It’s hard to think of anyone who defined the spirit of 2019 more than Greta Thunberg, the teenage climate activist who addressed the United Nations Climate Action Summit, held her own against a cyberbully who just happens to be the President of the United States, and honored the likes of Leonardo DiCaprio with a visit.

Now, Thunberg’s meteoric rise will be chronicled in a Hulu documentary that will air in 2020, the streaming service announced on Tuesday.

Produced by Cecilia Nessen and Fredrik Heinig via B-Reel Films and directed by Stieg Larsson documentary cinematographer Nathan Grossman, the Thunberg documentary will track her evolution from student to world-famous activist, taking care not to gloss over the specific issues she faces as a teenager on the autism spectrum.

The team behind the documentary has been following Thunberg since her early days of climate-strike school walkouts in Sweden, Deadline reports, which will make the dizzying heights she’s risen to—including a 2019 nomination for the Nobel Peace Prize—look all the more striking in context.

Netflix has been the streaming service best known for its documentaries, including Lady Gaga: Five Foot Two, Tig, and the Oscar-winning The White Helmets, but Hulu seems poised to challenge that status with this new offering. Streaming wars aside, this new Hulu documentary could allow audiences to see Thunberg in a new light; she’s been forced to adopt the role of mini adult over the past few years, with actual adults looking desperately to her for inspiration, but an extended documentary format might allow us a glimpse of some of the challenges that surely accompany worldwide fame at age 16.