The Nantucket Project
The Nantucket Project is a company.
Financial History
Leadership Team
Key people at The Nantucket Project.
The Nantucket Project is a company.
Key people at The Nantucket Project.
Key people at The Nantucket Project.
The Nantucket Project is a non-profit organization dedicated to fostering civil discourse, pluralism, and empathy through storytelling, immersive live gatherings, and films that spark dialogue on complex issues.[1][2][5][6] It hosts an annual 4-day event on Nantucket, Massachusetts, attracting around 600 attendees including leaders, artists, and entrepreneurs for talks, music, films, and courageous conversations on topics like political polarization, race, and global challenges; it also runs programs like Courageous Conversations on college campuses and TNP Labs for film production.[1][2][6] Neither an investment firm nor a traditional portfolio company, it operates in the media and civic engagement space with a mission to (re)imagine solutions to societal problems by promoting nuanced truth via dialogue, having raised about $6.21M in funding and produced over 50 short films plus an upcoming feature.[3][5][6]
Co-founded in 2010 by Tom Scott—former CEO of Nantucket Nectars and creator of the HBO series *The Neistat Brothers*—and Kate Brosnan, The Nantucket Project began as an annual gathering at the White Elephant Hotel on Nantucket, overlooking the harbor, evolving from intimate discussions into a platform for broader impact.[1][3][4] Its founding circle includes high-profile figures like Wendy Schmidt (President of The Schmidt Family Foundation), former Senator Bill Frist, and Bob Diamond (ex-Barclays CEO), providing early network strength.[1] Key milestones include launching TNP Labs in 2014 for film production—starting with "Reclaim Democracy," viewed over 4 million times—and expanding to initiatives like The Nantucket Academy for neighborhood research and Courageous Conversations for campus bridge-building.[1][3][6]
While not a tech company, The Nantucket Project intersects tech-adjacent trends like AI ethics, emerging technologies, and digital media's role in polarization by using films and gatherings to humanize complex issues, countering social media echo chambers with live, nuanced dialogue.[1][6] Timing aligns with rising demands for civil discourse amid U.S. political divides and campus tensions, where market forces like declining trust in institutions favor its bridge-building programs—evident in expansions to 30 campuses by 2026.[6] It influences the ecosystem by convening tech entrepreneurs with policymakers and artists, sparking ideas that ripple into civic tech and media innovation, as seen in its global topics coverage and fellow-driven hubs.[2][3]
With campus expansions, a 2026 feature film debut, and growing Courageous Conversations footprint, The Nantucket Project is poised to scale its pluralism model amid deepening divides, potentially partnering with more tech platforms for digital dialogue tools.[6] Trends like AI-driven misinformation and youth polarization will amplify demand for its methodology, evolving its influence from elite gatherings to widespread community hubs—reinforcing its founding pursuit of truth through courageous conversation.[5][6]