Netflix began carrying the live broadcast channels of France's largest commercial broadcaster, TF1 Group, inside its app for French subscribers on Friday 19 June.1 The integration covers five live feeds, TF1, TMC, TFX, TF1 Séries Films and the 24-hour news channel LCI, alongside the TF1+ on-demand library and live rugby and French national football fixtures.
These are the first third-party linear channels, scheduled broadcast feeds watched as they air, that Netflix has ever carried. Netflix built its business on subscription video on demand (SVOD), where viewers pick from a library on their own schedule. Carrying a rival broadcaster's live feeds turns Netflix from a competitor to French broadcasters into an aggregator of them, the streaming-era equivalent of the cable bundle. Netflix co-CEO Greg Peters called the partnership complementary; TF1 chief executive Rodolphe Belmer said Netflix subscribers would now get the best of TF1.2
Fox Corporation paid $22bn for Roku to own a data layer ; Netflix looked at Roku, walked away, and rented a broadcaster's audience instead.3 The AI thread runs underneath, because TF1's content now sits inside Netflix's recommendation engine, the machine-learning stack that also feeds the in-house tooling Netflix has been building, from The Eternaut's generated VFX to its INKubator animation unit , . Peters signalled Netflix would repeat the move with other broadcasters.
