This week on TechHive: TV network apps aren’t just for cable subscribers



Officially, cord-cutters aren’t welcome to use video-streaming apps from TV channels such as ABC, Discovery, The Food Network, and many others. Known in the industry as “TV Everywhere” apps, they’re really meant for paying cable or satellite subscribers, who can enter their account credentials to access a trove of on-demand shows and live channel streams.

But if you look in the right places, these apps can provide a plenty of ad-supported free TV for cord cutters, ranging from guilty-pleasure reality shows to late-night variety. So this week, I performed some good old-fashioned service journalism and look at which TV Everywhere apps offer free stuff, and how to find it. Read the full column on TechHive.

Weekly Rewind

Embracing on-demand: Speaking of TV networks, this Reuters story sums up their ongoing efforts to be more like Netflix by streaming full seasons of shows on-demand. Previously, networks’ rights agreements with TV studios didn’t allow for full-season streaming (or “stacking rights” in Hollywood jargon). Now, those networks are becoming more insistent on carrying full seasons instead of just a handful of recent episodes. As such, catch-up TV will become much easier this year through cable boxes and streaming apps.

While this is mainly beneficial to cable subscribers right now, the shift will likely benefit streaming TV bundles such as Sling TV and PlayStation Vue as well. In the long term, it prepares networks for a massive shift in viewing habits, away from antiquated concepts like DVR and toward convenient on-demand access to everything.

NFL on PlayStation Vue: Sling TV already announced its NFL Network/Redzone pricing, and now it’s Sony’s turn. To get the NFL’s channels on PlayStation Vue, you’ll need the Core or Elite plan, respectively priced at $35 and $45 per month in areas that don’t get live local channels, and $10 more per month in areas that do. With either plan, Redzone costs $40 extra for the full season.

How does that compare to Sling TV? Let’s do the math:

With Sling, NFL Network is part of the $25 per month Blue bundle, while Redzone lives in the $5 per month Sports Extra add-on. That’s a lot cheaper than any of Sony’s offerings, but it doesn’t include ESPN for Monday Night Football. For that, you’ll need to add the Orange bundle for another $15 per month. At that point, Vue’s Core bundle is just a little cheaper–provided you don’t live in an area with live local channels. Either way, you’ve got a couple solid options for complete NFL coverage without cable.

More Catch-Up

Save More Money



I’m not a huge fan of Amazon’s Fire TV stick. The device is nearly two years old, and it shows in the form of long app loading times and occasionally sluggish navigation.

Having said that, Amazon’s software is highly efficient at helping find something to watch on Amazon Prime. And because there’s no Amazon video support on Apple TV, Chromecast, or Android TV, your existing TV setup might just need a dedicated Amazon streaming device. In that context, $40 for a refurbished Fire TV Stick with voice remote isn’t a bad deal, at $10 off the price when bought new.

Thanks for reading!

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Until next week,
Jared