Tag: Netflix

  • Netflix launches first two mobile games in Poland

    Netflix launches first two mobile games in Poland

    Mumbai: Netflix has launched its first two mobile games on Android – “Stranger Things: 1984” and “Stranger Things 3” for members in Poland. Netflix Geeked made the announcement on 26 August via their official Twitter handle.  

    “Today members in Poland can try Netflix mobile gaming on Android with two games, Stranger Things: 1984 and Stranger Things 3. It’s very, very early days and we’ve got a lot of work to do in the months ahead, but this is the first step,” reads the tweet.

    According to a report by Variety, Netflix games will have no ads or in-app purchases and titles will be included with a Netflix streaming plan. In the Android app, available game titles will show up under a new menu that says ‘Play Mobile Games’ and users who click on it will be directed to a Google Play Store page to download the game. The report indicates that over time the games will be more tightly integrated into the Netflix app itself.

    “Stranger Things 3: The Game” is developed by studio BonusXP and allows gamers to play through familiar events in Stranger Things season three where they will be able to uncover new quests, character interactions and secrets. “Stranger Things: 1984” is described as a stylized retro action-adventure similar to the arcade games back in the 80s, letting players solve puzzles, collect Eggos and gnomes along the way, said the Variety report.

    In July, Netflix hired former Facebook, vice president, Mike Verdu to head its video games unit as vice president, game development. Verdu has been associated with EA Mobile, Kabam, TapZen and served as chief executive officer at Zynga from 2009 to 2012.  

    Last month, the company officially revealed its plans to enter the video game market as a new category to help it attract and retain customers. In their second-quarter earnings call, co-CEO Reed Hastings emphasised that Netflix is not looking to generate revenues from video games per se, it is about “enhancing the big service that we have”, he noted.  

  • Netflix announces its first-ever global fan event on 25 September

    Netflix announces its first-ever global fan event on 25 September

    Mumbai: ‘TUDUM’ is the first beat one hears when they watch a show or a movie on Netflix. And it’s the inspiration behind the OTT platform’s inaugural ‘TUDUM: A Netflix Global Fan Event’, which is all set to be held in September.

    The global streaming platform has announced that the virtual fan event to be held on 25 September will feature the biggest stars and creators of a variety of Netflix projects representing over 70 series, movies and specials. “The goal of ‘TUDUM’ is to “entertain and celebrate Netflix fans around the world,” it stated in its blog.

    The three-hour virtual live stream will start at 9:30 p.m. IST in addition to its social media handles- Twitter and Twitch around the world. It will also be broadcast on Netflix’s YouTube channel. The pre-show, which spotlights Korean and Indian series and movies, will be on a specific channel at 5:30 p.m. (Pacific Standard Time) / 5 AM (Pacific Standard Time) / 8 AM (Eastern Standard Time) / along with animated content. It will be held at 12:00 pm (Greenwich Mean Time) / 9:00 pm (JST and KST).

    “Fans will be the first to hear breaking news and see first looks, new trailers and exclusive clips during interactive panels and conversations with the creators and stars from Netflix,” stated the OTT platform.

    Some of the Netflix TV shows and movies to be featured include –‘Aggressive Retsuko: Season 4’-‘ The Witcher Away’-‘ Travels Demi Ventana’-‘Mystery’-‘ Army of Thieves’ -‘Black Crab’-‘Big Mouse’-‘Bridgerton’-‘ Bright: Samurai Soul’-‘ Hurt’-‘Chestnut Man’-‘ Cobra Kai’-‘ Black and White Colin’-‘ Cowboy Bebop’- ‘Crown’-‘De Volta Aos 15’-‘Do n’t Look Up’-‘ Emily in Paris’-‘Extraction’-‘ Finding Anamika’-‘ Floor is Lava’-‘The Harder they Fall’-‘ Helbound ‘-‘ Heeramandi’-‘ Human Resources’-‘ Interceptor’-‘ Inside Job’-‘ La Casa de Papel’-‘ Old Guard’-‘Oscrodeseo’-‘Ozark’-‘ Mardibus’-‘ My Name’-‘ New World’-‘Pretty Guardian Sailor Moon Eternal: The Movie’-‘ Rebelde’-‘ Ritmo Salvaje’-‘Red Notice’-‘ The Sandman’-‘Sex Education’-‘ The Silent Sea’-‘ Soy Georgina’- ‘Stranger Things’-‘ Super Crook’-‘ Ultraman: Season 2’-‘ Umbrella Academy’-‘ Viking: Valhara’-‘The Witcher’-‘ The Witcher: Blood Origin’ and ‘Young and Famous African’.

