Netflix is reportedly eyeing live TV channels...
July 11, 2026View Online | Sign Up | Shop
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Sponsor Logo: Frontieras

Happy 7/11. Go get yourself a free Slurpee and a brain freeze.

—Dave Lozo, Brendan Cosgrove, Sam Klebanov, Molly Liebergall, Holly Van Leuven

In today’s newsletter, we’ll look at:

  • Netflix’s pursuit of live TV channels
  • A housing bill becoming law despite the president’s protest
  • EU regulators’ findings that Meta apps are addictive

Markets

Nasdaq

26,281.61

S&P

7,575.39

Dow

52,637.01

10-Year

4.569%

Bitcoin

$63,982.57

SK Hynix

$168.01

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*Stock data as of market close, cryptocurrency data as of 6:00pm ET. Here's what these numbers mean.

  • Markets: The three major indexes finished the week as green as the World Cup pitches, thanks to SK Hynix’s blowout Wall Street debut. Oil prices fell, even though tensions continue to rise between the US and Iran (more on that below).

READY, WILLING, AND CABLE

Report: Netflix invents cable TV

Photo illustration of an old CRT TV with a view of a big Netflix sign on the screen with CRT glitches.

Morning Brew Inc., Photos: Adobe Stock

While some people turn into their parents as they get older, some streaming companies turn into cable television. Netflix is considering adding live channels and bundles to boost sagging engagement, the Wall Street Journal reported.

The report states that Netflix is concerned about a decline in engagement (i.e., how often a viewer stays with a show, movie, or series), which can signal subscription cancellations. Among the solutions being discussed, per the WSJ, is Netflix edging closer to the very thing it disrupted—traditional TV:

  • Executives are reportedly weighing adding live channels that constantly stream shows and movies of a specific genre, because the one thing Netflix subscribers were missing was a random weekday airing of Couples Retreat at 2pm.
  • Also on the table: Bundling with other subscription-based streaming platforms and selling those packages through the main app, similar to what rivals Amazon and Apple already do.

Live TV means more ad sales: Netflix generated ~$1.5 billion in ad revenue last year and projects to double that this year. A new channel showing Golden Girls on a 24/7 loop, for example, would certainly increase that number.

Isn’t Netflix the No. 1 streamer? By subscribers, yes, but shares are down 40% over the past 12 months. Some recent projections have come in below analyst expectations, and its TV viewership in April reached its lowest level since May 2025, according to Nielsen.

Netflix is also reportedly in the running to purchase Letterboxd, the app for people who love movies and miss writing book reports. Sony, Paramount, and Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian are also reportedly showing interest in the app, per Puck News.

Letterboxd has more than 30 million global members ready to be targeted with ads by whichever corporation lands the social media site. LionTree, an investment bank handling the sale, is “floating” a $250 million valuation.—DL

Sponsored By Frontieras

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Sponsor: Frontieras

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Now is the Rockefeller moment for Frontieras North America as they reform coal into hydrogen, diesel, fertilizer and other valuable commodities (just like Rockefeller did with oil).

With a White House that favors domestic energy, the NASDAQ ticker FASF reserved, and preparations underway to break ground for their $850m flagship coal reformation plant, Frontieras is positioned for potential valuation impact.

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World

Tour de headlines

In an aerial view, construction workers stand on the roof of homes under construction at a new housing development

Justin Sullivan/Getty Images