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Netflix to stream WWE's 'Raw' in $5 billion deal The agreement will cost Netflix more than $5 billion and will last for 10 years, with an option to extend an additional 10 years or opt out after five, TKO Group said in a regulatory filing.
International New York Times
Last Updated IST
<div class="paragraphs"><p>The WWE logo. </p></div>

The WWE logo.

Credit: Twitter/@WWE

Netflix reached a multibillion-dollar, 10-year deal for exclusive rights to WWE's flagship weekly wrestling show Raw, as the streaming giant broadens its offerings with more live content.

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The deal will bring Raw to Netflix starting in January 2025, Netflix and TKO Group, WWE's parent company, said in a statement. Netflix will also own the rights to stream WWE's other shows and specials outside of the United States.

The agreement will cost Netflix more than $5 billion and will last for 10 years, with an option to extend an additional 10 years or opt out after five, TKO Group said in a regulatory filing.

"By combining our reach, recommendations, and fandom with WWE, we'll be able to deliver more joy and value for their audiences and our members," Netflix's chief content officer, Bela Bajaria, said in a statement.

Raw which started the careers of stars such as Stone Cold Steve Austin, John Cena and Dwayne The Rock Johnson, has appeared on linear television since its debut in 1993. It now airs on the USA Network, where it draws 17.5 million unique viewers a year, according to WWE.

TKO, which is controlled by Hollywood power broker Ari Emanuel's Endeavor and was created by the merger of WWE and Ultimate Fighting Championship last year, said in a separate statement that Johnson would join its board. TKO's shares jumped about 17 per cent Tuesday; Netflix shares were up slightly.

With the WWE deal, Netflix, which has 247 million subscribers, greatly expands its stable of live programming, which also includes the reality show Love Is Blind. The company has recently focused on sports documentaries over live sports, but adding Raw to its lineup brings it in closer competition with rivals such as Peacock, which has made live sporting events a backbone of its service and recently streamed an NFL playoff game.

The announcement came a day after Netflix said Scott Stuber, the company's film chair who lured filmmakers such as Rian Johnson, Zack Snyder and Greta Gerwig to the streaming service, would depart in March.

Netflix will report its quarterly earnings Tuesday afternoon.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

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(Published 24 January 2024, 09:06 IST)