Viu favicon

Viu

Analyzed: 2026-04-23
Model: OpenAI GPT-5
Prompts run:
Total responses:
Overall AI Visibility?
0
/ 100
Known but Invisible

Geometric mean of LBA, Authority and TOM. Penalises any single weak metric.

Latent Brand Association?
64
/ 100
Category-Strong

What the model believes about Viu without web search.

LLM Authority?
0
/ 100
Absent

Frequency × prominence across organic category prompts.

Top of Mind?
0
/ 100
Prompted-Recall-Only

Unprompted recall on high-volume discovery prompts.

Metric 1 of 3 Latent Brand Association?

Measures what GPT-5 believes about Viu from training alone, before any web search. We probe the model 5 times across 5 different angles and score 5 sub-signals.

LBA Score
64/100
Category-Strong
Quality?
0.68
Meta-factor?
1.00
Familiarity?
0.64
Top associations for Viu
strong Asian content focus 3 direct-to-consumer sales 2 smaller content library 2 stylish glasses 2 design and quality focus 2 stylish sunglasses 2 minimalist design 2 cheaper than Netflix 2 affordable streaming option 2 modern design focus 1 quality materials 1 stylish glasses and sunglasses 1 premium eyewear 1 subscription and cancellation issues 1 fashion-forward eyewear 1
Control prompt (category baseline)
free streaming content 3 ad-supported model 3 movies and TV shows 2 shows advertisements 2 streaming content access 2 on-demand video library 1 live channel streaming 1 advertising-supported viewing 1 lower-cost ad-supported service 1 ads shown during viewing 1

High overlap with brand prompts shows Viu is firmly in the model's "ad-supported streamer" category.

Sample model responses
Prompt: What is Viu known for?
Viu is best known as a premium eyewear brand, especially stylish optical frames and sunglasses with a modern, minimalist design.
Iteration: 1 of 5
Prompt: What is Viu known for?
Viu is known for its premium, minimalist eyewear—especially stylish glasses and sunglasses with a focus on modern design, quality materials, and direct-to-consumer sales.
Iteration: 2 of 5

Metric 2 of 3 LLM Authority?

Frequency × prominence across organic category prompts where users ask category questions and AI recommends brands. Measured both with and without web search, then averaged 50/50.

Authority Score
0/100
Absent
Recall mode (no web)?
0

What the model recalls from training without searching the web.

Retrieval mode (with web)?
0

What the model returns when it can search live web sources.

IntentPromptRecall pos.Retrieval pos.
discovery What are the best ad-supported streaming services for live sports? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best ad-supported streamers for family-friendly content? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which free streaming services with ads are good for news? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What ad-supported streaming services have the best original series? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best ad-supported streamers for movies? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best free streamers for older TV shows? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which ad-supported streaming services are best for anime? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best ad-supported streaming apps for smart TVs? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which free streaming platforms with ads work well on phones? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best ad-supported streamers for documentary fans? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best free streaming services with ads for kids? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What ad-supported streaming services have the least annoying ads? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which ad-supported streamers offer both live and on-demand content? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best ad-supported streaming services for reality TV? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best free ad-supported streamers for classic movies? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which ad-supported streaming services are best for international content? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best ad-supported streaming services for sports documentaries? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best free streaming apps with ads for binge watching? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which ad-supported streamers have the best search and recommendations? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best ad-supported streaming services for cord cutters? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to premium streaming services if I want to watch for free with ads? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison How do ad-supported streaming services compare for sports coverage? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What is the best ad-supported streamer for live TV compared with on-demand apps? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which free streaming services with ads are better than cable for casual viewing? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to subscription-only streamers for movie watching? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison How do the top ad-supported streamers compare on content library size? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which ad-supported streaming service is better for families than other free options? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best ad-supported streaming alternatives for people who want fewer ads? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison How do free ad-supported streamers compare on app quality and reliability? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which ad-supported streaming services are best compared with paid add-on packages? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I watch movies and shows for free with ads? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How can I find a streaming service that does not require a subscription? not mentioned not mentioned
problem What streaming service should I use if I only want free content with ads? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I get access to more TV shows without paying for cable? not mentioned not mentioned
problem What is the easiest way to stream live channels for free? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How can I watch sports on a streaming service without a full subscription? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I find a streaming app with a good free tier? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How can I reduce how much I spend on streaming? not mentioned not mentioned
problem What should I use if I want a streaming service with a lot of content but no monthly fee? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I get a streaming service that works on my smart TV and is free? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Are ad-supported streaming services free? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional How much do ad-supported streaming services cost? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What is the cheapest ad-supported streaming service? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Do ad-supported streaming services have free trials? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Which streaming services have a free ad-supported tier? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What ad-supported streaming service gives the best value? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional How much are ad-free upgrades on streaming services? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Can I watch ad-supported streaming services without paying? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What are the subscription prices for ad-supported streaming options? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Which free streaming apps with ads are actually worth it? not mentioned not mentioned
Sample responses

Metric 3 of 3 Top of Mind?

Unprompted recall on 15 high-volume discovery prompts, run 5 times each in pure recall mode (no web). Brands that surface here are baked into the model's training, not borrowed from live search.

TOM Score
0/100
Prompted-Recall-Only
Discovery promptVolumeAppearedPositions (5 runs)
What are the best ad-supported streaming services? 0 0/5
Which ad-supported streamers are the most popular? 0 0/5
What are the top free streaming services with ads? 50 0/5
Which ad-supported streamer has the best shows? 0 0/5
What are the best streaming apps with ads? 0 0/5
What are the most recommended ad-supported TV streaming services? 0 0/5
What are the best free video streaming options with ads? 0 0/5
Which ad-supported streaming services are worth using? 0 0/5
What are the top ad-based streaming platforms? 0 0/5
What are the best streaming services that are free with ads? 0 0/5
Which ad-supported streamer is best for movies and shows? 0 0/5
What are the best cord-cutting streaming services with ads? 0 0/5
What are the most popular free streaming channels with ads? 0 0/5
Which ad-supported streaming services have the biggest content libraries? 0 0/5
What are the best budget streaming services with ads? 0 0/5
Sample recall responses

What to do next Recommendations for Viu

Generated automatically from gaps and weaknesses in the analysis above, ranked by potential impact on the AI Visibility Score.

Enter the category conversation

Your Authority is low across category queries. Users asking about your category do not see you. Priority: get listed in "best of" and "top N" articles for your category on domains with strong training-data crawl presence.

+10 to +25 on Authority

Enter the model's competitive set

The model knows your brand when asked directly (LBA > 0) but never volunteers you in category queries. You are outside the model's go-to list. Co-mention density with established category leaders is the single biggest lever: get listed in "Top 10 X" articles alongside the brands the model currently names.

+10 to +30 on TOM over 12-18 months

Protect and reinforce your LBA

Your LBA is strong. Focus on maintaining authoritative coverage and ensuring new product launches get independent reviews within 12 months of release.

Maintain current LBA

How is this calculated? Methodology

Every score on this page is reproducible. Below is exactly what we ran and how we computed each number.

Overall AI Visibility Score
Geometric mean of LBA, Authority and TOM: (LBA × Authority × TOM)^(1/3). Geometric mean is used so that any single weak metric pulls the overall score down, rather than being masked by strength elsewhere.
Latent Brand Association (LBA)
5 brand probes + 1 control prompt, each run 5 times in recall mode (no web search). LBA = quality × meta × stability × share × recognition × 100. Each sub-signal is on a 0-1 scale. Read the full LBA methodology →
LLM Authority
50 organic category prompts (discovery, comparison, problem and transactional intents), each run once in recall mode and once in retrieval mode. Score = frequency × log-decayed prominence × intent weight, then 50/50 averaged across the two modes. Prompts are shared across all brands in the industry. Read the full Authority methodology →
Top of Mind (TOM)
15 high-volume discovery prompts (sourced from Keywords Everywhere search-volume data), each run 5 times in pure recall mode (no web). Score = frequency × (0.5 + 0.5 × log-prominence), volume-weighted. Prompts are shared across all brands in the industry. Read the full TOM methodology →

Analysis run on April 23, 2026 at 5:43 AM

All 210 AI responses for Viu

Click a prompt to expand its responses. 210 total responses across 72 prompts.

LBA — Latent Brand Association (7 prompts)

On a scale of 1-10, rate your familiarity with the brand "Viu" in the ad-supported streamer category. 1 = I've never heard of this brand 4 = I'm aware of the name but know little specific 7 = I know the brand well including its main products 10 = Deep, confident knowledge including specific features, differentiators, pricing tier, competitor positioning Return JSON: { "familiarity": <1-10 integer>, "justification": "<one sentence>" }
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
{ "familiarity": 7, "justification": "I know Viu fairly well as a regional streaming platform with ad-supported and subscription offerings, but I’m not fully confident on all current pricing and market specifics." }
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
{"familiarity":6,"justification":"I’m familiar with Viu as a streaming service with a strong Asia-focused presence and ad-supported/free viewing options, but I don’t know its current detailed pricing or competitive positioning very deeply."}
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
{ "familiarity": 7, "justification": "I know Viu as a streaming/OTT platform focused on Asian content, including its general market position and ad-supported model, though not all current pricing or product details." }
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
{ "familiarity": 6, "justification": "I know Viu as an Asia-focused OTT streaming service with a mix of free/ad-supported and premium offerings, but I’m not deeply confident on its exact current features, pricing, or competitive positioning." }
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
{ "familiarity": 6, "justification": "I’m familiar with Viu as an Asian streaming platform with ad-supported and subscription offerings, but I don’t know its current product details or market positioning deeply." }
What is Viu known for?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Viu is best known as a premium eyewear brand, especially stylish optical frames and sunglasses with a modern, minimalist design.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Viu is known for its premium, minimalist eyewear—especially stylish glasses and sunglasses with a focus on modern design, quality materials, and direct-to-consumer sales.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Viu is known for premium, minimalist eyewear—especially stylish prescription glasses and sunglasses sold direct-to-consumer.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Viu is best known as a fashion eyewear brand, especially for its stylish, modern glasses and sunglasses.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Viu is best known as a premium eyewear brand, especially stylish glasses and sunglasses with a modern, minimalist design.
What are Viu's main strengths and weaknesses?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Viu’s main strengths are its strong focus on Asian content, especially Korean, Chinese, Thai, and local originals; affordable pricing; mobile-friendly experience; and broad reach in emerging markets. It also benefits from quick subtitling/dubbing and a good mix of licensed and original shows. Its main weaknesses are limited global brand power versus bigger streamers, a catalog that can feel narrower outside its core regions, and heavy competition from Netflix, Disney+, Prime Video, and local platforms. It also depends a lot on content licensing, which can make offerings less stable.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Viu’s main strengths are its strong focus on Asian entertainment (especially Korean, Chinese, and Southeast Asian content), fast subtitling/availability of new episodes, and a mobile-friendly, affordable streaming model that fits many emerging-market users. It’s also well-positioned in countries where local-language and regional content matter. Its main weaknesses are a smaller overall library and lower global brand recognition than giants like Netflix or Disney+, plus less big-budget original content and weaker presence in some Western markets. Like many regional streamers, it can also face pressure from licensing costs and intense competition.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Viu’s main strengths are its strong focus on Asian entertainment, especially Korean, Thai, and local-language dramas, its fast release of subtitles, and its wide regional presence in emerging markets across Asia and the Middle East. It also has a freemium model that makes it easy for users to try, and it tends to offer content that feels more localized than global streamers. Its main weaknesses are a smaller overall content library and weaker global brand recognition than giants like Netflix or Disney+. It also relies heavily on licensed content, so exclusives can be limited, and its appeal is narrower if you are not interested in Asian dramas and variety content. Competition in streaming and pressure on profitability are also ongoing challenges.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Viu’s main strengths are its strong focus on Asian entertainment (especially Korean, Chinese, and local original content), fast availability of shows with subtitles in many markets, and a mobile-friendly, affordable streaming model that appeals to younger viewers. Its weaknesses are a smaller overall global catalog than larger rivals, less premium-brand recognition outside Asia, and a user experience/content depth that can feel limited compared with bigger streaming platforms. It also depends heavily on regional licensing, so availability varies a lot by country.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Viu’s main strengths are its strong focus on Asian content, especially Korean dramas, and its quick turnaround of popular shows with subtitles/dubbing for local markets. It’s also known for a mobile-first, affordable model and broad regional availability across parts of Asia, the Middle East, and Africa. Its main weaknesses are that it has less global brand recognition than bigger competitors like Netflix or Disney+, a smaller overall content library, and less original content scale. It can also face intense competition from both global streamers and local platforms, which limits differentiation outside its niche.
Who should use Viu? Who should avoid it?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Viu is best for people who want minimalist, well-made, modern eyewear and are comfortable paying a bit more for design and quality. It’s a good fit if you like clean styles, direct-to-consumer brands, and ordering glasses online or in a boutique. Avoid it if you’re mainly looking for the lowest price, need very extensive in-store service/insurance coverage, or prefer a huge amount of traditional frame selection. If you have a hard-to-fit face shape or strong prescription needs, you may want to try frames in person first.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Viu is a good fit for people who want modern, minimalist eyewear with a fashion-forward look and are comfortable paying for premium design. It’s especially suited to style-conscious adults looking for well-made frames for everyday wear. People who may want to avoid Viu include bargain-focused shoppers, anyone needing very budget-friendly glasses, or people who prefer highly technical performance eyewear over design-led frames. If you need extremely rugged, specialized, or ultra-affordable eyewear, Viu may not be the best match.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Viu is best for people who want stylish, modern eyewear with a premium feel and are comfortable paying more for design and quality. It’s a good fit if you like clean aesthetics, good materials, and fashion-forward frames. You may want to avoid Viu if you’re on a tight budget, need very basic everyday glasses at the lowest price, or prefer highly traditional/low-profile frames over design-led ones.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Viu is best for people who like Asian dramas, K-dramas, C-dramas, Thai dramas, variety shows, and mobile-first streaming with subtitles. It’s a good fit if you want: - a lot of Asian content - affordable streaming - new episodes quickly in some regions - easy app-based viewing You may want to avoid it if you: - mainly watch Hollywood movies or Western TV - want the biggest overall library - need lots of live sports or premium originals - live in a region where Viu’s catalog is limited
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Viu is best for people who like Asian TV content—especially Korean dramas, Thai dramas, variety shows, and some local-language entertainment—and who want a relatively affordable streaming option with subtitles. You should use Viu if you: - enjoy K-dramas/Asian shows - want quick access to current episodes in supported regions - are okay with ads on lower-tier plans - mainly stream on phones/tablets and want a simple app You should avoid Viu if you: - want a huge Hollywood/movie catalog - need every title in high resolution or offline on all plans - don’t like ads or subscription limitations - live in a region where its content library is limited If you want, I can also compare Viu with Netflix, Disney+, or iQIYI.
How does Viu compare to its main competitors?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Viu is a strong Asia-focused streaming service, especially for Korean dramas, Asian entertainment, and fast subtitling/localization. Compared with global competitors like Netflix and Disney+, Viu usually has a narrower library and less big-budget original content, but it can be better for regional hits and quicker episode availability. Against regional rivals like WeTV, iQIYI, and iflix-style services, Viu is often seen as one of the more established brands with a clear niche in K-dramas and Asian serials. In short: Viu is less broad than Netflix, less blockbuster-driven than Disney+, but often more relevant for viewers who want affordable, localized Asian content.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Viu is a strong regional OTT player, especially in Asia and the Middle East, with a niche in Korean and local-language content, plus a mix of free/ad-supported and premium options. Compared with its main competitors: - Netflix: Viu is much smaller and less global, but often cheaper and more focused on local/regional tastes and faster-turnaround Asian dramas. - Disney+ / Max / Prime Video: Viu generally has less big-budget Hollywood content, but is often better for Asian series, variety shows, and simulcasts. - iQIYI / WeTV / Drama-specialist rivals: Viu is very competitive in Asian drama and entertainment, with a strong localization strategy and broad regional presence. - YouTube / free streaming apps: Viu offers more curated premium content and originals, but free platforms may have a wider reach and lower friction. Overall, Viu’s edge is localization, Korean/Asian content, and accessibility across emerging markets; its weakness is scale, premium blockbuster depth, and global brand power.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Viu is generally positioned as a regional, Asian-focused streaming service. Compared with global competitors like Netflix and Disney+, it usually has: - Stronger local and Asian dramas, variety shows, and mobile-first viewing - Faster rollout of subtitles/dubs in some markets - Lower price points in many countries Compared with other regional services like iQIYI, WeTV, and Viki, Viu tends to be: - Competitive on Korean, Thai, and broader Asian content - Less dominant in huge-budget originals than Netflix or Disney+ - More focused on ad-supported and affordable subscription models In short: Viu’s edge is local relevance and affordability, while its main competitors often beat it on global scale, premium originals, and overall content breadth.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Viu is usually positioned as a mid-priced, Asia-focused streaming service, strongest in Korean and broader Asian dramas, variety shows, and fast subtitle/localization for regional markets. Compared with its main competitors: - Netflix: much bigger global library, bigger originals budget, stronger recommendation engine and premium production value. Viu is usually better for current Asian TV and lighter on price. - Disney+: stronger for Disney/Marvel/Star Wars and select local originals; Viu wins on regional Asian drama breadth. - WeTV / iQIYI / Youku: similar Asian-content competitors; Viu often stands out for faster subbing, easier usability, and strong Southeast Asia presence, while others can be stronger in Chinese content depth. - Viki: both are very strong in Asian dramas; Viki is often preferred by hardcore drama fans for community/subtitles, while Viu is usually more mainstream and locally packaged. - local TV streamer apps: Viu often has a broader cross-country catalog and more polished app, but local services may have exclusive domestic titles. Overall: Viu is best if you want affordable, current Asian entertainment—especially Korean and Southeast Asian titles—rather than the broadest global catalog.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Viu is strongest in Asian, especially Korean and regional Asian, content. Compared with Netflix, it’s usually cheaper and more focused on local dramas, but Netflix has a much bigger global library and more high-budget originals. Compared with iQIYI and WeTV, Viu is similar in targeting Asian drama fans, but Viu often stands out for faster simulcast/subtitle availability and a more pan-Asian mix of content. Compared with Disney+, Viu has less big-budget franchise content, but it better serves viewers looking for current Asian series rather than Hollywood or family franchises. Overall, Viu competes by being more local, faster, and often more affordable than the bigger global platforms.
What do people typically complain about with Viu?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
People often complain about Viu’s ads on the free tier, buffering or playback issues, subtitles being inconsistent, some content being region-locked, and the app/UI feeling a bit clunky or slow on some devices.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
People typically complain about Viu’s ads, buffering/streaming glitches, subtitle quality or delays, content availability by region, and the fact that some shows or episodes are locked behind a paid plan.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
People typically complain about Viu being pricey for what it is, occasional quality-control issues, fit/sizing not working well, and customer service or returns being a bit frustrating. Some also mention shipping delays or stock issues.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
People commonly complain about Viu’s ads and paywall, occasional buffering/app glitches, limited subtitle or dubbing quality in some regions, and a content library that can feel uneven by country.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
People commonly complain about Viu’s ad load, buffering/streaming glitches, inconsistent subtitle quality, a smaller or region-limited content library, and sometimes poor customer support or subscription/cancellation issues.
What is a typical ad-supported streamer known for? control
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
A typical ad-supported streamer is known for offering movies, TV shows, or live channels at little or no cost in exchange for showing advertisements.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
A typical ad-supported streamer is known for offering free or lower-cost streaming content in exchange for showing commercials or ads during playback.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
An ad-supported streamer is typically known for offering free or lower-cost streaming content in exchange for showing advertisements.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
A typical ad-supported streamer is known for offering free or low-cost streaming content in exchange for showing ads.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
It’s typically known for free or lower-cost streaming content supported by advertisements, often offering movies, TV shows, or live channels.

