Before the Spotlight, There Was the Grind
Everybody loves an “overnight success” story. But let’s be real, most of them aren’t overnight at all.
Before landing a role on one of the biggest shows in the country, Julian Horton was like a lot of people just trying to make it work. Driving Uber. Watching his bank account sit around $500. Still holding onto a vision nobody else could see yet.
That part matters.
Because it’s easy to celebrate someone when they’re on Netflix. It’s harder to respect the version of them that was grinding in silence.
From the Driver’s Seat to the Top of Netflix
Now Horton is part of Beauty in Black, a series that climbed to the number one spot on Netflix in the U.S.
That shift is crazy when you really think about it.
From picking people up and dropping them off… to being watched by millions across the country.
And he didn’t hide that reality either.
He took to social media and kept it honest:
The Part People Don’t See
Horton made it clear that those Uber days were not a setback. They were part of the process.
He talked about belief. Not the fake motivational kind, but the kind you hold onto when nothing around you looks like it’s working.
The kind where:
- Nobody is validating you
- Nobody is checking for you
- And you still keep going
He said it best in his message. The people who believe they can and the people who believe they can’t are both right.
That’s real.
Faith, Focus, and Blocking Out the Noise
Another piece of his story that stood out was his mindset.
Horton credited his faith and discipline for keeping him grounded. He also spoke on something a lot of people deal with but don’t always say out loud. The noise.
People projecting doubt. People moving off fear. People telling you what you can’t do.
His advice was simple:
- Believe in yourself
- Stay locked in
- Do not let other people’s limitations become yours
And honestly, that hits beyond acting.
Why This Story Matters
This isn’t just about Netflix. It’s about perspective.
There are people right now:
- Driving rideshare
- Working jobs they don’t love
- Sitting on ideas nobody believes in
And they feel like they’re behind.
Horton’s story is a reminder that you might just be in the middle of your setup.
Not your ending.
The Bigger Picture
Success stories like this hit different when they feel real.
No silver spoon. No perfect timeline. Just consistency, belief, and staying in the game long enough.
That’s what makes this one resonate.
Because a lot of people see themselves in that version of Horton before the cameras, before the recognition, before the moment.
And if he can make that jump, it makes you look at your own situation a little differently.