Fortune magazine's 40 Under 40 list includes graduate of Utah Catholic Schools

Friday, Nov. 20, 2020
Fortune magazine's 40 Under 40 list includes graduate of Utah Catholic Schools + Enlarge
Kat Skiles
By Linda Petersen
Intermountain Catholic

SALT LAKE CITY — Kat Skiles, Madeleine Choir School Class of 1999 and Judge Memorial Catholic High School Class of 2003, has been named one of Fortune magazine’s 40 Under 40 influencers in government and politics.

 Skiles’ initial reaction to the award was that it was a case of mistaken identity, she said.

“The first thing I saw when I opened it [Fortune magazine] was that Beyoncé  got the award in one of the other sections, so I just assumed that they got it wrong; that there must be some other Kat Skiles,” she said. “It was a really kind thing to have happened in my life. I was honestly very surprised.”

A political consultant and videographer, Skiles carried on a family tradition by graduating from Judge Memorial CHS, a school her mother and grandparents all attended. She then pursued a bachelor’s degree in political science with a double minor in prelaw and religion at Dominican University of California.  Through a Panetta Institute for Public Policy college congressional internship, she began working on Capitol Hill. During the next 10 years, Skiles served as press secretary for the Democratic caucus, as senior adviser for Nancy Pelosi, and managed video and social media for the Democratic National Committee.

Along the way, she was named to Washingtonian magazine’s list of “100 Most Powerful Women in Washington” and as one of “The 20 Most Powerful Women Staffers on Capitol Hill” by National Journal.

In 2017, Skiles launched her own company, Narrative Creative Agency, to use her video and digital skills to highlight the issues and political figures she supports.

“I’ve always had a passion for storytelling and filmmaking,” she said. “When we’re talking about public policy and how it impacts the lives of others, it is really important to focus on people and what they’re going through in their lives. Video is a very compelling way to do that.”

For the last several months, Skiles has been working on several political races (non-disclosure agreements prevent her from saying which campaigns she has worked for). Since pandemic restrictions were implemented, she has worked from home. “It’s been really bizarre; I’m not in a campaign office for the first time in my career,” she said.

Coming up, Skiles will put her business on hold for several months to travel the country developing and filming “American Exceptionalism”– a documentary series on how COVID-19 has disproportionately and devastatingly affected the most vulnerable.

“Bringing light to what the situations are and how we can fix them – that’s a role that our policy-makers have in trying to build a better place, no matter which side of the aisle you’re on,” she said. “For me, the work that I do, working to influence policy, is about making sure those kids are reunited with their mommys and their daddys, for example,  and making sure that we have a world that our kids can live and thrive and grow up in.”

While the documentary series might seem a daunting project for just one person, Skiles said the skills she developed at The Madeleine Choir School will help see her through, even though more than 20 years have passed since she graduated.

“The Madeleine Choir School for me is so much of who I am today,” she said. “They train kids to have great work ethics, but they also ensure the heart and future commitment to public service, of doing right for others. I feel like when I got into the work force there were so many things I homed in on as a person on that I got from them. So much of who I am is because of all they gave me.”

“One of the biggest things, especially with the choir school, is it’s academically rigorous,” she said. “I think it’s difficult to teach hard work and habit; it’s challenging, and you don’t know you’re not just learning arithmetic and music notation. You’re learning about what it takes to succeed by working hard, and when you’re working hard and working to do good for others, then that’s work that matters.”

Along with a small capital investment generated through a GoFundMe campaign, Skiles will reach into her own pockets to fund her documentary project. When the series is complete, she hopes to pitch it to several streaming services.

“A Netflix or a Hulu would probably be my wildest dream, and that’s what we’re shooting for,” she said. 

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