already positioned it among Miami’s creator studios, Loranger appears focused on something larger: building a long-term media institution born directly from Miami’s energy.
At a time when creators are becoming companies, podcasts are becoming platforms, and personal brands are becoming businesses, The Move Miami has managed to place itself directly at the center of the conversation.
Learn more about The Move Miami on their official page.