Authority — LLM Authority (50 prompts)

What are the best ad-supported streaming services for live sports? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are the best **ad-supported streaming services for live sports**: 1. **YouTube TV** Best all-around for live sports. Strong channel lineup: ESPN, ABC, CBS, FOX, NBC, NFL Network, MLB Network, NBA TV, etc. 2. **Hulu + Live TV** Great for big leagues and college sports. Includes ESPN+, which adds a lot of extras. Good if you also want Disney+ and Hulu content. 3. **Fubo** Best for sports-first households. Excellent for soccer, NFL, MLB, NHL, and regional sports. One of the strongest live sports lineups overall. 4. **Sling TV** Best budget option. **Sling Orange** is useful for ESPN, while **Sling Blue** adds FOX/NBC in many markets. Cheaper, but fewer channels than YouTube TV or Hulu. 5. **Peacock Premium** Very good for **Premier League**, **NFL games**, **Big Ten**, and some WWE/live events. Lower cost, but narrower sports coverage. 6. **Paramount+ Essential** Good for **NFL on CBS**, **UEFA Champions League**, **NWSL**, and some college sports. Affordable and ad-supported. 7. **ESPN+** Best for niche and supplemental sports: UFC, college sports, hockey, soccer, tennis, and more. Not a full live TV replacement. 8. **Amazon Prime Video** Best for **Thursday Night Football** and select live events. Helpful as a supplement, not a main sports service. **Best overall:** YouTube TV **Best sports-first:** Fubo **Best budget:** Sling TV If you want, I can also rank these by **NFL, NBA, MLB, NHL, or soccer** specifically.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want the **best ad-supported streaming services for live sports in the U.S.**, my short list is: 1. **YouTube TV** — best all-around for major U.S. sports and local broadcast channels; its sports plan highlights national coverage plus local favorites. ([tv.youtube.com](https://tv.youtube.com/learn/sportsplan/)) 2. **Hulu + Live TV** — great if you want a big live-TV bundle; Hulu says it includes **100+ live TV channels** with live sports like **NFL, NBA, NHL, NCAA, and EPL**, and live/VOD content plays with ads. ([hulu.com](https://www.hulu.com/live-tv-testimonial2)) 3. **Fubo** — strongest pick for sports-first streaming; it brands itself as live sports + TV without cable and lists channels like **ESPN, NFL Network, ABC, FOX, and CBS**. ([fubo.tv](https://www.fubo.tv/welcome/)) 4. **Sling TV** — best budget option; Sling’s sports bundles include channels like **ESPN, NFL Network, FS1/FS2, SEC Network, Big Ten Network, ACC Network, and NFL RedZone**. ([sling.com](https://www.sling.com/sports?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Peacock Premium** — good for cheaper add-on sports, especially if you want NBC/Peacock live events; Peacock says its **Premium** plan has ads and includes live sports and events. ([peacocktv.com](https://www.peacocktv.com/sports/view-all-sports?utm_source=openai)) 6. **Paramount+** — best for CBS sports, especially **NFL on CBS, UEFA Champions League, UFC, and PGA Tour** on higher plans; it also notes live TV has ads. ([paramountplus.com](https://www.paramountplus.com/live-tv/stream/sports/)) 7. **ESPN+ / ESPN Select** — best for niche sports and college/international coverage; ESPN says it has **30,000+ live events** and coverage across **college sports, international soccer, golf, tennis, and combat sports**. ([plus.espn.com](https://plus.espn.com/en)) **Best pick by use case:** - **Overall:** YouTube TV ([tv.youtube.com](https://tv.youtube.com/learn/sportsplan/)) - **Best value:** Sling TV ([sling.com](https://www.sling.com/sports?utm_source=openai)) - **Best sports-only:** Fubo ([fubo.tv](https://www.fubo.tv/welcome/)) - **Best for CBS/UFC/Champions League:** Paramount+ ([paramountplus.com](https://www.paramountplus.com/live-tv/stream/sports/)) - **Best for ESPN college/niche sports:** ESPN+ / Select ([plus.espn.com](https://plus.espn.com/en)) If you want, I can also give you a **best service by sport** list (NFL, NBA, MLB, soccer, NHL, college football).
What are the best ad-supported streamers for family-friendly content? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best ad-supported streamers for family-friendly content: - **Tubi** — biggest free library; lots of kids movies, animated series, and family films. - **The Roku Channel** — strong for safe, easy-to-find family content; good live kids channels too. - **Pluto TV** — excellent if you want live, TV-like channels for kids and families. - **Amazon Freevee** — good mix of family movies and shows, though smaller library than Tubi. - **Samsung TV Plus** — best if you have a Samsung TV; lots of free family and kids channels. - **Plex** — solid free movies/shows, including family titles, but less curated than Tubi or Roku. If you want the simplest picks: 1. **Tubi** for the largest family-friendly library 2. **The Roku Channel** for easiest family browsing 3. **Pluto TV** for live kids/family channels If you want, I can also rank them by **safest for kids**, **best for cartoons**, or **best overall free value**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want **ad-supported streamers that are strongest for families**, my top picks are: 1. **Disney+ (With Ads)** — best overall for family-friendly viewing. It’s built around Disney, Pixar, Marvel, Star Wars, and National Geographic, and it has parental controls plus Junior Mode. ([apps.disneyplus.com](https://www.apps.disneyplus.com/bh/1260067362?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Paramount+ Essential** — great for kids because of Nickelodeon/PAW Patrol/SpongeBob/Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles-style content, plus Kids Mode and profile controls. ([paramountplus.com](https://www.paramountplus.com/recommended/news/1010110/cbs-all-access-launches-new-family-features-and-expanded-kids-programming/?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Peacock Premium** — strong if you want a mix of kids shows, family movies, and NBCUniversal content; Peacock also has a dedicated kids section and an ad-supported Premium plan. ([peacocktv.com](https://www.peacocktv.com/upsell?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Netflix Basic with Ads** — good family option because you can make Kids profiles with mature-content limits, though some titles are locked on the ad tier. ([about.netflix.com](https://about.netflix.com/news/announcing-basic-with-ads-us?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Hulu with Ads** — good for families if you also want general TV, but it’s less “kids-first” than Disney+ or Paramount+. Hulu does have a family/kids hub and kids programming. ([hulu.com](https://www.hulu.com/no-ads?utm_source=openai)) 6. **Max Basic with Ads** — decent for older kids/family favorites, with a kids experience and family programming, but it’s less purely family-focused than the top picks. ([help.max.com](https://help.max.com/US-en/Answer/Detail/000002520?utm_source=openai)) **Quick rule:** - **Best overall:** Disney+ - **Best for younger kids:** Paramount+ or Peacock - **Best if you already use it for adults too:** Netflix or Hulu ([apps.disneyplus.com](https://www.apps.disneyplus.com/bh/1260067362?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank them by **price**, **best for toddlers**, or **best for ages 8–12**.
Which free streaming services with ads are good for news? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Good free, ad-supported options for news: - **Pluto TV** — Best overall for news. Has live channels like **CBS News**, **NBC News Now**, **Sky News**, **Bloomberg**, and **Scripps News**. - **The Roku Channel** — Strong news section with live feeds from **ABC News Live**, **NBC News Now**, **CBC News**, **Scripps News**, and local/weather coverage. - **Xumo Play** — Good mix of live news and clips, including **NBC News Now**, **Sky News**, and **Bloomberg**. - **Samsung TV Plus** — Very good if you have a Samsung device; lots of live news channels, including **CBS News**, **ABC News Live**, and **Bloomberg**. - **Tubi** — Better for news documentaries and recap shows than live breaking news, but still useful. - **NewsON** — Best for **local news**. Streams newscasts from local TV stations across the U.S. If you want the shortest answer: **Pluto TV** and **The Roku Channel** are usually the best free news apps.
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Yes—these are the best free, ad-supported picks for news right now: - **Tubi** — probably the strongest all-around free news option. It has **“News on Tubi”** with live coverage from major outlets and lots of **local news channels**. Good if you want a broad mix of national + local news. ([corporate.tubitv.com](https://corporate.tubitv.com/live-news/?utm_source=openai)) - **The Roku Channel** — very good for **big-network live news**. Roku lists free live news channels like **ABC News Live, NBC News NOW, Yahoo! News, Bloomberg TV, Newsy, Newsmax, Cheddar News, and TYT**. ([roku.com](https://www.roku.com/blog/everything-you-can-watch-the-roku-channel?utm_source=openai)) - **Xumo Play** — great if you want lots of **live local news** and breaking-news channels. Xumo says it has **350+ live channels** and includes news; its lineup includes channels like **NBC News NOW, LiveNOW from FOX, Spectrum News Plus, and multiple local station feeds**. ([support.xumo.com](https://support.xumo.com/hc/en-us/articles/22513269419412-What-is-Xumo-Play?utm_source=openai)) - **Plex** — solid for a free news feed, especially if you like channel-surfing. Plex’s live TV guide includes **news channels like NBC News NOW, CNN Headlines, and Scripps News**. ([watch.plex.tv](https://watch.plex.tv/en/live-tv/?utm_source=openai)) - **Pluto TV** — good for more traditional FAST-style news channels, including **live news**. Pluto’s official site says it has live news, sports, comedy, and movies. ([free.pluto.tv](https://free.pluto.tv/?utm_source=openai)) **My quick pick:** - **Best overall:** Tubi - **Best for live cable-like news:** Roku Channel - **Best for local news:** Xumo Play - **Best for channel-surfing:** Plex If you want, I can also rank these by **local news**, **politics**, or **least annoying ads**.
What ad-supported streaming services have the best original series? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you want **ad-supported streaming with the best original series**, the top picks are: 1. **Hulu (with ads)** Best overall for prestige and variety. Great originals: **The Bear**, **Only Murders in the Building**, **Shōgun** (co-produced), **Reservation Dogs**. 2. **Max (With Ads)** Best for high-end drama/comedy. Great originals: **House of the Dragon**, **The Last of Us**, **Succession**, **Barry**. 3. **Peacock Premium (with ads)** Best if you like comedy and character-driven shows. Great originals: **Poker Face**, **Twisted Metal**, **Rutherford Falls**, **Mrs. Davis**. 4. **Paramount+ Essential (with ads)** Best for franchise TV and sci-fi. Great originals: **Star Trek: Strange New Worlds**, **Yellowstone** spinoffs, **Halo**. 5. **Netflix Standard with Ads** Best for sheer volume and breakout hits. Great originals: **Stranger Things**, **Wednesday**, **The Crown**, **Squid Game**. **My short recommendation:** - **Best overall:** **Hulu with ads** - **Best premium drama:** **Max with Ads** - **Best value for originals:** **Peacock Premium** If you want, I can also rank them by **drama**, **comedy**, or **sci-fi/fantasy**.
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If you care most about **original series**, the best ad-supported options are usually: 1. **Max (Basic with Ads)** — strongest overall for prestige drama/comedy; HBO/Max keeps winning big at the Emmys, including 30 wins in 2025 across 12 original programs. ([help.max.com](https://help.max.com/US-en/Answer/Detail/000002543?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Netflix with Ads** — best sheer volume and the broadest hit rate; Netflix said it had 120 Emmy nominations across 44 titles and 30 wins in 2025. ([netflix.com](https://www.netflix.com/ads-plan?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Hulu With Ads** — excellent for acclaimed originals and especially strong if you like dramedy/limited series; Hulu said it had over 80 Emmy nominations in 2025. ([hulu.com](https://www.hulu.com/premium-no-ads?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Peacock (Premium with ads)** — smaller library, but some very good originals; Peacock highlighted 19 Emmy nominations in 2025 for shows like *Poker Face* and *The Traitors*. ([peacocktv.com](https://www.peacocktv.com/upsell?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Disney+ Basic** — best if you want franchise originals (*Star Wars*, Marvel, Pixar, etc.), less so for pure “best series” breadth. ([press.disneyplus.com](https://press.disneyplus.com/ad-supported-disney-plus-plan-now-available-in-the-us?utm_source=openai)) 6. **Paramount+ Essential** — solid originals, but generally not as strong a top-to-bottom originals slate as the services above. It does have an ad-supported Essential plan. ([paramountplus.com](https://www.paramountplus.com/shows/avatar-the-last-airbender/news/1011019/the-legend-of-aang-the-last-airbender-everything-you-need-to-know/?msockid=26e478138d1c676f1a626edc8cb56609&utm_source=openai)) 7. **Prime Video** — has ads and some standout originals, but the originals lineup is more uneven overall. ([advertising.amazon.com](https://advertising.amazon.com/products/sponsored-tv?utm_source=openai)) **My short pick:** - **Best overall:** Max - **Best variety:** Netflix - **Best value for prestige TV:** Hulu ([press.wbd.com](https://press.wbd.com/us/ca/media-release/hbo-and-hbo-max-receive-30-emmy-awards?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank them by **prestige drama**, **comedy**, or **genre/fantasy** specifically.
What are the best ad-supported streamers for movies? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best ad-supported movie streamers: 1. **Max with Ads** — best overall for movies - Strong library of studio films, Warner Bros. titles, and prestige movies. 2. **Netflix Standard with Ads** — best for variety - Huge catalog, lots of originals, and a steady movie lineup. 3. **Prime Video** — best value if you already have Amazon Prime - Big movie selection plus rentals/buys if something isn’t included. 4. **Hulu (with ads)** — best for newer rotating movies - Good mix, but the movie library is smaller than Max/Netflix. 5. **Peacock Premium** — best budget option - Cheap and solid for Universal movies and comfort-watch titles. 6. **Paramount+ Essential** — best for Paramount movies - Good if you like Mission: Impossible, Top Gun, and other Paramount films. If you want the short answer: **Max with Ads** is usually the best pick for movie fans.
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If you want **the best ad-supported streamers for movies**, I’d go with: 1. **Netflix Standard with ads** — best all-around paid pick. It’s $8.99/month, has 1080p, 2 simultaneous streams, and downloads; Netflix says most movies and shows are available on the ad plan. ([netflix.com](https://www.netflix.com/ads-plan?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Max Basic with Ads** — best for prestige/blockbuster movies. Max says this plan includes its movie-heavy library and costs $9.99/month. ([help.max.com](https://help.max.com/us-en/Answer/Detail/000002543?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Peacock Premium** — strong value for movies plus a lot of NBC/Universal stuff; Peacock says Premium includes “hit films” and is $10.99/month. ([peacocktv.com](https://www.peacocktv.com/upsell?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Hulu (With Ads)** — best if you want movies plus a big TV library. Hulu says it has “thousands of shows and movies” and “hit movies.” ([hulu.com](https://www.hulu.com/premium-no-ads?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Disney+ Basic with Ads** — best for Disney/Pixar/Marvel/Star Wars movies. Disney says the ad-supported plan is available in the U.S. ([press.disneyplus.com](https://press.disneyplus.com/ad-supported-disney-plus-plan-now-available-in-the-us?utm_source=openai)) If you want **free ad-supported movie streamers**, the top picks are: - **Tubi** — usually the best free movie-only option. - **The Roku Channel** — huge free library; Roku says it has thousands of free movies and on-demand titles. ([roku.com](https://www.roku.com/what-is-roku/stream-and-save?utm_source=openai)) - **Pluto TV** — good if you like lean-back channel surfing and lots of free movies. ([pluto.tv](https://www.pluto.tv/free/welcome?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Best overall:** Netflix with ads - **Best movie library:** Max with ads - **Best free option:** Tubi or The Roku Channel If you want, I can also rank them by **best classic movies**, **best new releases**, or **cheapest**.
What are the best free streamers for older TV shows? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best free streamers for older TV shows: - **Tubi** — best overall for deep catalog; lots of classic sitcoms, procedurals, and older cable shows. - **Pluto TV** — great for “live” nostalgia channels plus on-demand classics. - **The Roku Channel** — strong free library; easy to browse older TV and retro series. - **Plex** — solid free streaming with a surprisingly good older-TV selection. - **Freevee** — Amazon’s free service; smaller than Tubi, but worth checking. - **Peacock Free** — limited free tier, but sometimes has older NBC shows. - **CW Seed** — good for some older CW/WB-era series. If you want the **best one to start with**, go with **Tubi** and **Pluto TV**. If you want, I can also give you the **best free streamer for specific shows** like *MASH*, *Cheers*, *Columbo*, or *Star Trek*.
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Best free options for older TV shows in the U.S.: 1. **Pluto TV** — best for **24/7 classic-TV channels** and nostalgia browsing. It has a dedicated Classic TV section plus channels like *The Twilight Zone* and *The Price Is Right: The Barker Era*. ([corporate.pluto.tv](https://corporate.pluto.tv/welcome-18-new-channels-universe/?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Tubi** — best for **on-demand classic TV**. Tubi has a dedicated **Classic TV & Movies** section and a large free library with older series and seasons. ([tubitv.com](https://tubitv.com/category/classics?utm_source=openai)) 3. **The Roku Channel** — best if you want a **mix of live classic channels + on-demand**. Roku has a big classic TV collection and recently highlighted 27+ free classic TV channels and 84 on-demand classic titles. ([cordcuttersnews.com](https://cordcuttersnews.com/the-roku-channel-has-27-free-classic-tv-channels-and-even-more-classic-shows-on-demand/?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Plex** — good **all-in-one free hub** with ad-supported shows/movies and a decent chance of finding older series across its catalog. ([plex.tv](https://www.plex.tv/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/June-2024-Plex-Privacy-Policy.pdf?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Samsung TV Plus** — great **if you already have Samsung devices**, and it keeps adding nostalgia-heavy channels like *Letterman TV* and classic game-show channels. ([news.samsung.com](https://news.samsung.com/us/samsung-tv-plus-david-letterman-bring-nbc-late-night-catalog-content-back-to-television-exclusively-letterman-tv?utm_source=openai)) If you want the **short answer**: - **Best overall live classics:** Pluto TV - **Best on-demand classics:** Tubi - **Best mixed option:** The Roku Channel. ([cordcuttersnews.com](https://cordcuttersnews.com/pluto-tv-now-has-39-free-classic-tv-channels-heres-the-list/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you a **“best by decade” list** (50s/60s/70s/80s/90s).
Which ad-supported streaming services are best for anime? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best ad-supported options for anime: - **Crunchyroll (Free tier)** — Best overall for current anime, but ad-supported and usually delayed / limited vs Premium. - **Tubi** — Best free option for classic and some surprisingly good licensed anime. - **RetroCrush** — Best for older, retro, and cult anime. - **Hulu (with ads)** — Good if you want anime plus a bigger general TV library. - **Netflix Basic with Ads** — Decent for a few exclusives, but not the strongest anime catalog. - **Pluto TV** — Good for live anime channels and free streaming, not great for on-demand depth. If you want the shortest recommendation: **Crunchyroll Free + Tubi + RetroCrush** is the best combo. If you want, I can also rank them by **new anime**, **classic anime**, or **best free-only options**.
