Netflix Chief Content Officer Bela Bajaria will receive the 2026 International Emmy Founders Award, recognizing her leadership in expanding global storytelling and transforming Netflix into a platform where international series can become worldwide successes. The announcement was made by the International Academy of Television Arts & Sciences.
The honor will be presented during the 54th International Emmy Awards Gala in New York City on November 23, 2026, placing Bajaria alongside previous recipients such as Steven Spielberg, Oprah Winfrey, Shonda Rhimes, Ryan Murphy, and Dana Walden.
Bela Bajaria recognized for Netflix’s global success
Since becoming Netflix’s Chief Content Officer in 2023, Bajaria has overseen several of the platform’s biggest global hits. These include Squid Game, which remains Netflix’s most-watched series with more than 265 million views, the acclaimed British drama Adolescence, and the record-breaking finale of Stranger Things, which delivered the streamer’s biggest English-language premiere with 1.2 billion views worldwide.
During her tenure, Netflix has also continued to grow internationally with successful productions including Money Heist, Lupin, and Delhi Crime, reinforcing the company’s strategy of investing in local stories for global audiences.
Announcing the award, International Academy President and CEO Bruce L. Paisner praised Bajaria’s impact on the television industry.
“Bela Bajaria is among the most consequential executives in television today. She has built a global content operation of remarkable scale and creative ambition, in which stories told in any language can become worldwide phenomena.”
Responding to the recognition, Bajaria said she was “deeply honored” by the International Academy.
“The stories that have resonated most with audiences around the world are the ones rooted in a specific place, a specific truth — and what we have proven, over and over, is that authenticity travels.”
The award highlights Bajaria’s role in reshaping Netflix’s content strategy, demonstrating that locally produced stories can achieve worldwide popularity while redefining the future of global streaming.