The Option

Reed Hastings is officially out of Netflix. This week's annual shareholder vote confirmed Jay Hoag as the new board chairman, ending Hastings' 29-year run with the company he co-founded. For studio heads, agents, and anyone doing business with Netflix at scale, this is a governance shift worth understanding — the post-founder era at the world's dominant streaming platform is now formally underway. Key Takeaways: Jay Hoag, a longtime Netflix investor and board member, was elected chairman at the June 2026 annual shareholder meeting.

Show Notes

Reed Hastings is officially out of Netflix. This week's annual shareholder vote confirmed Jay Hoag as the new board chairman, ending Hastings' 29-year run with the company he co-founded. For studio heads, agents, and anyone doing business with Netflix at scale, this is a governance shift worth understanding — the post-founder era at the world's dominant streaming platform is now formally underway.

Key Takeaways:

  • Jay Hoag, a longtime Netflix investor and board member, was elected chairman at the June 2026 annual shareholder meeting.
  • Hastings' board term expired without renewal — he did not stand for re-election, closing a 29-year chapter.
  • Netflix is projected to hit $50 billion in revenue in 2026, with approximately 325 million global subscribers.
  • Hastings retains roughly 1% of Netflix stock, currently valued at over $2 billion.
  • Hastings has directed hundreds of millions of dollars toward Powder Mountain resort in Utah and political philanthropy since stepping back in 2023, including a $2 million donation to Newsom's Proposition 50.
  • Co-CEOs Ted Sarandos and Greg Peters now run the company without any founder presence on the board for the first time in Netflix's history.
  • Netflix's prior unsuccessful bid for Warner Bros. Discovery — before WBD moved toward a Paramount takeover — signals an M&A appetite that Sarandos and Peters now own outright.

The Sarandos-Peters co-CEO structure was always Hastings' design. With the architect fully off the board, the institutional conservatism a founder provides is no longer structurally present. For anyone negotiating with Netflix — on talent deals, output agreements, or potential acquisitions — the risk profile of who's sitting across the table has quietly shifted. Watch how Netflix moves on M&A in the next twelve months. That's where the post-Hastings posture will become readable.

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