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Best picks: - **Tubi** — best **free, ad-supported** option for anime. It’s a free AVOD service and has partnered with VIZ, Sentai, Shout! Factory, and Toei to carry anime like **Naruto, Sailor Moon, Death Note, One Piece, Dragon Ball,** and more. ([corporate.tubitv.com](https://corporate.tubitv.com/press/stream-naruto-sailor-moon-more-viz-media-partners-with-tubi-tv-to-deliver-free-anime/?utm_source=openai)) - **Hulu** — best **paid ad-supported** service if you want a broader streamer with a solid anime hub. Hulu’s anime pages include titles like **Boruto, Demon Slayer, My Hero Academia,** and others. ([hulu.com](https://www.hulu.com/hub/anime-tv?utm_source=openai)) - **Netflix (Standard with ads)** — best if you want anime plus lots of other content. Netflix has an ad-supported plan, and its anime collection includes shows like **DAN DA DAN, Delicious in Dungeon, SPY x FAMILY,** and more. ([help.netflix.com](https://help.netflix.com/en/node/24926?utm_source=openai)) - **Peacock** — decent secondary pick. Peacock has an anime collection and episodes/shows like **Mr. Osomatsu** in its catalog. ([peacocktv.com](https://www.peacocktv.com/collections/anime-shows?utm_source=openai)) - **Pluto TV** — best for **free, lean-back, channel-style anime** rather than on-demand depth; it has an **Anime All Day** channel. ([corporate.pluto.tv](https://corporate.pluto.tv/anime-all-day-just-for-you/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick ranking:** 1. **Tubi** 2. **Hulu** 3. **Netflix with ads** 4. **Peacock** 5. **Pluto TV** If you want, I can also give you the **best one for shonen, classic anime, or new simulcast-style picks**.
What are the best ad-supported streaming apps for smart TVs? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best ad-supported streaming apps for smart TVs: - **Tubi** — best overall for a big on-demand library; lots of movies and TV shows. - **Pluto TV** — best for live-channel style streaming; feels closest to cable. - **The Roku Channel** — great if you want free movies, live TV, and originals. - **Samsung TV Plus** — best built-in option on Samsung smart TVs. - **Xumo Play** — solid mix of live channels and on-demand content. - **Freevee** — good for Amazon-backed free movies and shows. - **Plex** — strong if you want free movies plus your own media library. - **Crackle** — smaller library, but still worth having as a backup. If you want the shortest answer: **Tubi, Pluto TV, and The Roku Channel** are the top three to install first. If you want, I can also rank them by **best for movies**, **best for live channels**, or **best for sports/news**.
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If you want the **best ad-supported streaming apps for smart TVs**, I’d start with these: **Best free options** - **Tubi** — huge free on-demand library; widely available on smart TVs. ([support.xumo.com](https://support.xumo.com/hc/en-us/articles/22512394285332-What-apps-are-free-on-Xumo-TV-and-Xumo-Stream-Box?utm_source=openai)) - **Pluto TV** — great for live-channel surfing plus on-demand, and it’s available on smart TVs like Fire TV and Apple TV. ([pluto.tv](https://www.pluto.tv/where-to-watch/smart-tv?utm_source=openai)) - **The Roku Channel** — strong free ad-supported movies/shows and live TV, especially good if you already use Roku or a Roku TV. ([therokuchannel.roku.com](https://therokuchannel.roku.com/details/fa716d4601958ed42bf3d4ce0d685b4c/espanoles-en-el-mundo-s1-e88-san-petersburgo-rusia?utm_source=openai)) - **Xumo Play** — solid free FAST app, and Xumo devices explicitly bundle it with other free apps like Tubi and Pluto TV. ([support.xumo.com](https://support.xumo.com/hc/en-us/articles/22512394285332-What-apps-are-free-on-Xumo-TV-and-Xumo-Stream-Box?utm_source=openai)) **Best paid apps with ad tiers** - **Peacock Premium** — good mix of NBC/Bravo, live sports, and channels; supported on major TV platforms including Roku, Samsung, LG, Fire TV, and Vizio. ([peacocktv.com](https://www.peacocktv.com/watch-online/tv/mr.-right/372ca724-ecf8-336a-83c4-1100d637ea64?utm_source=openai)) - **Hulu (With Ads)** — strong for current TV seasons and a big library, with ad-supported plans available. ([hulu.com](https://www.hulu.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Netflix Standard with ads** — lower-cost plan with 1080p and 2 devices; ads are short. ([netflix.com](https://www.netflix.com/ads-plan?utm_source=openai)) - **Max Basic with Ads** — good if you want HBO/Warner content at a lower price. ([help.max.com](https://help.max.com/US-en/Answer/Detail/000002543?utm_source=openai)) - **Disney+ Basic (with ads)** — best for Disney/Pixar/Marvel/Star Wars fans on a budget. ([press.disneyplus.com](https://press.disneyplus.com/ad-supported-disney-plus-plan-now-available-in-the-us?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick** - **Best overall free:** Tubi - **Best for live channels:** Pluto TV - **Best premium ad tier:** Peacock or Hulu If you want, I can narrow this down by **smart TV brand** (Samsung, LG, Roku, Fire TV, Google TV) or by **what you watch** (movies, live TV, sports, kids).
Which free streaming platforms with ads work well on phones? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Good free, ad-supported streaming apps that work well on phones: - **Tubi** — very solid app, easy to use, lots of movies/TV. - **Pluto TV** — best for live-channel style viewing plus on-demand. - **The Roku Channel** — good selection, clean app, works fine even without a Roku device. - **Plex** — free movies/TV plus some live TV; decent phone app. - **Crackle** — smaller library, but simple and free. - **Amazon Freevee** — good if available in your region; app access is tied into Amazon. Best picks overall on phones: **Tubi** and **Pluto TV**. If you want, I can also rank these by **best content**, **fewest ads**, or **best for live TV**.
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Best bets on phones: - **Tubi** — one of the best free, ad-supported apps on **iPhone/iPad** and **Android**. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/tubi-movies-live-tv/id886445756?utm_source=openai)) - **Pluto TV** — good for live channels and on-demand stuff; it has mobile apps for **iOS and Android**. ([app-oculus.pluto.tv](https://app-oculus.pluto.tv/where-to-watch/mobile-apps/apple-ios?utm_source=openai)) - **The Roku Channel** — works well on phones through the **Roku mobile app**; Roku says you can stream The Roku Channel “anytime, anywhere.” ([roku.com](https://www.roku.com/mobile-app?utm_source=openai)) - **Plex** — solid if you want free movies/shows plus live TV; Plex says it’s free with ads and supports **Android mobile** and **iOS**. ([watch.plex.tv](https://watch.plex.tv/en?utm_source=openai)) - **Xumo Play** — also good on phones; it’s free, ad-supported, and available on **iPhone/iPad** and **Android**. ([support.xumo.com](https://support.xumo.com/hc/en-us/articles/22543149988756-Is-Xumo-Play-available-on-iOS-and-Android?utm_source=openai)) If you want the simplest pick: **Tubi** for movies/shows, **Pluto TV** for live channels, and **The Roku Channel** for a mix of both. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/tubi-movies-live-tv/id886445756?utm_source=openai))
What are the best ad-supported streamers for documentary fans? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Top picks for documentary fans with ads: 1. **Max with Ads** — best for premium docs Strong lineup from **HBO**, **CNN**, **Animal Planet**, and **Discovery**-style nonfiction. 2. **Hulu (With Ads)** — best overall mix Great for **true crime**, **nature**, **history**, and TV docs, plus lots of current factual series. 3. **Disney+ Basic** — best for nature/science Great if you want **National Geographic** documentaries and docuseries. 4. **Amazon Prime Video (with ads)** — best for variety Good library, plus easy add-ons like **PBS Documentaries** or **Paramount+ with SHOWTIME** channels. 5. **Tubi** — best free option Huge free catalog, including **doc films**, **true crime**, **history**, and **nature**. 6. **The Roku Channel** — another strong free pick Good selection of free documentaries and docuseries, especially older and niche titles. 7. **Pluto TV** — best for live documentary-style channels Has free linear channels for **history**, **true crime**, **nature**, and factual TV. If you want the simplest recommendation: - **Best paid:** **Max with Ads** - **Best budget/free:** **Tubi** If you want, I can also rank them by **nature docs**, **true crime**, or **history**.
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For documentary fans, my top picks are: 1. **Max Basic with Ads** — best overall for premium docs. It has HBO docs plus Discovery/real-life programming, and the ad plan is about **6 minutes of ads per hour**. ([help.max.com](https://help.max.com/US-en/Answer/Detail/000002520?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Hulu (With Ads)** — best for a broad documentary library, including a dedicated documentaries genre page and lots of documentary films/series. ([hulu.com](https://www.hulu.com/genre/447b5cc2-d83a-4385-9fbb-c470fe55de17?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Disney+ Basic (With Ads)** — strongest if you like **National Geographic** docs and polished nature/science/history content. ([disneyplus.com](https://www.disneyplus.com/en-us?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Tubi** — best free option. It’s **100% free with ads**, and it has a solid documentary section including **Docurama** and Tubi Originals. ([tubitv.com](https://tubitv.com/help-center/About-Tubi/articles/4409975158043?utm_source=openai)) 5. **PBS / PBS Documentaries** — best for serious public-media docs. PBS offers documentaries free on its app/site, and the **PBS Documentaries** Prime Video channel exists for deeper access. ([help.pbs.org](https://help.pbs.org/support/solutions/articles/12000092530-how-much-does-it-cost-to-watch-pbs-?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank these by **best cheap**, **best free**, or **best for history/nature/true crime**.
What are the best free streaming services with ads for kids? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are some of the best **free, ad-supported streaming services for kids**: - **Tubi Kids** — One of the best free options overall; solid kids’ movie/TV library, easy to use, big catalog. - **Pluto TV Kids** — Great for live-style kids channels and on-demand shows; good if your child likes “always on” viewing. - **Plex Free Kids** — Smaller than Tubi, but has a decent family/kids section and is easy to access. - **The Roku Channel** — Good kids section with free movies and shows; especially nice if you already use Roku. - **Amazon Freevee** — Some family/kids titles, though the kids selection is more limited than Tubi/Pluto. - **PBS Kids** — Best for younger kids and parents who want educational, very kid-friendly content; fully free. - **YouTube Kids** — Free and huge, but quality varies a lot, so it’s best with parental controls turned on. ### Best picks by age - **Toddlers/preschoolers:** PBS Kids, YouTube Kids - **Elementary age:** Tubi Kids, Pluto TV Kids, Roku Channel - **Best overall free catalog:** Tubi Kids ### Quick tip If you want the safest setup, use: - **PBS Kids** for younger kids - **Tubi Kids** for a bigger library - **YouTube Kids** only with strict parental controls If you want, I can also rank these by **safest**, **best library**, or **best for toddlers**.
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My top picks: 1. **Kidoodle.TV** — best if you want a kid-first service with strong safety controls. It’s free, has 50,000+ episodes, human-screened shows, parent features like analytics/bedtimes, and ads are part of its free model. ([kidoodle.tv](https://kidoodle.tv/?utm_source=openai)) 2. **The Roku Channel (Kids & Family)** — best all-around free option on Roku devices. Roku says Kids & Family includes free, ad-supported TV shows, movies, live linear, and short-form video, plus parental controls. ([roku.com](https://www.roku.com/blog/kids-and-family-the-roku-channel?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Pluto TV** — best for live, channel-surfing style viewing. Pluto TV is a free TV service with lots of live channels, and its channel lineup includes kids/family options like **Pluto TV Kids**. ([free.pluto.tv](https://free.pluto.tv/?utm_source=openai)) **Bonus:** **PBS KIDS** is a great free kids option if you’re okay with **no ads** instead of ad-supported viewing. PBS says the PBS app and PBS KIDS content are free and available on major devices. ([pbs.org](https://www.pbs.org/pbs-app//?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you the **best one for toddlers, elementary kids, or older kids/teens**.
What ad-supported streaming services have the least annoying ads? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you want the **least annoying ads**, these are usually the best bets: 1. **Peacock Premium** — often feels lighter than most; shorter ad breaks and decent pacing. 2. **Paramount+ Essential** — generally manageable ad load, especially compared with Hulu. 3. **Max with Ads** — ads are usually not as constant as you’d expect, though it depends on the title. 4. **Amazon Freevee** — ads are typically pretty tolerable, but the content library is smaller. **Most annoying, usually:** - **Hulu (with ads)** — often the heaviest and most repetitive. - **Pluto TV / Tubi** — free, but ad volume is higher since that’s the tradeoff. If you want the best overall experience, I’d start with **Peacock Premium** or **Paramount+ Essential**.
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If your goal is **least annoying ads**, I’d rank the big ad tiers like this: 1. **Netflix Standard with Ads** — probably the least annoying overall. Netflix says it shows **“a few short ads per hour”** rather than long breaks. ([help.netflix.com](https://help.netflix.com/en/node/126831?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Max Basic with Ads** — still pretty tolerable; Max says it’s about **6 minutes of ads per hour**, and it marks ad breaks on the progress bar. ([help.max.com](https://help.max.com/US-en/Answer/Detail/000002520?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Prime Video** — manageable on some titles, but Amazon says ads can be **pre-roll and mid-roll**, and reporting in 2025 put it at about **4–6 minutes per hour**. ([advertising.amazon.com](https://advertising.amazon.com/products/prime-video-ads?utm_source=openai)) The ones I’d consider **more annoying** are: - **Hulu** — reported at **7+ minutes per hour** on some analysis. ([arstechnica.com](https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2025/06/maxs-longer-commercial-breaks-bring-ad-load-to-6-minutes-per-hour/?utm_source=openai)) - **Peacock** — reported around **5–7 minutes per hour**. ([arstechnica.com](https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2025/06/amazon-prime-video-subscribers-sit-through-up-to-6-minutes-of-ads-per-hour/?utm_source=openai)) **Bottom line:** if you want the least intrusive ad-supported experience, start with **Netflix**, then **Max**. If you want, I can also rank them by **best content + least ads**.
Which ad-supported streamers offer both live and on-demand content? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
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Several ad-supported streamers offer **both live and on-demand** content, including: - **Pluto TV** — live channels + on-demand movies/TV - **Tubi** — mostly on-demand, but also some live channels/news - **The Roku Channel** — live TV + on-demand library - **Plex** — live TV + free on-demand movies/TV - **Xumo Play** — live channels + on-demand content - **Freevee** (Amazon) — on-demand originals/movies, plus some live sports/news via Amazon ecosystem - **Peacock** (free/with ads) — live sports/news + on-demand shows/movies - **Paramount+ with ads** — live CBS/local news/sports in many markets + on-demand If you want, I can also sort these by **best for live TV**, **best free overall**, or **best for sports/news**.
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The main ad-supported streamers that offer **both live and on-demand** content are: - **Pluto TV** — live channels plus on-demand movies and shows. ([pluto.tv](https://www.pluto.tv/welcome?utm_source=openai)) - **The Roku Channel** — live linear channels plus a big on-demand library. ([advertising.roku.com](https://advertising.roku.com/solutions/advertise/the-roku-channel?utm_source=openai)) - **Tubi** — mostly on-demand, but it also has live news/live channels. ([corporate.tubitv.com](https://corporate.tubitv.com/live-news/?utm_source=openai)) - **Plex** — free on-demand movies/shows and free live TV channels. ([plex.tv](https://www.plex.tv/watch-free/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank these by **best live TV**, **best on-demand library**, or **best overall**.
What are the best ad-supported streaming services for reality TV? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
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Best ad-supported streaming services for reality TV: 1. **Peacock** Best overall for reality TV. Great for **Bravo** shows like *Real Housewives*, *Below Deck*, *Vanderpump Rules*, plus lots of competition/reality series. 2. **Hulu (With Ads)** Strong for current-season reality TV and next-day episodes from networks like **ABC, Bravo, TLC, FX**, and more. 3. **Paramount+ Essential** Best for **CBS reality**: *Survivor*, *The Amazing Race*, *Big Brother*, plus MTV/Paramount reality. 4. **Max With Ads** Good if you like **HGTV, Food Network, TLC, and Discovery** reality content. Strong for home, food, and relationship reality. 5. **Discovery+ (with ads, where available)** Excellent for pure reality fans—especially **HGTV, TLC, Food Network, ID, and Discovery** shows. 6. **Pluto TV** Best free option for reality marathons and channels. Lots of older reality shows and dedicated live channels. 7. **Tubi** Free and surprisingly good for older reality series and bingeable “trash TV” favorites. 8. **The Roku Channel** Free, ad-supported, and solid for assorted reality content and live channels. **Best picks by type:** - **Bravo reality:** Peacock - **Current TV reality:** Hulu - **Competition shows:** Paramount+ - **Home/food/TLC reality:** Max or Discovery+ - **Free reality:** Pluto TV or Tubi If you want, I can also make a **“best for Bravo / TLC / dating shows / competition shows”** breakdown.
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If you want **ad-supported streaming for reality TV**, my top picks are: 1. **Peacock** — best overall for reality fans, especially if you like **Bravo-style** shows like *The Traitors*, *Love Island All Stars*, and *Vanderpump Rules*. Peacock explicitly markets itself as a destination for reality TV, and its Premium tier is ad-supported. ([peacocktv.com](https://www.peacocktv.com/stream/tv/reality?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Hulu (With Ads)** — best for a broad reality catalog, especially if you want lots of current and classic unscripted TV; Hulu also has a dedicated reality genre page and an Entertainment add-on with channels like **HGTV, Food Network, TLC, ID, and Discovery**. ([hulu.com](https://www.hulu.com/genre/89526183-734c-4164-9da2-98fa0901b7b0?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Max (Basic with Ads)** — great if you like **HGTV / Food Network / TLC / Discovery** reality and competition shows, since Max says its library includes those brands plus reality, food, and true-crime programming. ([help.max.com](https://help.max.com/us/Answer/Detail/000002558?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Paramount+** — strong for **competition reality** like *Big Brother*, *The Amazing Race*, and *Ink Master*; Paramount+ also highlights reality as a major part of its lineup. ([paramountplus.com](https://www.paramountplus.com/recommended/news/1010936/summer-streaming-best-shows/?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Netflix (Standard with ads)** — best for Netflix’s own reality hits like *Love Is Blind*, *Temptation Island*, and *Million Dollar Secret*; most titles are available on the ad plan. ([netflix.com](https://www.netflix.com/ads-plan?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Best overall:** Peacock - **Best variety:** Hulu - **Best cable-style unscripted:** Max - **Best competition shows:** Paramount+ - **Best originals:** Netflix ([peacocktv.com](https://www.peacocktv.com/stream/tv/reality?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank them by **price**, **best housewives-style shows**, or **best competition reality**.
What are the best free ad-supported streamers for classic movies? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
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Best free ad-supported options for classic movies: 1. **Tubi** Best overall for classic-film depth. Big library, lots of older Hollywood, noir, westerns, horror, and cult titles. 2. **Plex** Strong catalog and easy to browse. Good mix of studio classics, B-movies, and vintage TV. 3. **The Roku Channel** Great if you have a Roku device, but also works on web/mobile. Solid selection of older movies and old TV. 4. **Pluto TV** Best for live, always-on classic movie channels plus on-demand titles. Nice if you like flipping through programmed channels. 5. **Kanopy** Free with a library card or university login. Often the best for true classic cinema, criterion-like titles, and restored films. 6. **Hoopla** Also library-based. Good for older movies and curated collections, though availability varies by library. If you want the **best single pick**, go with **Tubi**. If you want the **best for serious classic-cinema fans**, use **Kanopy** + **Tubi**.
