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Netflix Adds 5.3 Million Subs In Q3, Beating Forecasts (variety.com)

Netflix shows no signs of slowing down. The company announced its third quarter results, adding more subscribers in both the U.S. and abroad than expected. Variety reports: The company gained 850,000 streaming subs in the U.S. and 4.45 million overseas in the period. Analysts had estimated Netflix to add 784,000 net subscribers in the U.S. and 3.62 million internationally for Q3. "We added a Q3-record 5.3 million memberships globally (up 49% year-over-year) as we continued to benefit from strong appetite for our original series and films, as well as the adoption of internet entertainment across the world," the company said in announcing the results, noting that it had under-forecast both U.S. and international subscriber growth. Netflix also indicated that its content spending may be even higher next year than previously projected. The company had said it was targeting programming expenditures of $7 billion in 2018; on Monday, Netflix said it will spend between $7 billion and $8 billion on content (on a profit-and-loss basis) next year. For 2017, original content will represent more than 25% of total programming spending, and that "will continue to grow," Netflix said.

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  1. Re:Now if they wou;ld just by thereitis · · Score: 4, Insightful
    If Netflix were going to add 75 years worth of content, they'd really have to improve their search, discovery, and add filtering features. Even now it's quite a chore to find something new and interesting and no way to filter out what's not interesting.

    Let me search by one or more of director, by movie rating, actor/actress, publish date, rotten tomatoes score, etc.. There's no reason they couldn't do that other than dumbing the interface down for the masses. Give me an "advanced" option at least.

    I can't tell you how many times I've had someone over and we're like hey let's watch a movie. Then spend the next 20 minutes flipping through Netflix and giving up.

    Netflix is the best option out there, but once someone comes up with a better search and quality content, they're going to eat Netflix's lunch.