
The Walt Disney Company and Amazon were the largest producers of original streaming movies and television shows in 2025, according to a new report released by entertainment data and analytics firm Reelgood this week.
The report, shared with The Desk via e-mail on Thursday, shows Disney produced more than 120 titles for its streaming platforms last year, while Amazon’s various studios produced nearly 100 titles.
Warner Bros Discovery (WBD) was not too far behind with more than 80 streaming movies and TV shows produced, followed by Comcast’s NBC Universal at 71 titles and Netflix at 66.
Across all measured streaming services, more than 6,400 movies and 2,400 TV shows were produced for streaming platforms — either those co-owned with the film and TV studios producing them, or licensed to other services like Apple TV, Netflix and Starz.
Adaptations — TV shows and movies that repurpose other source material like books, comics, videogames and even other shows and films — was the top sub-genre of the year across media types. Documentaries and comedies were the second- and third-most produced sub-genre of the year across films and TV shows equally, Reelgood reported.
Unsurprisingly, Disney Plus added the most TV content during the year, growing its library of shows and movies by 38 percent compared to 2024, based on data collected by Reelgood. That data point didn’t appear to include Hulu content, which was integrated into Disney Plus across some markets last year; Hulu grew its own content library by 3.5 percent, Reelgood reported.
Prime Video had the second-largest rate of TV content growth at 31.5 percent, while Netflix was in a distant third place with 12 percent growth. Paramount’s content library shrank by 1.5 percent, Reelgood reported.
On the film side, things were very different. Paramount Plus had the largest movie content growth of the year at 16.6 percent, followed by Disney Plus with a 5 percent rate of growth and Prime Video at nearly 4 percent. Hulu lost more than 38 percent of its titles compared to 2024, while Apple TV’s library shrank by nearly 21 percent, Reelgood said.
To view the full report, click or tap here.
