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The Israeli creative-IP economy operates through two distinct mechanisms that are frequently conflated in international coverage. Distinguishing them is essential.
Mechanism one — television format exports. An Israeli television original is licensed to an international production company, which then produces a market-specific adaptation. Hatufim → Homeland is the canonical example: the Israeli original (Yes/Kan) was licensed to Showtime, which produced an English-language adaptation set in the United States with a US cast and US writers' room. The Israeli original and the international adaptation are distinct productions sharing format DNA, intellectual property anchor, and licensing structure.
Mechanism two — Israeli originals distributed internationally. An Israeli production is produced in Israel, in Hebrew (sometimes with additional languages), and distributed internationally as-is through an international streaming service. Fauda (Yes Studios for Netflix global) is the canonical example: the Israeli original is produced in Israel and distributed globally on Netflix without being adapted into a separate national production.
Both mechanisms operate at substantial international scale. The institutional architecture, licensing economics, and commercial mechanics differ materially between them.
Operating alongside the television creative-IP economy is the Israeli gaming industry. Playtika (mobile gaming, IPO'd 2021 on Nasdaq), Moon Active (mobile gaming, the company behind Coin Master), Plarium (acquired by Aristocrat in 2017), and ironSource (mobile advertising and game monetization, merged with AppLovin in a deal that closed in 2022) anchor the major-operator tier. Crazy Labs, Lightricks (mobile creative tools extending into adjacent entertainment applications), and a wider tier of mid-cap gaming and creative-tools operators add further depth.
The Israeli VFX, animation, and creative-technology layer adds depth, anchored by Lightricks alongside a wider tier of creative-tool and post-production operators. Israeli filmmakers and Israeli music exports operate substantial international presence.
The Olam covers it as institutional reference. Format licensing economics distinct from Israeli original international distribution. Production company structure. Gaming company structure. The Israel-Hollywood executive pipeline. Streaming-original commercial structures.
Major Israeli format exports and their confirmed international adaptations include:
— Hatufim → Homeland (Showtime, 2011-2020) — BeTipul → In Treatment (HBO, 2008-2010; revival 2021); also adapted in multiple international markets — Hostages (Bnei Aruba) → Hostages (CBS, 2013) — Traffic Light (Ramzor) → Traffic Light (Fox, 2011) — On the Spectrum (BaSpectrum) → As We See It (Amazon Prime Video, 2022) — Euphoria (Hot, 2012) → Euphoria (HBO, 2019-present)
Specific adaptation details, format-licensing structures, and international market coverage for each title should be verified against the cited international productions and trade-press reporting.
The major Israeli production companies and format developers include Keshet International, Reshet, Yes Studios, Endemol Shine Israel (operating within Banijay Group following the 2020 merger), Dori Media, Tedy Productions, July August Productions, and the broader Israeli production ecosystem.
The format-licensing economics typically operate through multi-year licensing structures, with Israeli creators retaining intellectual property rights and receiving licensing fees, royalties, and (in some structures) participation in the adapted production economics.
Distinct from format exports, several major Israeli original productions are distributed internationally without market-specific adaptation.
Fauda (Yes Studios, distributed by Netflix). One of the most internationally successful Israeli originals globally. Multiple seasons through 2023-2024.
Shtisel (Yes Studios, distributed by Netflix). The ultra-Orthodox Jerusalem family drama operating multiple seasons through 2023.
Tehran (Apple TV+). An Israeli original co-production distributed by Apple TV+ as part of the company's international original-content slate.
The Israeli original international distribution layer continues to expand through 2024-2026, with major international streaming services commissioning or acquiring Israeli original content.
The Israeli gaming industry operates as a substantial global mobile-gaming center, with several major operators producing significant international revenue.
Playtika (NASDAQ: PLTK). Mobile gaming, IPO'd in January 2021. Operating major casual and social-casino mobile games globally. Playtika was acquired by Caesars Interactive in 2011 and subsequently sold to a Chinese consortium led by Giant Interactive in 2016 before the 2021 IPO. The company operates substantial Israeli engineering presence.
Moon Active. Mobile gaming, privately held, the company behind Coin Master and a broader social-casino-and-casual mobile portfolio. A major global mobile-gaming operator.
Plarium. Mobile and PC gaming, acquired by Aristocrat Leisure (Australia) in 2017.
ironSource (legacy). Mobile advertising and game-monetization platform. ironSource went public on the NYSE in 2021. AppLovin announced an agreement to acquire ironSource in an all-stock transaction in 2022; the merger closed in 2022.
Crazy Labs (formerly TabTale). Mobile casual gaming.
Lightricks. Mobile creative-tools company (Facetune, Videoleap, and the broader portfolio), increasingly extending into AI-generated content and the broader creator-economy stack.
The bidirectional flow of executives and creative talent between Israel and Hollywood represents an institutional component of the Israeli creative economy that is materially under-documented in structured business writing.
Major Israeli-origin figures operate substantial Hollywood roles across studio operations, independent production, and the broader creative-industries layer. Specific entity-page coverage will be built on a per-individual basis with anchored career documentation.
Lightricks anchors a major Israeli creative-tools position, with the Facetune, Videoleap, Photoleap, and broader portfolio operating at substantial global user scale.
Israeli VFX studios and post-production operators participate in international film and streaming production, though typically at smaller scale than the major Hollywood VFX primes.
Israeli music exports operate at substantial scale globally, particularly in electronic music (the Israeli trance and psytrance scene operating one of the larger global presences in the genre), classical music (Israeli classical performers and ensembles operating across major international venues), and Eurovision participation (Israel won the Eurovision Song Contest in 1978, 1979, 1998, and 2018, with the 2019 contest hosted in Tel Aviv).
The Israeli domestic broadcast and streaming environment operates through several major operators.
Public broadcasting. Kan (Israel Public Broadcasting Corporation) operates the primary public broadcaster, succeeding the historical IBA after the 2017 restructuring.
Commercial broadcasting. Keshet (Channel 12) and Reshet (Channel 13) operate the major commercial free-to-air broadcasters.
Pay television. Yes and Hot operate the major Israeli pay-TV platforms.
International streamers. Netflix, Apple TV+, Disney+, Amazon Prime Video, HBO Max, and the major international streamers operate in Israel either through direct domestic offerings or international subscription access.
— Format Exports: Hatufim, BeTipul, On the Spectrum, and the licensing structure — Israeli Originals Distributed Internationally: Fauda, Shtisel, Tehran — Israeli Production Companies: Keshet International, Reshet, Yes Studios, Endemol Shine Israel — The Israeli Gaming Industry: Playtika, Moon Active, Plarium, ironSource — Lightricks and the Creative-Tools Layer — The Israel-Hollywood Executive Pipeline — VFX, Animation, and Post-Production — The Israeli Domestic Broadcast and Streaming Environment
Footer disclosure: The Olam covers Israeli media, entertainment, and gaming as institutional and structural reference. Production, licensing, and gaming company data is sourced from public filings (where listed), industry trade press (Variety, Deadline, The Hollywood Reporter), and Israeli Ministry of Culture and Sport and IATI aggregate disclosures. Data current as of Q2 2026.
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