Netflix’s new partnership with the Indian Institute of Creative Technologies looks like a bold step, at least on paper.
The streaming giant has joined hands with a government-backed creative institute to nurture India’s AVGC-XR (Animation, Visual Effects, Gaming, Comics, and Extended Reality) talent.
The promise?
Real-world exposure, mentorship, and possibly even funding for student-led projects.
But here’s the thing, partnerships like this have been announced before, and most never moved beyond press releases and photo ops. What makes this one different is who’s involved.
Netflix’s global reach, combined with India’s creative potential, could genuinely reshape how local talent enters the global entertainment supply chain. If executed well, it could position India not just as a service hub for post-production, but as a source of original IPs and creators.
Still, skepticism remains. Netflix’s investments in India have fluctuated, from aggressive regional expansion plans to quiet cost-cutting moves. Will this collaboration become another PR stunt, or will Netflix genuinely commit to long-term skill-building in India’s creative ecosystem?
IICT’s ambition to be the “IIT of media and entertainment” is promising. But ambition alone doesn’t create industry shifts, consistent investment, transparent selection processes, and measurable outcomes do.
If Netflix and IICT can turn intent into execution, this could be the start of something transformative. Otherwise, it risks becoming yet another case of great headlines, little impact.
All we can hope is that this isn’t an attempt of Netflix to get some limelight and actually try to do something good for the community.