Did Netflix Ruin Movies?

Did Netflix Ruin Movies?

From Galaxy Brain by The Atlantic

March 6, 2026 · 42 min · Episode 18

About this episode

The episode explores Netflix's impact on the film industry and cultural expectations around movies and television.

Few companies have reshaped American culture as aggressively as Netflix. This week’s Galaxy Brain charts how we got here. Charlie Warzel talks with Atlantic film critic David Sims about Netflix’s strange, sweeping arc: from red DVD envelopes to a streaming colossus with 325 million subscribers. Sims explains how Hollywood initially shrugged off streaming as a novelty, only to watch Netflix reshape both distribution and the aesthetics and economics of entertainment itself. Together, they discuss the rise of binge culture, data-driven green-lighting, and the tension between prestige projects and “second screen” slop built for distracted viewers. The conversation also examines Netflix’s stance toward theaters, its aborted bid for Warner Bros. Discovery, and the deeper question haunting the industry: Has Netflix simply exploited technological inevitabilities—or has it rewired our expectations of what movies and television are supposed to be? Get more from your favorite Atlantic voices when you subscribe. You’ll enjoy unlimited access to Pulitzer-winning journalism, from clear-eyed analysis and insight on breaking news to fascinating explorations of our world. Atlantic subscribers…

People in this episode

Host: Charlie Warzel

Guest: David Sims

Topics covered

  • Netflix
  • movies
  • streaming
  • binge culture
  • Hollywood
  • entertainment

Keywords

  • cultural impact
  • streaming services
  • data-driven content
  • prestige projects

Mentioned in this episode

Products: Netflix

Books & works: Galaxy Brain, Pulitzer

Places: Hollywood

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