    According to Netflix, those interested in hosting a co-stream can also sign up for TUDUM.com to respond to their personal Facebook, Twitch, or YouTube channels.

  • Netflix, UNESCO partner to celebrate India’s diverse cultural heritage

    Netflix, UNESCO partner to celebrate India’s diverse cultural heritage

    Mumbai: Netflix and UNESCO (United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation) have come together to celebrate India’s rich cultural heritage through the popular animated series “Mighty Little Bheem”. Produced by Green Gold Animation, the series was premiered on the streaming platform in 2019.

    Over the next year, Netflix and UNESCO will come up with a series of fun short videos themed ‘One Country, Incredible Diversity’ that will shine a light on India’s cultural journey, including monuments, living heritage, performing arts, social practices, rituals and festivals such as Dussehra, Diwali and Holi. 

    The short videos to be released on UNESCO New Delhi’s Facebook, Instagram, YouTube and Twitter pages, will demonstrate how cultural history enriches people’s everyday lives by covering everything from food and traditions to languages and storytelling. 

    The first video was released on 13 August to celebrate the 75th anniversary of India’s Independence (Azadi Ka Amrit Mahotsav), a day that brings the entire country together.

  • Netflix doubles down on reality content to attract paying subscribers

    Netflix doubles down on reality content to attract paying subscribers

    Mumbai: Netflix has announced several new and returning unscripted series for reality content fans. The streaming giant has also renewed the docuseries ‘Indian Matchmaking’ for the second season. The show premiered on the OTT platform in July 2020.

    The OTT platform has also renewed the US reality competition series ‘The Circle’ for seasons four and five and ‘The American Barbecue Showdown’ for a second season. It has also ordered a new reality series ‘Roaring Twenties’.

    “Reality TV is a powerful genre. It has the ability to make you invested in who is going to win the big competition or find true love (or at least a ‘good showmance’). It also has the ability to bring people together from all walks of life. We love to hear from viewers who feel inspired and accepted after seeing themselves reflected in our shows. After all, what is reality TV if it doesn’t represent real people?”, said Netflix’s vice president, unscripted and documentary series, Brandon Riegg.

    ‘Indian Matchmaking’ is an Emmy-nominated docuseries featuring matchmaker Sima Taparia who helps singles across the globe, who have decided to put their love lives in the hands of an expert. It is produced by Industrial Media’s The Intellectual Property Corp. Aaron Saidman, Eli Holzman, Smriti Mundhra, and J.C. Begley are the executive producers.

    The OTT Giant Netflix’s subscriber growth has slowed down significantly in the second quarter of 2021. It reported adding 1.5 million paid subscribers in Q2 2021 whereas it added 10.1 million paid subscribers during the same period last year. Notably, the APAC region accounted for two thirds of the global paid net addition during this quarter.

    The streaming service saw a record 26 million paid subscribers in the first half of 2020 whereas in 2019 it achieved 28 million subscribers for the whole year.

    Netflix launched many of its popular reality shows like ‘Too Hot to Handle’, ‘Indian Matchmaking’, ‘The American Barbeque Showdown’, ‘Bling Empire’, and ‘Love is Blind’ last year when it added a record number of new subscribers.

  • Netflix’s Monika Shergill talks about crafting stories for every mood on OTT

    Netflix’s Monika Shergill talks about crafting stories for every mood on OTT

    New Delhi: The OTT platforms have taken the world by storm. If there is one key trend that has completely revolutionised the way content is now being created across mediums, it is definitely these new-age platforms. And leading the way is OTT giant Netflix which currently boasts of over 209 million subscribers worldwide.

