
Harry and Meghan sign reduced deal with Netflix
The couple have worked with the streaming service since 2020.
Their previous Netflix deal bought the streamer exclusive rights to their output, and the new multi-year agreement is a 'first look deal.'
Prince Harry and Meghan Markle will continue to develop film and TV projects for Netflix, but on more limited terms, the streaming giant announced Monday.
The estranged British royal and his wife have worked with Netflix since 2020, producing documentary Harry & Meghan and lifestyle series With Love, Meghan.
The latter showcased the Duchess of Sussex as a thriving domestic maven, hosting guests, harvesting honey and mixing bath salts against an idyllic California backdrop. Netflix has extended the subscription to a second season, and a holiday special is due in December.
But while the pair's previous Netflix deal bought the streamer exclusive rights to their output, the new multi-year agreement is a 'first look deal.'
READ | Meghan Markle's As Ever brand marks her 44th birthday with stunning new portrait
In Hollywood parlance, this means Netflix has the right to say yes or no to a project before Harry and Meghan's media company, Archewell Productions, can shop it around other studios.
Typically, first-look deals are less lucrative than exclusive deals, though they also provide producers with more flexibility.
'We're proud to extend our partnership with Netflix and expand our work together to include the 'As ever' brand,' said Meghan, referring to her recently re-branded line of lifestyle products, including rose wine and apricot spreads.
Bela Bajaria, Netflix's chief content officer, described Harry and Meghan as 'influential voices whose stories resonate with audiences everywhere,' in the statement.
Harry and Meghan wed in a fairytale ceremony in 2018, before splitting from the British royal family and moving to California two years later. Cut off from the royal purse, the pair signed their first Netflix deal in 2020 for a reported $100 million.
That figure was never confirmed, and no financial terms have been revealed for the extension.
The New York Times reported Monday that the new deal is worth less for Harry and Meghan than the previous agreement, citing a person familiar with the terms.
Harry & Meghan, a six-episode tell-all about their relationship and exit from the House of Windsor, drew 23 million views in its first four days - a record for a Netflix documentary.
Despite withering reviews from critics, With Love, Meghan had over five million views in the first half of 2025, making it Netflix's most-watched cooking show.
The upcoming holiday special will feature Meghan hosting 'friends and family' as they 'deck the halls, create holiday feasts, craft heartfelt gifts, and share lots of laughs,' the statement promised.
Later this year, Netflix will release a short documentary from Archewell Productions about a small orphanage in Uganda.
The couple are also producing a 'romance feature adaptation' of Carley Fortune's novel Meet Me At The Lake, though no Netflix release has been confirmed.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
23 minutes ago
- Yahoo
RB position preview: WHY this may be the DEEPEST RB has ever been + WHO you need to target in drafts
Subscribe to Yahoo Fantasy Forecast Apple Podcasts | Spotify | YouTube Position preview week on the pod rolls on with Justin Boone joining Matt Harmon to preview the running backs. The two dive into the most crucial position in fantasy football and debate if this season is the deepest we've ever seen the position in fantasy. Harmon and Boone identify potential league winners at RB, which rookies you need to target and the late draft gems you need to steal in the later rounds. (2:45) - Elite RB tier (18:35) - RB1 ceiling guys (29:15) - Ideal RB2 targets and the potential drop off and RB cliff (50:45) - Boone's backup RB rankings (1:03:05) -Late round RB gems you need to target that are going outside Yahoo ADP 120 (1:18:40) - Fantasy Film Room segment - ONE RB you need to come away with in your drafts 🖥️
Yahoo
23 minutes ago
- Yahoo
What's Something From The '90s That People Are Nostalgic About, But It Wasn't Really That Great?
