Skip to content
Tech News
← Back to articles

YouTube’s TV takeover continues with 24/7 streaming ‘Stations’

read original get YouTube TV Streaming Device → more articles
Why This Matters

YouTube's introduction of 24/7 streaming 'Stations' marks a significant shift towards passive, linear viewing experiences, aligning with the rising popularity of FAST channels and expanding YouTube's role in the living room entertainment ecosystem. This development offers both content creators and consumers new ways to engage with music and event content seamlessly, enhancing the platform's versatility and appeal in the streaming landscape.

Key Takeaways

Posts from this author will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

When Coachella returns to YouTube next week, the music festival will be offering more than just live performances. Viewers will also be able to tune into something YouTube calls Stations — 24/7 linear streams preprogrammed with videos from artists performing at the festival, perfect for playing in the background or vegging out on the couch.

Stations are essentially YouTube’s take on FAST channels: free linear streaming TV channels that have gained popularity on services like Pluto and The Roku Channel, and are now baked into the EPGs of most smart TV operating systems.

One of the reasons FAST channels have become so popular is that they bring back passive leanback viewing, doing away with the need to find something to watch when you just want to hit play. As YouTube viewing has grown in the living room, the service has seen its viewers interested in the same thing.

“I want to put something on,” says YouTube’s senior product management director, Kurt Wilms. “I want it to be hands-free. I want it to stay in the same lane.”

YouTube quietly started testing these stations with around 40 bands and musicians in recent weeks, and plans to make the feature available widely in the future. One of the early adopters is Bruno Mars, who is currently promoting his new album with a YouTube Station.

To a viewer, such a station looks a lot like a live broadcast, complete with an audience chat. Some YouTubers have actually used YouTube’s livestreaming feature to set up similar linear feeds. However, rolling something like this on your own isn’t exactly easy, as it involves broadcasting software running on a PC 24/7 to create livestreams from prerecorded assets playing in an endless loop. If the PC ever goes down, the stream stops.

Stations are a lot easier to set up. “A creator can come onto YouTube, go into our studio product, set up a playlist of videos,” explains Wilms. “They click ‘Start Station,’ and we’ll do all the work to start the livestream for them.”

YouTube isn’t ready to share a timeline for when Stations will be made available to all creators. Wilms is already thinking about taking the feature further and opening it up to regular viewers. “We’re going to democratize it,” he says. “Anyone will be able to go in, make a playlist, and click ‘Start a Station.’ That’s what we want to get to, ultimately.”

Stations is just one of the features YouTube is looking to roll out to make its living room experience even more sticky. Earlier this week, the service launched its conversational AI tools, which debuted on web and mobile last year, within its TV app. With that, viewers are now able to ask a wide range of questions about a video with their TV’s voice remote.

... continue reading