

CAN YOU MERGE NETFLIX ACCOUNTS TV
Beyond just Netflix and Philo, you can also create user profiles in Hulu, PlayStation Vue, and the Apple TV app, and the forthcoming Disney+ service will support profiles as well. Meanwhile, no other streaming services have taken up the idea. Last time I asked Philo’s PR folks for a status update, they said there was nothing to share. Those social features, however, have yet to materialize, and neither have joint recommendations. McCollum also mentioned joint recommendations to TechCrunch, saying Philo would add them sometime after implementing other long-awaited social features, such as the ability to create co-watching sessions with faraway friends. It seemed like a brilliant feature to me, though I’m not sure what’s become of it. Jared Newman / IDGĪn extremely (and perhaps insultingly) simple mock-up of how you might select multiple Netflix viewers for combined recommendations. The service would then consider the viewing preferences of each user and come up with some overlapping recommendations. The idea was that instead of selecting a single person from Philo’s profile selection screen, you’d check off all the people who are watching with you. During our conversation, he floated the possibility of adding a joint recommendation feature to the service. Back in January, during CES, I met briefly with Andrew McCollum, CEO of the live TV streaming service Philo. I can’t exactly take credit for the idea of joint streaming TV profiles. If you’ve ever felt conflicted about whose profile to choose while watching Netflix with your cohabitants, you might want to try it too. I like the idea of steadily building a streaming menu that fuses our respective tastes, and at the very it least, it answers the question of whose profile to use while watching together. While I can’t say for sure yet that the experiment has worked-mainly because I think Netflix still needs more data-I’m glad to be giving it a try.

Our tastes do have some overlap, especially in the realms of standup and sitcoms, but choosing either profile made finding common ground harder. Hers leaned more towards documentaries, light dramas, and the occasional romantic comedy, while mine was a weird mix of dark humor, showbiz comedies, and thrillers. The idea was to bridge the gap between our respective recommendation lists, which had grown rather different. But instead of it being just for me or any other individual, it was a combo profile for my wife and I. A few weeks ago, I created a new Netflix profile for our household.
