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Netflix’s Ted Sarandos Says “Audiences Don’t Care About Windows,” Touts ‘Baby Reindeer,’ ‘Supacell’ for “Authentic” Britishness, Audience Focus

Georg Szalai
4–6 minutes

Streaming giant Netflix likes to think about original content with an authentic local focus, co-CEO Ted Sarandos told a TV industry gathering in London on Tuesday.

Speaking during a keynote address at the Royal Television Society’s (RTS) London Convention 2024, for which Netflix served as the principal sponsor, he also shared his thoughts on the streamer’s British hits, including Baby Reindeer , for which star Richard Gadd won Emmys for best actor and best writer on a limited or anthology series or movie this weekend, the U.K.’s creative edge.

“Choice and control” are key in the streaming age, the exec argued, calling “change” key. “We had two big competitors,” piracy and Netflix’s own DVD business, he said, calling it “a painful split” when the firm gave up on its DVD business. He cited Steve Jobs as saying cannibalizing one’s own business is key to continued progress and

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“Audiences don’t care about windows at all,” he said. “They never talk about it over dinner.” Do we need so many shows and films? Yes, you can’t program just “for one sensibility,” he said. “You have to love it all.” People who love The Crown also love Dolly Parton’s Heartstrings , he shared. “Put the audience first.”

Think about the job from the perspective of a fan, not critics or media execs, Sarandos said. Targeting a global audience is wrong. “There really is a global audience for anything,” he said, instead urging an authentic local focus that can then travel. Supacell and Baby Reindeer became global hits thanks to being “authentically British,” he suggested. And they were commissioned by a local British team based her, he added.

Success is more art than science. Algorithms can’t “reverse-engineer success,” and if so, we’d never have flops, “and we do,” he admitted.

Sarandos also shared that Netflix owns less than 25 percent of the IP in its U.K. catalog. “There is so much potential in TV today,” he concluded. “This generation loves stories as much as we ever have, maybe more. We just have to find the right way to connect with them.”

Sarandos on Tuesday also remembered showing the first trailer for The Crown at the RTS event seven years ago, touting that the show was a “stand conventional wisdom on its head.”

Saying he has long though of the U.K. as “the birthplace of prestige television,” he said the firm has invested 6 billion ponds here since 2000, with over 30,000 cast and crew. over 100 productions in the U.K., including Bridgerton , Thursday Murder Club , and the new Knives Out movie. He lauded the creativity and skills of the country, its production incentives and education. “Britain has become one of the best countries for TV and film,” he concluded.

Saranos shared that he and his wife enjoy different content, so he enjoys jointly watching stuff they both enjoy. She “loves” Emily in Paris which the two finished pinging, he said.

Netflix, which launched in the U.K. 12 years ago, is the first streamer to sponsor the annual RTS event, Anna Mallett, vp, production, EMEA/U.K. at Netflix said in her opening comments. She also touted that the U.K. entertainment industry is expected to surpass 100 billion pounds ($132 billion) this year.

During another conference in London this summer, Sarandos’ co-CEO Greg Peters had outlined that streaming, linear, advertising and gaming present a $600 billion-plus total revenue opportunity, meaning that much growth room remains for Netflix. A chart he showed on a screen listed $300 billion in spending on linear and streaming subscriptions, $180 billion in advertising, and $140 billion in gaming consumer spending.

Netflix beat Wall Street expectations with strong second-quarter financial and subscriber growth (8 million subscriber additions for 277 million total worldwide users) reported on July 18. But management forecast slower growth ahead — setting expectations for lower paid net additions in the current third quarter compared to the year prior — partly because the firm has already reaped gains from its successful password-sharing crackdown, launched about a year ago. Many Wall Street analysts came away feeling that the results didn’t move the needle too much in terms of their financial forecasts and views on the stock, but some increased their stock price targets.