    From originals, sit-coms, documentaries, adapted formats to movies, the platform offers something for every kind of viewer. It will also be completing ten years in original programming soon, globally.

    “In all these years, we have tried to offer all kinds of stories on our platform – stories that feel real, and have universal emotions. We have had powerful novel based series, and multiple seasons each told in a fresh way,” says Netflix India, vice president, content, Monika Shergill at the fifth edition of The Content Hub 2021, which concluded recently.

    The three-day mega event organised virtually by Indiantelevision.com brought content makers from the world of television, films and OTT on one platform to delve upon the evolving media and entertainment industry. Indiantelevision.com’s founder and CEO Anil Wanvari got into an engaging fireside chat with Shergill about Netflix’s journey of creating content for the Indian masses.

    “Netflix is creating stories for every mood,” highlights Shergill. “As a streaming service, we are designed very uniquely. Everyone’s version of Netflix is different. You can experiment according to your taste, and try new content anytime you want. The way Netflix is designed, it is to really reflect as many lives as we can, mood within moods, genres, creating an ocean of stories and unlocking its full potential.”

    The French series, Lupin which was released on the platform in January remained among its Top 10 shows across most countries for weeks. It recently released Taapsee Pannu starrer Haseen Dillruba, and Kriti Sanon’s Mimi, and is gearing up for the release of the much-awaited fifth season of Spanish drama Money Heist. Then, there is the American teen romantic comedy, The Kissing Booth 3 in August.

    Haseen Dillruba has been trending ever since it was released. Ray (an anthology based on the works of Satyajit Ray) also spiked audience’s interest. Money Heist remained in Top 10 for 117 days last year,” Shergill says joyously. “What we are beginning to do is to create programming catering to different tastes. One story cannot work for everyone and we understand that everyone has different tastes, which we must cater to. Viewing of Kids content has increased by 100 per cent, and also the documentaries and films in different languages.”

    The final season of Money Heist is now set to launch in two instalments of five episodes each on 3 September and 3 December.

    The platform had announced as many as 41 titles early this year, and has a huge pipeline of new series, shares Shergill. “Finding Anamika will mark Madhuri Dixit’s debut on OTT. Then we will have another web-series, Yeh Kaali Kaali Ankhein in August which is a dark romantic series, bound to surprise everyone. R Madhavan will be seen in the comedy series, Decoupled. So, yes, we programme for every mood and taste,” adds Netflix India’s top executive, “Family dramas are also close to our hearts, and they appeal to the widest set of audiences.”

    According to Shergill, the platform has also made its mark as a global platform that has been successfully bringing best of stories from the world to India and vice-versa. “At a time when people cannot travel physically, we are taking them to different places through our stories. We are glad we are able to do it. All we want to do is entertain, and we promise that we have something for everyone. And, we deliver it to them in a responsible way,” she sums up.

    The fifth edition of the Content Hub 2021 was co-presented by IN10 Media Network and ZEE5, and co-powered by Applause Entertainment and Tipping Point, the digital content unit of Viacom 18 Studios. PTC Network was the supporting partner.

  • Netflix sets up its first Music Creative and Production team in Mumbai

    Netflix sets up its first Music Creative and Production team in Mumbai

    New Delhi: Streaming giant Netflix on Tuesday announced the setting up of its first Music Creative and Production team in Mumbai.

    Ramprasad Sundar, who will lead the team at Netflix for Music Creative and Production said, “I am excited to lead this new Music and Creative Production team in India. Bringing viewers closer to the stories we tell through the magical combination of sight and sound is very inspiring. I can’t wait to get started.”

    This is the first such facility in the Asia-Pacific region, where the team will partner with composers, producers, labels, publishers, and artist management teams to bring incredible music to its series and films from India for members across the world.

