A May 2-5 Morning Consult/The Hollywood Reporter poll found that among Netflix subscribers ages 18-29, nearly half (49 percent) of them would cancel Netflix if “The Office,” “Friends,” Marvel movies and Disney content were all removed from the service — compared to 32 percent of all 1,085 subscribers who said the same. The margin of error for the sample of all subscribers was 3 percentage points, while the subsample’s margin of error was 6 points.

“The Office” and “Friends” are still on the platform, but Disney has already begun removing content from Netflix as licensing agreements expire and has announced that certain new releases, such as “Captain Marvel” and “Avengers: Endgame,” will stream exclusively on the upcoming Disney+ streaming service.

Netflix said by email that in the United States, “The Office” will remain on the platform until at least 2021 and that some Disney and Marvel films released before 2019 will also remain on the platform, but it didn’t specify an end date.

Dan Rayburn, an analyst with market research firm Frost & Sullivan, said he doesn’t think that Netflix has much to fear in terms of losing subscribers as it loses content.

“Most people have these subscriptions because they watch a wide variety of content and programming,” he said. “The fact that they lose one show doesn’t typically force them to cancel their subscription.”

Brett Sappington, the senior director of research at Parks Associates, added that Netflix’s stability among streaming services is to its advantage.

“I suspect that consumers who are subscribing for only one or two series are ultimately not long-term subscribers,” he said in an email. He noted that Netflix has lost licensed content before but still retains a low turnover rate. “They have somehow been able to overcome content losses without having huge subscriber losses,” he said.