Kate Moss lines up Netflix documentary for 35th anniversary

Kate Moss lines up Netflix documentary for 35th anniversary

kate moss is reportedly being lined up for a Netflix documentary tied to the 35th anniversary of her 1992 Calvin Klein adverts. The move would put one of the 1990s’ most recognisable fashion figures back at the center of a streamer that has already leaned on celebrity docuseries to drive attention.

Netflix and the Calvin Klein tie-in

The project would be offered as a series about Moss, with the anniversary of her 1992 Calvin Klein adverts used as the timing hook. A source told The Sun newspaper's TVBiz column that she may now be willing to discuss her life in a way she never has before, a shift that would give the production a far more personal angle than a standard fashion retrospective.

That same source said, "Getting Kate on board would make a huge difference to the streamers and probably spark a bidding war, if it came to fruition." The commercial logic is obvious: Moss still has name value, and a documentary built around her would carry both fashion history and platform branding value.

Kylie and Beckham precedent

The pitch arrives after the global streamer already worked on docuseries about Kylie Minogue and Sir David and Lady Victoria Beckham. Producers are hoping that seeing David Beckham, Kylie, Victoria Beckham and Gordon Ramsay fronting big TV autobiographies will be persuasive, a sign they are trying to sell Moss on a format that has already traveled well.

The insider called it "a bit of a chicken-and-egg situation" and said it was "dependent on someone like Netflix saying it is interested first." That is the friction point here: the project needs Moss to sign on, but her willingness appears linked to a streamer showing interest before she commits.

Kate Moss at 52

Moss turned 52 on January 16 this year, and Lila Moss marked the birthday with the tribute, "Happy birthday mummy!!! I love you the mostest (sic)." The birthday note gave the public a rare family snapshot around a figure who has long kept her private life tightly managed.

In 2022, Moss told the Evening Standard, "I'm now in charge of my career." She also said, "I'm allowed to have an opinion," and added, "Now I know exactly what I'm doing when I turn up on the day." If a Netflix project gets past the interest stage, that agency over her own story is likely to shape what reaches the screen.

For streaming buyers, the practical takeaway is simple: this is not just a fashion documentary pitch, but a bid to turn a 1992 advertising moment into a premium franchise sale. If Moss does engage, the bidding fight could move fast; if she does not, the anniversary idea stays a producer’s pitch rather than a series on the slate.

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