*As Netflix Goes Global, Can It Avoid Regional Politics?*



*6:15 AM PDT 4/16/2018 by Scott Roxborough , Alex RitmanThe Hollywood
Reporter*

https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/as-netflix-goes-global-can-it-avoid-regional-politics-1102121?ncid=newsltushpmgentertainment__Streamline__042118


*Scandals involving shows in Brazil, Israel and the Philippines highlight
the challenge for the streaming giant as it tries to grow internationally
while staying above the local political fray.*

Netflix has long since gone global.

The majority of Netflix's subscribers are already outside the United
States, and that global gap is only going to get wider.

Netflix will publish its fourth-quarter results after the market close
April 16, but management has already said it anticipates a net gain of 4.9
million subscribers outside the U.S., against a net increase of 1.45
million subscribers stateside, or year-over-year growth, respectively, of
41 percent internationally, compared with 11 percent domestically.

But as Netflix gets bigger — and more international — the company is
running up against a challenge more threatening than Facebook or Amazon
Prime: local politics.

Netflix is under fire, around the world, not for its disruptive business
model, but for the political content of its programming.

In Brazil, left-wing politicians, critics and journalists have called for a
boycott of the streamer to protest its new series The Mechanism, alleging
“lies and inaccuracies” in the loosely fictionalized docudrama about the
real-life corruption scandal that just saw former Brazilian President Luiz
da Silva imprisoned on a 12-year sentence.

Fauda, an Israeli political thriller that Netflix carries worldwide, also
sparked threats of a local boycott after a pro-Palestinian (and Nobel Peace
Prize-nominated) activist group accused the show, which depicts a secret
Israeli commando unit operating inside the West Bank, of being “propaganda
glorifying Israeli war crimes.” And the Asian director of Human Rights
Watch has called Amo, Netflix's fictionalized miniseries about Philippine
President Rodrigo Duterte's hugely controversial drug war, “a whitewashed
view” of the regime’s crackdown on alleged drug dealers that paints “a
ludicrous veneer of civility and lawfulness [over the] human rights
calamity that Duterte has inflicted on Filipinos.”

Netflix has so far declined to comment on any of the backlash facing some
of its international programming.

The streamer has encountered international controversy before, most
famously in its public spat with the Cannes Film Festival, which recently
banned Netflix films from official competition. Netflix responded by
refusing to submit any of its movies for Cannes screenings, even for
out-of-competition or sidebar events.

But Cannes' problem with Netflix is the company's disruptive business
model. The festival doesn't like it that the streamer bypasses local
theaters by putting its movies up online worldwide, day-and-date. Theater
owners around the world have similar complaints. Until very recently,
however, no one had any problem with what Netflix was showing, they just
griped about how they were showing it. The flare-ups over The Mechanism,
Fauda and Amo show that is changing.

Of course, some local controversy could have been expected given Netflix's
ambitious global expansion. In order to appeal to local audiences, the
company plowed money into local-language production in Rio, Manila, Tokyo,
Berlin and elsewhere. Typically, Netflix has gone in big, hiring
award-winning local directors — Brazil's Jose Padilha, Filipino auteur
Brillante Mendoza — to tell cutting-edge, often politically explosive
stories with a strong regional appeal. But what plays in the U.S. as
entertainment or simple artistic license — misattributing a quote to the
wrong politician (as Padilha is accused of doing in The Mechanism) or
depicting as law-abiding Filipino drug police who are accused of “wholesale
slaughter” and the killing of more than 12,000 people, as Mendoza does in
Amo — can be seen through a local lens as inaccurate at best and, at worst,
as deliberate propaganda.

Nowhere is this clearer than in Russia, where the country's culture
minister, Vladimir Medinsky, has gone so far as to accuse Netflix of “mind
control.”

Moscow took aim at Netflix over its 2016 Oscar-winning short film The White
Helmets. The British doc follows members of the Syrian volunteer rescue
group, who pull the dead and injured from the ruins of buildings bombed by
Syrian government forces in rebel-held areas. Russia, whose military forces
and air force are supporting Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in his fight
against these same rebels, as well as ISIS and other extremists, consider
the White Helmets little more than “crisis actors” promoting a pro-ISIS
agenda. Kremlin-backed international media outlets, including RT and
Sputnik, have sharply criticized the Syrian volunteer group and singled out
the White Helmets film for condemnation.

The same happened earlier this year with Feras Fayyad's documentary The
Last Men in Aleppo, which also centers on the work of the White Helmets.
When the doc earned an Oscar nomination and was picked up by Netflix,
Fayyad came under fire from various Putin-supporting media groups and
figures, while the director tells THR that Netflix also faced accusations
of "supporting an anti-Russian film, as they called it."

In Israel, across the Syrian border, Fauda may have won six awards —
including best drama series, at the Israeli Academy Awards in 2016 — but
has fallen foul of the growing Boycott Divestment Sanctions movement, a
pro-Palestinian activist group that seeks to cut, among other things,
global cultural ties with Israel (a tactic that had a powerful impact on
ending Apartheid in South Africa). The group wrote an open letter calling
on Netflix to ditch the show ahead of the second season’s launch in May.