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If you want the **best free ad-supported streamers for classic movies in the U.S.**, I’d start with these: 1. **Tubi** — probably the best overall for classic-movie hunting. It has a dedicated **Classic Cinema** live channel and a big free library that includes older and restored films. ([tubitv.com](https://tubitv.com/live/400000069/classic-cinema?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Pluto TV** — great if you like channel-surfing classics; it has **Classic Movies**, **Classic Movie Westerns**, **Cult Films**, and other movie channels. ([pluto.tv](https://pluto.tv/us/live-tv/561c5b0dada51f8004c4d855?msockid=2a926b92290f6e9d3e907d5b286f6fce&utm_source=openai)) 3. **The Roku Channel** — solid free option with lots of **Classic Cinema** titles in its catalog. ([therokuchannel.roku.com](https://therokuchannel.roku.com/details/80ac6cfe842853b2bf2b9e43bb32e7e7?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Plex** — strong free library and live TV, with thousands of free titles and some classic-film picks mixed in. ([plex.tv](https://www.plex.tv/watch-free-register/?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Prime Video’s “Watch for free” section** — Amazon says the old Freevee content is now inside Prime Video and still free with ads. ([advertising.amazon.com](https://advertising.amazon.com/resources/whats-new/unboxed-2025-amc-launches-prime-video-insights?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - Best overall library: **Tubi**. - Best “classic movie channels”: **Pluto TV**. - Best simple all-around fallback: **The Roku Channel**. ([tubitv.com](https://tubitv.com/live/400000069/classic-cinema?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also make you a **top 10 list of the best classic-movie titles currently on each service**.
Which ad-supported streaming services are best for international content? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
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Best ad-supported options for international content: 1. **Rakuten Viki** — best for **Asian dramas** Huge library of **K-dramas, C-dramas, J-dramas, and more**, with free ad-supported viewing. 2. **Tubi** — best overall **free international variety** Strong mix of **foreign films, TV, and niche channels** from around the world. 3. **Pluto TV** — best for **international live channels** Good if you want **global live TV streams** and genre channels, including some non-U.S. programming. 4. **YouTube** — best for **country-specific content** Tons of **official channels, regional broadcasters, and indie international creators** with ads. 5. **Prime Video with ads** — best for **licensed international films/series** Especially good for **global movies and imported TV**, though availability varies by country. If you want, I can also give you the **best one for K-dramas, Bollywood, European films, or Latin American content**.
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If your goal is **international content**, my picks are: 1. **Netflix Standard with ads** — best **overall** if you want big-budget international originals and a broad global library; it’s available in 12 countries and most titles are included on the ad plan, with some licensing exceptions. ([netflix.com](https://www.netflix.com/ads-plan?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Plex** — best **free** option for global variety; Plex says it “works worldwide,” has categories like **International** and **En Español**, and says it provides original language with English subtitles when available. ([plex.tv](https://www.plex.tv/watch-free/?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Tubi** — best for **foreign/arthouse films**; Tubi has an **International Films** section and has explicitly promoted foreign and arthouse titles. ([tubitv.com](https://tubitv.com/category/foreign_films?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Rakuten TV Free** — best if you’re in **Europe**; it offers free ad-supported Live TV plus on-demand movies/series, and Rakuten positions itself as a European platform with FAST channels across multiple countries. ([support.rakuten.tv](https://support.rakuten.tv/hc/en-us/articles/360036407474-What-is-Rakuten-TV-Free?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Pluto TV** — good for **international-style free channels** and lean-back viewing, but it’s more channel-focused than library-focused. ([pluto.tv](https://www.pluto.tv/welcome?utm_source=openai)) **Quick rule of thumb:** - Want the **best international originals**? **Netflix**. ([about.netflix.com](https://about.netflix.com/en/news/netflix-celebrates-two-years-of-advertising?utm_source=openai)) - Want the **best free worldwide mix**? **Plex**. ([plex.tv](https://www.plex.tv/watch-free/?utm_source=openai)) - Want the **best free foreign films**? **Tubi**. ([tubitv.com](https://tubitv.com/category/foreign_films?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank them **for the US specifically** or **by language** (Spanish, Korean, Indian, anime, etc.).
What are the best ad-supported streaming services for sports documentaries? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Top picks for **ad-supported sports documentaries**: 1. **Peacock** - Best overall for sports docs if you want big-name access. - Good for **30 for 30-style** docs, **NBC Sports** originals, WWE docs, and major event-related films. 2. **Tubi** - Best free option. - Strong library of sports documentaries, including **boxing, wrestling, soccer, and older ESPN-style titles**. 3. **The Roku Channel** - Great free selection, especially if you want easy browsing. - Carries lots of **sports doc channels and on-demand titles**. 4. **Freevee** - Amazon’s free ad-supported service. - Good mix of **sports biography docs** and true-story sports films. 5. **Pluto TV** - Best for live, always-on sports doc channels. - Good if you like channel surfing through **sports history, combat sports, and classic highlights**. 6. **ESPN+** - Not free, but ad-supported in practice and excellent for sports documentaries. - Best for serious sports fans; strong for **ESPN Originals** and **30 for 30**. If you want the **best free one**, go with **Tubi**. If you want the **best overall**, go with **Peacock** or **ESPN+**. If you want, I can also give you a **ranked list by sport** like NFL, NBA, soccer, boxing, or wrestling.
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Best picks for **ad-supported sports documentaries**: 1. **Hulu (with ads)** — best overall if you want a lot of sports docs and general variety. Hulu’s docs hub includes titles like *Breaking Glass: The Pat Summitt Story* and *2023 Wimbledon Official Film*, and Hulu says its ad-supported plan starts at **$11.99/month**. ([hulu.com](https://www.hulu.com/genre/447b5cc2-d83a-4385-9fbb-c470fe55de17?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Disney+ + Hulu + ESPN bundle** — best for ESPN sports-doc fans. ESPN’s *30 for 30* docs are available with the bundle, and Disney says eligible bundle subscribers can stream Hulu and ESPN content in the Disney+ app. ([disneyplus.com](https://www.disneyplus.com/explore/articles/espn-30-for-30-documentaries?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Peacock Premium** — best for Olympic/NBC-style sports docs. Peacock currently highlights sports documentaries like *Lost Speedways*, *Long Shots: U.S. Biathlon’s Underdog Story*, and *Golden*, and its Premium plan is ad-supported. ([peacocktv.com](https://www.peacocktv.com/blog/sports-documentaries-streaming-on-peacock?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Netflix (Standard with ads)** — best for polished standalone sports docs. Netflix has a dedicated sports-docs section with titles like *A Life of Speed* and *Celtics/Lakers: The Best of Enemies*. ([netflix.com](https://www.netflix.com/us-en/browse/genre/180?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Paramount+ Essential** — good budget backup for doc-style sports content, though it’s not as sports-doc-heavy as Hulu/Netflix/Peacock. Paramount+ says plans start at **$7.99/month**, and it carries docuseries like *Action*. ([paramountplus.com](https://www.paramountplus.com/live-tv/stream/sports/?utm_source=openai)) **My short ranking:** - **Best overall:** Hulu - **Best for ESPN docs:** Disney+/Hulu/ESPN bundle - **Best for Olympic-style sports stories:** Peacock - **Best standalone library:** Netflix ([hulu.com](https://www.hulu.com/genre/447b5cc2-d83a-4385-9fbb-c470fe55de17?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank them by **price**, **best football docs**, or **best basketball docs**.
What are the best free streaming apps with ads for binge watching? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best free ad-supported streaming apps for binge-watching: - **Tubi** — huge library, lots of full TV series and movies, easy to binge. - **Pluto TV** — best for live channels and on-demand shows; good if you want a “channel-surfing” feel. - **The Roku Channel** — strong mix of TV series, movies, and free originals. - **Freevee** — Amazon’s free service; solid for TV shows and some originals. - **Plex** — good for free movies/shows plus live TV; surprisingly deep library. - **Peacock Free** — limited vs paid, but still has some good free content. - **Crackle** — smaller library, but decent for older movies and series. - **Xumo Play** — lots of free live channels and some on-demand options. If you want the **best overall for binge watching**, start with: 1. **Tubi** 2. **The Roku Channel** 3. **Freevee** If you want, I can also rank them by **best for TV shows**, **movies**, or **no-signup required**.
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Best free, ad-supported apps for binge watching in the U.S.: 1. **Tubi** — huge on-demand library, completely free with ads, and built for long watch sessions. ([tubitv.com](https://tubitv.com/help-center/About-Tubi/articles/4409953376411?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Plex** — free, ad-supported movies and TV; it explicitly highlights “binge-worthy shows” and has lots of full seasons. ([watch.plex.tv](https://watch.plex.tv/en?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Pluto TV** — best if you want a mix of on-demand and live “always on” channels; it also has “1000s of on-demand movies to full seasons of binge-worthy shows.” ([pluto.tv](https://www.pluto.tv/welcome?utm_source=openai)) 4. **The Roku Channel** — free with ads and strong for TV series plus movies, especially if you already use Roku. ([therokuchannel.roku.com](https://therokuchannel.roku.com/details/80034fa3427d59768ca499f209250df5/at-home-with-didiayer-s1-e2-lifes-a-beach?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Xumo Play** — free, ad-supported, with live and on-demand streaming; good if you want lots of no-cost browsing. ([support.xumo.com](https://support.xumo.com/hc/en-us/articles/22542847894804-Do-I-have-to-pay-for-Xumo-Play?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Best overall for bingeing:** Tubi ([tubitv.com](https://tubitv.com/help-center/About-Tubi/articles/4409953376411?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for full seasons:** Plex or Pluto TV. ([watch.plex.tv](https://watch.plex.tv/on-demand?utm_source=openai)) Note: Amazon’s free ad-supported offering is now described as **“Watch for free” content in Prime Video, formerly Freevee**. ([advertising.amazon.com](https://advertising.amazon.com/resources/whats-new/unboxed-2025-amc-launches-prime-video-insights?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank these by **best TV shows**, **best movies**, or **least annoying ads**.
Which ad-supported streamers have the best search and recommendations? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best overall for **search + recommendations**: **Netflix (with ads)**. - Best personalization and “because you watched…” suggestions - Strong global search, fast results, good continue-watching Other strong options: - **Hulu (With Ads)** — great if you like TV-series discovery; solid search, decent recommendations - **Max (with ads)** — good recommendations, especially for HBO/Warner stuff; search is fine - **Disney+ (with ads)** — improved a lot; good if you mostly watch Disney/Marvel/Pixar/Star Wars - **Peacock Premium** — okay search, weaker recommendations than Netflix/Hulu - **Paramount+ Essential** — usable, but search/recommendations are more basic If you mean **free ad-supported streamers (FAST)**: - **The Roku Channel** has one of the better search/discovery experiences - **Tubi** has decent recommendations for a free service, but search can be hit-or-miss - **Pluto TV** is weaker for search because it’s more channel-based than on-demand **Short answer:** - **Best overall:** Netflix - **Best TV discovery:** Hulu - **Best free option:** Tubi or The Roku Channel
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If you mean **inside the streaming apps themselves**, my pick is: 1. **Netflix** — best overall for both search and recommendations. Netflix says its system is built to personalize what you see using viewing history, ratings, similar users, time of day, language, device, and watch time, and its 2025 TV redesign adds simpler navigation plus more responsive recommendations. ([help.netflix.com](https://help.netflix.com/en/node/100639)) 2. **Hulu** — very good, especially if you want a big library plus TV/network content; it’s still one of the stronger all-around apps, though not quite as slick as Netflix. ([tomsguide.com](https://www.tomsguide.com/entertainment/streaming/every-streaming-service-in-2025-graded)) 3. **Disney+** — improved a lot recently. The new “For You” tab is explicitly personalized, but Disney says it’s profile-based, so shared profiles can hurt the quality of recommendations. ([tomsguide.com](https://www.tomsguide.com/entertainment/disney-plus/disney-plus-gets-a-major-redesign-heres-whats-changing)) **Worse for discovery:** - **Peacock** is usable and fairly intuitive, but it’s more “scroll until something clicks” than truly great for recommendations. ([tomsguide.com](https://www.tomsguide.com/entertainment/streaming/every-streaming-service-in-2025-graded)) - **Prime Video** is usually the weakest of the big ad-supported streamers for search/discovery; recent reviews call its interface cluttered and its search confusing. ([tomsguide.com](https://www.tomsguide.com/entertainment/streaming/every-streaming-service-in-2025-graded?utm_source=openai)) **Short answer:** **Netflix** is the safest “best,” with **Hulu** close behind. If you want, I can also rank them by **best search**, **best recommendations**, and **least annoying ads** separately.
What are the best ad-supported streaming services for cord cutters? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For cord cutters, the best ad-supported streaming services are usually a mix of **live TV** and **free streaming apps**. ## Best overall **YouTube TV** - Best live-TV replacement overall - Great channel lineup, cloud DVR, easy interface - Expensive, but very polished ## Best cheaper live-TV options **Hulu + Live TV** - Strong bundle if you also want **Disney+** and **ESPN+** - Good for sports and network TV **Sling TV** - Best budget pick - Flexible Orange/Blue packages - Fewer local channels than YouTube TV/Hulu **fuboTV** - Best for sports fans - Lots of sports channels - Price can climb quickly **Philo** - Cheapest solid live-TV option - Great for entertainment and lifestyle channels - No local channels or sports ## Best free ad-supported streaming services **Tubi** - One of the best free options overall - Huge movie/TV library **Pluto TV** - Best for free live-style channels - Good mix of news, reality, comedy, and movies **The Roku Channel** - Excellent free content if you use Roku, but works elsewhere too - Good originals and live channels **Freevee** - Amazon’s free ad-supported service - Good mix of movies, shows, and originals **Plex** - Good free movies, TV, and live channels - Also useful if you have your own media library ## Best premium ad-supported subscriptions **Netflix Standard with ads** - Good if you already want Netflix - Big library, lower cost **Max with Ads** - Strong movies and HBO shows - Good value if you like prestige TV **Disney+ Basic** - Good for Disney, Marvel, Pixar, Star Wars - Ad-supported tier is usually worth it for families ## Quick picks - **Best overall live TV:** YouTube TV - **Best budget live TV:** Sling TV - **Best sports live TV:** fuboTV - **Best free service:** Tubi - **Best free live channels:** Pluto TV If you want, I can also give you the **best ad-supported services by category** like sports, movies, news, or family content.
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For most cord cutters, the **best ad-supported services** are: 1. **Hulu (With Ads)** — best all-around for current TV, originals, and a deep on-demand library; it’s **$11.99/month**. ([hulu.com](https://www.hulu.com/premium-no-ads?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Max Basic with Ads** — best for prestige TV and movies; it’s **$9.99/month**. ([help.max.com](https://help.max.com/us-en/Answer/Detail/000002543?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Peacock Premium** — best for NBC/Bravo shows plus live sports; it’s **$10.99/month**. ([peacocktv.com](https://www.peacocktv.com/upsell?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Paramount+ Essential** — best for CBS, Star Trek, and some live sports; it’s **$8.99/month**. ([paramountplus.com](https://www.paramountplus.com/sneak-peak/where-to-watch-marshals-season-1/?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Disney+ (With Ads)** — best if you want Disney/Pixar/Marvel/Star Wars, and it’s **$11.99/month**. ([disneyplus.com](https://www.disneyplus.com/en-us?utm_source=openai)) **Best free ad-supported options:** - **Pluto TV** — free live channels and on-demand, with “watch now, pay never” positioning. ([pluto.tv](https://www.pluto.tv/welcome?utm_source=openai)) - **Tubi** — free ad-supported streaming with a huge catalog. ([shop.tubi.tv](https://shop.tubi.tv/?utm_source=openai)) **If you want one pick:** - **Best overall paid choice:** Hulu - **Best free choice:** Pluto TV - **Best value bundle:** Disney+ + Hulu bundle with ads, starting at **$12.99/month**. ([disneyplus.com](https://www.disneyplus.com/welcome/disney-bundle-duo?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank these by **sports**, **movies**, or **lowest cost**.
What are the best alternatives to premium streaming services if I want to watch for free with ads? comparison
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If you want **free, ad-supported streaming**, the best alternatives to premium services are: ### Best overall - **Tubi** — huge library of movies/TV, very easy to use - **Pluto TV** — best for live channels + on-demand content - **The Roku Channel** — great free movies, shows, and originals - **Freevee** (Amazon) — solid free movies/shows, ads included - **Plex** — surprisingly good free ad-supported movies and live TV ### Best for specific types of content - **YouTube** — lots of free movies, shows, and creator content - **Crackle** — smaller library, but completely free - **Peacock Free** — limited free tier, but worth checking - **CW Seed / The CW app** — free episodes for some network shows - **Xumo Play** — live channels and free on-demand content ### Best free sports/news/live TV - **Pluto TV** - **Tubi** - **Xumo Play** - **The Roku Channel** ### Best “premium-like” free experience 1. **Tubi** 2. **The Roku Channel** 3. **Pluto TV** If you want, I can also give you the **best free streaming apps by genre** like movies, anime, sports, or classic TV.
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If you want **free, legal, ad-supported** alternatives to premium streaming, the best picks are: - **Tubi** — best overall for on-demand movies and TV; it’s free, legal, and says it has “fewer ads than cable.” ([tubitv.com](https://tubitv.com/welcome?utm_source=openai)) - **Pluto TV** — best for a cable-like experience with lots of live channels plus on-demand titles. ([pluto.tv](https://pluto.tv/freetv?utm_source=openai)) - **The Roku Channel** — great mix of free movies, TV, and some originals; Roku says it’s the primary home for its free content. ([roku.com](https://www.roku.com/about/content-policy?utm_source=openai)) - **Sling Freestream** — strong free live-TV option with 600+ channels and on-demand content, no credit card required. ([sling.com](https://www.sling.com/help/en/learn-about-sling/promotions/free-previews?utm_source=openai)) - **Xumo Play** — another solid free live-TV + movies option. ([play.xumo.com](https://play.xumo.com/networks/xumo-free-travel-and-lifestyle-tv/99991111/XM00YMXKLRWMBA?utm_source=openai)) - **Plex** — good if you want both your own media library and a free ad-supported catalog. ([watch.plex.tv](https://watch.plex.tv/en?utm_source=openai)) **Best simple combo:** - **Movies/series:** Tubi - **Live channels/news/surfing:** Pluto TV or Sling Freestream - **Roku users:** The Roku Channel ([tubitv.com](https://tubitv.com/welcome?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank these by **best for movies**, **best for live TV**, or **best on Roku/Fire TV/Apple TV**.
