Netflix is trying to get ready for some football.
The streaming giant has been reaching out to broadcasters this week in the hopes of finding a partner to produce the NFL games it will air on Christmas Day this year, according to people familiar with the matter. Netflix will show two games on Christmas Day this year, followed by at least one matchup in both 2025 and 2026, the company announced last month.
This is Netflixâ€
Netflix has been in touch with the broadcasters that currently air NFL games, including Disneyâ€
In-depth discussions havenâ€
Fox and CBS Sports already produce various games in different regions each week, which could make taking on additional games for Netflix a burden, some of the people said.
Thereâ€
Amazon inked a deal with NBCUniversal to produce its NFL games before its first season of “Thursday Night Footballâ€� in 2022, but there may be more resistance among current NFL partners to help out Netflix, according to people familiar with the matter. Thatâ€
The NFL has an out clause in its current media contracts that allows it to select new media partners after the 2029-30 season.
Representatives for Netflix, the NFL, NBCUniversal, CBS, ESPN and Fox declined to comment.
Netflix announced its entry into the NFL in mid-May ahead of its Upfront presentation, when it tried to woo advertisers for its burgeoning ad-supported platform. Netflix said last month it has reached 40 million global active users for its advertising tier, which costs $6.99 per month in the U.S. and debuted in November 2022.
In May, co-CEO Ted Sarandos told CNBC that the NFL was the right fit for Netflix because it matched the streamerâ€
For the NFL, Netflix represents the chance to reach a global, younger audience. Thereâ€
The NFL signed long-term deals in 2021 with Disney, Paramount, NBCUniversal, Fox and Amazon for its five primary packages of games.
While there is some trepidation among current media partners to produce games for a potential rival, pressure from the league — and a hefty paycheck from Netflix — could convince broadcasters to strike a deal, according to people familiar with the matter.
“There arenâ€
Netflix and the league are looking to mirror the partnership that Amazonâ€
While NBC Sportsâ€
Amazon produces all of its pregame, halftime and postgame coverage, but NBC Sports is in charge of the extensive production work that goes into an NFL game, and employs the vast majority of those workers.
Netflix is interested in finding a similar partner, according to people familiar with its plans.
If a deal canâ€
“Itâ€
Amazon Prime Video was the first streamer to obtain exclusive rights to NFL games as the league pushed to broaden its media partners and have more streaming offerings to widen its audience.
Amazon reached its deal to carry “Thursday Night Football� in 2021 in conjunction with the rest of the media rights deals for the NFL — an 11-year media rights agreement worth over $100 billion, with an opt out clause at the seven-year mark.
Given the recent NBA media rights negotiations, which are beckoning top dollar from various media companies, many in and around the industry expect the NFL to exercise the clause and look for new partners.
Since the NFL has inked its deal, streaming services for Comcast, ESPN and Paramount have begun to simultaneously stream games, and in some cases, hosted games exclusively. Alphabetâ€
Sports, particularly the NFL, have been the glue holding the traditional TV bundle together — and have also proved to be a boost to streaming. NBCUniversal said in April its exclusive NFL wild-card game on Peacock helped to add, and then retain, more customers than expected.
The league has been vocal in its push to add more streaming partners in an effort to widen its audience.
That was the thinking behind the deal with Netflix to stream these Christmas Day games.
When the “Sunday Ticket� rights negotiations were underway, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell told CNBC the longtime package offered only by DirecTV would move to streaming.
“I think thatâ€
Disclosure: Comcast is the parent company of NBCUniversal and CNBC.