“If Netflix insists on broadcasting Fauda, we shall have no choice but to
call on progressive and liberal Netflix customers in the U.S. and around
the world to pressure the company by all legal, peaceful mean possible,
including boycotts,” says Hind Awwad, steering committee member at PACBI,
the academic and cultural arm of the BDS movement.

“Fauda’s real danger lies in its hyped subtlety, used to normalize and
sanitize otherwise horrendous war crimes committed by undercover occupation
soldiers against Palestinians, in violation of international law,” adds
Awwad.

The call to dump Fauda came March 29, just a day before the Israeli Defense
Forces shot dead 17 Palestinian protestors at the Gaza border, injuring
more than 1,400 others. “To see such revolting army crimes presented as a
'thriller' for entertainment is beyond racist,” says Awwad. “It cheapens
Palestinian lives.”

Even in Europe, Netflix has run into political controversy with its choice
of programming. Netflix's first original in Italy, launched last February,
was Grillo vs. Grillo, a comedy show created by, and starring, the
comedian-turned-founder of the Five Star populist movement Beppe Grillo,
which last month became the strongest party in Italy, winning around a
third of the votes. The show was the equivalent of Netflix, in America,
doing a one-off Celebrity Apprentice special with Donald Trump ahead of the
2016 election.

The special definitely helped bring attention to Netflix in Italy — Grillo
is hugely popular, with a Facebook following of 2 million, rivaling that of
the country's leading newspapers — but the move also proved divisive. Many
pundits wondered why Netflix was giving the man BuzzFeed found to be
“leading Europe in fake news and Kremlin propaganda” such a prominent
platform. Grillo's off-color and often offensive humor also sparked
controversy. One particular bit in the show, involving crass transgender
jokes, caused a protest on social media, with Italian LGBT news outlet
Gay.it calling his remarks “transphobic vulgarity,” and a blow to LGBTQ
rights in the country.

Michael Pachter, an analyst with Wedbush Securities, sees such controversy
as inevitable as Netflix gets bigger, and more global.

“So long as they have politically charged content, they’re going to be
susceptible to criticism," he says. "In order to appeal to people in every
country, they’re inevitably going to step on some toes.”

To be fair, Netflix has faced similar accusations of political bias in the
U.S. The company's appointment last month of Susan Rice, a former U.S.
ambassador to the United Nations, to its board of directors, led to
scattered backlash from right-wing media outlets and bloggers, some calling
for Netflix subscribers to cancel their subscriptions. Rice was a top
official in the Obama administration and also served as national security
adviser for four years. She was highly scrutinized for her part in the
administration's response to the attack on the U.S. embassy in Benghazi,
Libya, in 2012 that left four Americans dead. The incident became a focal
point for right-wing ire against the Obama government.

Recent reports that Netflix is in talks with President Obama and his wife
Michelle on a possible production partnership have further inflamed critics
who accuse Netflix of being or becoming a tool of the political left.

But a little controversy, at home or aboard, might not be such a bad thing.

“It’s interesting that [Netflix isn't] playing it safe,” says Mike Lerner,
an executive producer on Jehane Noujaim’s documentary The Square, about the
explosive 2012-13 protests in Cairo, which was Netflix's first foreign film
acquisition, earned the company its first Oscar nomination in 2014 and was
banned in Egypt for its perceived criticism of the military. “They’re very
politically aware. Ted Sarandos, like Jeff Bezos, is not apolitical. They
are liberals and it’s in their best business interests to present the most
lively films and shows. Good for them — provoking a debate and a reaction.
They’re demonstrating that they are a liberal and open-minded distributor.”

Pachter, however, warns that Netflix “must be sensitive to local outrage”
if it is to avoid scandal that could hurt its bottom line. “They’ll have to
censor some of their shows if the local government finds them offensive,”
he adds. While he thinks controversy and boycotts are unlikely to lead to
an outright ban on Netflix — some have even suggested the notoriety
surrounding The Mechanism could help the show in Brazil — if the streamer's
content goes too far in offending local sensibilities, more regulation
could be the result.

“This isn't just a free speech issue and isn't just about politics,” adds
Claire Enders from U.K.-based Enders Analysis. For Enders, who has been
observing the European media industry for four decades as a U.S. expat, the
current debates around Netflix are really about regulation. As the
company's international viewership grows, local politicians are beginning
to pay attention.

“By 2020, Netflix's audience in the U.K. will be larger than (national
commercial network) Channel 4,” Enders says, “do you think they'll be able
to avoid the same kind of regulation imposed on every broadcast and pay TV
network in this country? They won't.”

Enders predicts the U.K. will lead a regulatory crackdown on the service
within the next two years, with the main focus being child protection and
the high level of violent and sexually explicit content on Netflix.

“Since having programming with loads of sex and violence is one of
Netflix's main selling points, that could have a impact on their
popularity,” she notes.
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