Their first breakout wasn't a prestige drama, but a raw, unscripted digital series called The Pivot . It followed three women in their fifties—a former CEO starting a bakery, a divorcee entering the competitive dating scene for the first time in thirty years, and a retired athlete.

The industry scoffed. "Who’s the target?" they asked. "Where’s the TikTok hook?"

Gorgette ignored them. She leaned into high-production value and "unfiltered" storytelling. She didn't use soft-focus filters to hide wrinkles; she used 4K lenses to celebrate them.

Gorgette had spent twenty years in the industry as a "ghost"—the producer everyone called to fix a flat script or a failing pilot, but whose name never quite made the top of the marquee.

How would you like to —should we focus on a specific show Gorgette produces, or explore her clash with a younger rival executive?

Now, at fifty-two, she was launching , her own boutique media house. Her mission was simple: create content for the demographic the industry treated as invisible once they stopped being "trending."

"The algorithm thinks women over forty only want to buy beige cardigans and life insurance," Gorgette told her small, hungry team in their sun-drenched Brooklyn loft. "We’re going to give them the mess, the ambition, and the heat they actually live."