Today could be the day you finally land that dream job. Netflix is hiring people to handle the enormous number of new TV shows and movies it's dumping into its library in the coming year. Watch Shows on Netflix As previously reported on The Penny Hoarder, you can actually get paid to binge-watch movies and shows on Netflix. The company hires “taggers” to watch movies and TV shows to properly categorize them. The hours are long, but you can do the work at home in bed if you like. The successful candidate will get a free Netflix account, a budget for pizza delivery and snacks and a $500 paycheck. The position requires staying home, eating and then rating takeout pizza,. Get Paid $500 to Watch Netflix and Eat Pizza Following a rocky start to 2021, the team at BonusFinder want to spread some cheer by opening a new role where you'll be paid to watch Netflix and eat takeout pizza. Get Paid to Watch Netflix or Short Videos in Your Spare Time Even if you can’t land a job to get paid to watch Netflix as a tagger, there are ways to land a gig watching videos. Watching videos on sites like Swagbucks is easier than filling out surveys or mystery shopping.

Who wouldn’t want to get paid to watch TV from the comfort of home? As a Netflix Tagger, you can do exactly that!

If you enjoy children’s television and movies, then the Netflix Kids Content Tagger job may be for you.

Netflix is no longer hiring for this position. They may open the position again at a later date. Please note that Netflix also has a general Tagger position that may be available again in the future.

So what does a Netflix Tagger do?

Taggers watch shows and movies, and categorize or “tag” based on each programs’ characteristics. The tags help Netflix suggest additional shows to viewers based on their viewing history.

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For example, the Netflix original show Stranger Things might be tagged with “science fiction”, “1980s”, and “conspiracy drama” along with other descriptions (If you’re a sci-fi fan, definitely give this show a look 🙂 ).

Netflix

As a Kids Content Tagger, you will view content suitable for children up to age 12.

From the job description:

The ideal candidate has in-depth knowledge of kids’ (ages 0–12) movies and television content. Our team is responsible for determining, across the United States and worldwide: 1) which content belongs in Kids profiles and how it evolves as kids grow up, and 2) tagging Kids shows and movies with an eye toward accuracy and consistency.

The job posting only mentions that this position is “remote”, so hopefully that indicates that it is open to applicants across the United States.

I’ve read that only 40 people worldwide hold the tagger position (that number might have slightly increased by now); add to that the fact that your job will be binge-watching TV from the cozy confines of home, and you can expect heavy competition for this position.

You’ll work part-time at about 15 hours per week, and the position is expected to last one year.

Apply for the position here, and good luck!

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There are those who binge watch to avoid work, and then there are the lucky few who binge watch for work.

Netflix recently posted a UK/Ireland-based job listing seeking someone who would be paid to watch TV shows and movies and tag them with genres. While we thought the idea of getting paid to stream shows without having to change out of stretch pants seemed like the best career ever, others worried that spending hours tagging videos ranging from “Gory Canadian Revenge Movies” to “Sentimental Movies About Horses for Ages 11 to 12” was the fastest way to “occupation-induced madness.”

So we decided to talk to Greg Harty, one of 40 part-time taggers, about what it’s really like to watch Netflix for a living — from the good to the bad to the My Little Ponies.

Netflix hired Harty, 34, in its first batch of taggers eight years ago. “At the time they described it as an experiment,” he says. “It’s one of the luckier gigs I’ve gotten.”

A movie buff who’s worked odd jobs in film, televisions, video games, writing, and software testing, the Los Angeles-based Harty describes his Netflix interview as one of the easiest he’s ever had: “We talked about everything from Casablanca to Predator in the same conversation, which doesn’t happen that often.”

Taggers are asked to watch and rank shows and movies based on a variety of guidelines. “We have a couple hundred different categories (i.e. perilous situations, race against time, darkness of humor, etc.) in which our taggers can dissect content,” spokesperson Betsy Sund says. “Some of the tags are scalar (for level of comedy/action/chase scenes etc) and others are categories of terms we’ve vetted ourselves (including cerebral, light-hearted, rebellious, etc.), while others are specific to characters and/or directors.”

But 1 to 5 ratings abide by an “A for Effort” ideology.

“For comedy it’s about comedic intent rather than if you thought it was funny or not,” Harty said. “If you know a movie is trying to get a laugh for every scene, that rates higher than whether it got the laugh or not.”

Detachment, therefore, is a key ingredient for being a successful Netflix tagger. Harty says a common misconception of his job is he is a “Roman emperor for movies,” giving them a thumbs up or down.

“You need to be objective,” Harty said. “This is never about whether I like a movie, and if I like it, I can’t change the tagging to try to get you to watch it.”

The whole point of the job is to provide users with suggestions that align with their watching preferences, whatever those preferences may be. “You might like what I consider to be horrible movies,” Harty said. “And my job right now is to get you all those horrible movies you want.”

Supervisors will, however, give taggers a heads up if there’s a particularly disturbing movie to watch and ask for volunteers rather than assigning it arbitrarily. And in specific circumstances, like the film Irreversible — which features a graphic rape scene — a supervisor will personally tag it.

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Taggers are given assignments on a weekly basis, and while there are some specialists in certain genres and taggers can request to tag a specific movie, Harty receives assignments at random. The weekly time commitment ranges from a couple of hours to eight movies a week, which — barring the world’s Titanics — runs between 16 and 20 hours. Luckily the hours of required watching has not limited Harty’s ability to binge watch. He saw all of Orange is the New Black season two in two days.

A non-disclosure agreement prohibits Netflix taggers from disclosing their salary, although Sund did volunteer that the part-time work’s pay “makes up a percentage of his overall salary.” A 2012 story in the L.A. Timesestimated that taggers make “several hundred dollars per week.”

But when watching gets bad, and we’re talking really bad, Harty says that it doesn’t hurt to remember his undisclosed paycheck.

“I come from a blue collar family and watched both of my parents bust their humps every day,” he said. “I’m not going to complain because I have to watch My Little Pony.

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