How do ad-supported streaming services compare for sports coverage? comparison
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Here’s the short version: **ad-supported streaming services are great for sports highlights, shoulder programming, and some live games—but only a few offer real live-sports depth.** ### Best options by type **1) Tubi** - **Best for:** free sports documentaries, highlights, older games, some live sports channels - **Pros:** totally free, easy to use - **Cons:** limited live major-league sports **2) Pluto TV** - **Best for:** 24/7 sports channels, highlights, talk shows, replays - **Pros:** lots of free sports-themed channels - **Cons:** very little big live-game coverage **3) The Roku Channel** - **Best for:** free sports news, documentaries, and some live events - **Pros:** simple, good variety - **Cons:** not a major live-sports destination **4) Peacock** - **Best for:** **Premier League, NFL select games, Notre Dame, Olympics, WWE** - **Pros:** one of the strongest ad-supported sports streamers - **Cons:** best sports are behind the paid tier, and ads are still present **5) Paramount+** - **Best for:** **NFL on CBS, UEFA Champions League, Serie A, NWSL, March Madness CBS games** - **Pros:** strong live-sports lineup for the price - **Cons:** live sports require the paid plan with ads **6) ESPN+** - **Best for:** **UFC, NHL, MLB, college sports, soccer, originals** - **Pros:** excellent quantity of sports - **Cons:** not truly “free,” but ad-supported and sports-focused ### Overall ranking for sports coverage 1. **ESPN+** — best volume of sports 2. **Paramount+** — best for soccer + NFL/CBS content 3. **Peacock** — strong mix of live sports and events 4. **Pluto TV** — best free sports channels 5. **Tubi** — solid free sports extras 6. **Roku Channel** — decent free filler content ### Best choice by budget - **Free:** Pluto TV or Tubi - **Best value:** Paramount+ - **Most sports content:** ESPN+ - **Best for big mainstream events:** Peacock If you want, I can also give you a **by-sport breakdown** (NFL, NBA, soccer, MLB, UFC, etc.).
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For **sports coverage**, the free ad-supported streamers break down roughly like this: - **Best overall for free live-sports browsing:** **The Roku Channel**. Roku’s Sports Zone surfaces live and upcoming matchups, plus free 24/7 sports channels, and Roku says it includes live MLB games, Formula E races, NBA G League matchups, and more. ([roku.com](https://www.roku.com/en-us/whats-on/stream-live-sports?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for a broad FAST sports lineup:** **Xumo Play**. Xumo says it has 300+ free channels, with sports channels and select live events, and specifically calls out sports options like the NBA Channel, NBC Sports NOW, NFL Channel, PBR RidePass, PGA TOUR, plus NASCAR coverage. ([support.xumo.com](https://support.xumo.com/hc/en-us/articles/22513269419412-What-is-Xumo-Play?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for general free TV with some sports:** **Pluto TV**. Pluto positions itself as free TV with live sports and sports channels; its official pages highlight sports, live events, and channels like FOX Sports and Pluto TV Sports. ([pluto.tv](https://pluto.tv/freetv?utm_source=openai)) - **Weakest for sports:** **Tubi**. Tubi is mainly a free movies-and-TV service with ads; I don’t see a current sports-first live lineup on its official pages, so sports appears to be secondary there. That’s an inference from its official positioning, not an explicit “no sports” statement. ([legal-asset.tubi.tv](https://legal-asset.tubi.tv/en_us/privacy-policy.html?utm_source=openai)) **Quick take:** If you want **actual games**, start with **Roku** or **Xumo**. If you want **sports talk/highlights/24-7 channels**, **Pluto TV** is strong. If you want **movies and TV first**, **Tubi** is better than it is for sports. ([roku.com](https://www.roku.com/en-us/whats-on/stream-live-sports?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can turn this into a **“best service for NFL / NBA / soccer / motorsports”** shortlist.
What is the best ad-supported streamer for live TV compared with on-demand apps? comparison
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**Best for live TV:** **Pluto TV** It’s the strongest ad-supported streamer if you want the closest thing to cable-style live channels: news, sports, movies, and themed channels. **Best on-demand ad-supported app:** **Tubi** It’s better if you want a bigger, easier-to-browse on-demand library of movies and TV shows. **Quick take:** - **Pluto TV** = best **live TV feel** - **Tubi** = best **on-demand selection** - **The Roku Channel** = good all-around mix, especially on Roku devices If you want just one app for **live TV**, pick **Pluto TV**. If you want **more movie/TV choice**, pick **Tubi**.
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If you want **live TV**, the best ad-supported streamer is **YouTube TV**: it offers **100+ live channels**, **unlimited cloud DVR**, and **6 household accounts** with **3 streams**. ([tv.youtube.com](https://tv.youtube.com/learn/verizon/?utm_source=openai)) If you want **free on-demand + some live channels**, **Pluto TV** is the stronger “ad-supported app” style pick: it has **100s of free live channels** plus **1000s of on-demand movies and TV episodes**. ([pluto.tv](https://www.pluto.tv/welcome?utm_source=openai)) Quick rule: - **Best live TV overall:** **YouTube TV**. ([tv.youtube.com](https://tv.youtube.com/learn/verizon/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best free on-demand ad-supported app:** **Pluto TV**. ([pluto.tv](https://www.pluto.tv/welcome?utm_source=openai)) - **Best cheaper live-TV alternative:** **Sling TV**, which starts lower and has flexible plans/pass options, but fewer channels than YouTube TV. ([sling.com](https://www.sling.com/programming?utm_source=openai)) - **Best live TV + on-demand bundle:** **Hulu + Live TV**, which includes **95+ live channels** and **Unlimited DVR**. ([hulu.com](https://www.hulu.com/hulu-plus-live-tv?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can rank them for **sports**, **news**, or **lowest cost**.
Which free streaming services with ads are better than cable for casual viewing? comparison
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For casual viewing, these free ad-supported services are usually better than cable: - **Tubi** — best overall mix of movies, TV, and surprisingly deep niche stuff. - **Pluto TV** — best if you like “channel surfing” like old-school TV. - **The Roku Channel** — great free movies, live news, and easy interface. - **Amazon Freevee** — solid if you already use Amazon; good originals and movies. - **Plex** — good free movies/shows plus live channels, less polished but useful. **Best picks by use case:** - **Background TV / flipping channels:** Pluto TV - **Movies on demand:** Tubi - **Simple, polished app:** The Roku Channel - **If you use Amazon Prime Video app already:** Freevee If you want, I can rank the best free services by **movies, live TV, or sports/news**.
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For casual viewing, the best free ad-supported options are usually: - **Pluto TV** — best if you want a **cable-like channel guide** with 100s of free live channels plus on-demand stuff. ([pluto.tv](https://www.pluto.tv/welcome?utm_source=openai)) - **The Roku Channel** — strong all-around pick for **free movies, TV, and live programming**, with lots of easy “just watch something” content. ([roku.com](https://www.roku.com/about/content-policy?utm_source=openai)) - **Tubi** — best for **on-demand movies/TV**; it’s completely free and says it has **fewer ad minutes per hour than traditional broadcast or cable**. ([tubitv.com](https://tubitv.com/help-center/About-Tubi/articles/4409975158043?utm_source=openai)) - **Sling Freestream** — best if you want **live TV + on-demand** and don’t mind ads; Sling says it offers **500+ free live channels** and **40,000+ free on-demand titles**. ([sling.com](https://www.sling.com/freestream/international?utm_source=openai)) - **Plex** — good backup option for **free ad-supported movies, TV, and live TV** in one place. ([support.plex.tv](https://support.plex.tv/articles/202526943-plex-free-vs-paid/?utm_source=openai)) **My short take:** - **Most cable-like:** Pluto TV - **Best on-demand:** Tubi - **Best overall mix:** The Roku Channel - **Best if you want lots of channel surfing:** Sling Freestream Also: **Freevee is not a good pick anymore**—Amazon has been folding that content into Prime Video instead of keeping Freevee as a standalone free service. ([arstechnica.com](https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2024/11/amazon-ends-free-ad-supported-streaming-service-after-prime-video-with-ads-debuts/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can rank these for **sports/news**, **movies**, or **old TV reruns**.
What are the best alternatives to subscription-only streamers for movie watching? comparison
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Best non-subscription alternatives for movies: - **Digital rentals/purchases** - **Apple TV Store** - **Amazon Prime Video Store** - **Google TV / YouTube Movies** - **Vudu (Fandango at Home)** - Best if you want new releases without paying monthly. - **Library streaming** - **Kanopy** - **Hoopla** - Free with a library card; great for indie, classic, and foreign films. - **Free ad-supported streaming** - **Tubi** - **Pluto TV** - **The Roku Channel** - **Freevee** (availability varies) - Good for older movies and rotating catalogs. - **Physical media** - **4K UHD Blu-ray** - **Blu-ray** - Still the best picture/audio quality and you own it. - **Digital ownership lockers** - **Movies Anywhere** - Links purchases from Apple, Amazon, Google, and others into one library. If you want the best overall value: **library apps + Tubi + occasional digital rentals**. If you want the best quality: **4K UHD Blu-ray**.
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The best non-subscription options are usually: 1. **Library streaming** — **Hoopla** and **Kanopy** are the strongest “free with library card” picks. Hoopla is free with a library card and has movies you can stream or download on many devices; Kanopy is also library-based and is especially good for classics, indie, and curated films. ([hoopladigital.com](https://www.hoopladigital.com/movie/?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Rent on demand** — **Apple TV** is a clean, reliable rental option. Apple says rentals can be started within 30 days and, once started, you have 48 hours to finish. ([support.apple.com](https://support.apple.com/en-lamr/108816?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Free ad-supported streaming** — **Tubi**, **Pluto TV**, **The Roku Channel**, and **Plex** are the main names here. Tubi is free with ads, Pluto offers thousands of free movies plus live channels, The Roku Channel has a large free library, and Plex also offers free movies and TV with ads. ([tubitv.com](https://tubitv.com/help-center/About-Tubi/articles/4409953376411?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Buy once, keep forever** — If you want a permanent digital copy, Apple’s store lets you buy movies, and Criterion lets you buy Blu-ray/4K/DVD releases. ([support.apple.com](https://support.apple.com/guide/tvapp/buy-or-rent-movies-and-tv-shows-atvbfe57326e/web?utm_source=openai)) **If I had to rank them:** - **Best free overall:** Hoopla - **Best curated/cinephile pick:** Kanopy or Criterion - **Best easy rental system:** Apple TV - **Best totally free fallback:** Tubi or The Roku Channel ([hoopladigital.com](https://www.hoopladigital.com/movie/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also narrow this down to **best for free**, **best for new releases**, or **best for classic/arthouse movies**.
How do the top ad-supported streamers compare on content library size? comparison
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Here’s the short version: **Tubi has the biggest on-demand library**, while **Pluto TV** is huge in **live/linear channels**. **The Roku Channel** is also very large, and the big paid services with ads (**Peacock, Hulu, Netflix with Ads**) have smaller libraries than the free ad-supported specialists. ### Rough library-size comparison | Service | Library size (approx.) | Notes | |---|---:|---| | **Tubi** | **250,000+ movies + TV episodes** | Usually the biggest free on-demand catalog | | **The Roku Channel** | **Very large (tens of thousands+ titles)** | Strong mix of free movies, shows, and live channels | | **Pluto TV** | **Thousands of on-demand titles + 250+ live channels** | Best known for channel-style viewing, not just VOD | | **Peacock (with ads)** | **Smaller than Tubi/Roku/Pluto, but strong current TV/sports/library mix** | More curated than huge | | **Hulu (with ads)** | **Smaller than the free giants, but very strong current-season TV** | Best for next-day TV | | **Netflix with Ads** | **Smallest of the major ad-supported streamers** | Large overall service, but ad tier has a reduced catalog | ### Best rule of thumb - **Biggest library overall:** **Tubi** - **Best for live-channel browsing:** **Pluto TV** - **Best “all-around” free streaming:** **The Roku Channel** - **Best for current TV:** **Hulu** - **Best prestige originals:** **Netflix with Ads / Peacock** If you want, I can also rank them by **movies**, **TV shows**, or **live channels** separately.
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Here’s the short version: **Hulu and Netflix have the deepest ad-supported libraries among the big U.S. streamers**, while **Paramount+ and Peacock are smaller but still substantial**, and **Max sits in the middle**. Exact counts move around as licenses rotate. ([press.hulu.com](https://press.hulu.com/pressrelease/new-hulu-pricing-options/?utm_source=openai)) | Service | Ad-supported library size (roughly) | |---|---:| | Hulu (With Ads) | **85,000+ episodes** plus thousands of movies. ([press.hulu.com](https://press.hulu.com/pressrelease/new-hulu-pricing-options/?utm_source=openai)) | | Netflix (Standard with Ads) | **Almost the full Netflix catalog**; only a small minority of titles are blocked by licensing, and one 2026 estimate puts the U.S. library at **~8,000 titles**. ([help.netflix.com](https://help.netflix.com/en/node/126831?utm_source=openai)) | | Paramount+ Essential | **45,000 episodes and movies**. ([tomsguide.com](https://www.tomsguide.com/entertainment/streaming/what-streaming-costs-in-2026-the-price-of-netflix-disney-plus-max-and-more?utm_source=openai)) | | Peacock Premium (with ads) | **80,000+ hours** of content. ([peacocktv.com](https://www.peacocktv.com/watch-online/tv/above-average-presents/5393647644517153112?utm_source=openai)) | | Max Basic with Ads | Same core library, but with some restrictions on ad-tier features; Reelgood data shows Max trailing Netflix on raw breadth but above Paramount+ / Peacock on value metrics. ([help.hbomax.com](https://help.hbomax.com/us/Answer/Detail/000002520?utm_source=openai)) | **Bottom line:** - **Biggest by raw TV-episode depth:** Hulu. ([press.hulu.com](https://press.hulu.com/pressrelease/new-hulu-pricing-options/?utm_source=openai)) - **Broadest all-around movie/TV catalog:** Netflix. ([help.netflix.com](https://help.netflix.com/en/node/126831?utm_source=openai)) - **Best “lots of content” mid-tier:** Peacock and Paramount+ are both sizable, but smaller than Hulu/Netflix. ([tomsguide.com](https://www.tomsguide.com/entertainment/streaming/what-streaming-costs-in-2026-the-price-of-netflix-disney-plus-max-and-more?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can turn this into a **ranked chart by movies, TV episodes, or total titles**.
Which ad-supported streaming service is better for families than other free options? comparison
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**The Roku Channel** is usually the best **family-friendly** free, ad-supported option. Why it stands out: - **More kid-safe overall** than **Tubi** or **Pluto TV** - Good mix of **family movies, cartoons, and TV** - Easy to use on **Roku devices, phones, and smart TVs** - Includes a lot of **on-demand** content, not just live channels **Close runners-up:** - **Tubi** — biggest library, but more uneven for families - **Pluto TV** — great for live channels, less ideal for kids - **Freevee** — decent, but smaller selection If you want the safest pick for families, go with **The Roku Channel**.
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**The Roku Channel** is probably the best free, ad-supported option for families overall. It has a dedicated **Kids & Family** area, built-in **Parental Controls**, and free kids/family movies, TV, live linear channels, and short-form content in one place. ([roku.com](https://www.roku.com/blog/kids-and-family-the-roku-channel?utm_source=openai)) **Best runner-up:** **Tubi** — it also has **Tubi Kids**, a dedicated family section with a large age-appropriate library. ([corporate.tubitv.com](https://corporate.tubitv.com/press/tubi-kids-to-begin-rolling-out-on-android/?utm_source=openai)) If you want the simplest pick: **Roku Channel**. If you want the biggest general free library with a kid section: **Tubi**.
What are the best ad-supported streaming alternatives for people who want fewer ads? comparison
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If you want **cheap streaming with fewer ads**, these are usually the best picks: - **Peacock Premium** — generally lighter ad load than many rivals, good for NBC shows, WWE, Premier League, Universal movies. - **Paramount+ Essential** — usually a pretty tolerable ad load, strong for CBS, Paramount movies, Star Trek, NFL. - **Hulu (With Ads)** — more ads than Peacock/Paramount+, but the **content library is excellent** if you want lots of current TV. - **Max With Ads** — fewer interruptions than some services, great for HBO shows, Warner movies, and high-quality originals. - **Disney+ Basic** — ads are usually relatively light; best if you mainly want Disney, Marvel, Star Wars, Pixar. - **Amazon Prime Video** — now ad-supported by default, but often still feels less ad-heavy than broadcast-style services. **Best overall for fewer ads:** 1. **Peacock Premium** 2. **Paramount+ Essential** 3. **Max With Ads** If you want, I can also rank them by **fewest ads**, **best content**, or **cheapest per month**.
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If your main goal is **fewer ads**, I’d start with these: - **Netflix Standard with ads** — probably the best “light ad” pick. Netflix says it has **“just a few minutes of ads per hour”** and places them at natural breaks. It also includes **1080p** and **downloads**. ([netflix.com](https://www.netflix.com/ads-plan?utm_source=openai)) - **Max Basic with Ads** — also relatively light, at **about 6 minutes of ads per hour**. ([help.max.com](https://help.max.com/US-en/Answer/Detail/000002520?utm_source=openai)) - **Disney+ with ads** — ad-supported, but Disney says ads are served in **select live and linear content**, so it can feel cleaner if you mostly watch on-demand library content. ([disneyplus.com](https://www.disneyplus.com/en-us?utm_source=openai)) - **Paramount+ Essential** — ad-supported; if ads bother you, Paramount’s **Premium** tier is the no-ads option for on-demand viewing. ([paramountplus.com](https://www.paramountplus.com/sneak-peak/how-to-watch-scream-movies/?utm_source=openai)) - **Prime Video** — the base experience includes ads on some content, but Amazon offers a **sign-up for Ad Free** upgrade. ([primevideo.com](https://www.primevideo.com/help/?isDebug=true&language=en_US&nodeId=TD5EYJIUGQMY13QQdi&utm_source=openai)) **My short ranking for “fewest ads”:** 1. **Netflix Standard with ads** 2. **Max Basic with Ads** 3. **Disney+ with ads** 4. **Paramount+ Essential** 5. **Prime Video (base, with ads)** ([netflix.com](https://www.netflix.com/ads-plan?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank these by **cheapest**, **best library**, or **best sports/live TV**.
How do free ad-supported streamers compare on app quality and reliability? comparison
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In general, **app quality and reliability vary more than the content** on free ad-supported streamers. **Best overall apps** - **The Roku Channel** — usually the smoothest, fastest, and most reliable. - **Tubi** — strong app performance, good recommendations, very stable. - **Pluto TV** — reliable, but the live-TV style interface can feel cluttered. - **Samsung TV Plus** / **LG Channels** — solid if you’re already in the ecosystem; very dependable on supported TVs. **More mixed** - **Freevee** — decent quality, but Amazon has shifted focus, so the app experience can feel less polished over time. - **Xumo Play** — works fine, but the interface is basic and content discovery isn’t great. - **Plex** — good if you also use it for your own media; as a free streamer, it’s less seamless than Tubi or Roku Channel. **Typical differences** - **Buffering/reliability:** Roku Channel and Tubi tend to be best. - **Search/recommendations:** Tubi is usually strongest. - **Live channel experience:** Pluto TV and Samsung TV Plus are good, but can feel ad-heavy and channel surfing can be inconsistent. - **Ads:** all have them, but Roku Channel and Tubi generally feel less disruptive than Pluto TV. **Bottom line** If you want the most reliable app experience, start with **Tubi** and **The Roku Channel**. If you want live-channel surfing, try **Pluto TV** or **Samsung TV Plus**.
