Netflix is done just trying to be your movie theater. Now, it wants to be your background noise, your morning routine, and your lunch break companion.
In a move that explicitly targets YouTube’s dominance, Netflix has inked exclusive deals with iHeartMedia and Barstool Sports to bring massive video podcasts behind its paywall—stripping full video episodes from YouTube in the process.
The “Youtube Killer” Clause
The most aggressive part of this deal isn’t what Netflix is adding, but what it is subtracting from the open web. Starting January 2026, video versions of heavy-hitter shows like “The Breakfast Club,” “My Favorite Murder,” and “Pardon My Take” will reportedly vanish from YouTube.
- Audio: Stays free on Spotify/Apple (for now).
- Video: Exclusively on Netflix.
This is a direct attack on YouTube’s “vodcast” empire, which generated over 700 million hours of watch time on TV screens last October alone. Netflix is betting that if you want to watch Charlamagne tha God or Big Cat, you’ll pay a subscription to do it.
Why Pivot to Podcasts?
Why would the house of Stranger Things and Squid Game care about guys talking into microphones?
- Cost vs. Retention: A season of The Crown costs $150 million. A year of a video podcast costs a fraction of that and produces hours of content every single week.
- Habit Formation: Movies are events; podcasts are habits. If Netflix can get you to open the app every Tuesday and Thursday for your favorite pod, you are less likely to cancel your subscription between viral TV seasons.
- Ad Inventory: Netflix’s ad-tier is growing, but they need safe, consistent content to sell against. Talk shows are perfect for reading host-read ads—a format advertisers already love.
The Risk
YouTube is free, frictionless, and has a comment section that drives community. Netflix is a walled garden. By locking these creators behind a gate, Netflix risks killing the very virality that made them famous. Will Gen Z switch apps to watch a podcast they used to get for free? Or will they just find a new creator on YouTube who isn’t behind a paywall?
The Bottom Line: The “Streaming Wars” are over. The “Attention Wars” have begun, and Netflix is no longer content with just your Friday night—it wants your Tuesday morning commute, too.