Hello, my name is Max Volokhov. I'm the founder of Admitad Startups and In this article, I would like to share a list of the best TV shows, movies, and books about startups. These are definitely not the only ones out there â just my favorite pieces of media that I personally appreciate.
Hopefully, they will provide you with inspiration and food for thought. Keep continuously learning and exploring other entrepreneursâ case studies on your journey towards developing your own business!

TV Shows                            Â
Silicon Valley

This one is a golden classic that deserves to be placed in the Hall of Fame. The story unfolds over five seasons. Itâs focused on a team of stereotypical garage startupers: a geek founder, a cynical digithead, a conscientious nerd, and an Asian coder. If youâve never watched TV shows about startups before, Silicon Valley is a perfect one to get started with.
WeCrashed

This story shows how investorsâ money can ruin well-intended business ideas. Even though it sounds like a paradox, this story happened in real life with a co-working space network called WeWork. Apart from this TV show, it inspired a bunch of podcasts and documentaries.
The series reveals the absurd chain of events with great precision: enamored with the startup, SoftBank decides to invest in it. As the founder gets a fortune, he keeps on scaling his business and doesnât bother to think about anything else.Â
The finale is just as tragic as the real story. The IPO is canceled. The CEO gets fired from the company that he founded. He feels devastated. Now that his experience is immortalized in a TV show, his legacy will serve as a cautionary tale for other entrepreneurs.
Halt Catch a Fire

Halt Catch a Fire is a highly underrated show. Even though it is based on a made-up story, its creators drew inspiration from real events of the 1980s when the technological world that surrounds us today was only beginning to shape.
At the start of each season, the main protagonist finds himself in a C-suite or managerial position in a company that is about to revolutionize its industry. It might be creating the Internet, a portable personal computer, or a multiplayer RPG.Â
Itâs immensely funny to see IT companies at the time when their employees were wearing ties at work. Also, you will get a closer look at the beginnings of the global computer revolution.
The Dropout

Itâs a film adaptation of the recent story of Elizabeth Holmes and her startup Theranos that promised to revolutionize diagnostics and medical testing.Â
Itâs hard to say whether the showrunners are trying to justify Holmes or make her look as cynical as possible. On the one hand, according to the plot, she had good intentions. She began to tell lies about a new item under development to gain time and bring her MVP to a working condition. But then, her sweet little lie grew to such an extent that it became the only thing Theranos is known for.
Inside Billâs Brain: Decoding Bill Gates

This Netflix documentary consists of three parts. It receives mixed reviews for two reasons:
The most precious part of the show is the analysis of Billâs mindset and motivations. Plus, youâll have a close look into the charity work of the Gates Foundation.
Super Pumped

The term âuberizationâ has become an integral part of our vocabulary, so Uber definitely stands out from other unicorns of recent history. Only Google can boast an identical contribution to the English language â after all, we constantly tell each other to âGoogle it!â
This show is not about Uber but about its founder, Travis Kalanick. Showrunners believe he bears full responsibility for the hardships that the startup had to face from time to time.Â
From the point of view of dramatic storytelling, itâs a strong piece of media. But entrepreneurs who have tried to launch at least one business will hardly be impressed. Indeed, Super Pumped can keep you entertained for a few hours, but itâs not a manual for aspiring startupers.
A big kudos goes to the showrunners who did not shy away from depicting Appleâs place in the modern world. In the last ten years, this company has become a monstrous monopolist. There is a creepy scene where Tim Cook and Eddy Cue call Kalanick, the founder and CEO of a billion-worth company, onto the carpet and rub his nose in the dirt, threatening to remove the Uber app from AppStore.
Movies
The Social Network

Watch this film to find out how Mark Zuckerberg created Facebook while studying at Harvard. Later on, the Winklevoss brothers accused him of stealing their business idea, and he had to pay a hefty compensation to them.Â
This movie will remind you that Facebook was not always a giant and had very humble beginnings. Also the cast is brilliant! Aaron Sorkin was responsible for the script and David Fincher was the director, so you can be sure youâll enjoy every second of the movie.
Pirates of Silicon Valley

This movie saw light in 1999. It depicts the events that took place between 1981 and 1997. The plot is focused on the rivalry between Steve Jobs and Bill Gates. The former used to work for Apple but then quit because of internal conflicts. Without Jobs, Apple conceded the leading position in the market to Microsoft. In 1999, Jobs came back to its employer and made the brand great again, but you wonât see it in the movie.Â
Pirates of Silicon Valley is based on the book Fire in the Valley: The Making of the Personal Computer. You can find many other films about Jobs on the Internet but this one stands out from the rest because it depicts Steve during the period when he seemed to be losing the war.
Silicon Cowboys

The decade-long rivalry between Compaq and IBM is another David-and-Goliath story worthy of a movie adaptation.Â
The former company â âDavidâ â was founded in the early 1980s by three friends. It achieved mainstream acceptance due to its Compaq Portable device. âGoliathâ released its own personal computer in response.Â
The documentary Silicon Cowboys saw light in 2016. It contains footage and interviews not only from IBM and Compaq but also from other players of the PC industry of that decade.
Startup.com

