In 2019, Outcast began with a simple conviction: the internet belongs to Jesus.
It wasn’t polished. It wasn’t funded. It wasn’t fully formed. It was just a burden in my heart that creatives, misfits, builders, and young people who felt “out of place” in the church might actually be God’s strategic answer for this generation.
In 2020, we started Outcast Academy with a bold experiment: What if we trained media missionaries instead of just media professionals?
Since then, we’ve trained over 100 students in media missions. Young creatives who now see design, filmmaking, AI, strategy, and storytelling not just as careers, but as callings.
Along the way, Zero, our call to missions movement, has gathered four times, with over 300 people responding to the call to carry the Gospel into the internet and AI generation.
What started as a small conviction has become a growing movement.
Deep down, this generation is not confused. They are hungry. Hungry for meaning. Hungry for purpose. Hungry for something eternal in a world that scrolls endlessly.
Sometimes it feels like the digital space is loud, chaotic, and algorithm driven. But here is what we have learned building Outcast.
The same internet that spreads noise can also carry revival.
The same tools used for distraction can disciple nations.
The same generation people criticize may be the one God uses most powerfully.
Outcast exists for the ones who feel different. For the creative. For the builder. For the coder. For the storyteller.
We are not building content. We are building carriers of conviction.
And this is just the beginning.
Sincerely,
Ricky Raymond George
Founder, Outcast

And we couldn’t make
great work without great people

Ricky Raymond

Alisha Rallan

Rijo Johny

Lalitha Reddy

Anoohya Rachel

Joshua Singh

Blesson Varghese

Craig Andrew

Shalom Sundilla

Kenny Samuel

Nithin Raj