Toronto Star

Netflix plans to open office in Canada

Toronto, Vancouver top of mind as production company looks to build Canadian connection­s

- VICTORIA AHEARN

Netflix plans to open an office in Canada in what the streaming giant calls “a big first step” toward content creation in this country.

Netflix co-CEO and chief content officer Ted Sarandos says the California­based company is still figuring out the office location.

But they’re thinking of Toronto and Vancouver, since the company has so much production happening in both markets.

Two years ago, Netflix announced plans to set up a production hub in Toronto by leasing two studio spaces along the downtown industrial waterfront area.

Sarandos says adding an office in Canada will allow Netflix executives to be closer to Canadian creators, so they can build relationsh­ips and field pitches.

He adds that Netflix executives will also be able to be more on the ground here and “can keep their fingers on the pulse of what’s happening in the creative community in Canada.”

“You should think about this as a big first step,” Sarandos said in an interview from Montecito, Calif.

“We’re not just going to put one person in a little office in one city, in one place in Canada. We’re looking to grow our relationsh­ip with the creative community in Canada. So that’ll be as open geographic­ally as Canada is.”

has 21 offices around the world, including Amsterdam and Rome.

For the Canadian location, the company is in the process of hiring a local content executive and hopes to introduce that person “very soon,” said Sarandos.

The content executive will be a point person to guide creatives through Netflix while trying to get their programmin­g in a variety of genres onto the service, whether it be in English or French.

The company also plans to expand the Canadian office staff base to include such department­s as marketing and publicity.

“So this is kind of the ongoing evolution of a deep and deepening relationsh­ip in Canada,” he said.

Netflix recently celebrated its 10-year anniversar­y in Canada and has seven million Canadian subscriber­s.

Sarandos said since 2017, Netflix has spent $2.5 billion on production in Canada, on titles including the Toronto-shot “The Umbrella Academy” and the new Vancouver-filmed series “Firefly Lane,” which is currently their No. 1 show in the world.

Other Netflix programmin­g shot in Canada includes “Virgin River” in British Columbia, “The Adam Project” in Vancouver and “Locke & Key” in Toronto.

Quebec is also an important centre of Netflix investment for VFX and animation, and the company intends to continue that presence, Sarandos said.

“This is kind of the ongoing evolution of a deep and deepening relationsh­ip in Canada.”

TED SARANDOS

NETFLIX CO-CEO/CHIEF CONTENT OFFICER

The company will also continue to help develop underrepre­sented voices in Canada, he added, noting Netflix’s partnershi­ps with groups including imagineNAT­IVE, the Indigenous Screen Office, and Wapikoni Mobile.

Canada is “an important part of our production ecosystem” with “world-class crews,” he said.

“The density of talent in Canada is remarkable.”

In 2017, Netflix pledged to spend $500 million to fund original content made in Canada over five years, and has already met that target.

Asked if Canada might see a similar commitment from NetNetflix flix next year, when that fiveyear date expires, Sarandos said: “We’re in this for the long haul with Canada.”

Sarandos pointed to homegrown content produced by Netflix, including the B.C.made Canadian-American animated film “The Willoughby­s” and documentar­y series “Rust Valley Restorers,” and two Quebec-shot projects — the film “The Decline” and the series “Can You Hear Me?”

Then there are Canadianma­de shows that have been vaulted to internatio­nal fame by their presence on Netflix, from “Schitt’s Creek” to “Kim’s Convenienc­e,” he added.

He said Netflix also recently held a virtual Canadian pitch day between creators and executives, which yielded more than 10,000 submission­s from across the country.

Until now, streaming platforms like Netflix have been exempt from Canada’s Broadcasti­ng Act, which sets regulation­s for the amount of money contribute­d to the creation of Canadian content in Canada and how much of it should be aired here.

But proposed changes to the act through Bill C-10, which was introduced in November and is now before the House of Commons, could mean those streaming platforms have to face the same regulation­s as traditiona­l broadcaste­rs.

Sarandos said Netflix loves “the kind of flexible nature of the bill as proposed,” and doesn’t think it should face the same spending requiremen­ts broadcaste­rs face.

“Our businesses are very different,” he said.

 ?? AHN YOUNG-JOON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Netflix chief content officer Ted Sarandos, right, with CEO Reed Hastings, says adding an office in Canada will allow Netflix executives to be closer to Canadian creators, so they can build relationsh­ips and field pitches.
AHN YOUNG-JOON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Netflix chief content officer Ted Sarandos, right, with CEO Reed Hastings, says adding an office in Canada will allow Netflix executives to be closer to Canadian creators, so they can build relationsh­ips and field pitches.

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