BetaBlox relaunching its popular demo day as part of documentary-style reality TV show
January 29, 2021 | Tommy Felts
BetaBlox is adding more reality to its demo day — pushing the entrepreneur incubator’s hotly anticipated event to the summer and retooling the format as documentary-style vignettes that feed into casting for a full-season reality TV show.
“This opportunity is a win-win-win,” said Weston Bergmann, founder and lead investor at BetaBlox, in a message to entrepreneurs hoping to join the project. “We win because we’re creating an asset that promotes our incubator/process/services/products; the viewer wins because it’s pulling back the curtain on what it’s like to start real companies, which will aid them in their entrepreneurial education; and you win because you and your business will be showcased at scale to potential customers/partners/investors.”
BetaBlox is an exclusive school for startups. Every year, its team picks the best-of-the-best and then puts them through a rigorous curriculum of classes, one-on-one consultation, and mentorship designed to give them a higher likelihood of survival.
Season 1 is set to be shot in early summer in Tulsa, Oklahoma — where BetaBlox operates a second campus — over the course of a week at a luxury hotel and casino with an in-house co-working space.
The concept is a more fleshed out version of “Founder’s House,” a pilot for which was shot in the lead-up to BetaBlox’s demo day in January 2020. About 10 BetaBlox companies from across the region were placed in a house in Kansas City, put through a series of activities similar to those experienced in the incubator, and filmed.
That footage — along with the demo day pitches at the Grid Collaborative Workspace in Overland Park — then were turned into a short documentary, which first premiered in May and was posted online in December.
Click here to read more about the 2020 BetaBlox class, which featured Kansas City companies like Mindsport, Flexy, River Watch Beef, and KC Hemp Co.
View this post on Instagram
This go-round, BetaBlox companies’ documentary-style pitches will be filmed during the early summer as shooting gets under way for the reality TV show’s season. The best pitches are expected to be cast on the show, alongside a nationwide casting call that provides more exposure for BetaBlox and its complementary AlphaBlox programming.
Casting already has begun with more than 2,000 applicants expected, Bergmann told Startland News.
“We’re looking for entrepreneurs of all different types. We want high-tech startups, we want small businesses, we want men and women, we want old and young, etc.,” he said in a message to potential applicants. “Our thesis is that you should surround yourself with different types of entrepreneurs, and find inspiration from what they’re doing for your personal journey.”
“We’ve found that small businesses don’t think enough like a startup, and startups don’t think enough like a small business,” he continued. “This experience will help illuminate that opportunity for you and those who watch.
Click here to apply or learn more about the casting and filming process. The finished product is expected in late summer 2021.
“Interestingly enough, I’ve wanted to pivot the demo days to this for several years, COVID just gave me the excuse to do it,” said Bergmann, who himself was a cast member on MTV’s “The Real World: Austin” and is a frequent competitor on the network’s “The Challenge” series.
In March 2020, BetaBlox was among the first entrepreneur programs to rapidly move its efforts to virtual formats as the early impact of the pandemic began to set in.
“Timing-wise, we got really lucky,” Bergmann told Startland News at the time, having just wrapped the January demo day and the interview process for a new round of companies. “We got both of those done recently and now it’s just one giant knowledge transfer from our coaches/curriculum/process to our entrepreneurs.”
After what seemed like 100 phone calls with current and alumni startups in BetaBlox, he said, patterns quickly emerged on how to adapt the program.
“We took those patterns and created a class series we’re teaching via remote broadcast and slides that centers exclusively around how to navigate these current waters,” Bergmann said. “The advice changes dependent upon how far along the companies are, and if they’re in a market that is more (or less) in demand during this crisis.”
Like those BetaBlox companies, entrepreneurs cast on the reality show will have free access to the incubator’s digital curriculum — AlphaBlox — which has proven a core asset during the transition to virtual.
“AlphaBlox is about eight hours of videos/classes/panels/infographics that walk our startups through the first several months,” Bergmann said, noting cast members would use the materials as “summer reading” before shooting begins. “It was originally designed for people that aren’t quite ready for BetaBlox. It took two years to produce it, so it’s of a quality we’ve never seen anyone else in our space do.”
Want to get a feel for BetaBlox’s planned reality TV series? Watch the pilot below.
Founder’s House Pilot from Weston Bergmann on Vimeo.

2021 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Duo designs Paloma Post greeting cards for more inclusive representation of couples
As she stood flipping through an endless sea of birthday cards, Julie Korona couldn’t find a single one that would send the right message to her then-fiancé, Tyler, she recalled. “All of the cards that I was looking through either said ‘husband’ or were super generic,” said Korona, co-founder of Paloma Post — a newly…
Artist who won rare Jayhawk licensing deal — scoring a $150K payday — set to rebound
Seemingly routine for many Kansas fans, crimson and blue are once again among the colors flooding the canvas of the 2019 NCAA tournament. But for artist Megh Knappenberger, the Jayhawks’ familiar palate has painted an entrepreneurial journey with as thrilling ups and downs as Big 12 basketball, she said. “It’s a pretty special and unique…
Cloud platform Packet opens KC office after $25M funding round in New York
New York-based Packet’s newly established Kansas City office is expected to take full advantage of the area’s wealth of tech talent, said Ihab Tarazi. “There is actually a very good technical base in Kansas City — so here’s validation of that,” said Tarazi, chief technology officer at the cloud infrastructure firm committed to “building a…
Fast track Missouri Hyperloop: Bipartisan support for 670-mph travel builds speed
It isn’t just a pipe dream. The arrival of bipartisan state and federal support for high-speed, cross-region travel means the much-anticipated Missouri Hyperloop project continues to shoot forward, Ryan Weber said. “For businesses, this could be a huge opportunity to create a new industry, attract new businesses and leverage a much larger workforce,” Weber, KC…

