§A · Dispatch · Landing
Netflix lands in San Francisco the same week its TF1 partnership launches in France
The streaming giant’s Gulfstream G550 returns from Paris just as a landmark content deal with French broadcaster TF1 goes live.
By celebplanes · 1 min read · Netflix
Netflix
Netflix flew from Paris-Le Bourget to San Francisco on June 19, a 10-hour 33-minute crossing that brought the company’s Gulfstream G550 (N533GV) back to its home base at San Jose International. The flight arrived just after 9 p.m. local time.
The same week, Netflix and French broadcaster TF1 began rolling out a first-of-its-kind partnership that puts TF1’s live channels, on-demand catalog, and major sporting events — including rugby and football — directly inside the Netflix interface for subscribers in France [deadline.com](https://deadline.com/2026/06/tf1-arrives-on-netflix-france-in-broadcaster-streamer-pact-1236959163/). Co-CEO Greg Peters called the deal a way to deliver “the best variety of TV and films in a seamless and personalized way” [variety.com](https://variety.com/2026/tv/global/netflix-tf1-streaming-broadcast-tie-up-france-1236785249/). The Paris departure follows a pattern of recent European trips for Netflix’s aircraft; earlier in June the jet flew from San Francisco to London Luton and from Burbank to Teterboro, suggesting a busy stretch of content and distribution meetings on both sides of the Atlantic.
The return flight lands as Netflix also pursues a $400 million deal to buy Radford Studio Center in Los Angeles, a property seized by lenders including Goldman Sachs [bloomberg.com](https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-06-18/netflix-is-under-contract-to-buy-la-studio-lot-seized-by-goldman). For a company that produces roughly 23 flight hours’ worth of emissions per tracked month on its own jet, the transatlantic trip underscores how much of its business still happens in person.
Aboard the Gulfstream G550


The aircraft
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