Inside the live economy where selling is performance, every bid is a bet, and success and failure happen in public.
"Anyone can turn their passion into a business and bring people together through commerce."
— Grant LaFontaine, CEO & Co-Founder, WhatnotProjected live commerce market by 2026. Whatnot commands 31% of all social shopping GMV — vastly outpacing every competitor.
Categories now active on the platform. Knives. Plants. Beauty. Golf. Vintage. What started as a collectibles app has become a new economic layer on top of American culture.
Sellers are now full-time. 66% earn $10,000 or more per month. In one generation, a new profession was invented — and it happens live, on camera, every day.
Audiences will follow any world — if the characters are right and the stakes are real. Formula One wasn't mainstream until Netflix made you care about the people inside the cars.
Whatnot is the same story. It's not about the platform. It's about the people betting their livelihoods on a live stream. Every episode has a built-in climax: the big inventory risk, the stream that goes sideways, the moment a career pivots in real time.
This is character-driven, access-driven documentary filmmaking. Raw. Embedded. Observational — not promotional.
Premium observational docuseries. 6–8 episodes. Character-driven. Embedded within real live streams, real inventory decisions, real financial stakes.
Setup → The Inventory Risk → Stream Build-Up → The Stream → Outcome → Personal Aftermath. Every episode has a financial climax. Every climax has a human consequence.
Handheld, embedded. Screen-capture integration. Split between real life and stream persona. Chat scrolling in real time. The camera sees what the audience sees — and what the audience doesn't.
Introduce the ecosystem and its people. Escalate stakes, rivalries, pressure. Big swings, burnout, breakthroughs. Who made it — and who didn't.
These are not influencers. They are not reality TV contestants. They are people who decided, at some point, to go live — and bet their livelihoods on whether anyone would watch.
Ten years at JPMorgan as a VP. A salary, a title, a career. She quit all of it to auction thrifted clothing live on Whatnot. The gamble paid — more than her corporate salary ever did. But the camera never stops, and neither does she.
30,000 followers. An unremarkable coin shop in San Francisco. And $10,000 to $20,000 earned per hour on camera. He made $4 million through Whatnot in a single year. Almost nobody outside the platform knows his name — yet.
When Whatnot launched in Australia in October 2024, Carson was already there. Now he's a contractor for the company — building the market from the inside while still running his own channel. The frontiersman of a new economy taking root on a new continent.
Every season, someone bets everything on a single inventory haul. A sealed case of vintage cards. A pallet of sneakers. A container of luxury goods. When it works, it's life-changing. When it doesn't, the camera is still rolling.
They built the inventory over a lifetime. Now they're supposed to sell it. The tension between passion and commerce — between keeping what matters and building a business — is the emotional spine of every episode they appear in.
Six months ago they had 200 followers. Now they have 20,000 and the platform is pushing their content. The rise is happening fast — too fast. The question is whether the business can keep up with the audience.
Live commerce is the fastest-growing segment of e-commerce globally. The $35B projection is not hypothetical — it's happening now. Whatnot sits at the center of it, outpacing every competitor, and the story has not been told on screen.
TikTok's regulatory uncertainty in the United States has created a direct tailwind for Whatnot. As the dominant alternative, Whatnot is absorbing both sellers and buyers — and growing faster than at any point in its history. This window will close.
There is no documentary. No docuseries. No long-form treatment of what Whatnot has built or who is building their lives inside it. An $11.5 billion company — the most popular app people have never heard of — and the story has never been told.
Producer and development executive with a track record across unscripted, scripted, and digital content. Experience developing projects from concept through sale, with a focus on character-driven stories that sit at the intersection of culture, commerce, and identity. 1Mosaic Productions, Los Angeles.
Unscripted television executive and producer. Monarch Content. Specializes in reality and documentary formats with strong narrative architecture and commercial appeal. Deep experience developing content for major streaming platforms and broadcast networks.
Drive to Survive model. Character-first, access-driven. Global commerce story.
Commerce DNA. Prime audience. American entrepreneurship, live on camera.
Selling Sunset lane. Personality-driven. Character drama + business stakes.
Hybrid model. Shorter format. Direct Whatnot platform collaboration.
City of Whatnot is in active development. If you're interested in distribution, partnership, or collaboration, we'd like to hear from you.
drew@1mosaicproductions.com