Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
Media's AI Pivot
10JUN

Netflix rents Runway, builds its own

3 min read
10:06UTC

Ted Sarandos confirmed AI-generated VFX in The Eternaut while Netflix advertised a $545,000 role to build the tools in-house, the buy-and-build posture in one week.

IndustryAssessed
Key takeaway

Netflix is renting AI video tools from Runway and building its own at the same time.

Netflix co-chief executive Ted Sarandos confirmed that AI generated a VFX (visual effects) sequence in the Netflix series The Eternaut, an Argentine sci-fi adaptation; a source told Bloomberg the tool was Runway 1. Runway is the independent generative-video vendor that Disney turned to after cancelling its $1bn OpenAI/Sora stake . The two largest streamers have now converged on one substrate. The Runway identification rests on a single source and is not confirmed on the record by Netflix.

Netflix is doing both halves of the buy-versus-build choice at once. Its careers page advertises an AI Video Product Manager role paying up to $545,000, to build AI tooling for "directors, editors, colorists, VFX artists" and studio production workflows 2. That is editor-and-colourist-facing software, not recommendation maths, and it sits beside the in-house INKubator generative-animation unit Netflix confirmed last month . Rent the capability from Runway now; build the replacement in parallel.

The $545,000 salary is the tell that the dependency is meant to be temporary. Funding a tools-for-filmmakers hire at director level says Netflix intends to internalise the capability rather than rent forever. Runway's leverage is rising on the other side of that trade: the world-model company disclosed $40m in added quarterly ARR weeks ago , and Disney-plus-Netflix demand concentrating onto one vendor is exactly what gives it pricing power. Netflix's hire reads as the move to escape that before the bill compounds.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Netflix uses computer-generated effects in many of its shows: the digital environments, creatures, and action sequences that look impossible to film for real. Studios like ILM, Weta Digital, and DNEG have built their businesses around producing these sequences for major streaming and cinema releases at costs running from $50,000 to $150,000 per finished minute. Netflix has now confirmed it used an AI tool called Runway to generate part of the effects in The Eternaut, a sci-fi series from Argentina. At the same time, Netflix is advertising a job paying up to $545,000 to build its own internal AI production tools for editors and effects artists. The two moves together, renting an existing AI tool while hiring someone to build a replacement, show Netflix trying to eventually own its AI production pipeline rather than depend on outside vendors.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Netflix's simultaneous rental and build posture reflects two independent structural pressures that converge at the VFX production layer.

First, AI-generated VFX allows Netflix to compress per-episode VFX budgets, which have inflated 30 to 40% since the COVID-era production backlog cleared. A VFX sequence generated by Runway on a $5,000-per-minute AI compute cost replaces sequences that historically ran $50,000 to $150,000 per minute at traditional VFX houses. The cost arbitrage is available now; the quality ceiling for hero sequences is not yet competitive with traditional VFX, which creates the rental-while-building posture.

Second, Netflix's content-discovery algorithm depends on producing titles across demographic and linguistic segments at a cadence that traditional VFX pipelines cannot sustain. The Eternaut is Netflix's Argentine flagship; using Runway on it tests AI VFX at the top of the Spanish-language market. If the quality holds, the same tooling rolls across 190 countries of production without proportional cost scaling.

What could happen next?
  • Precedent

    Netflix's confirmed use of Runway for a flagship production establishes the generative-video vendor as the de facto industry standard for AI VFX, accelerating adoption by Paramount, WBD, and Amazon in the following six-to-twelve months.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Risk

    SAG-AFTRA's AI clauses expire during the same quarter as Netflix's AI VFX disclosure, creating a renegotiation trigger that could impose disclosure and consent obligations on generative-video use in US productions.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Consequence

    A $545,000 salary ceiling for an AI Video PM signals to traditional VFX studios that Netflix is competing for their senior pipeline talent, compressing the talent market available to ILM, Weta, and DNEG.

    Short term · Assessed
First Reported In

Update #4 · Lenovo runs football's biggest AI broadcast

TechRadar / Bloomberg· 3 Jun 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
RTL Group
RTL Group
RTL closed its Sky Deutschland acquisition on 1 June for €68m, less than half the €150m announced price, creating a 12.3-million-subscriber DACH entity with Bundesliga rights through 2029 and Netflix's primary DACH distribution partnership. The consolidated scale justifies AI production investment neither entity could have afforded separately.
ITV / Carolyn McCall
ITV / Carolyn McCall
McCall confirmed on 4 June that Sky talks are 'very much actively engaged', with the £1.6bn plus earn-out structure unchanged. ITV's AI strategy is effectively deferred to Comcast: if the deal closes, ITV inherits Sky's AI production stack without a separate procurement cycle.
European Commission / EU AI Act
European Commission / EU AI Act
The Omnibus provisional agreement reached in May 2026 grandfathers in-market AI systems until 2 December 2026, extending the effective Article 50 machine-readable-marking deadline by four months for existing deployments. No EU broadcaster has signed the Code of Practice, meaning incumbents are in-market without a disclosed compliance posture.
DAZN Group
DAZN Group
DAZN closed a $100m acquisition of ViewLift to own its US streaming infrastructure rather than rent it, and launched the integrated FIFA+ DTC service in the same window. The acquire move addresses a third-party dependency before DAZN inherits the Lenovo World Cup AI broadcast stack for an expected 6 billion viewers from 11 June.
FOX Entertainment / FoxNXT
FOX Entertainment / FoxNXT
FOX posted a VP, AI Production Support role on 3 June inside FoxNXT, its technology unit, scoping a central AI function across the full production chain without naming a vendor. The posting signals FOX is building capability governance before committing to a tool stack, the inverse sequence to BBC and Fremantle who joined the Runway customer list first.
Runway
Runway
Runway opened its European HQ in London on 1 June and named BBC, Fremantle, and WPP as enterprise customers alongside a $100m UK investment commitment. The disclosure positions Runway as the default generative-video substrate for European broadcasters and agencies at the same moment it serves Netflix and Disney in the US, concentrating production-AI access at a single US vendor.