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NETFLIX MAINTAINS HIGH-PRICED RELATIONSH­IP WITH ‘FRIENDS’

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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 to keep showing “Friends” in the U.S. through 2019, according to a report in the New York Times . That’s more than triple the $30 million 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, California, company declined further comment.

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 “Friends” is worth to its service. But Netflix is still spending far more on original programmin­g such as “Stranger Things” and “The Crown” to 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 “Friends” on that service beginning in 2020, according to the Times.

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