I was barely alive in the '90s, but my generation loves to romanticize that decade. However, I'm sure it wasn't all Blockbuster and Dunkaroos. There are definitely some things that are way better in people's memories than they actually were IRL. For example, a lot of people reminisce about waiting all day by the radio for their favorite song to play so they can record it on a cassette. TBH, that sounds more frustrating than fun. And downloading music from LimeWire was basically Russian roulette with a computer virus. And a Tamagotchi seems like choosing to do that high school project where you take care of a fake baby for fun! So, in your opinion, what's something about the '90s that people are super nostalgic about, but it wasn't actually that great? Why? Share your thoughts with us in the comments (or in the anonymous comments box below), and you may be featured in an upcoming BuzzFeed Community post! Also in Community: Also in Community: Also in Community:


Tom's Guide
24 minutes ago
- Tom's Guide
Best Netflix shows with a lot of seasons you should binge-watch right now
If you're like us, you're getting a bit frustrated about having to wait for all of your favorite streaming shows to finish filming and come back with a fresh new batch of episodes. (We're looking at you, "Bridgerton," "The Diplomat" and "Emily in Paris.") If that's the case, these top-notch Netflix shows with a lot of seasons — we're talking a minimum of six, at least — should certainly keep you busy (and entertained) while you wait. Unlike one-and-done miniseries, these lengthy shows have the scope and space to stretch out, letting viewers get to know their characters and follow them across several years. (Or, at the very least, across several days, if you're a binge-watcher.) Whether you're in the mood for a crime-family drama led by an Oscar winner, a cackle-worthy sitcom starring two undeniable legends, or a prison-set saga that pretty much put the streaming service on the map, here are three Netflix shows with a lot of seasons that you should add to your next watch list. To say that "Orange is the New Black" is a huge reason for Netflix's dominance today isn't an understatement — running for seven seasons from 2013 to 2019, it was one of Netflix's first original series and brought in both commercial popularity and critical acclaim during the streamer's early years, including 16 Emmy Award nominations and four wins. Over 91 episodes, "OITNB" follows the lives, loves, losses and legal battles of the women inmates at Litchfield Penitentiary, a minimum-security women's federal prison in Upstate New York, with Piper Chapman (Taylor Schilling) — a clean-cut public relations executive whose drug-running past eventually catches up with her, landing her in prison for 15 months — acting as the audience's proxy. Along the way, Chapman has to adjust to life behind bars as well as the often eccentric, sometimes violent, always interesting convicts now populating her new life. Watch "Orange is the New Black" on Netflix now Get instant access to breaking news, the hottest reviews, great deals and helpful tips. Before he was winning an Academy Award for his explosively great portrayal of J. Robert Oppenheimer in Christopher Nolan's "Oppenheimer," Cillian Murphy was making things blow up on the small screen as Tommy Shelby, the leader of a notorious street gang in post-WWI Birmingham in "Peaky Blinders." The BBC drama series, which took on a new life when it was added to Netflix's library in 2014, only had 36 episodes across six seasons (this is a British show, after all), but it manages to pack in a lot, following Murphy's unrelentingly ambitious crime boss as he deals with the Italian mafia, corrupt Catholic priests, Russian aristocrats, dastardly Irish cops, lingering wartime PTSD and more. Watch "Peaky Blinders" on Netflix now We'd watch Jane Fonda and Lily Tomlin in anything, but especially in "Grace and Frankie," the seven-season comedy that sees the two legendary performers playing our eponymous pair of women — sharp-tongued cosmetics mogul Grace Hanson and quirky artist Frankie Bergstein, respectively — who form an unlikely friendship after their husbands reveal they are in love with each other and plan to get married. Over 94 half-hour episodes, Frankie and Grace will have you interchangeably laughing and crying as you watch them hilariously and heartwarmingly get through such a major change in their family dynamics, and become family for each other in the process. Watch "Grace and Frankie" on Netflix now What's your favorite show to binge watch? Let us know in the comments below, and be sure to follow Tom's Guide on Google News to get our up-to-date news, how-tos, and reviews in your feeds. Make sure to click the Follow button.