Netflix Pulls the Plug on Its Daily Soap Gamble! 😱
‘Tout Pour La Lumière’ has been canceled after just one season, marking the end of Netflix’s bold daily soap experiment.The ambitious French series was meant to reinvent the genre for streaming — but with its early cancellation, fans are now asking the big question:
👉 Is this the end of daily soaps on Netflix forever?
Netflix’s Daily Soap Experiment Ends Prematurely; ‘Tout Pour La Lumière’ Canceled After Single Season
Does this rule out daily soaps from ever working on Netflix?

According to local reports, the crew of TF1/Netflix coproduction was informed that Tout Pour La Lumière, a first-run daily soap set in the performing arts community, would not be coming back for season 2. Are there any reasons why the bold experiment failed? Below is a bit of context.
After a decade of presence, Netflix has been making bold, big moves to further establish its leading position in France. From increased investments to produce and acquire French-language movies, year-round partnerships with the French Cinémathèque, to exclusive marketing tie-in events in Paris, over weeks, to promote blockbusters like Wednesday season 2. Last year, the platform unveiled a pioneering new partnership. In this partnership, it picked the leading broadcasting group TF1 to launch a first-of-its-kind project: a daily French-language soap that would be broadcast first on Netflix, then 5 days later on the linear channel TF1 and its replay platform TF1+. Even more innovative: Tout Pour La Lumière was a Fame-style show in the background of a performing arts school, starring an ensemble of comedians, most with musical backgrounds, including lead Joy Esther.

After a mid-June premiere and a report of strong ratings in access prime time on TF1 (1.1 million viewers live, best launch of a daily show on the 15-24-year-old commercial target), the linear ratings gradually slipped, to the shock of viewers, the first season ended a month ago on a cliffhanger and what appeared to be a fatal outcome for a major character.
At the time, local media reports said that season 2 stories had been tentatively submitted to both TF1 and Netflix, pending a renewal, and that production was penciled in to resume next spring if everything went right. Instead, Puremédias reported that the crew of the show was told the series was cancelled. TF1 then confirmed the news to Allociné, adding that despite the cliffhanger ending, the show was “always written as a closed-ended 90-episode season and it would not necessarily lead to a second season”.
Talking to Télé Loisirs, lead actress Joy Esther looked at the cancellation through a fatalistic lens: “We are all sad not to meet again, but we all know we shared an extraordinary experience. Now, on to other projects. It’s the business. No way to fight it.”
What dimmed the lights on Tout Pour La Lumière?
It would be fair, but quite incomplete, to blame the cancellation of the show solely on lackluster ratings. Over the summer and the weeks leading up to the finale, live ratings on TF1 had dipped to somewhere below 700,000 viewers ; when confronted with these figures, representatives for the French channel nuanced that, when audiences watching in replay were factoring, the show averaged close to a million viewers per episode, as well as a consistent leadership on key target audiences (women and 15-24-year-olds). But what was in it for Netflix?
As VP of French acquisitions, Sonia Askil explained to Puremédias before the show premiere, the partnership and first-run of Tout Pour La Lumière was a way “to broaden our catalogue, and get subscribers who will take a liking to the show and come back to our platform to watch it”. But the engagement would be made daily, a departure from most of the Netflix shows released all at once. Moreover, the experiment was, to the best of our knowledge, limited only to French audiences: Netflix viewership numbers are harder to come by.
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However, we can report that, according to the Netflix Engagement Report for the first half of 2025, Tout Pour La Lumière had amassed 200,000 overall views and 1,1 million hours of viewership combined; these figures account for the first three weeks of the show. FlixPatrol reports that the show spent 7 days in the Top 10 Netflix trends before fading away.
Moreover, the bet was also risky as there are already a lot of daily soap operas programmed on French television: TF1 itself already has three long-running shows in Demain Nous Appartient, Ici Tout Commence, and Plus Belle La Vie, encore plus belle. Its target audience was also significantly younger than the latter three shows, though on the Netflix side, Sonia Askil was quick to offer a reminder that the platform was not working on a system of key demographics to assess its viewership. Therefore, whatever engagement there has been with the show has not been deemed sufficient to warrant the funding of a new season ; local media reports also quoted an industry observer saying that the platform was not pushing the show on its own.
The last reason may also come down to costs. Traditional broadcasters can, for the most part, sustain the year-long costs associated with daily shows; for Netflix, coproducing a show produced on the Riviera, in state-of-the-art studios in La Ciotat was a departure in more ways than one. Netflix has made no secret that production costs versus viewership was a key metric in renewal decisions for its own productions. Therefore, a source working with the mayor’s staff in La Ciotat (in La Provence), which hosted the production, noticed that “in an uncertain political and economic global landscape, productions tend to be more financially wary”. Even with this failed partnership, TF1 and Netflix remain firmly in business: content from replay platform TF1+ as well as all the live channels of the group are still scheduled to be distributed through Netflix France, starting next summer.
Do you see more innovative partnerships between Netflix and broadcasters in the future? Do you wish Tout Pour La Lumière had been renewed? Discuss in the comments below.