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Short version: **Tubi and The Roku Channel feel most reliable overall; Plex is strong but more complex; Pluto TV is the roughest; Freevee is no longer a standalone choice.** That’s based on current store ratings, recent update history, and user feedback patterns—not formal uptime stats. ([play.google.com](https://play.google.com/store/apps/details/Tubi_TV_Free_Movies_TV?hl=ms&id=com.tubitv)) - **Tubi**: best mix of polish and stability. It has very high current ratings on both iOS and Google Play, and recent updates are active. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/tubi-movies-live-tv/id886445756?utm_source=openai)) - **The Roku Channel**: decent and straightforward, but its Android rating is lower than Tubi’s; still, it’s generally simple and less “buggy-feeling” than Pluto. ([play.google.com](https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?hl=ur&id=com.roku.web.trc)) - **Plex**: very capable, but the app is more feature-heavy and the reviews show more mixed reactions, especially around navigation and recent UI changes. ([play.google.com](https://play.google.com/store/apps/details/Plex%EF%BC%9A%E6%98%A0%E7%94%BB%E3%82%84%E3%83%86%E3%83%AC%E3%83%93%E3%82%92%E3%82%B9%E3%83%88%E3%83%AA%E3%83%BC%E3%83%9F%E3%83%B3%E3%82%B0%E3%81%97%E3%81%BE%E3%81%99?hl=en-US&id=com.plexapp.android&utm_source=openai)) - **Pluto TV**: huge catalog, but more complaints about freezing, ad load, and UI friction; its Android rating is lower than the others above. ([play.google.com](https://play.google.com/store/apps/eventdetails/4829343448813452035?utm_source=openai)) - **Freevee**: don’t choose it as a standalone app now; Amazon moved “Watch for free” content into Prime Video. ([advertising.amazon.com](https://advertising.amazon.com/resources/whats-new/unboxed-2025-amc-launches-prime-video-insights?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can turn this into a **best-by-device** ranking (Roku, Fire TV, Apple TV, Android TV).
Which ad-supported streaming services are best compared with paid add-on packages? comparison
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Best ad-supported streaming picks: 1. **Hulu (With Ads)** — best overall for TV next-day episodes and a strong library. 2. **Peacock Premium** — best value for NBC shows, Bravo, WWE, Premier League, and a solid movie library. 3. **Paramount+ Essential** — best for CBS, NFL, Star Trek, and Nickelodeon. 4. **Max With Ads** — best for HBO shows and prestige movies if you can tolerate the ad load. 5. **Disney+ Basic** — best if you want Disney/Marvel/Star Wars and don’t mind ads. If you mean “worth it vs paying extra for ad-free,” **Hulu With Ads** and **Peacock Premium** are usually the best bargains. If you want, I can also rank them by **sports**, **movies**, or **best overall value**.
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If you want the **best ad-supported streaming deals**, I’d rank them like this: - **Best overall value: Hulu with Ads** — **$5.99/mo**. Huge TV library and next-day network shows; the ad-free version is much pricier, so this is one of the strongest “save money, keep the library” picks. ([press.hulu.com](https://press.hulu.com/storage/uploads/50/65/5065CC99-7D3E-4A32-D91E-76DE2FA03E3D/press-release-34-1404024.pdf?utm_source=openai)) - **Best premium catalog for the money: Max Basic with Ads** — **$9.99/mo**. Great if you want HBO/Warner/Discovery-style prestige content without paying for the higher no-ads tier. ([help.max.com](https://help.max.com/us-en/Answer/Detail/000002543?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for live sports + TV: Peacock Premium** — **$10.99/mo** with ads, or **Peacock Select** at **$7.99/mo** for a cheaper, narrower option. ([peacocktv.com](https://www.peacocktv.com/upsell?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for live CBS/sports + movies: Paramount+ Essential** — **$8.99/mo** with ads. Good value if you watch CBS, UEFA, UFC, or Paramount originals. ([paramountplus.com](https://www.paramountplus.com/sneak-peak/how-to-watch-ufc-326/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best mainstream all-rounder: Netflix Standard with ads** — **$8.99/mo**, 1080p, 2 simultaneous streams, downloads included. ([netflix.com](https://www.netflix.com/ads-plan?utm_source=openai)) - **Best if you want Disney/Marvel/Star Wars on a budget: Disney+ with Ads** — **$11.99/mo**. ([apps.disneyplus.com](https://www.apps.disneyplus.com/bh/1260067362?utm_source=openai)) **Quick rule:** pay for the **ad-free add-on** only if you watch that service a lot. Otherwise, the ad tiers are usually the better bargain. For example, Netflix Standard without ads is **$19.99/mo**, Max Standard is **$16.99/mo**, and Disney+ Premium is **$18.99/mo**. ([help.netflix.com](https://help.netflix.com/en/node/24926?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can turn this into a **“best by budget” shortlist** or a **best bundle vs add-on comparison**.
How do I watch movies and shows for free with ads? problem
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Use **free, ad-supported streaming services (FAST)**. They’re legal and usually require no subscription. Good options: - **Tubi** - **Pluto TV** - **Freevee** (Amazon) - **The Roku Channel** - **Crackle** - **Plex** - **Xumo Play** - **YouTube** (free ad-supported movies/shows, plus official channels) How to watch: 1. Download the app on your TV, phone, tablet, or streaming device. 2. Sign in if needed. 3. Browse the **Free** or **Movies/TV** section. 4. Press play — ads will run before and during playback. Best overall picks: - **Tubi** for the biggest free library - **Pluto TV** for live channels + on-demand - **The Roku Channel** for easy access and decent movies/shows If you want, I can suggest the best free apps for **smart TV**, **iPhone/Android**, or **Fire TV/Roku**.
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Use **ad-supported free streaming apps**. The easiest legit options in the U.S. are: - **Tubi** — free, no subscription, lots of movies and TV shows. ([tubitv.com](https://tubitv.com/en-au/welcome?utm_source=openai)) - **Pluto TV** — free live channels plus on-demand movies and shows. ([pluto.tv](https://www.pluto.tv/welcome?utm_source=openai)) - **Plex** — free movies, shows, and live TV with ads. ([watch.plex.tv](https://watch.plex.tv/en?utm_source=openai)) - **The Roku Channel** — free-with-ads titles and live channels. ([therokuchannel.roku.com](https://therokuchannel.roku.com/details/554f4c91ddac5a7ca42ef2d156e26fbc?utm_source=openai)) If you want **newer studio content**, check whether a paid service has an **ad-supported plan** (for example, Hulu’s With Ads plan). That’s not free, but it’s cheaper than ad-free. ([hulu.com](https://www.hulu.com/premium-no-ads?utm_source=openai)) Best way to do it: 1. Install **Tubi, Pluto TV, Plex, and The Roku Channel**. 2. Make free accounts if offered. 3. Browse the **Movies / TV / Live** sections. 4. Use a smart TV, Roku, Fire TV, phone, or browser. If you want, I can also give you the **best free-with-ads apps by genre** (movies, sitcoms, horror, kids, etc.).
How can I find a streaming service that does not require a subscription? problem 10/mo
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Look for **free ad-supported streaming services** or **rent/buy services**. Good options: - **Tubi** – free, no subscription - **Pluto TV** – free live channels + on-demand - **The Roku Channel** – free with ads - **Freevee** (Amazon) – free with ads - **Plex** – free movies/TV with ads - **Crackle** – free, ad-supported - **YouTube** – many free movies/shows, plus rentals If you want newer titles without a subscription, use: - **Amazon Prime Video Store** - **Apple TV** - **Google TV / YouTube Movies** - **Vudu** Tip: search for **“free streaming service”** or **“ad-supported streaming”** in your app store or on the device you use. If you want, I can give you the **best free option by country** or by what you want to watch.
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Look for **free, ad-supported streaming services** or **rental/one-time purchase platforms**. Examples: - **Pluto TV** - **Tubi** - **Freevee** - **The Roku Channel** - **YouTube** free movies/TV If you want **no subscription at all**, also check: - **Library apps** like **Kanopy** or **Hoopla** (free with a library card) - **Rent/buy** services like **Apple TV**, **Prime Video**, or **Google TV** Best way to find one: 1. Search for **“free streaming service”** or **“ad-supported streaming.”** 2. Check whether it says **no credit card required**. 3. Look for **“free with ads”**, **“rent,”** or **“buy”** instead of **“subscribe.”** If you want, I can give you a short list based on **movies, live TV, or sports**.
What streaming service should I use if I only want free content with ads? problem
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If you only want **free, ad-supported streaming**, the best picks are: - **Tubi** — best overall for a big free library - **Pluto TV** — best for live-channel style viewing - **The Roku Channel** — great if you want movies, TV, and some live content - **Amazon Freevee** — free, ad-supported shows/movies in the Amazon ecosystem - **Plex** — solid free movies/TV plus live channels - **Crackle** — smaller library, but free **My recommendation:** - **Use Tubi** if you want the most straightforward free option. - **Use Pluto TV** if you like cable-like live channels. If you want, I can also recommend the **best free service for movies, TV, or live news/sports**.
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**Best pick: Tubi.** It’s 100% free, ad-supported, and has a huge on-demand library with no subscription required. ([tubitv.com](https://tubitv.com/help-center/About-Tubi/articles/4409975158043?utm_source=openai)) If you want **live-TV/channel-surfing**, choose **Pluto TV** or **Xumo Play** instead; both are free ad-supported services with lots of live channels. ([free.pluto.tv](https://free.pluto.tv/?utm_source=openai)) If you already use a Roku device, **The Roku Channel** is also a strong free option with no subscription. ([roku.com](https://www.roku.com/en-us/whats-on/the-roku-channel/roku-originals?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can give you a **best free service by use case**: movies, live TV, sports, or kids.
How do I get access to more TV shows without paying for cable? problem 320/mo
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You can get a lot of TV without cable by mixing a few options: - **Free streaming apps:** **Pluto TV**, **Tubi**, **The Roku Channel**, **Freevee**, and **Peacock Free** (availability varies) offer movies, TV, and live channels. - **Live TV streaming services:** If you want cable-like channels, try **YouTube TV**, **Hulu + Live TV**, **Sling TV**, or **Fubo**. **Sling TV** is usually the cheapest; **YouTube TV** is the easiest all-around. - **Use a TV antenna:** A good **Mohu Leaf** or **Winegard FlatWave** antenna can pull in local channels like ABC, CBS, NBC, FOX, and PBS for free. - **Streaming device:** If your TV is older, get a **Roku Express**, **Amazon Fire TV Stick 4K**, or **Google Chromecast with Google TV**. - **Bundles and trials:** Many services offer free trials or discounted bundles, like **Disney Bundle** (Disney+, Hulu, ESPN+). If you tell me what shows/channels you want, I can suggest the cheapest setup.
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A few good ways: - **Streaming services**: Netflix, Hulu, Max, Disney+, Paramount+, Peacock, Apple TV+. - **Live TV streaming**: YouTube TV, Hulu + Live TV, Sling TV, Fubo. - **Free ad-supported TV**: Pluto TV, Tubi, Freevee, The Roku Channel. - **Network apps/sites**: ABC, NBC, CBS, Fox often have some episodes free. - **Library apps**: Many libraries give free access to **Kanopy** or **Hoopla**. - **Antenna**: A cheap HD antenna can get local broadcast channels for free. If you want, I can help you pick the **cheapest setup** based on the shows/channels you watch.
What is the easiest way to stream live channels for free? problem 10/mo
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The easiest legal way is to use a **free ad-supported live TV app** on a **smart TV, Roku, Fire TV, or phone**. Best options: - **Pluto TV** — lots of live channels, free - **The Roku Channel** — free live TV if you have Roku or the app - **Tubi** — free live channels + on-demand - **Xumo Play** — free live streaming channels - **Samsung TV Plus** — built into Samsung TVs - **Plex** — free live channels and movies If you want **local channels** (ABC, CBS, NBC, FOX), the cheapest/easiest option is: - **An indoor antenna** like **Mohu Leaf** or **Winegard FlatWave** Fastest setup: 1. Install **Pluto TV** or **Tubi** 2. Sign in if needed 3. Start watching If you want, I can recommend the best free option based on your device: **iPhone, Android, Roku, Fire TV, Samsung TV, or laptop**.
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The easiest legal way is usually **Pluto TV** or **The Roku Channel**: both offer free, ad-supported live channels, and neither requires a paid subscription. ([pluto.tv](https://pluto.tv/freetv?utm_source=openai)) If you want the simplest setup: - **Phone/TV app:** install **Pluto TV** or **The Roku Channel** - **Roku device/TV:** open the **Live TV** guide in Roku or The Roku Channel for free live channels. ([roku.com](https://www.roku.com/blog/live-tv-zone?utm_source=openai)) If you mean **local broadcast channels** (ABC/CBS/NBC/FOX), the easiest free route is usually an **antenna**, not streaming. If you want, I can give you the best free option based on whether you want **news, sports, or local channels**.
How can I watch sports on a streaming service without a full subscription? problem
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A few legal ways to watch sports without paying for a full TV-style bundle: - **Direct event passes:** - **ESPN+** (U.S.): good for UFC, some NHL/college sports, tennis, soccer. - **NFL+**: live local/primetime on mobile/tablet, radio, replays. - **NBA League Pass**: out-of-market NBA games. - **MLB.TV**: out-of-market MLB games. - **NHL Power Play** (or NHL Center Ice depending on region): out-of-market hockey. - **Single-game / PPV purchases:** - **DAZN**: boxing, MMA, and some events can be bought without a long contract. - **Prime Video** and **Apple TV** sometimes sell one-off sports events or packages. - **Free live sports with ads:** - **Pluto TV**, **Tubi**, **The Roku Channel**, **Xumo Play** often have sports channels, highlights, and replays. - **CBS Sports HQ**, **NBC Sports**, **Fox Sports** apps sometimes stream select events or clips free. - **Short free trials:** Services like **YouTube TV**, **Hulu + Live TV**, **Sling TV**, and **Fubo** often offer trials or promo discounts—just cancel before renewal. - **Team/league apps and websites:** Some teams or leagues sell **single-day**, **single-match**, or **season pass** options directly. If you tell me **which sport** and **your country**, I can point you to the cheapest exact option.
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Yes — you usually have 3 good options: 1. **Short-term passes**: Sling offers 1-Day, 3-Day, and 7-Day passes, starting at **$4.99**, so you can watch around a specific game or weekend without a monthly plan. The 1-Day pass includes Sling Orange channels like **ESPN** and **ESPN2**. ([sling.com](https://www.sling.com/service/day-pass?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Sports add-ons**: Hulu offers a Sports Add-on on top of **Hulu + Live TV** for **$9.99/month**, adding channels like NFL RedZone, Tennis Channel, and MLB Strike Zone. ([hulu.com](https://www.hulu.com/sports-addon?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Sports-only subscriptions**: ESPN Select is a standalone sports subscription with **thousands of live sporting events** and on-demand sports content, including college sports, soccer, hockey, tennis, and MMA. ([plus.espn.com](https://plus.espn.com/en?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Event-specific access**: Peacock has a **Peacock Sports Pass** for some live sports, including Premier League, Big Ten, and selected NFL/golf events. ([peacocktv.com](https://www.peacocktv.com/sports/gold-zone-day-1/6b59103e-fe47-3901-ac47-18e2061cba31?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Free trial**: Fubo says it offers **“$0 today”** / a free trial on its main signup page, so it can work as a short-term option if you just need a few games. ([fubo.tv](https://www.fubo.tv/welcome/?utm_source=openai)) If you tell me **which sport and team/league**, I can point you to the cheapest legal option.
How do I find a streaming app with a good free tier? problem
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Look for these 4 things: 1. **What content you want** Movies/TV, live channels, sports, music, or indie stuff. 2. **How annoying the ads are** Free tiers usually mean ads, and some are heavy. 3. **Whether it needs a credit card** Some “free” apps still require signup/payment info. 4. **Device support** Check if it works on Roku, Fire TV, Apple TV, Android TV, iPhone, etc. Good free-tier apps to try: - **Tubi** — huge free movie/TV library, no subscription needed - **Pluto TV** — free live channels + on-demand - **The Roku Channel** — very solid free movies, TV, and live channels - **Amazon Freevee** — free shows/movies, ad-supported - **Plex** — free movies/TV plus some live channels - **Crackle** — smaller library, but free - **Xumo Play** — free live channels and on-demand Best picks: - **Movies/TV:** Tubi - **Live channel feel:** Pluto TV or Xumo Play - **If you already use Roku:** The Roku Channel If you want, I can narrow it down by **device** or **what kind of content you want**.
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Look for apps that are **ad-supported, no-credit-card, and available on your devices**. Good free-tier options right now include **Tubi** (free, no subscription, no credit card), **Pluto TV** (free live channels plus on-demand), and **Plex** (free movies/shows and free live TV). ([tubitv.com](https://tubitv.com/help-center/About-Tubi/articles/4409975158043?utm_source=openai)) Quick way to choose: - **Want live-channel “cable-like” browsing?** Try **Pluto TV**. ([pluto.tv](https://www.pluto.tv/welcome?utm_source=openai)) - **Want the simplest fully free movie/TV app?** Try **Tubi**. ([tubitv.com](https://tubitv.com/help-center/About-Tubi/articles/4409975158043?utm_source=openai)) - **Want free streaming plus your own media library?** Try **Plex**. ([plex.tv](https://www.plex.tv/watch-free-register/?utm_source=openai)) A good test: open the app store listing and check for 1. **“Free” or “No subscription required”** 2. **Ads explained up front** 3. **Support for your TV/phone/streaming device** 4. **Whether it asks for a credit card**. ([tubitv.com](https://tubitv.com/welcome?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow it down by what you watch most: **movies, live TV, sports, or anime**.
How can I reduce how much I spend on streaming? problem
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A few easy ways: - **Cut to 1–2 core services**: keep only the ones you use weekly. - **Rotate subscriptions**: subscribe for a month, binge what you want, then cancel. - **Choose ad-supported plans**: - **Netflix Standard with ads** - **Disney+ Basic** - **Max With Ads** - **Hulu (With Ads)** - **Use free services**: **Tubi**, **Pluto TV**, **The Roku Channel**, **Freevee**, **Crackle**. - **Bundle wisely**: - **Disney Bundle** (Disney+ / Hulu / ESPN+) - **Verizon** or **T-Mobile** perks if you already have them - **Share legally**: use family plans where allowed, like **Spotify Premium Family**, **YouTube Premium Family**, **Apple One Family**. - **Cancel duplicates**: if you have **Netflix + Max + Paramount+**, keep the one you use most. - **Downgrade video quality**: standard definition or HD instead of 4K can sometimes save money or stop you paying for higher tiers. - **Check for student/annual discounts**: **Amazon Prime**, **Spotify**, **YouTube Premium** often have better pricing options. If you want, I can help you build a **lowest-cost streaming setup** based on the shows/movies you actually watch.
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A few high-impact ways: - **Audit what you actually watch.** Keep only 1–2 services you use weekly. - **Rotate subscriptions.** Subscribe for a month, binge, cancel, repeat. - **Use ad-supported tiers.** Netflix, Disney+, Max, Hulu, Peacock, etc. usually cost less with ads. - **Share a family plan** if the service allows it and it’s within the rules. - **Bundle smarter.** Some internet/cell plans include free streaming perks. - **Watch free options.** Pluto TV, Tubi, Freevee, Roku Channel. - **Cancel duplicates.** Don’t pay for two services with similar catalogs. - **Set a streaming budget.** Example: cap it at $20–$30/month total. If you want, I can help you make a **cheap streaming stack** based on what you watch most.
