Entropico & Director Genevieve Kaiser Raise Foster Care Awareness for New South Wales

Entropico & Director Genevieve Kaiser Raise Foster Care Awareness for New South Wales

Creative company Entropico has helped the NSW Government Department of Communities and Justice (DCJ) launch a new landmark campaign, urgently calling for new foster carers.

Developed and produced by Entropico’s in-house creative team and directed by celebrated filmmaker Genevieve Kaiser, the campaign seeks to shatter negative misconceptions about foster care and highlight the positive, two-way growth fostering brings.

The campaign, which forms part of the NSW Government’s record $1.2 billion investment in child protection, is designed to modernise the perception of foster care by showing that the experience is about the growth of the child, the foster parent, the family, and the wider community.

The need for foster carers in NSW is acute, with over 300 children and young people aged 1 to 17 requiring loving homes.

“Our mission with DCJ was to deliver a dignifying, positive message that speaks to hope and purpose,” says Entropico Founding Partner Erin Moy. “We wanted to move away from negative narratives, break down barriers, and show that becoming a carer is an act of communal growth and love, while educating our audience on the many kinds of foster carers needed across the state.”

Entropico's creative concept centres on the kitchen fridge front – the keeper of family life and milestones in Australian homes. The campaign narrates the journey of four new foster parents using a compelling time-lapse of their fridge front as a canvas for change and positive growth.

Entropico Creative Director Harri Dunwell explains: “We wanted our audience to see themselves in this campaign, and ask, ‘Could I and should I become a foster carer?’, and we recognised the fridge as the heart of the home –  a relatable, universal anchor for memories. We start with a mostly empty fridge before a child arrives and watch it joyfully evolve, filling up with their artwork, school photos, awards, and family mementos. This evolution shows that fostering is a journey of purpose, love, and immense growth for both the child and the carer.”

The campaign was brought to life by director Genevieve Kaiser, known for her ability to blend authentic emotion with high-quality visual storytelling.

“This is such a beautiful creative platform, and it was such a privilege to work on,” says Kaiser. “We wanted these to feel like honest, intimate snapshots of these families’ lives and there was so much love and attention put into crafting every minute detail of these four stories.”

The campaign is being rolled out statewide across social media, TV, and print, reaching communities at major and local events.

Minister for Families and Communities, Kate Washington, stated: “Children don’t get a second chance at childhood, so we’re urging everyone to consider becoming a foster carer. It’s time for some myth-busting foster care facts – you can be single, in a same-sex relationship, retired, rent or own your own home, kids just need people who care. Fostering isn’t just long-term, we need short term, respite, emergency, and restoration carers too.”

The NSW Government’s investment supports foster carers with initiatives like paid foster carer leave for public sector workers and a 20% increase to the base Foster Care Allowance beginning January 2026.
To find out more about becoming a foster carer, visit nsw.gov.au/fostercare or call 1300 770 240.


CREDITS

NSW Government Department of Communities and Justice


Director – Campaigns and Strategy: Jacqueline Barnes
Manager, Campaigns and Strategy – System Reform: Rebecca Murphy
Senior Communications Officer: Nisha Labade

EntropicoEP / ECD: Erin Moy  
Creative Director: Harri Dunwell  
Account Directors: Andrew Macalpine, Dave Bostelman  
Director & Editor: Genevieve Kaiser  
Producer: Shaye Guillory  
Director of Photography (DOP): Simon Higgins  

1st AC: Jono Heighes  

Robot Arm Operator: Dan Miller  

Gaffer: Simon Walsh  

Art Director: Laura Murray  

Art Assist: Margarita Gershkovich, Thomas Rolls, Alastair Wharton  

Edit Assist: Jodie Williams, Ange Scott  

VFX & Animation: Tom Spiers, Tom Stone  

Colour Grade: Matt Fezz  

Composition & Sound Mix: Rowan Dix