

Earlier in October, Netflix partnered with Walmart for a merchandising deal that will bring customers clothes, toys and other goods linked to popular Netflix shows. The streaming giant isn’t limiting its ambitions to just shows and films, and Q3 proved to be an eventful quarter for Netflix acquisitions. and Canada saw a slight increase in Q3, hitting $14.68. Revenue in Q3 hit $7.5 billion, representing a 16 percent year-over-year growth and a slight increase from Q2’s reported $7.3 billion in revenue.
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Netflix has had a lackluster year for subscriber growth, though hit shows like Squid Game arriving at the end of the third quarter may speak to the “backweighted” 2021 slate that Netflix co-CEO and chief content officer Ted Sarandos referenced during the company’s Q2 earnings call. For Q4, the streamer is projecting a net add of 8.5 million subscribers - a marked increase from its performance thus far in 2021. In Q1, the company failed to meet its projections, adding 4 million new subscribers - 2 million short of its expectation of 6 million. In Q2, the company saw its total subscriber base increase by 1.5 million. 'Cobra Kai' Star Thomas Ian Griffith Teases Chilling Terry Silver Future In Latin America, Netflix added around 300,000, while U.S./Canada accounted for roughly 70,000 new paid subscribers, bouncing back from last quarter’s loss of around 400,000 subscribers. Europe, the Middle East and Africa contributed 1.8 million subscribers for the quarter. The Asia-Pacific region proved to be the largest contributor to Netflix’s subscriber growth, with the region accounting for more than half, or 2.2 million, of the quarter’s net subscriber adds, according to a shareholder letter released on Tuesday. Let me know Please use that email, as I don’t monitor this feed/forum.Netflix added 4.4 million new subscribers in the third quarter of 2021 for a total of 214 million paid subscribers, topping the company’s modest projections set last quarter for a net subscriber add of 3.5 million. I, personally, think somehow Netflix is screwing over TMobile customers, as TMobile, in every other way, has been nothing but great. I can only comment on how it is when used in connection to TMobile. If this is the case, TMobile certainly needs to look into it’s agreement with Netfilx and figure out what the problem is, and why it constantly occurs. Again, Netflix may not be very good at responsiveness through it’s own device. I find it hard to believe, as popular as it is, that Netflix is such a poor responsive platform, and can only, at this time, presume that is has something to do with the service as viewed through a “TMobile” agreement. I would be interested in knowing which is which. Again, I don’t know if this is because, as a streaming platform, Netflix just sucks, or if it has something to do with trying to use the platform as it’s connected to TMobile.

It’s gotten (or has remained) so bad, that we now opt to pay 5 bucks on Amazon Prime simply because there is much less frustration that way than trying to watch anything on Netflix. You have to go back and start the process all over again. However, it constantly has to buffer, and if it ever reaches the 25% mark, it will not go passed that. Once we get passed that initial freeze (approximately 25-45 seconds), we can start watching the program. Once we (finally) get to choose the movie/show we are trying to watch, it will play for about three seconds before it freezes. Anytime we try to use Netflix, it takes 10-15 seconds for the system to recognize whether we’ve hit the up, down, or left, right options. Information for anyone trying to use Netflix through their TMobile account: I don’t know if Netflix just sucks as a whole, or, if for some reason, Netflix just sucks when going through TMobile (hopefully someone can explain which is the case).
