Netflix just showed Hollywood what the future of filmmaking looks like, and it involves a lot less money and a lot more GPUs.
The streaming company’s new five-episode documentary series, The American Experiment, which premiered on June 24, features 17 minutes of AI-enhanced footage that was produced “twice as fast and at half the cost” compared to traditional methods, according to Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos. The series stars Martin Sheen voicing George Washington alongside contemporary political figures including Kamala Harris, Mike Pence, and Hillary Clinton.
The economics of AI-powered content
Netflix’s content budget tells a story of relentless escalation. Spending grew from $16.2 billion in 2024 to roughly $17-18 billion in 2025, and is now projected to hit $20 billion in 2026.
The technology isn’t being deployed in a single experimental project and then shelved. Netflix has applied generative AI tools across approximately 300 different titles, suggesting this is already baked into the production pipeline rather than treated as a novelty.
The company’s earlier deployment of AI in visual effects for El Eternaut in 2025 served as a proving ground. The American Experiment represents the next step: using AI not just for touch-ups but for generating footage that would have previously required expensive historical reenactments, elaborate sets, and weeks of additional shooting.
Why crypto and AI infrastructure investors should pay attention
Generative AI, the kind that produces documentary footage convincing enough for a major streaming platform, requires massive amounts of GPU compute. Training and running these models at scale is expensive, energy-intensive, and increasingly constrained by centralized cloud providers.
This is precisely the gap that decentralized compute networks have been positioning to fill. Projects building GPU marketplaces and distributed rendering infrastructure stand to benefit as demand for AI compute expands beyond tech companies and into entertainment, advertising, and media production at scale.
The 300 titles figure is the number worth watching most closely. If Netflix scales AI integration from 300 titles to its entire catalog over the next few years, the ripple effects on compute demand, labor markets, and content economics could dwarf anything a 17-minute documentary segment suggests today.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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