Netflix used to be the easy app. One password covered a whole family, and the hardest decision most nights was what to watch. That version of the service began disappearing in 2023, when Netflix started charging extra for accounts shared outside a single household.
The password crackdown was never really about passwords. It was about converting a passive habit into a paying relationship, one login at a time.
Three years later, Netflix is running a similar playbook on a different problem: keeping people on the app once the credits roll.
On July 7, Netflix confirmed a new content partnership with a group of major publishers, according to a Seeking Alpha report.
Starting Aug. 3, the streamer will carry lifestyle video from Condé Nast, Hearst Magazines, People Inc., and Penske Media’s PMX division, among others, The Hollywood Reporter shared.
The rollout covers subscribers in the U.S., Canada, the U.K., Ireland, Australia, and New Zealand.
Netflix will feature new short-form content category
The new Netflix content blends licensed archival footage with ongoing series, ranging from three-minute shorts to episodes over 20 minutes long, according to Variety.
Titles include BuzzFeed’s “30 Questions,” Architectural Digest’s “Walking Tour,” Vanity Fair’s “Lie Detector,” and Travel + Leisure’s “Travel Unfiltered.” Coverage spans travel, cooking, fashion, celebrity profiles, and home design, a mix that reads closer to a newsstand than a streaming library.
Netflix VP John Derderian framed the move as an effort to extend fandom past a single episode.
Members want to “keep exploring the stories and personalities they love,” Derderian said, according to Seeking Alpha.
That is a retention pitch wrapped in a content announcement.

Netflix is fighting for attention, not just subscribers
The publisher deal follows Netflix’s earlier pushes into live sports, video games, and podcasts, part of a broader effort to fill idle scrolling time, TechCrunch confirmed.
The company also built Clips, a vertical video feed inside its mobile app aimed squarely at competing with YouTube and TikTok.
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Each experiment is small on its own, but together, they show a company testing every format that might keep a thumb from swiping away.
For publishers, the appeal is simple: access to an audience of more than 300 million paid Netflix memberships worldwide, according to TheWrap. For Netflix, it is an inexpensive way to keep the platform feeling active between marquee releases, without committing to new original production budgets.
Netflix stock has had a rough 2026
The publisher news lands as Netflix (NFLX) shares sit well below where they started the year. The stock closed at $76.18 on July 7, down 2.18% on the day, according to data from TheStreet.
Shares have fallen roughly 16.28% year to date, and sit more than 42% below the all-time closing high of $133.91 set last June.
Related: Netflix’s Roku loss points to bigger streaming risk
Much of that decline traces back to Netflix’s failed pursuit of Warner Bros. Discovery. The company walked away from the deal in February after Paramount Skydance topped its offer, collecting a $2.8 billion breakup fee in the process, according to The Motley Fool.
Netflix also lost to Fox in a separate bidding war for Roku this spring, and longtime chairman Reed Hastings stepped down from the board in June, adding to investor unease around leadership continuity.
Q1 earnings, reported in April, actually beat expectations, with revenue up 16% year over year. But a soft second-quarter guidance print overshadowed the beat, and the stock dropped nearly 10% the next trading day.
None of that has much to do with lifestyle videos, but it explains why Netflix needs steady, low-cost engagement wins right now, with its next earnings report due July 16, as Wall Street Horizons noted.
Why Netflix’s lifestyle content deal matters for all streamers
Streaming platforms are running out of easy subscriber growth, and a password crackdown only works once. The next fight is not just about whether people sign up, but about how much time they spend inside these apps once they are already there.
Netflix’s decision to integrate content from magazine publishers looks small in isolation, but it points to something bigger. Entertainment platforms increasingly compete with each other, and with whatever else is open on the same phone.
Whether a Vogue segment or a Rolling Stone clip can hold that attention is the real experiment Netflix is running here, and the answer will matter far beyond Aug. 3.