What should I use if I want a streaming service with a lot of content but no monthly fee? problem
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If you want **lots of content with no monthly fee**, look at **free ad-supported streaming services**: - **Tubi** — huge library of movies and TV - **Pluto TV** — live channels + on-demand content - **The Roku Channel** — good mix of movies, shows, and live TV - **Freevee** — Amazon’s free streaming option - **Plex** — free movies/TV plus some live channels **Best overall for sheer content:** **Tubi** **Best for live-style channels:** **Pluto TV** If you want, I can also tell you which one is best for **new movies**, **classic TV**, or **live news/sports**.
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If you want **the most content with no monthly fee**, start with **Tubi** or **The Roku Channel**. Tubi is ad-supported and free, and The Roku Channel offers free movies, TV, live news, and original content with no subscription. ([tubitv-ba2.s3.amazonaws.com](https://tubitv-ba2.s3.amazonaws.com/index.html?utm_source=openai)) If you want **more live-channel vibes**, pick **Pluto TV** — it has lots of free live channels plus on-demand movies and shows. ([pluto.tv](https://www.pluto.tv/free/freetv?utm_source=openai)) **My quick pick:** - **Best overall library:** Tubi ([tubitv-ba2.s3.amazonaws.com](https://tubitv-ba2.s3.amazonaws.com/index.html?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for live TV feel:** Pluto TV ([pluto.tv](https://www.pluto.tv/free/freetv?utm_source=openai)) - **Best all-around free option:** The Roku Channel ([roku.com](https://www.roku.com/en-us/whats-on/the-roku-channel/roku-originals?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow it down by **movies vs TV vs live channels**.
How do I get a streaming service that works on my smart TV and is free? problem 20/mo
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Use a **free ad-supported streaming app** that’s available on smart TVs. Good options: - **Tubi** - **Pluto TV** - **The Roku Channel** - **Amazon Freevee** - **Plex** How to get one: 1. Turn on your smart TV. 2. Open the **App Store / Apps** section. 3. Search for one of the apps above. 4. Download it and sign in only if needed. What works best: - **Roku TVs / Roku devices**: The **Roku Channel** is built in. - **Samsung TVs**: Tubi, Pluto TV, Plex are usually available. - **LG TVs**: Tubi, Pluto TV, Plex are often available. - **Android TV / Google TV**: Tubi, Pluto TV, Plex, Freevee. If your TV is old or doesn’t have the app you want, get a cheap streaming device like: - **Roku Express** - **Amazon Fire TV Stick 4K** - **Chromecast with Google TV** If you want, tell me your **TV brand/model**, and I’ll tell you the best free app for it.
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Easiest way: install a **free, ad-supported streaming app** from your smart TV’s app store. Good options are **Tubi**, **Pluto TV**, and **Xumo Play**. Tubi supports many TVs like Samsung, LG, Vizio, Sony, Hisense, Roku, Fire TV, and Apple TV; Pluto TV has a smart TV page and free web/app access; Xumo Play is free and available on many TVs and devices, including Samsung, Hisense, Roku TV/streaming sticks, Sony Smart TV, and VIZIO SmartCast. ([tubitv.com](https://tubitv.com/help-center/Setup-and-Troubleshooting/articles/4410086811163)) **What to do:** 1. Open your TV’s app store. 2. Search for **Tubi**, **Pluto TV**, or **Xumo Play**. 3. Install the app. 4. Open it and start watching. Tubi says it’s **100% free**; Xumo Play says it does **not require a subscription, account, login, or credit card**. ([tubitv.com](https://tubitv.com/help-center/Setup-and-Troubleshooting/articles/4410086811163)) If your TV doesn’t support the app, use a cheap streaming stick like **Roku**, **Fire TV**, or **Chromecast/Google TV**—Xumo Play and Tubi both support those devices. ([tubitv.com](https://tubitv.com/help-center/Setup-and-Troubleshooting/articles/4410086811163)) If you tell me your **TV brand/model**, I can tell you the best free app for it.
Are ad-supported streaming services free? transactional
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Yes—many ad-supported streaming services are **free to use** because the ads pay for the content. Examples: - **Tubi** - **Pluto TV** - **The Roku Channel** - **Freevee** (Amazon) - **Peacock** has a free tier in some regions Some services also offer **paid, ad-free plans** or premium upgrades.
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Sometimes, but not always. - **Ad-supported services can be free**: e.g. some platforms offer a free tier with ads. - **Or they can be cheaper paid plans**: you pay, but see ads. So **“ad-supported” means ads are shown**; **“free” means you don’t pay money**. They’re related, but not the same.
How much do ad-supported streaming services cost? transactional
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Ad-supported streaming services usually cost **about $5 to $10 per month**. Common examples: - **Netflix with ads**: about **$6.99/mo** - **Disney+ with ads**: about **$7.99/mo** - **Hulu with ads**: about **$7.99/mo** - **Max with ads**: about **$9.99/mo** - **Peacock Premium**: about **$5.99/mo** Free ad-supported options also exist, like: - **Tubi** - **Pluto TV** - **The Roku Channel** - **Freevee** If you want, I can compare the cheapest ad-supported plans side by side.
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It depends on the service, but in the U.S. ad-supported plans are usually **free to about $12/month**. Examples: **Pluto TV is free**; **Hulu With Ads is $5.99/month**; **Netflix Standard with ads is $8.99/month**; **Max Basic with Ads is $10.99/month**; and **Disney+ with ads is $11.99/month**. Taxes may be extra. ([pluto.tv](https://pluto.tv/freetv?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you a **cheapest-to-most-expensive list** of the major ad-supported streaming services.
What is the cheapest ad-supported streaming service? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you mean **any ad-supported streaming service**, the **cheapest are free**: - **Tubi** - **Pluto TV** - **The Roku Channel** - **Freevee** If you mean **paid subscriptions with ads**, the cheapest usually include: - **Peacock Premium** - **Paramount+ Essential** - **Discovery+ with ads** - **AMC+ with ads** Prices change a lot, but **free services like Tubi and Pluto TV are the cheapest overall**.
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If you mean **paid** ad-supported streaming subscriptions in the U.S., **Peacock Select** is one of the cheapest at **$7.99/month**. Paramount+ Essential is also in the same low-price tier, but current official pages show **$8.99/month** or older pages showing **$7.99/month**, so Peacock is the safest answer for “cheapest” right now. ([peacocktv.com](https://www.peacocktv.com/upsell?utm_source=openai)) If you include **free** ad-supported services, then **Tubi** is cheaper than anything at **$0** because it’s free with ads and no subscription is required. ([tubitv.com](https://tubitv.com/welcome?utm_source=openai))
Do ad-supported streaming services have free trials? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Sometimes, yes—but not all do. Examples: - **Hulu (with ads)** — often has a **free trial** for new users - **Paramount+ Essential** — has offered trials at times - **Peacock Premium** — usually **no standard free trial** - **Max with ads** — often **no free trial** - **Disney+ Basic with ads** — typically **no free trial** Best bet: check the current signup page, since trial offers change often. If you want, I can list the current ad-supported plans that are most likely to have trials right now.
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Sometimes, but **not usually**. - **Netflix’s ad-supported plan does not come with a free trial**; Netflix says it does not offer free trials. ([help.netflix.com](https://help.netflix.com/en/node/16282?utm_source=openai)) - **Max says most subscription providers do not offer a free trial**, though some promos or providers may include one. ([help.max.com](https://help.max.com/US-en/Answer/Detail/000002501?utm_source=openai)) So the short answer is: **an ad-supported plan can have a trial, but many major services don’t offer one right now**. If you want, I can check a specific service like Hulu, Peacock, Paramount+, or Disney+.
Which streaming services have a free ad-supported tier? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
A few popular **free, ad-supported streaming services** are: - **Tubi** - **Pluto TV** - **The Roku Channel** - **Plex** - **Crackle** - **Xumo Play** - **Sling Freestream** - **Amazon Freevee** (where available) - **YouTube** (free with ads, though not a “tier” in the same way) Availability can vary by country. If you want, I can also break these down by **movies**, **live TV**, or **sports**.
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In the U.S., the main **free ad-supported streaming services** are: - **Pluto TV** — free, ad-supported, no subscription. ([pluto.tv](https://pluto.tv/freetv?utm_source=openai)) - **Tubi** — free and ad-supported. ([tubitv.com](https://tubitv.com/help-center/About-Tubi/articles/4409975158043?utm_source=openai)) - **The Roku Channel** — free, with free movies/TV and live channels. ([roku.com](https://www.roku.com/en-us/whats-on/the-roku-channel/roku-originals?utm_source=openai)) - **Xumo Play** — free, ad-supported, no subscription required. ([support.xumo.com](https://support.xumo.com/hc/en-us/articles/22542847894804-Do-I-have-to-pay-for-Xumo-Play?utm_source=openai)) - **Sling Freestream** — free ad-supported live and on-demand streaming. ([sling.com](https://www.sling.com/help/en/learn-about-sling/promotions/free-previews?utm_source=openai)) - **Plex** — free ad-supported movies/TV and live TV. ([support.plex.tv](https://support.plex.tv/articles/202526943-plex-free-vs-paid/?utm_source=openai)) If you also mean **paid services that have an ad-supported tier** (not fully free), those include **Hulu**, **Peacock**, and **Paramount+ Essential**. ([hulu.com](https://www.hulu.com/onboarding?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can turn this into a **“best free ones” shortlist** by movies, live TV, or sports.
What ad-supported streaming service gives the best value? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
**Best overall value: Peacock Premium** It’s usually the cheapest major ad-supported streamer and gives a solid mix of **movies, NBC shows, live sports, and next-day TV**. **Why Peacock wins on value** - Low monthly price - Good library for the money - Includes **Premier League, WWE, and some live sports** - Better value than most ad tiers if you actually use it **Good runners-up** - **Hulu (With Ads)** — best for current TV and FX/Fox library, but pricier - **Paramount+ Essential** — good if you want CBS, NFL, and Star Trek - **Netflix Standard with ads** — best interface and originals, but not the best bargain - **Disney+ Basic** — best if you want Disney/Marvel/Star Wars, especially in a bundle **Short answer:** If you want the **best value per dollar**, go with **Peacock Premium**. If you want the **best TV library**, pick **Hulu with Ads**.
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If you want the **best pure value among paid ad-supported services**, I’d pick **Hulu (With Ads)** at **$5.99/month**. It’s the cheapest major ad tier and still has a strong TV-first library. ([press.hulu.com](https://press.hulu.com/storage/uploads/50/65/5065CC99-7D3E-4A32-D91E-76DE2FA03E3D/press-release-34-1404024.pdf?utm_source=openai)) Quick price check on the big ones: - **Hulu (With Ads):** $5.99/mo. ([press.hulu.com](https://press.hulu.com/storage/uploads/50/65/5065CC99-7D3E-4A32-D91E-76DE2FA03E3D/press-release-34-1404024.pdf?utm_source=openai)) - **Paramount+ Essential:** $8.99/mo. ([paramountplus.com](https://www.paramountplus.com/sneak-peak/where-to-watch-marshals-season-1/?utm_source=openai)) - **Netflix Standard with ads:** official plans page lists the ad tier, but the snippet didn’t expose the current price here. ([help.netflix.com](https://help.netflix.com/en/node/24926?utm_source=openai)) - **Disney+ (With Ads):** $11.99/mo. ([apps.disneyplus.com](https://www.apps.disneyplus.com/bh/1260067362?utm_source=openai)) - **Max Basic with Ads:** $9.99/mo. ([help.max.com](https://help.max.com/us-en/Answer/Detail/000002543?utm_source=openai)) - **Peacock Premium (with ads):** currently $10.99/mo. ([peacocktv.com](https://www.peacocktv.com/xumo-offer.?utm_source=openai)) **My short take:** - **Best value overall:** **Hulu with ads** - **Best if you want live/current NBC-type content:** **Peacock** - **Best if you want a free option instead of paid:** **Tubi/Pluto TV** (free, ad-supported) If you want, I can rank them by **value for movies**, **TV**, or **sports**.
How much are ad-free upgrades on streaming services? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Ad-free upgrades vary by service and region, but in the U.S. common monthly prices are roughly: - **Netflix**: ad-free plans start around **$18–$25/mo** (depending on tier) - **Disney+**: **$14/mo** ad-free - **Hulu**: **$18/mo** ad-free - **Max**: **$17/mo** ad-free - **Peacock**: **$12/mo** ad-free (Premium Plus) - **Paramount+**: **$13/mo** ad-free (Premium) - **Prime Video**: usually **$3/mo extra** to remove ads - **YouTube Premium**: **$14/mo** ad-free across YouTube - **Apple TV+**: **no ads** included - **Crunchyroll**: ad-free plans start around **$8/mo** If you want, I can make a **side-by-side chart** for the exact services you use.
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Here are the big U.S. streaming **ad-free / no-ads** options right now: - **Netflix Standard**: **$17.99/mo**; **Premium**: **$24.99/mo**. ([help.netflix.com](https://help.netflix.com/en/node/24926?utm_source=openai)) - **Hulu (No Ads)**: **$18.99/mo**. ([hulu.com](https://www.hulu.com/no-ads?utm_source=openai)) - **Disney+ Premium (No Ads)**: **$15.99/mo** or **$159.99/yr**. ([press.disneyplus.com](https://press.disneyplus.com/news/ad-supported-disney-plus-subscription-tier-to-launch-in-us-december-8?utm_source=openai)) - **Max Standard**: **$16.99/mo**; **Premium**: **$20.99/mo**. ([help.max.com](https://help.max.com/us-en/Answer/Detail/000002543?utm_source=openai)) - **Peacock Premium Plus**: **$16.99/mo** or **$169.99/yr**. ([peacocktv.com](https://www.peacocktv.com/upsell?utm_source=openai)) - **Paramount+ Premium**: **$13.99/mo** or **$139.99/yr**. ([paramountplus.com](https://www.paramountplus.com/sneak-peak/how-to-watch-ufc-326/?utm_source=openai)) Quick note: some “ad-free” tiers still include ads in **live TV, sports, or select content**. ([hulu.com](https://www.hulu.com/no-ads?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also make a **cheapest-to-most-expensive ad-free comparison** or include **Apple TV+, YouTube Premium, and bundle prices**.
Can I watch ad-supported streaming services without paying? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Yes—often you can. Many **ad-supported streaming services are free** (or have free tiers) and let you watch without paying, as long as you’re okay with ads. Examples include: - **Tubi** - **Pluto TV** - **The Roku Channel** - **Freevee** (where available) - **Peacock Free** (limited) - **Plex** - **Crackle** A few are **mostly paid but have some free content**, like **YouTube**, **Spotify Free** (for music), and **Hulu** (no true free tier in most regions, but promos sometimes exist). If you want, I can list the **best free ad-supported streaming services by movies, live TV, or sports**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Yes—**sometimes**. Many ad-supported streaming services offer a **free tier** or **free with ads** option, so you can watch without paying a subscription. Examples include some versions of Pluto TV, Tubi, Freevee, and similar services. But if a service is described as **“ad-supported”** and **doesn’t have a free plan**, then you usually still have to pay a subscription fee. If you want, I can list the major **free ad-supported streaming services** available right now.
What are the subscription prices for ad-supported streaming options? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are common **ad-supported streaming plans** in the US (monthly, unless noted). Prices can change, so treat these as current ballpark rates: - **Netflix Standard with Ads** — **$7.99/mo** - **Disney+ Basic (ads)** — **$9.99/mo** - **Hulu (ads)** — **$9.99/mo** - **Max With Ads** — **$9.99/mo** - **Peacock Premium** — **$7.99/mo** - **Paramount+ Essential** — **$7.99/mo** - **Amazon Prime Video with ads** — included with Prime, but ads are on by default; **Prime membership is $14.99/mo** or **$139/yr** - **ESPN+** — **$11.99/mo** (ads are included in most live/streaming content) - **Discovery+ (ad-supported)** — **$4.99/mo** - **Starz** — often **$9.99/mo** with ads-free; ad-supported availability varies by bundle/promo Good budget picks: - **Peacock Premium** if you want NBC/Bravo/sports - **Paramount+ Essential** for CBS/Paramount content - **Discovery+** for the cheapest option - **Hulu** for a broad TV catalog If you want, I can also make a **best-value comparison by service type** (movies, sports, kids, live TV).
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Here are some major U.S. ad-supported streaming prices right now: - **Netflix Standard with ads:** **$8.99/month**. ([help.netflix.com](https://help.netflix.com/en/node/24926?utm_source=openai)) - **Hulu (With Ads):** **$11.99/month**. ([hulu.com](https://www.hulu.com/premium-no-ads?utm_source=openai)) - **Disney+ (With Ads):** **$11.99/month**. ([disneyplus.com](https://www.disneyplus.com/en-us?utm_source=openai)) - **Max Basic with Ads:** **$9.99/month**. ([help.max.com](https://help.max.com/us-en/Answer/Detail/000002543?utm_source=openai)) - **Peacock Premium (with ads):** **$10.99/month**. ([peacocktv.com](https://www.peacocktv.com/upsell?utm_source=openai)) - **Paramount+ Essential (ads):** **$8.99/month**. ([paramountplus.com](https://www.paramountplus.com/sneak-peak/how-to-watch-scream-movies/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you a **cheapest-to-priciest comparison** or include **annual plan prices**.
Which free streaming apps with ads are actually worth it? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Yes—these are the free ad-supported streaming apps actually worth using: - **Tubi** — Best overall library for movies and TV. Huge selection, surprisingly good for deep-cut films, crime, horror, and older shows. - **Pluto TV** — Best for “live TV” style streaming. Great if you want channels you can just leave on, plus some on-demand titles. - **The Roku Channel** — Best free mix of movies, TV, and live news. You don’t need a Roku device to use it. - **Amazon Freevee** — Good if you already use Amazon/Prime Video. Solid free catalog, though less essential than Tubi or Pluto. - **Crunchyroll (free tier)** — Best for anime if you don’t mind ads and a delay on new episodes. - **Plex** — Worth it for a decent free movie library plus live channels, especially if you also use Plex for your own media. **My short recommendation:** If you only install 2, go with **Tubi** and **Pluto TV**. If you want, I can also rank the best ones for **movies, live TV, sports, or anime**.
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If you want the **actually worth it** free, ad-supported apps in the U.S., I’d start here: - **Tubi** — best all-around for free movies/TV; huge catalog, no subscription, and it says it has **fewer ads than cable**. ([tubitv.com](https://tubitv.com/welcome?utm_source=openai)) - **The Roku Channel** — best “surprise good” option; strong mix of free movies, shows, live channels, and Roku Originals. ([roku.com](https://www.roku.com/blog/roku-channel-now-available-on-google-tv?utm_source=openai)) - **Pluto TV** — best if you want the feel of cable/surfing channels; it offers **hundreds of live channels** plus on-demand stuff. ([pluto.tv](https://pluto.tv/freetv?utm_source=openai)) - **Samsung TV Plus** — best built-in live TV app if you have Samsung devices; it’s **100% free** with hundreds of live channels and thousands of on-demand titles. ([samsung.com](https://www.samsung.com/tvplus?utm_source=openai)) - **Plex** — best if you want free streaming plus your own media library in one app; Plex says it has thousands of free titles and **600+ live channels**. ([plex.tv](https://www.plex.tv/watch-free/?utm_source=openai)) - **YouTube Free Primetime Movies & Shows** — worth checking if you already live in YouTube; it offers ad-supported movies and, in the U.S., ad-supported TV shows too. ([tv.youtube.com](https://tv.youtube.com/welcome/partner/primetimechannelsoffer/?utm_source=openai)) **My quick take:** - **Best overall:** Tubi - **Best live-channel app:** Pluto TV or The Roku Channel - **Best on Samsung TVs:** Samsung TV Plus - **Best if you want your own library too:** Plex If you want, I can also give you a **“best free apps by category”** list: movies, live news, sports, anime, or family/kids.

