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Home Sci-Fi

Disney, Fox, Warner sports streaming service Venu announces price and launch date

August 2, 2024
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Hey, do you want to have to pay even more money for yet another streaming service? Boy, are you in luck: Venu — the joint sports streaming offering from Disney (ESPN), Fox, and Warner Bros. Discovery — has officially set its price-tag and outlined when it plans to launch.

It’ll cost $42.99 per month and launch in the fall, with no exact date set just yet. At least on it’s surface value, that’s a tough ask, considering it’s much more expensive than pretty much any other streaming service. But sports, and live broadcast rights, are big business and one of the few remaining things on TV that are appointment viewing. In short: sports, typically speaking, get folks to pay-up.

It seems the goal from Venu — which by the way, is pronounced like the word Venue, which is just wrong — is to get younger customers who loves sports but don’t want to pay for a cable package.

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“We’re building Venu from the ground up for fans who want seamless access to watch the sports they love, and we will launch at a compelling price point that will appeal to the cord cutter and cord never fans currently not served by existing pay TV packages,” Venu CEO Pete Distad said in a statement.

So, what’ll be on Venu? You get all the sports offerings on ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU, SECN, ACCN, ESPNEWS, ABC, FOX, FS1, FS2, BTN, TNT, TBS, truTV, and ESPN+. The press release, and pretty much every write up of the news, notes the service will include the NFL, NBA, MLB, NHL, WNBA, NASCAR as well as college sports, golf, tennis, and soccer offerings.

The big question here, however, is the NFL because, well, it is by far the most popular thing on TV in the U.S. With ESPN and Fox onboard, you have a decent amount of the NFL offerings on Venu. But, if you’re an NFL completist, as most American sports fans are, Venu won’t be enough. NBC, CBS, Amazon, and the NFL Network and also air a fair number of NFL games, meaning you’ll need to pony up for other streaming services or a YouTube TV/cable subscription if you want to watch every game.

So, no matter what decision you make, watching sports is going to continue to cost a lot of money.

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