Netflix has been cashflow positive since last year.
The reason people don't care about net debt is because it's assumed the money they borrow will be sunk into capital assets (ie. the shows, or new studios, or other "one-time" costs), and those investments have been coming closer to paying for themselves every year (until last year, when they started making more than they cost).
Netflix's content is a fixed cost for the company. They need just enough new stuff to keep people from leaving every year, but they don't to add, say, another show for every million subscribers. It was only a matter of time before the math worked out in their favour, based on what they were posting for EBITDA.
I think the greater Tampa area is probably one of the best places to live and work in the country right now. I'm Canadian, but I also have 2 condos in the area, and if I need to, I'm set for life thanks to some smart business decisions--I'll just buy an E5 visa (although they recently increased from a $1M to $1.8M "investment"; I guess if you're an illegal Mexican, you can come on in, but literal millionaires need to wait their turn?), or maybe try to qualify under E1/2 ("exceptional immigrants").
The problem with Florida is that it can all turn on a dime. It's already a close swing state and the old people who act as a bulwark against the blue tide of shit are dying off. Demographics are destiny, as the kikes on Twitter like to remind us and it's only a matter of time before Florida is another Virginia.