Verified source report
Netflix is turning into YouTube
Netflix has shows and movies. And video games. And live sports. And podcasts. And also, apparently, YouTube videos? For a company that used to seem like the next big thing in TV, it all feels a little frenetic, and maybe a tad desperate. For a company that sees sleep as its primary competitor, it might […] Netflix has shows and movies. And video games. And live sports. And podcasts. And also, apparently, YouTube videos ? For a company that used to seem like the next big thing in TV, it all feels a little frenetic, and maybe a tad desperate . For a company that sees sleep as its primary competitor, it might all make perfect sense. On this episode of The Vergecast , David and Nilay try to figure out why Netflix continues to expand its content machine and whether the company's ongoing YouTube-ification makes any sense at all. Many have tried to compete with YouTube; none have succeede
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Netflix has shows and movies. And video games. And live sports. And podcasts. And also, apparently, YouTube videos? For a company that used to seem like the next big thing in TV, it all feels a little frenetic, and maybe a tad desperate. For a company that sees sleep as its primary competitor, it might […] Netflix has shows and movies. And video games. And live sports. And podcasts. And also, apparently, YouTube videos ? For a company that used to seem like the next big thing in TV, it all feels a little frenetic, and maybe a tad desperate . For a company that sees sleep as its primary competitor, it might all make perfect sense. On this episode of The Vergecast , David and Nilay try to figure out why Netflix continues to expand its content machine and whether the company's ongoing YouTube-ification makes any sense at all. Many have tried to compete with YouTube; none have succeede
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What happened
According to The Verge’s linked source, Netflix is turning into YouTube, Netflix has shows and movies. And video games. And live sports. And podcasts. And also, apparently, YouTube videos? For a company that used to seem like the next big thing in TV, it all feels a little frenetic, and maybe a tad desperate. For a company that sees sleep as its primary competitor, it might […] Netflix has shows and movies. And video games. And live sports. And podcasts. And also, apparently, YouTube videos ? For a company that used to seem like the next big thing in TV, it all feels a little frenetic, and maybe a tad desperate . For a company that sees sleep as its primary competitor, it might all make perfect sense. On this episode of The Vergecast , David and Nilay try to figure out why Netflix continues to expand its content machine and whether the company’s ongoing YouTube-ification makes any sense at all. Many have tried to compete with YouTube; none have succeede
Context
The development sits in VINI’s Technology coverage for readers following technology, science, product policy, markets, infrastructure, and the public consequences of innovation. The original report is linked so readers can check the publisher account, follow later updates, and compare new coverage against the first published record. The original item is dated 2026-07-10T16:29:50+00:00.
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Source
Primary source: Netflix is turning into YouTube via The Verge. VINI cites and links the source; it does not reproduce the publisher’s full article text without rights clearance.
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Source links
- Netflix is turning into YouTubeThe Verge - 2026-07-10T16:29:50+00:00
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