    “Music is a powerful universal language. At Netflix, we believe that music is critical to building an emotional, intrinsic connection to a story no matter where that story comes from,” said the company in a statement. “As we grow in India, we are committed to making a universe of exciting and authentic stories from all corners of the country and in all languages, including Hindi, Tamil, Telugu, Malayalam, and more.”

    The idea behind the launch is to provide exceptional production support to the creators in India and connect them with local music talent. The team will be engaged in creating an instantly recognisable sonic brand for titles, like the theme song to Sacred Games, and drive conversations around titles such as the Tamil blockbuster film Jagame Thandhiram, through soundtracks and music promotions.

    The Music Creative and Production team will also partner with organisations across the country on bespoke programs and a range of initiatives, including workshops for training music supervisors and music editors. With the aim of developing the next generation of music supervisors and specialists, the team will work towards building a more inclusive talent pipeline of individuals from underrepresented groups, said the company.

    In June, the streaming platform also announced Mumbai as the home to its first fully owned, live-action, full-service post-production facility globally. The facility which will become operational by 2022 will have 40 offline editing rooms designed as a flexible, collaborative and inspiring environment for showrunners, directors, editors and sound designers to create their best work.

  • Netflix’s growth slows down in 2021, adds just 1.5m subs in Q2

    Netflix’s growth slows down in 2021, adds just 1.5m subs in Q2

    New Delhi: After a meteoric rise in 2020, the US-based streaming giant Netflix’s subscriber growth in early 2021 has slowed down. According to the company’s latest financial results, the OTT platform has added just 1.5 million subscribers, compared to 10.1 million new sign-ins it reported during the same period last year.

    Netflix, thus ended the quarter with 209 million paid memberships.

    The APAC region represented about two-thirds of the global paid net adds in the quarter. However, its Q2 paid memberships in the US and Canada region were slightly down sequentially, as it lost 0.4 million paid memberships in the region. “We believe our large membership base in UCAN coupled with a seasonally smaller quarter for acquisition is the main reason for this dynamic”, said Netflix.

    In Q2, revenue increased 19 per cent year over year to $7.3 billion, while operating income rose 36 per cent year over year to $1.8 billion. Revenue growth was driven by an 11 per cent increase in average paid streaming memberships and 8 per cent growth in average revenue per membership (ARM).

    According to the company, Covid has created some lumpiness in the membership growth.

    “We finished the quarter with over 209m paid memberships, slightly ahead of our forecast. The pandemic has created unusual choppiness in our growth and distorts year-over-year comparisons as acquisition and engagement per member household spiked in the early months of Covid. In Q2’21, our engagement per member household was, as expected, down vs. those unprecedented levels but was still up 17 per cent compared with a more comparable Q2’19,” said Netflix on Wednesday.

    Netflix chief financial officer, Spencer Neumann said, “We had the kind of big pull forward in 2020 of subscriber adds. We also had to push in production of some of our kind of key returning titles and big tent-pole new releases until the latter part of the year. But overall, the business is performing well. Our churn is actually down relative to the more comparable two-year-ago period in 2019, Q2 of ’19 before Covid.”

    For Q3 ’21, the company forecast paid net additions of 3.5m vs. 2.2m in the prior-year period. “If we achieve our forecast, we will have added more than 54m paid net adds over the past 24 months or 27m on an annualised basis over that period, which is consistent with our pre-Covid annual rate of net additions. We forecast that ARM will grow roughly 5 per cent year over year on a FX neutral basis in Q3’21,” said Netflix.

    As the streaming war heats up, Netflix said it continues to target a 20 per cent operating margin for the full year 2021 vs. 18 per cent in 2020. “After our big global launch in January 2016, we committed to steadily growing our operating margin thereafter at an average rate of three percentage points per year over any few-year period. Some years we’ll be a little over (like in 2020), some years a little under (like in 2021). Assuming we achieve our margin target this year, we will have quintupled our operating margin in the last five years and are tracking ahead of this average annual three percentage point pace,” it stated on Wednesday.

    Netflix is also shifting focus to growing its live action and animated original film offering, with several impactful titles in Q2. Its non-English content investments are also growing both in scope and impact. “Our P&L content expense for this content category has more than doubled in the past two years,” it added.

