Prime Video’s The CEO Club Spotlights Women Leaders
Prime Video’s new docuseries spotlights seven influential women leaders redefining power, business and identity in today’s global landscape.
Prime Video has officially premiered The CEO Club, a documentary series that brings together seven powerful women whose careers span fashion, music, beauty, entrepreneurship, technology, wellness and global branding. Far from a traditional business documentary, the series blends the emotional depth of personal storytelling with the intensity and ambition of high-level leadership, offering viewers a rare inside look at how women at the top of their industries build, innovate and rise.
Featuring Serena Williams, Thalia, Dee Ocleppo Hilfiger, Loren Ridinger, Winnie Harlow, Hannah Bronfman and Isabela Rangel Grutman, the series captures the triumphs, doubts, life transitions and bold decisions that shaped their evolution from creators to CEOs. With eight episodes, The CEO Club offers an intimate examination of modern female leadership at a moment when global representation, entrepreneurship and brand influence are undergoing a generational transformation.
A New Lens on Leadership, Influence and Identity
Set across New York, Miami, Los Angeles and global creative hubs, the series opens with the women reflecting on how leadership today looks nothing like the traditional corporate mold. They speak about entering boardrooms that did not expect them, turning passion into billion-dollar opportunity, and using their platforms not just for personal success but also for empowerment and representation.
Serena Williams, now a major investor and business founder, shares a rare, introspective look at how her competitive mindset evolved beyond the tennis court. “I learned that leadership is not about perfection, it’s about intention, resilience and the courage to reinvent,” she says in the opening episode.
Mexican superstar Thalia, who runs media, beauty and lifestyle ventures reaching millions globally, discusses building businesses that withstand fame cycles. “You can be an artist, a mother, a boss — even all at once. The world doesn't get to limit you anymore,” she notes.
Fashion entrepreneur Dee Ocleppo Hilfiger, co-founder of the global luxury label GiGi New York and creative director of Judith Leiber, highlights the pressure of reinventing legacy brands while nurturing new creative expression.
Meanwhile, Loren Ridinger, co-founder of the multibillion-dollar e-commerce company Market America, speaks candidly about grief, rebuilding, and choosing purpose over fear — making her one of the series’ most emotionally resonant voices.
Where Fame Meets Enterprise: The New Blueprint for Women in Business
One of the strongest themes throughout the series is how modern female CEOs are no longer confined to traditional corporate routes. Today, influence, identity, community-building and digital entrepreneurship merge into hybrid leadership that reshapes industries.
Supermodel and beauty entrepreneur Winnie Harlow describes the emotional journey of building her brand Cay Skin after years of struggling with skin sensitivity under harsh set lighting. “I didn’t want another girl on set to go through what I did,” she says, capturing the deeply personal motivations behind her business decisions.
Fitness and wellness pioneer Hannah Bronfman speaks about balancing digital entrepreneurship, motherhood and the pressure to exist constantly online. She discusses how vulnerability became essential in growing her global wellness community.
Philanthropist and entrepreneur Isabela Rangel Grutman, co-founder of Rangel Development Group and owner of several hospitality brands, shares how she navigates Miami’s competitive business landscape, balancing public visibility with high-stakes real estate decisions.
The Power of Female Networks and Peer Support
Throughout the series, an underlying message resonates clearly: women supporting women is a strategic advantage, not a symbolic gesture.
The seven CEOs discuss how they rely on each other for guidance during crises, expansion decisions, or personal turning points. In several episodes, they share private conversations about vulnerability, leadership burnout, marriage, motherhood and public scrutiny.
One of the most striking moments in the early episodes features Serena Williams and Loren Ridinger speaking openly about grief and resilience — highlighting how leadership is inseparable from lived experience. Their discussions illustrate how emotional intelligence, intuition and collaboration — traditionally undervalued in business — are now redefining what strong leadership looks like.
A Defining Cultural Moment for Women-Led Storytelling
As the documentary gains traction on social platforms within hours of its release, critics note that The CEO Club arrives at a pivotal time. Younger generations are turning increasingly to women-led brands, female-founded companies are gaining historic funding momentum, and global media is pushing for more authentic stories of leadership and identity.
Prime Video’s newest release underscores that female power is not linear or limited — it is dynamic, multifaceted, imperfect and deeply impactful. With seven trailblazing CEOs at the center of this narrative, The CEO Club sets a new standard for how global media portrays women who build, lead and reimagine industries.