Netflix maintains high-priced relationship with Friends - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 11:45 PM | Calgary | -7.7°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Entertainment

Netflix maintains high-priced relationship with Friends

Netflix will still be there for fans of the old TV series Friends, but maintaining the relationship will come at a steep price.

Besides current rivals like Hulu and Amazon, Netflix facing further streaming threats from Disney and more

A scene from the series finale of Friends, including (from left) David Schwimmer, Jennifer Aniston, Matthew Perry, Matt LeBlanc, Courteney Cox Arquette, Paul Rudd and Lisa Kudrow. Netflix will still be there for fans of '90s TV series, but maintaining the relationship has apparently come at a steep price: $100 million US. (Warner Bros./Canadian Press)

Netflix will still be there for fans of the old TV series Friends,but maintaining the relationship will come at a steep price.

The video streaming service paid $100 million US to keep showing Friendsin the U.S. through 2019, according to a report in the New York Times. That's more than triple the $30 million US a year Netflix had been paying for the long-running TV series about six 20-something friends in New York.

The report cited two unidentified people with direct knowledge of Netflix's deal with the series' rights holder, AT&T.

Netflix tweeted that it will continue showing Friends,but didn't disclose financial details. The Los Gatos, Calif., company declined further comment Tuesday.

Netflix's willingness to pay so much for a series that ended in 2004 is the latest sign of intensifying competition in video streaming.

Besides current rivals such as Hulu and Amazon, Netflix is also facing a significant threat next year when Walt Disney Co. plans to roll out a video streaming service featuring its popular movies and TV shows. As part of its move into streaming, Disney will be pulling much of the entertainment that it has licensed to Netflix for years.

That setback may have figured into Netflix's calculations about how much Friendsis worth to its service.

But Netflix is still spending far more on original programming such as Stranger Thingsand The Crownto distinguish itself from its rivals. The strategy has forced Netflix to take on billions of dollars in debt to pay for the programming, but it has helped the company build the world's largest video streaming service with 137 million subscribers.

AT&T also is planning to offer a video streaming service, and there is nothing in its deal with Netflix that prevents it from featuring Friendson that service beginning in 2020, according to the Times.

Netflix faces a raft of current and forthcoming rivals as the world's largest video streaming service, with 137 million subscribers. (Paul Sakuma/The Associated Press)