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Dallas Cowboys Owner Cuts Ties With Netflix Amid #CancelNetflix Wave — Christmas Day Clash vs. Commanders Pulled From Broadcast

Dallas, TX – Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones has officially ended all partnerships with Netflix, as the #CancelNetflix campaign spreads rapidly and dominates America’s culture wars. His decision marks one of the boldest moves yet.

The move cancels Netflix’s behind-the-scenes project about Cowboys history. Even more significantly, Jones has formally asked the NFL to pull the highly anticipated Christmas Day showdown between the Cowboys and Washington Commanders from Netflix’s exclusive broadcast package.

 

Netflix faces mounting backlash fueled by accusations of “woke bias,” LGBTQ+ content for children, and controversial remarks from former creators. Elon Musk amplified the #CancelNetflix wave by urging cancellations more than 20 times in three days.

According to the Dallas Morning News, Jones saw the decision as both personal and strategic. He refused to let the Cowboys brand be tied to a company accused of undermining family values and disrespecting tradition.

 

Reactions came swiftly. Cowboys Nation praised Jones for “standing up for America’s Team,” while analysts warned the move could set a dangerous precedent, potentially disrupting the NFL’s growing reliance on lucrative streaming partnerships moving forward.

The Christmas Day matchup with the Commanders was projected to be one of Netflix’s premier NFL showcases. If pulled, it would be a major blow to the streamer’s ambitions of expanding deeper into live sports broadcasting.

 

If Netflix won’t respect families, then they don’t deserve the Dallas Cowboys. Tradition, loyalty, and values come first — and those matter more than any streaming contract,” one Cowboys executive said.

Chiefs Head Coach Announces Chris Jones to Start on the Bench for Standout Rookie After Costly Mistake vs. Jaguars
  Kansas City, MO —The Kansas City Chiefs’ coaching staff confirmed that Chris Jones will start on the bench in the next game to make way for rookie DT Omarr Norman-Lott, following a mistake viewed as pivotal in the loss to the Jacksonville Jaguars. The move is framed as a message about discipline and micro-detail up front, while forcing the entire front seven to re-sync with Steve Spagnuolo’s system. Early-week film study highlighted two core issues. First, a neutral-zone/offsides penalty on a late 3rd-and-short that extended a Jaguars drive and set up the decisive points. Second, a Tex stunt (tackle–end exchange) that broke timing: the call asked Jones to spike the B-gap to occupy the guard while the end looped into the A-gap, but the footwork and shoulder angle didn’t marry, opening a clear cutback lane. To Spagnuolo, this was more than an individual error—it was a warning about snap discipline, gap integrity, pad level, and landmarks at contact, the very details that define Kansas City’s “January standard.” Under the adjusted plan, Omarr Norman-Lott takes the base/early-downs start to tighten interior gap discipline, stabilize run fits, and give the call sheet a cleaner platform. Chris Jones is not being shelved; he’ll be “lit up” in high-leverage situations—3rd-and-long, two-minute stretches, and the red zone—where his interior surge can collapse the pocket and force quarterbacks to drift into edge pursuit. In parallel, the staff will streamline the call sheet with the line group, standardize stunt tags (Tex/Pir), shrink the late-stem window pre-snap, and ramp game-speed reps in 9-on-7 and 11-on-11 so everyone is “seeing it the same, triggering the same.” Meeting the decision head-on, Jones kept it brief but competitive: “I can’t accept letting a kid take my spot, but I respect the coach’s decision. Let’s see what we’re saying after the game. I’ll practice and wait for my chance. When the ball is snapped, the QB will know who I am.” At team level, the Chiefs are banking on a well-timed hard brake to restore core principles: no free yards, no lost fits, more 3rd-and-longs forced, and the return of negative plays (TFLs, QB hits) that flip field position. In an AFC where margins often come down to half a step at the line, getting back to micro-details—from the first heel strike at the snap to the shoulder angle on contact—remains the fastest route for Kansas City to rebound from the stumble against Jacksonville.