    The company is also in the early stages of further expanding into games, building on its earlier efforts around interactivity (eg, Black Mirror Bandersnatch) and Stranger Things games.

    “We view gaming as another new content category for us, similar to our expansion into original films, animation and unscripted TV. Games will be included in members’ Netflix subscription at no additional cost similar to films and series. Initially, we’ll be primarily focused on games for mobile devices. We’re excited as ever about our movies and TV series offering and we expect a long runway of increasing investment and growth across all of our existing content categories, but since we are nearly a decade into our push into original programming, we think the time is right to learn more about how our members value games,” it added.

  • Netflix eyes foray into video gaming, hires former Facebook exec as gaming VP

    Netflix eyes foray into video gaming, hires former Facebook exec as gaming VP

    New Delhi: Netflix is finally making the big move. Even as media conglomerates across the world slug it out to challenge its dominance in the streaming space, the US giant is gearing up for its next step. According to reports, Netflix is planning to expand beyond its traditional streaming business, and make its foray into video gaming.

    On Wednesday, Netflix hired former Facebook, vice president, Mike Verdu, as VP of game development to lead its video games unit, reported Bloomberg. Verdu was previously Facebook’s vice president in charge of working with developers to bring games and other content to Oculus virtual-reality headsets.

    He has previously served as senior vice president of EA mobile, president of studios and chief creative officer at Kabam, CEO of TapZen, and chief executive officer for Zynga from 2009 to 2012. At Netflix, he will report to chief operating officer Greg Peters.

    The idea is to offer video games on Netflix’s streaming platform within the next year, Bloomberg quoted a person familiar with the situation. According to the report, the games will appear alongside current fare as a new programming genre — similar to what Netflix did with documentaries or stand-up specials.

    The reports suggest Netflix will build its gaming team in the next few months, and it has “already started advertising for game-development related positions on its website”.

    The company now has 208 million paid subscribers across the globe, up from 204 million last quarter, and the latest announcement could be its boldest move yet. The announcement comes at a time, when Netflix is looking at ways to catalyse its growth especially in saturated markets like the US. Analysts contend that the move could also enable the company to justify its price hike in the coming few months.

  • Netflix India, Tinder team up for dating reality show ‘IRL: In Real Love’

    Netflix India, Tinder team up for dating reality show ‘IRL: In Real Love’

    Mumbai: Dating app Tinder is set to collaborate with Netflix as its official casting partner for the Indian dating reality show titled IRL: In Real Love.

    The ongoing July month will see swipe cards appearing in between Tinder members’ stack of potential matches, and if they swipe right on the in-app casting call they will be redirected to a registration page. The applicants have to be single in real life, and need to have an eye-catching Tinder profile to score a chance of being cast for the Netflix show.

    IRL: In Real Love is in tune with other Netflix  Original shows like Indian Matchmaking, Love is Blind, and Too Hot to Handle. The upcoming show, produced by Monozygotic, is set to woo audiences with a true to its time dating format, the app said in a statement.

    “Tinder is thrilled to partner with Netflix to offer this generation’s hopeful romantics a chance to go after a flame that can’t be put out,” said Tinder and Match Group India’s GM Taru Kapoor. “Right from the casting process to its distinctive dating format, this show brings to the table, an opportunity to experience new connections, some heartbreaks, unmatched chemistry and a whole lot of fun. With Tinder’s diverse community of young singletons actively looking for real sparks, this show will provide them with exactly that and more. It’s a perfect match!”

    “IRL: In Real Love is an indigenous dating format and the association with Tinder will help us keep it as real as the times today,” shared Netflix India’s director – International Originals, Tanya Bami. “Authenticity is key to any reality series and Tinder will help us find a cast whose preferences and choices will enable us to understand the everyday dating conundrums. We can’t wait for the Tinder members to swipe right for IRL: In Real Love on Netflix!”

