Pakistan pushes for Netflix deal to get local dramas and films in front of the world
Pakistan wants Pakistani dramas and films on Netflix and officials are now saying so out loud. Talks are underway with Netflix and a handful of other big streaming names. Federal Minister for Planning, Development, and Special Initiatives Ahsan Iqbal confirmed the discussions, saying the aim is to build partnerships that actually work long-term, not just one-off deals that fade after a year or two.
Iqbal has been framing this as more than a cultural win. He tied it to Uraan Pakistan, the government’s broader export push, and said local dramas and films already get plenty of praise abroad, the kind of praise, he argued, that should be turning into actual revenue and reach, not just applause.
Netflix and Amazon Prime Video came up specifically as the platforms that matter most for reaching global viewers. But Iqbal also brought up something less flattering regional politics, he said, has repeatedly gotten in the way, and Pakistani shows have paid the price in lost exposure because of it.
So now there’s a push to fix that. Talks with Netflix and others are reportedly focused on getting the current regional arrangement changed, something that could open real doors if it goes through.
Nothing’s signed yet. No timeline either. But the intent from the government side is out in the open now , get Pakistani stories onto the platforms that actually reach the world, and stop losing ground to politics that has nothing to do with the content itself.