This movie was edited from over 400 hours of footage and was released in 2001. Itâs a cautionary tale about the startup called GovWorks.Â
This business was conceived during the fabulous era of the dotcom bubble. Youâll get a chance to peek behind the scenes of a company that was launched by friends who evolved into fierce rivals.Â
BooksÂ

The Lean Startup: How Todayâs Entrepreneurs Use Continuous Innovation to Create Radically Successful Businesses by Eric Ries
This book was dubbed âThe Bible of tech startupsâ. The Lean Startup methodology relies on five principles:
Eric Ries helps founders to boost their teamsâ creativity and efficiency, cut down expenses, and avoid common mistakes. This classic will teach you to formulate your vision, scale sustainably, test ideas, and adapt to change.Â
Good to Great. Why Some Companies Make the LeapâŚand Others Donât by ĐĄollins JimÂ
The author teamed up with professionals from various industries to carry out large-scale research. Their goal was to find out whether business success factors exist indeed.
They analyzed companies that met two criteria:
Collins pays attention to all aspects that can contribute to achieving success: from discipline to strategic and tactical decisions. He explains which managerial principles business leaders rely on and how they work with their rivals and clients.
This book is particularly helpful for entrepreneurs whose companies are in the slow growth stage. Thanks to the knowledge youâll get, youâll be able to introduce the necessary changes to the structure and regulations of your startup and accelerate most of the processes.
Zero to One: Notes on Startups, or How to Build the Future by Peter Thiel and Blake Masters
Peter Thiel is primarily known as a PayPal founder, a Facebook investor, and a venture capitalist who has established several VC funds. In this book, he scrutinizes the most successful corporations from the position of both a startuper and a VC. He analyzes the early-stage development of these companies. His book is focused on the attempts of various startups to monopolize the market. Itâs not a political monopoly that can be achieved thanks to personal connections but a client-oriented approach that suggests creating genuinely good and innovative products.
Zero to One is just as exciting and easy to read as a fiction book. Business-specific issues are approached from the point of view of simple people and not large corporations. Youâll discover many real-life examples and case studies in the text: the author investigates the solutions that speed up business growth.
Live Work Work Work Die: A Journey into the Savage Heart of Silicon Valley by Corey Pain
Every entrepreneur has heard the fact that only one startup out of ten survives. Todayâs statistics, however, might be even more depressing.Â
This book explains how exactly the survivors manage to stay afloat. The author immersed himself in the very heart of the US technological boom and wasnât happy at all with what he saw there.Â
Itâs true that every waiter and every delivery courier in the Valley has their own startup. But their odds to take off are close to nil. These people are much more likely to spend all their modest savings on entry tickets to âinvestor partiesâ. Naturally, no real investors attend such events â only poor startupers, down on their luck.
The Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly Improbable by Nassim Nicholas Taleb
Since 2020, the term âblack swanâ has become a part of our everyday vocabulary. But in a startup industry, itâs a norm to expect that these extreme outliers might show up at any moment.
Readers who run their businesses will smile and nod, saying âYes, thatâs right.â All the others will enjoy exploring the authorâs fascinating theory â and, hopefully, begin to perceive the news less emotionally.
The Startup Ownerâs Manual: The Step-By-Step Guide for Building a Great Company by Steve Blank
This is a collection of how-toâs for startupers. Its author came up with the concept of the customer development interview that nearly all successful startups rely on today. He will teach you how to work with your already existing and new clients, collect and process information, and pivot if necessary. The book will provide you with all the advice required to grow a big business from modest beginnings.
Rules For Revolutionaries. The Capitalist Manifesto for Creating and Marketing New Products and Services by Guy Kawasaki and Michele MorenoÂ
Guy Kawasaki, an Apple evangelist, believes that it takes three components to build a unicorn startup:
These three pillars are mentioned in Kawasakiâs main principle, âCreate like a god, rule like a king, work like a slave.â
Compared to Lean Startup or The Startup Ownerâs Manual, this book is less formal. Nevertheless, it can be perceived as a manual for launching and developing your own project. Plus, it will help you improve as a founder. The author doesnât guarantee that youâll avoid any mistakes after reading the book but it will be easier for you to survive them.
Scrum: The Art of Doing Twice the Work in Half the Time by J.J. Sutherland
Sutherlandâs method works wonders not only for startups but for big players too. Coherent interaction of different departments is an eternal headache for top managers. Several FAANG companies successfully use the Scrum methodology â according to various sources, this has boosted the efficiency of selected processes from 300% to 400%. The target audience of this book is not only startupers but also classic offline businesses.
Presentation Secrets of Steve Jobs by Carmine Gallo
Steve Jobs could impress any audience, be it Appleâs business partners or a presentation of a new product to a large audience. This professional knew how to grab his listenersâ attention and achieve the desired results.
The book is divided into three parts that will teach you to:
This book is indispensable for startupers, marketing specialists, and everyone whose job involves speaking in public.
High Growth Handbook: Scaling Startups from 10 to 10,000 People by Elad Gil
The author analyzes the success stories of Twitter, Google, Stripe, and Airbnb. The text reveals the behavioral patterns of entrepreneurs who never sacrifice their company culture or forget the core vision when growing their businesses.Â