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How Much Netflix Paid For Seinfeld Is A Jaw-Dropping Sum

Netflix paid big time.

23 Comments

Streaming giant Netflix recently announced it will be the exclusive streaming home for Seinfeld starting in 2021. Given that Seinfeld is one of the most popular shows in the history of television, the company had to pay a pretty penny for the rights. But how much scratch are we talking?

According to sources speaking to The Los Angeles Times and The Wall Street Journal, Netflix paid Sony Pictures Television more than $500 million for the five-year streaming rights. It's a big get for Netflix, as the streaming network recently lost The Office and Friends to rival streaming services.

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According to reports, NBCUniversal paid $500 million to take The Office off Netflix and put it on its own streaming service beginning in 2021, while WarnerMedia is estimated to have paid $425 million to pick up Friends and take it away from Netflix as well. These deals, which are said to span five years, are for US streaming rights only, whereas the Seinfeld deal reportedly is global.

Hulu is the current exclusive streaming site for Seinfeld in the United States. According to the reports, the company paid $130 million for a six-year deal that expires in 2021.

Netflix is said to have outbid Hulu, Amazon, WarnerMedia, and NBCUniversal for the streaming rights to Seinfeld. Viacom, which recently merged with GameSpot's parent company, CBS, also reportedly put in a bid for Seinfeld to run on CBS All Access before Netflix ultimately won out.

"Seinfeld is the television comedy that all television comedy is measured against," Netflix chief content officer Ted Sarandos told The LA Times. "It is as fresh and funny as ever and will be available to the world in 4K for the first time."

Seinfeld's rights and ownership is mixed between numerous different companies, including WarnerMedia and CBS (which is GameSpot's parent company), along with the show's creators, Jerry Seinfeld and Larry David. Each company and individual will receive a cut of the $500 million-plus, with Sony taking a "significant percentage" as the program's overall distributor. Seinfeld was originally produced at the now-defunct Castle Rock, which is now owned by WarnerMedia.

While Netflix is getting the exclusive streaming rights to Seinfeld, re-runs of the show will still be shown on TV and WarnerMedia's own network TBS. According to WSJ, Sony Pictures Television has already negotiated $3 billion worth of rerun deals over the years for Seinfeld.

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lion2447

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I would much rather see them invest in newer shows and better original shows. I still watch Seinfeld plenty on TV, but it is losing its interest after seeing the same episode a hundred times. As a side note, look up bloopers of Seinfeld on youtube, they are hilarious.

I would much rather see Netflix invest in better Sci-Fi and do something about how they greenlite new shows. I have no idea how the shows like Another Life and The I-land managed to get past the script writing stage. They are both fairly recent and are terrible. $500 million, however, could be used for better script writers and some really good space shows or movies.

I would also like to see more mini-series' with endings over seasonal shows since Netflix's cancel hammer seems to be getting bigger. I'm losing interest in new shows since many I enjoy end up getting cancelled on cliffhangers.

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Avatar image for vega2505
vega2505

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It's on hulu now and I'll be done watching it before 2021.

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ClunkerSlim

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Netflix must be REALLY freaked out at losing The Office and Friends. I'm guessing Seinfeld had it's own little bidding war too. But they probably would have been better off dumping that money into keeping The Office. Seinfield is a great show, but every great sitcom becomes less relate-able to the new generations as time goes on. Notice that nobody is in a bidding war for Murphy Brown, Three's Company, or The Mary Tyler Moore Show. Sitcoms have a shelf life and Seinfield is getting up there in years.

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JustPlainLucas

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That's a ridiculous amount. More than three times the price and for one year less than Hulu's deal? I mean, it is Seinfeld, but I don't see them getting that many new subscribers just to watch one show...

In the meantime... *watches more quality original shows get canceled*

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Stunningham

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Meh. Never got into Seinfeld. Office, How I Met Your Mother, and Friends were more in my area of enjoyment... Really liking the Ranch on Netflix though that now has wrapped up.

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Uneeda_Slap

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So does that mean I will no longer be able to watch it on crave?

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gargungulunk

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That's quite a jump from the current contract....and no overhead to get the money, just play-rights. I'm more interested in what Sony will do next.

The streaming wars of 2020 are going to be weird. I plan on playing Cyberpunk till it blows over.

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Hagan

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show is so dated. Not sure why people keep watching it.

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alastor529

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@Hagan: SO is Friends and The Office, especially the office since alot of its jokes use references form around the episode was filmed and both those shows get MASSIVE ratings on Netflix

and Seinfeld gets massive ratings form HULU

don't think its a problem from the majority.

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gargungulunk

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Edited By gargungulunk

@Hagan:

Sitcoms are always dated, that's part of the fun.

Once you get to a certain point in life, it's a good trip to be able to go backwards and have something still be the same.

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Archangel3371

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That is a lot of money however Seinfeld is an amazing show. I watched them when they first aired and still love watching them from time to time. The first season wasn’t so hot but after that it was comedy gold.

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Frostblind

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500 million for old trash... wow.

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uninspiredcup

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I really hope this gets shown on the UK Netflix as well.

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Megawizard

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What a waste of money. And not just for Seinfeld; all this money dumped into 20-30 year old shows. No wonder monthly fees keep going up across the board.

---

"Seinfeld is the television comedy that all television comedy is measured against," Netflix chief content officer Ted Sarandos told The LA Times.

---

Was not surprised in the slightest to see he's 55.

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uninspiredcup

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@Megawizard: Star Trek TNG and Deep Space 9 are probably my most watched shows on Netflix, 20 - 30+ years old.

Most of the stuff I watch like martial arts are SHAW BROTHERS going back to the 70's.

I mean, if somethings enjoyable, it's age doesn't really mean shit.

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Megawizard

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@uninspiredcup: I actually probably should have mentioned comedies specifically. Other genres I can see aging just fine, especially stuff like Star Trek. Still way too much money for any single show though.

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Poodger

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@Megawizard: 20-30 year old shows are the most streamed. Friends and Seinfeld are among the all time most streamed shows ever. It is a no brainer to try to snag the rights to them. Will people SIGN UP to watch Seinfeld? IDK, perhaps not. Plenty of adult aged people might, I know a few that probably would. But it certainly might help keep more people from unsubscribing.

I personally LOVE Seinfeld. It is, IMO, the greatest sitcom to be made, with Always Sunny being a close second. I got Hulu for free a while back, because it came with Sprint. But I never bothered activating my free account until one day I decided I wanted to rewatch Seinfeld from start to finish. It is a pretty well made show, and is a lot more popular than you are giving it credit for.

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ASneakyPoptart

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@Megawizard: I cancelled my Netflix months ago and I don't miss it one bit. They have definitely changed to quantity>quality and when they do have a good Original, they just run it for three seasons and then give it the axe. What's the point of getting into a show if it's just going to end on a cliffhanger?

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Sorrow_316

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@asneakypoptart: We’re all devastated by Santa Clarita Diet.

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ASneakyPoptart

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@Sorrow_316: The fact that you know I was explicitly talking about Santa Clarita Diet just further proves my point lol. Yes Netflix, I'm still salty AF. Cancelling SCD was just the straw that broke the camel's back.

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