Sarah Cooper
Unfrosted stands as a notable work in Sarah Cooper's career, one entry point into the range of projects she has taken on as a comedian, actor, writer, and television producer.
Cooper was born on January 1, 1977, in Jamaica, and later became a citizen of the United States. She attended Colonel Zadok A. Magruder High School and went on to study at the University of Maryland. From those beginnings she developed a career that draws on several related crafts — comedy, writing, blogging, acting, and television production — all conducted in English.
In 2016, Cooper published her first two books: 100 Tricks to Appear Smart in Meetings and Draw What Success Looks Like. Both appeared in the same year, marking a significant moment in her work as an author. Alongside her books, she has worked as a blogger, adding that form to the other modes through which she operates as a writer. The 2016 publications gave her a visible presence as an author at a point in her career when she was also active across other areas of creative work.
Her involvement with Unfrosted reflects the breadth of her activity as a performer and producer. Cooper's work as a television producer, alongside her acting, shows a career that has extended well beyond any single role or medium. The 2016 books and the subsequent screen and production work together trace a path across distinct but connected crafts, and Unfrosted remains among the named works that mark her career's ongoing range.
Quotes by Sarah Cooper

People really hate Trump - a lot. They hate his voice. They hate looking at him. They hate everything about him.

Selling an idea to a publisher is not as valuable as selling your audience to a publisher.

Leaving Google was really hard. It's such an incredible place to work and the people there are fantastic.

You can tell a lot about a woman by her email signature. Actually you can't but for some reason people do anyway.

20 or 30 exclamation points can go a long way to making the tone of your email excited and cheerful.

If we want little girls and young women and people of color to see they have a place in the tech world, it's up to us to make that place for them.

Slide decks are only as great as their giant, useless appendixes, so make sure yours has a ton of useless, not even remotely relevant slides in it. You'll look like you really did your research.


