Pros
There are some fantastic people who work here, but the best ones leave as soon as they can. MOSAK taught me to appreciate the jobs that I thought were the worst I had ever had.
Cons
When you first work at MOSAK, you are treated really well and everyone is welcoming. You usually get good projects and are energized by all of the friendly people. However, the honeymoon at MOSAK only lasts about a month before you start to see the cracks. Eventually the cracks become holes and the holes become a giant cavern of incompetence, disorganization, and lack of respect for the people who work the longest and the hardest. Upper management only cares about their bottom line and doesn't think anyone is working hard unless they are coming in every weekend. In the minds of MOSAK, hard work is only recognized by how many hours you put in, not the quality of your work or the efficiency of your ability to produce it. The creative directors pretend like they do work all day by going to meetings and spending time behind closed doors gossiping, shopping and rearranging the structure of the creative teams. Management makes up policies on the spot to convenience them whenever an employee makes a request. There is a very skewed view of reality at MOSAK and unless you are desperate for a job, don't bother applying here.