  • Content spending to top $250 billion by year-end, amid soaring demand

    New Delhi: Despite a year of uncertainty and production hiatuses due to the global pandemic, streaming platforms have set the global film and TV industry on a trajectory of accelerated growth with no imminent ceiling in sight. According to a latest assessment by London-based fin-tech platform, Purely Streamonomics, audience demand, production spending, and TV budgets reached all-time highs during the pandemic.

    While the actual number of films that went into production dropped last year, and TV series experienced shooting delays, more cash than ever was committed to content, reflecting continually rising production budgets and greater rights-buying activity.

    Production spending to top $250 billion by year-end

    Based on current trend lines, Purely expects production spending to top $250 billion by year-end, and then keep rising beyond that, especially as media mergers: Warner Bros Discovery, Amazon-MGM and Televisa-Univision start to flex their combined muscles around the planet.

    “What is remarkable about these record numbers is that the industry’s spending has yet to bump up against any natural ceiling. Every year there is talk of the industry being on the cusp of ‘peak television’ and yet it is clear from our own business dealings that the streaming of films and TV shows is only now starting to reach escape velocity,” said Purely, founder and CEO, Wayne Marc Godfrey, “Streaming is not just displacing traditional sources of entertainment revenue such as pay-TV and linear broadcasting, it is actually expanding the global marketplace for video.”

    The research shows that gross cash amount spent producing and licensing new entertainment content (excluding sports) soared by 16.4 per cent in 2020 to reach $220.2 billion, setting yet another milestone that is on track to be surpassed again this year. “But this is only the start of what’s to come. Even more spending growth is on the short-term horizon as a new wave of ad-supported platforms start gaining a stronger foothold around the world, alongside the subscription-funded services that have been driving the streaming marketplace until now,” says the report by the London-based fin-tech platform.

    Four emerging trends:

    Deluge of new streaming platforms:

    Since 2019, the number of global customers subscribing to streaming video platforms (has grown from 642 million to more than 1.1 billion, a 71 per cent leap that has been turbo-charged by months of enforced lockdowns at home. The pandemic not only drove rampant growth on existing platforms, it also accelerated the acceptance of powerful new global competitors including Disney Plus, Apple TV Plus, HBO Max, Peacock, Discovery Plus, Paramount Plus and Star. Joining these global platforms in the hunt for monthly customers are several regional Champions. Total number of subscribers is expected to reach at least 1.6 billion by 2025—representing about a fifth of the planet’s total projected population by then.

    Content Spending Reaches a New High

    As more platforms entered the streaming market and audience demand reached all-time highs in 2020, overall Film & TV production spending increased worldwide.

    According to the research, The Walt Disney Co remains the biggest single spender on content, with a grossed-up total of $28.6 billion for 2020 – which is more than spend across the whole of Asia ($27.7 billion) last year, followed by recently formed Warner Bros. Discovery and Netflix. Once Amazon completes its own acquisition of MGM, that combined entity would rank as the fourth largest North American production. On that basis these top four companies alone, with combined spending of $75.3 billion, almost equates to the entire worldwide spending outside of North America ($77.3)

    Spending On Indie Content Surges

    As much as Netflix and the five major Hollywood studios spend producing their own content, independently made and acquired content accounts for twice as much money globally. According to Purely Streamonomics’ global research, indie content spending jumped by 25.3 per cent year-on-year in 2020 and now accounts for 65.5 per cent of the world’s film and TV production activity.

    Budgets Are Soaring for TV shows

    As audiences continue to grow, and more competition enters the market, the stakes keep getting higher. In order to stay competitive, producers face pressure to up their production spending. As a result, budgets have risen in recent years, especially for TV shows. According to the research, average budgets across all new series in the US– scripted, unscripted, daytime and kids – was on the rise, up 16.5 per cent in 2020. The cost of introducing and monitoring COVID protocols in 2020 also added 20-30 per cent to production budgets.

    The findings of the research were presented in the form of infographics by Purely Streamonomics and created by digital publisher Visual Capitalist. The data is based on SEC filings by U.S. media conglomerates and tech giants, as well as reports published by national film and TV data-gathering organisations around the world.