New York Post

’Flix vows to keep the funny coming

-

Netflix boss Ted Sarandos (inset) fielded a slew of questions about the demise of his company’s stock price, how he plans to stop the bleeding and his thinking behind defending the controvers­ial comedy specials of Dave Chappelle (at right) and Ricky Gervais, which put him at the center of a culture war.

Netflix, once the darling of streaming and the envy of Hollywood, has had a rough year — and it hit a major speed bump in April when it reported losing nearly 200,000 subscriber­s in the first quarter of 2022.

“Let’s start out with the bad news: your stock price,” said tech journalist Kara Swisher, who interviewe­d Sarandos on Cannes Lions’ main stage on Thursday. “Flying high a year ago . . . things were going well. This was a moment where everyone said Netflix owned the world.”

The news has tanked the stock nearly 50% since the announceme­nt, causing Wall Street to question whether the streaming giant — known for hit shows like “Stranger Things,” “Bridgerton” and “Squid Game” — has any more room to grow.

Sarandos, who was in Cannes to accept the Entertainm­ent Person of the Year Award at the advertisin­g festival, said he’s experience­d similar hiccups.

“There’s a time where the market disconnect­s from the core business. You have to prove to the market,” he said, before turning to Hollywood, which has reveled in Netflix’s missteps.

“They viewed us as a spoiler. They’re happy to see the spoiler trip,” Sarandos added.

The co-CEO of the world’s largest streaming service explained that the pandemic accelerate­d password sharing and there has been an increase in competitio­n for the streaming space. As a result, his company is going to crack down on password sharing and add a lower-priced advertisin­g tier, which will likely attract more customers, who don’t want to shell out an average of $16 a month.

The exec also did not bite when Swisher asked who Netflix will be partnering with for its ad tier amid reports that the company could work with the likes of NBCUnivers­al or Google. He brushed off the question, saying the company is in talks with all the “biggest advertiser­s.”

Swisher then quickly shifted to a more buzzy topic, namely the recent controvers­ies in which Sarandos has defended the Netflix comedy specials of Chappelle and Gervais, who have peppered jokes aimed at the transgende­r community.

Both specials — particular­ly Chappelle’s — sparked outrage among Netflix employees and trans activists, who staged a walkout and rally last year in protest and demands to take the special down. Sarandos held his ground but apologized to staff.

“The reason why comedy is very hard is we don’t laugh at the same thing. We all almost cry at the same thing,” Sarandos said. “You find the line by crossing it sometimes.”

Gervais’ recent special on Netflix reignited the anger, but Netflix, which has been in the process of laying off staffers, has doubled down on its support of the comedians.

In May, Netflix sent out a memo to employees saying that if they “find it hard to support our content breadth, Netflix may not be the best place for you.”

Although Sarandos said he wishes he had initially been more “empathetic” to employee complaints, he said the decision was “important” for the global audience, which has varied taste and beliefs.

“Everyone is not going to like all of it. We won’t make everybody happy,” he said.

 ?? ??
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States