Can old TV shows find a Netflix Effect on YouTube?

By 03/13/2025
Can old TV shows find a Netflix Effect on YouTube?

An attempt to revive a bygone television spinoff is also a novel twist on a common marketing tactic. In recent months, studios and other rights holders have started making classic films and TV shows available for free on YouTube, where a new generation of viewers can revive interest in older productions.

For years, TV networks and streamers have used YouTube as a secondary distribution window for previous episodes of returning shows. At the start of new seasons, it’s not unusual to see full-length pilot episodes show up on network-affiliated YouTube channels. The most recent example of that phenomenon brought the entire first season of the Disney+ hit Andor to YouTube ahead of the Star Wars saga’s impending return.

That move is informed by simple logic: If viewers can get free access to a hit show, they’re more likely to give it a try. If they like what they see, they might be convinced to buy a cable or streaming subscription. The biggest blockbusters on television are frequently pirated, especially during episodes or arcs that are crucial to the plot. If fans are going to watch for free anyway, why not give them an official source and generate some goodwill at the same time?

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At the start of 2025, the full-episode YouTube dump began to evolve. One catalyst for change was Warner Bros. The film studio has quietly uploaded more than 40 features to YouTube, where they can be watched for free.

The movies Warner Bros. has selected for YouTube distribution are a mixed bag that ranges from classics like Waiting For Guffman to indie darlings like SubUrbia to utter schlock Flight of the Living Dead: Outbreak on a Plane. What the movies have in common is that they are all due to be rediscovered by the generations that make up the bulk of the YouTube audience. If Gen Z wants to enjoy early work from zeitgeisty stars like Catherine O’Hara and Parker Posey or compare their feelings to twentysomething Gen X angst, the free Warner Bros. collection has them covered.

Enter Joey. A few months after outlets noticed Warner’s YouTube dump, the official Friends YouTube channel began hosting full episodes of the ill-fated spinoff that continues the story of Matt LeBlanc’s Joey Tribbiani character. Upon its initial release in 2004, Joey flopped and was canceled after just two seasons. Now, Tribbiani’s adventures in L.A. are getting a second look, with the pilot drawing more than 200,000 YouTube views in just two days.

It’s not just Joey. The Y2K revival that began in the fashion world is now expanding to the realm of television, with early 2000s favorites like Malcolm in the Middle earning modern-day reprises. Though YouTube is a prominent distribution point for those throwbacks, their prominence in contemporary pop culture is informed by Netflix data. Previous iterations of the streamer’s What We Watched report have shown that the most popular TV reruns earn more viewership than many of the platform’s original programs.

Joey’s predecessor Friends is a primary example. The show originally aired from 1994 to 2004, and was picked up by Netflix for syndication from 2015 to 2020. This newfound accessibility helped the program gain a significant following among younger viewers who missed its initial run and also contributed to its continued merchandising success and reunion special.

Does the staying power of time-honored television show that today’s audiences are ready for a full-on Joey reboot? Friends co-creator Kevin S. Bright certainly seems to believe that executive meddling tanked a promising spinoff. “[Joey] became a pathetic, mopey character,” Bright said in 2006. “I felt he was moving in the wrong direction, but I was not heard.” Nearly two decades later, viewers can offer a second opinion.

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