Netflix is giving songwriters the spotlight in “Hitmakers,” an eight-episode reality series set to debut globally on 24 July. The streamer describes the show as “an all-access ride where creativity and ego collide” as a dozen up-and-coming writers race to craft singles for marquee artists while living together in Los Angeles. Cameras will follow pitch sessions, demo recordings and late-night rewrites, promising viewers “the drama behind every hook,” according to a log-line shared by TV Insider and Netflix’s own listings.
“Hitmakers” extends a summer slate that already features the posthumous Liam Payne vehicle “Building the Band,” bowing 9 July with Kelly Rowland, Nicole Scherzinger and AJ McLean judging unseen auditions before singers meet to form groups. Both projects emerged from Netflix’s 2024 reality-development drive, billed internally as the “Reality Universe” expansion, which pledged to double unscripted output in music, lifestyle and competition formats.
The streamer’s appetite for music contests sharpened after hip-hop series “Rhythm + Flow” returned last November with new judges Ludacris, DJ Khaled and Latto and climbed into Netflix’s weekly global Top 10. Executives see song-centric shows as cost-effective counter-programming to scripted blockbusters; a Netflix content strategist told BroadwayWorld last year that unscripted formats “travel well and refresh the catalogue between tentpoles.”
Industry observers say “Hitmakers” also taps demand for behind-the-board stories popularised by NBC’s “Songland,” which elevated unknown writers to the Billboard charts in 2019-20. “Audiences are curious about who actually builds the hits they stream,” notes USC media professor Stacy L. Smith, adding that songwriter competitions carry lower licensing costs than full-performance shows.
Still, songwriters’ unions will watch closely: “Songland” sparked debate over ownership of submission masters, and Netflix has not disclosed deal terms for “Hitmakers.” A representative said only that participants “retain a stake” in any released recording, language music-industry attorney Dina LaPolt calls “encouraging but vague.”
Whether the new format breaks through may hinge on star power; social-media teasers hint at guest artists ranging from John Legend to Blackpink’s Lisa, though Netflix declined to confirm booking lists. For now, the streamer is betting that the tug-of-war between melody and ego will play as compellingly as any blind audition or rap battle—and keep subscribers humming through the dog days of July.