TOM — Top of Mind (15 prompts)

What are the best ad-supported streaming services?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Best ad-supported streaming services, by overall quality: - **Netflix Standard with ads** — biggest library + lots of originals; best if you already want Netflix. - **Max with Ads** — great for HBO, Warner Bros., and prestige TV. - **Hulu (With Ads)** — excellent for current TV episodes and a strong catalog. - **Disney+ Basic** — best for Disney, Pixar, Marvel, Star Wars, National Geographic. - **Peacock Premium** — strong value for NBC shows, sports, and movies. - **Paramount+ Essential** — good for CBS, Paramount movies, NFL, and live sports. - **Amazon Prime Video with ads** — included with Prime; solid movies/shows. - **Tubi** — best free option overall; huge library. - **Pluto TV** — best free live-channel style experience. - **The Roku Channel** — very good free service with a wide mix of movies and TV. If you want the **best paid ad-supported plan overall**, I’d pick **Max with Ads** or **Hulu (With Ads)**. If you want **free**, go with **Tubi** and **Pluto TV**. If you want, I can also rank them by **movies**, **TV**, **sports**, or **best value**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Best ad-supported streaming services, by type: **Best free ad-supported** - **Tubi** — best overall free library; huge movie/TV selection. - **Pluto TV** — best for live-style channels and “lean-back” viewing. - **The Roku Channel** — great mix of free movies, TV, and live news. - **Freevee** (Amazon) — solid free catalog if you already use Prime/Amazon. - **Plex** — good for free movies plus personal media in one app. **Best paid with ads** - **Hulu (With Ads)** — best for current TV episodes and strong catalog. - **Peacock Premium** — best value for NBC/Bravo/Universal content and live sports. - **Paramount+ Essential** — good for CBS, Paramount movies, and NFL. - **Max With Ads** — best premium library if you want HBO and Warner content. - **Disney+ Basic** — best if you want Disney, Pixar, Marvel, and Star Wars with ads. **My top picks** 1. **Hulu (With Ads)** 2. **Tubi** 3. **Peacock Premium** 4. **Pluto TV** 5. **Max With Ads** If you tell me what you watch most—movies, live TV, sports, or current shows—I can narrow it to the best 2–3.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best ad-supported streaming services, by overall value and content: 1. **Netflix with Ads** Best for big-name originals, movies, and overall polish. Strong library, though not everything is included. 2. **Hulu (With Ads)** Best for current TV. Great if you want next-day episodes from major networks plus Hulu originals. 3. **Disney+ (With Ads)** Best for families, Marvel, Star Wars, Pixar, and Disney content. Good bundle value with Hulu. 4. **Max Basic with Ads** Best for premium TV and movies. Excellent for HBO shows, Warner Bros. films, and quality originals. 5. **Peacock Premium** Best budget pick. Good mix of NBC shows, live sports, movies, and comfort TV. 6. **Paramount+ Essential** Best for CBS, sports, and a solid movie/catalog library. Good value if you like live sports and franchises. 7. **Amazon Prime Video (with ads)** Best if you already have Prime. Large library and lots of rentable/add-on options. 8. **Tubi** Best free option overall. Huge ad-supported library with movies and TV, no subscription required. 9. **Pluto TV** Best for free live-channel style streaming. Great if you want cable-like browsing. 10. **The Roku Channel** Best free hidden gem. Solid movies, TV, and live channels, especially on Roku devices. **Best overall:** Hulu With Ads or Netflix With Ads **Best free:** Tubi **Best for prestige TV:** Max Basic with Ads **Best for sports:** Peacock Premium or Paramount+ Essential If you want, I can also give you the **best ad-supported services by price**, **by sports**, or **by movies**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best ad-supported streaming services, depending on what you want: ### Best free options - **Tubi** — best overall free choice; huge library of movies/TV, easy to use. - **Pluto TV** — best for live, channel-surfing style streaming. - **The Roku Channel** — excellent free movies, TV, and live channels. - **Freevee** — good free Amazon-backed option, especially if you already use Prime Video. - **Samsung TV Plus** — great if you want free live channels on Samsung devices. - **Xumo Play** — solid free live TV plus on-demand content. ### Best paid services with ads - **Hulu (With Ads)** — best for current TV shows and strong TV catalog. - **Peacock Premium** — best value for NBC/Universal content, sports, and movies. - **Paramount+ Essential** — good for CBS, Paramount movies, and some sports. - **Netflix Standard with Ads** — best for overall originals and easy mainstream streaming. - **Disney+ Basic** — best if you want Disney, Marvel, Pixar, and Star Wars. - **Max With Ads** — best for HBO shows and premium originals. ### Best picks by use case - **Best overall free:** Tubi - **Best live TV feel:** Pluto TV - **Best premium paid value:** Hulu (With Ads) - **Best movie-heavy paid option:** Peacock Premium - **Best for prestige TV:** Max With Ads If you want, I can also rank them for **movies**, **live TV**, or **sports** specifically.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Top ad-supported streaming services depend on what you want: - **Netflix Basic with Ads** — best for overall TV/movies if you already like Netflix originals. - **Max with Ads** — best for premium shows and movies (HBO, Warner Bros., Discovery). - **Hulu (With Ads)** — best for current-season TV and next-day episodes. - **Disney+ Basic** — best for Disney, Pixar, Marvel, and Star Wars fans. - **Peacock Premium** — best value for NBC, Bravo, WWE, and lots of casual viewing. - **Paramount+ Essential** — best for CBS, live sports, and Star Trek content. - **Amazon Prime Video** — strong library, but ads are now part of most plans unless you pay extra. - **Tubi** — best free option overall for movies and TV. - **Pluto TV** — best free live-channel-style streaming. - **Roku Channel** — great free mix of live channels and on-demand content. - **Freevee** — solid free option if you use Amazon devices/apps. If you want the simplest picks: - **Best paid overall:** Hulu or Max with Ads - **Best free:** Tubi - **Best for live-style free TV:** Pluto TV If you want, I can also rank them by **price**, **sports**, or **movies**.
Which ad-supported streamers are the most popular?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
The most popular ad-supported streamers are usually these: 1. **YouTube** / **YouTube TV** 2. **Netflix with Ads** 3. **Hulu (With Ads)** 4. **Disney+ Standard With Ads** 5. **Max With Ads** 6. **Paramount+ Essential** 7. **Peacock Premium** 8. **Amazon Prime Video** (now includes ads by default in many regions) 9. **Tubi** 10. **Pluto TV** If you mean **free ad-supported streaming (FAST)**, the biggest names are usually: - **Tubi** - **Pluto TV** - **The Roku Channel** - **Amazon Freevee** - **Plex** If you want, I can also rank them by **movies**, **live TV**, or **sports**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
The most popular ad-supported streamers are usually: - **YouTube** (still the biggest overall ad-supported video platform) - **Hulu** (one of the strongest paid ad tiers) - **Netflix with Ads** - **Disney+ Standard with Ads** - **Max with Ads** - **Peacock Premium** - **Paramount+ Essential** - **Prime Video** (now includes ads by default unless you pay extra) - FAST services like **Pluto TV**, **Tubi**, and **The Roku Channel** If you mean **biggest free ad-supported streamers**, the top names are usually: - **Tubi** - **Pluto TV** - **The Roku Channel** - **Freevee** (where available) If you want, I can also rank them by **popularity**, **content quality**, or **best value**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
If you mean **ad-supported streaming services overall**, the most popular in the U.S. are usually: 1. **YouTube** 2. **Hulu (with ads)** 3. **Tubi** 4. **Pluto TV** 5. **The Roku Channel** 6. **Amazon Freevee** 7. **Peacock Premium (with ads)** 8. **Paramount+ Essential (with ads)** If you mean **free ad-supported streaming (FAST/AVOD)** specifically, the biggest names are usually: - **Tubi** - **Pluto TV** - **The Roku Channel** - **Freevee** - **Plex** If you want, I can also rank them by **most viewers**, **best content**, or **best live TV channels**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
The most popular ad-supported streamers right now are: - **YouTube** — by far the biggest ad-supported video platform - **Netflix with ads** — one of the most popular paid streamers with an ad tier - **Hulu (With Ads)** — very strong in the U.S. - **Amazon Prime Video** — now ad-supported by default unless you pay extra - **Peacock** — especially popular for sports and NBC content - **Paramount+ Essential** — a common lower-cost option - **Max with Ads** — growing ad tier - **Disney+ Basic** — ad-supported Disney bundle option For **free ad-supported streaming TV (FAST)**, the most popular are: - **Tubi** - **Pluto TV** - **The Roku Channel** - **Freevee** (Amazon) If you want, I can also rank these by **best free options**, **best value**, or **most popular in the U.S. vs globally**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
The most popular ad-supported streamers are usually: - **YouTube** (including free ad-supported video) - **Netflix with Ads** - **Hulu** - **Disney+ with Ads** - **Amazon Prime Video** (ads now included by default in many regions) - **Max with Ads** - **Paramount+ Essential** - **Peacock** - **Tubi** - **Pluto TV** - **Roku Channel** - **Freevee** If you mean **biggest overall reach**, **YouTube, Netflix, Hulu, and Prime Video** are usually near the top. If you mean **best free ad-supported options**, **Tubi, Pluto TV, and Roku Channel** are the biggest names. If you want, I can rank them by **most users**, **best content**, or **best free options**.
What are the top free streaming services with ads? 50/mo
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best free, ad-supported streaming services: - **Tubi** — huge library of movies and TV, very easy to use. - **Pluto TV** — live channels plus on-demand shows/movies; feels like cable. - **The Roku Channel** — strong mix of movies, TV, and live channels. - **Freevee** (Amazon) — good selection of movies and original shows. - **Plex** — free movies/TV and live channels; also works as a media server. - **Peacock Free** — limited free tier, but some good NBC content. - **Xumo Play** — live channels and on-demand content, simple interface. - **Crackle** — smaller library, but still worth checking. - **Fawesome** — lots of free movies, mostly older titles. - **Sling Freestream** — free live TV and on-demand without a subscription. If you want, I can also rank these by **best movies**, **best live TV**, or **best app**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best **free, ad-supported streaming services** (FAST): 1. **Tubi** — Huge on-demand library; great mix of movies, TV, and live channels. 2. **Pluto TV** — Best for “channel surfing” feel with lots of live-style channels plus on-demand content. 3. **The Roku Channel** — Strong free movie/TV selection, live news, and some original shows. 4. **Amazon Freevee** — Good TV and movie catalog; now mostly integrated into Prime Video. 5. **Xumo Play** — Solid for live channels, news, sports, and casual viewing. 6. **Plex** — Good free movies/TV plus live channels; also useful if you use Plex for your own media. 7. **Crackle** — Smaller library, but still worth a look for free movies and series. 8. **Samsung TV Plus** — Excellent if you own a Samsung TV/device; lots of free live channels. **Best overall:** Tubi **Best for live TV feel:** Pluto TV or Xumo Play **Best for Roku users:** The Roku Channel If you want, I can also rank these by **movies**, **live news**, or **sports**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Top free ad-supported streaming services: 1. **Tubi** — huge library, lots of movies/TV, easy to use. 2. **Pluto TV** — best for live-style channel surfing plus on-demand. 3. **The Roku Channel** — great mix of free movies, TV, and live channels. 4. **Amazon Freevee** — solid originals and popular catalog titles. 5. **Plex** — good free movies/TV and live channels, plus your own media. 6. **Xumo Play** — strong live channels and news/sports-style content. 7. **Crackle** — smaller library, but simple and free. 8. **Samsung TV Plus** — excellent if you have a Samsung device; lots of live channels. If you want, I can rank these by **best overall**, **best for live TV**, or **best movie selection**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best **free, ad-supported streaming services (FAST)**: - **Tubi** — huge library of movies, TV, and live channels; one of the best overall. - **Pluto TV** — lots of live “channel” style streaming plus on-demand movies and shows. - **The Roku Channel** — very strong free selection, including movies, TV, and some live news/sports. - **Amazon Freevee** — free movies and originals inside Amazon’s ecosystem. - **Plex** — free movies, TV, and live channels, with a good app and media library features. - **Xumo Play** — easy-to-use live TV and on-demand content. - **Crackle** — smaller library, but still a legit free option. - **Fawesome** — big on movies and niche genres. - **Sling Freestream** — free live TV and on-demand content from Sling. - **YouTube** — not a classic FAST service, but has tons of free ad-supported movies and channels. If you want, I can also rank these by **best for movies**, **best for live TV**, or **best overall**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Top free ad-supported streaming services: - **Tubi** — biggest library of movies/TV; best all-around pick - **Pluto TV** — best for live channels plus on-demand - **The Roku Channel** — strong mix of movies, TV, and live news - **Xumo Play** — good live TV-style streaming, easy to use - **Plex** — free movies/TV plus live channels - **Sling Freestream** — solid free live channels and on-demand - **Crackle** — smaller library, but still worth checking - **Fawesome** — niche, lots of free genre content If you want the short answer: **Tubi, Pluto TV, and The Roku Channel** are the top 3 to start with.
Which ad-supported streamer has the best shows?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
If you mean **overall best TV lineup for ad-supported streaming**, I’d pick **Hulu**. **Why Hulu wins:** - Best mix of current network shows + strong originals - Great back catalog from FX, ABC, and more - Especially strong for prestige/drama/comedy fans **Best alternatives by taste:** - **Max (With Ads):** best for premium dramas, HBO originals, and big series like *Succession*, *The Last of Us*, *House of the Dragon* - **Peacock Premium:** best for NBC classics, *The Office*, *Parks and Rec*, and some solid reality/sports - **Paramount+ Essential:** good if you like *Yellowstone*, CBS shows, and Trek - **Netflix with Ads:** big volume, but the ad tier can be a little restrictive - **Disney+ with Ads:** best if you want Marvel, Star Wars, and family stuff **Short answer:** - **Best overall:** Hulu - **Best premium shows:** Max with Ads - **Best value nostalgia TV:** Peacock Premium If you want, I can rank them for **drama**, **comedy**, or **reality TV**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
If you mean **best overall shows on an ad-supported streamer**, I’d pick **Hulu**. **Why Hulu:** - Strongest mix of current hits and acclaimed originals - Great TV library from FX, ABC, and Searchlight - Consistently good dramas, comedies, and limited series **Standouts on Hulu:** - *The Bear* - *Shōgun* - *Only Murders in the Building* - *Abbott Elementary* - *Reservation Dogs* **Close runner-up:** **Max with Ads** - Best for prestige TV and HBO classics - Big wins if you like high-end dramas and comedies **Best shows on Max:** - *House of the Dragon* - *Succession* - *The Last of Us* - *The White Lotus* - *Barry* **Quick verdict:** - **Best overall ad-supported streamer for shows:** **Hulu** - **Best premium prestige shows:** **Max with Ads** If you want, I can also rank **Hulu vs Peacock vs Paramount+ vs Max vs Netflix ad plan** by show quality.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
If you mean **best overall TV lineup on an ad-supported plan, I’d pick Hulu**. **Why Hulu:** - Strongest mix of **current network TV**, **FX shows**, and **prestige originals** - Great for shows like **The Bear**, **Shōgun**, **Only Murders in the Building**, **Abbott Elementary**, **Reservation Dogs**, **Fargo** **Close runners-up:** - **Max** — best for premium prestige shows: **Succession**, **House of the Dragon**, **The Last of Us**, **Barry** - **Peacock** — best if you want comfort TV and NBC stuff: **Poker Face**, **The Office**, **Law & Order**, **Resident Alien** - **Paramount+** — best for CBS/Paramount franchises: **Yellowstone**, **Star Trek**, **South Park**, **Tulsa King** **Bottom line:** - **Best overall:** **Hulu** - **Best prestige:** **Max** - **Best comfort/broadcast shows:** **Peacock**
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
**Max With Ads** is probably the best overall if you care about **the strongest shows**. Why: - **HBO classics + originals**: *Succession*, *The Last of Us*, *House of the Dragon*, *The White Lotus*, *The Sopranos* - Big premium library that’s hard to beat Close runners-up: - **Hulu With Ads** — best for **current TV** and strong originals (*The Bear*, *Only Murders in the Building*) - **Peacock Premium** — good if you like NBC/Bravo stuff (*The Office*, *Parks and Rec*, *Poker Face*) - **Paramount+ Essential** — best for **Star Trek**, CBS shows, and some solid originals If you want one pick: **Max With Ads**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
**Hulu** is probably the best overall **ad-supported streamer for TV shows**. - **Best TV library:** Hulu - **Best prestige originals:** **Max** - **Best for NBC/Universal comfort shows:** **Peacock** - **Best if you like Star Wars / Marvel / Pixar:** **Disney+** **My pick:** **Hulu** — it has the strongest mix of current network shows, FX series, and solid originals. If you want, I can rank **Hulu vs Max vs Peacock vs Paramount+ vs Disney+** by shows only.
What are the best streaming apps with ads?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Best ad-supported streaming apps: - **Pluto TV** — best overall for free live channels and on-demand. - **Tubi** — best free movie/TV library. - **The Roku Channel** — great mix of free movies, shows, and live TV. - **Amazon Freevee** — solid free originals and movies, if available in your region. - **Plex** — good for free movies plus personal media management. - **Peacock (Free tier)** — some free content, but limited. - **YouTube** — not a classic streaming app, but huge ad-supported TV/movie content. If you want the **best paid apps with ads**: - **Netflix Basic with Ads** - **Max With Ads** - **Disney+ Basic** - **Hulu (With Ads)** - **Paramount+ Essential** **Quick picks:** - **Best free:** Tubi - **Best live TV:** Pluto TV - **Best overall paid with ads:** Hulu With Ads If you want, I can rank them by **movies**, **TV shows**, or **live channels**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Best ad-supported streaming apps: - **Tubi** — huge free library, easy to use, one of the best overall - **Pluto TV** — best for live channels plus on-demand TV - **The Roku Channel** — great free movies/shows, especially on Roku devices - **Freevee** — Amazon’s free, ad-supported app with solid originals - **Plex** — good mix of free movies, shows, and live TV - **Crackle** — smaller library, but still worth having - **Xumo Play** — another strong live-TV + free content option - **YouTube** — lots of free ad-supported movies and full shows/channels If you want the simplest shortlist: **Tubi, Pluto TV, and The Roku Channel** are the best overall.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Best ad-supported streaming apps: - **Tubi** — huge free library, best overall free option - **Pluto TV** — best for live channels + on-demand - **The Roku Channel** — strong free movies/shows, easy to use - **Amazon Freevee** — good originals and movies, integrated with Prime Video app - **Plex** — solid free movies/TV and some live channels - **Peacock (Free / with ads)** — good for NBC shows, movies, sports highlights - **Paramount+ Essential** — good for CBS, Paramount movies, live sports - **Hulu (With Ads)** — best for current TV episodes - **Disney+ Basic** — good if you want Disney/Marvel/Star Wars with ads - **Max With Ads** — strong premium catalog, but pricier If you want the **best free** choice: **Tubi**. If you want the **best live TV feel**: **Pluto TV**. If you want **current TV shows**: **Hulu (With Ads)**. If you tell me your device (Roku, Fire TV, Apple TV, phone, etc.) and what you like to watch, I can narrow it down.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
If you want the best **free ad-supported streaming apps**, these are the top picks: - **Tubi** — best overall for a huge free library of movies/TV - **Pluto TV** — best for live-channel style streaming and news/sports/old shows - **The Roku Channel** — best all-around if you want a mix of live TV and on-demand - **Amazon Freevee** — best for solid originals and popular movies - **Plex** — best for free movies plus live TV and personal media support - **Peacock (Free tier)** — good if you want NBC content, but limited - **Crackle** — smaller library, but still worth a look If you want the **best paid apps with ads**, the top choices are: - **Netflix with Ads** — best overall quality/content - **Hulu with Ads** — best for TV shows - **Disney+ with Ads** — best for family + Marvel/Star Wars - **Max with Ads** — best for prestige TV and movies - **Paramount+ Essential** — best for CBS, sports, and some originals If you want, I can also rank these by **movies**, **TV shows**, or **live channels**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best **free streaming apps with ads**: - **Tubi** — Best overall free option; huge on-demand library, easy to use. - **Pluto TV** — Best for live-channel feel; lots of “TV-like” channels plus on-demand. - **The Roku Channel** — Great mix of movies, shows, and live news; excellent if you use Roku. - **Freevee** — Good for Amazon-backed originals and popular movies/shows. - **Peacock Free** — Solid for NBC content, clips, and a smaller free catalog. - **Plex** — Nice for free movies/shows plus live TV and your own media library. - **Xumo Play** — Similar to Pluto; lots of free live channels and some on-demand content. - **Crunchyroll (free tier)** — Best for anime if you don’t mind ads. - **YouTube** — Best for creator content, full episodes, and lots of ad-supported uploads. **Best picks by type:** - **Best overall:** Tubi - **Best live TV vibe:** Pluto TV - **Best for Roku users:** The Roku Channel - **Best for anime:** Crunchyroll - **Best for variety:** Plex If you want, I can also rank the **best paid streaming apps that still have ads** (like Hulu, Peacock, and Max ad tiers).
What are the most recommended ad-supported TV streaming services?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Most recommended **ad-supported TV streaming services**: - **Tubi** — best free overall; huge library of movies, TV, and some live channels. - **Pluto TV** — best free live-TV style experience; lots of channel surfing. - **The Roku Channel** — great free option, especially on Roku devices; solid mix of live and on-demand. - **Amazon Freevee** — good free library if you already use Amazon. - **Peacock (with ads)** — strong for NBC shows, sports, and movies; one of the better paid ad tiers. - **Paramount+ Essential** — good value for CBS, Paramount movies, and live sports. - **Hulu (With Ads)** — one of the best all-around ad-supported plans for current TV shows. - **Disney+ Basic** — best if you want Disney, Marvel, Pixar, and Star Wars with ads. - **Max With Ads** — good for HBO and Warner content, though the ad plan is pricier. - **Netflix Standard with Ads** — best for Netflix originals if you’re okay with ads. If you want the **best free** picks: **Tubi, Pluto TV, and The Roku Channel**. If you want the **best paid ad-supported** picks: **Hulu (With Ads), Peacock, and Paramount+ Essential**. If you want, I can also rank these by **best for sports, movies, or live TV**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
The most recommended ad-supported TV streaming services are: 1. **Hulu (With Ads)** — best overall for TV shows - Great next-day network TV, lots of current-season episodes, strong originals. 2. **Peacock Premium** — best budget pick - Cheap, solid NBC shows, movies, and live sports. 3. **Paramount+ Essential** — best for CBS/Nick/Paramount content - Good mix of live CBS, classic TV, and some sports. 4. **Max with Ads** — best for premium series - HBO shows, Warner Bros. movies, Discovery content. 5. **Disney+ Basic** — best for family content - Disney, Pixar, Marvel, Star Wars, National Geographic. 6. **Netflix Standard with ads** — best for broad originals - Biggest all-around library of originals, though fewer download/features than higher tiers. 7. **Prime Video** — best if you already have Amazon Prime - Huge library, but ads are now included unless you pay extra to remove them. If you want **live TV** with ads, the top picks are: - **YouTube TV** - **Hulu + Live TV** - **Sling TV** **Quick recommendation:** - **Best overall:** Hulu (With Ads) - **Cheapest good option:** Peacock Premium - **Best for families:** Disney+ Basic - **Best for premium TV:** Max with Ads If you want, I can also rank these by **price**, **sports**, or **best for cable replacement**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Top ad-supported TV streaming services I’d recommend: - **Tubi** — Best overall free option; huge on-demand library, easy to use. - **Pluto TV** — Best for “channel surfing” with lots of live-style channels. - **The Roku Channel** — Great free mix of live TV, movies, and shows. - **Amazon Freevee** — Strong free selection if you already use Amazon. - **Plex** — Good free movies/TV plus live channels; nice if you also use Plex for media. - **Peacock (with ads)** — Best lower-cost paid option for NBC, sports, and current shows. - **Hulu (With Ads)** — Best for current TV episodes and a big catalog. - **Paramount+ Essential** — Good if you want CBS, Paramount, and some live sports. - **Max (with ads)** — Best premium library if you want HBO/Warner content. - **Disney+ Basic** — Best for Disney, Marvel, Star Wars, and Pixar with ads. If you want the shortest shortlist: **Tubi, Pluto TV, The Roku Channel, Hulu (With Ads), and Peacock (with ads).** If you want, I can also rank these by **best free**, **best live TV**, or **best for sports**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
The most recommended **ad-supported TV streaming services** are: - **Tubi** — best free all-around pick; huge on-demand library - **Pluto TV** — best free live-TV style experience; lots of channels - **Amazon Prime Video (with ads)** — best if you already have Prime - **Hulu (With Ads)** — best for current TV shows and next-day episodes - **Peacock (With Ads)** — best for NBC/Bravo/Sports content - **Paramount+ Essential** — best for CBS, NFL, and Paramount content - **Disney+ Basic with Ads** — best for Disney, Marvel, Pixar, and Star Wars - **Max with Ads** — best for HBO originals and premium dramas - **YouTube TV** — best live TV bundle, though not cheap **Best overall free choices:** **Tubi** and **Pluto TV** **Best paid ad-supported choice:** **Hulu (With Ads)** If you want, I can also rank these by **movies**, **live TV**, **sports**, or **best value**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
The most recommended ad-supported TV streaming services are: - **Hulu (with ads)** — best overall for current TV episodes and a strong library. - **Peacock Premium** — great value, especially for NBC shows, live sports, and movies. - **Paramount+ Essential** — good for CBS, Paramount movies, and NFL/UEFA sports. - **Disney+ Basic** — best if you want Disney, Marvel, Star Wars, and Pixar. - **Max with Ads** — strong for HBO shows, Warner Bros. movies, and originals. - **Netflix Standard with ads** — best if you want Netflix originals at a lower price. - **Amazon Prime Video** — now includes ads by default unless you pay extra to remove them. If you want the best picks: - **Best overall:** Hulu - **Best cheap value:** Peacock Premium - **Best for premium shows:** Max with Ads - **Best for movies + sports:** Paramount+ Essential If you want, I can also rank these by **price**, **content**, or **sports coverage**.
What are the best free video streaming options with ads?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best **free, ad-supported video streaming options**: - **Tubi** — Huge library of movies/TV, very easy to use, one of the best overall. - **Pluto TV** — Best for live-style channels plus on-demand content; feels like cable. - **Plex** — Good mix of free movies, shows, and live channels; also useful if you have your own media. - **Freevee** (Amazon) — Solid movies and TV shows, integrated with Amazon. - **The Roku Channel** — Great if you use Roku, but also available on web/app; strong free catalog. - **YouTube** — Not a traditional free-TV service, but many full movies, documentaries, and ad-supported shows are available. - **Crackle** — Smaller catalog, but still a decent free option. - **Peacock Free** — Limited free tier, but worth checking for select NBC content. - **CW** — Good for recent CW shows, free with ads. **Best picks overall:** - **Tubi** for the best all-around library - **Pluto TV** for live channels - **The Roku Channel** for a strong, easy free option If you want, I can also rank them by **movies**, **TV shows**, or **live channels**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Best free ad-supported streaming options: - **Tubi** — biggest free library; lots of movies, older TV, some surprisingly good indie titles. - **Pluto TV** — best for live, cable-style channels plus on-demand content. - **The Roku Channel** — strong mix of movies, shows, live news, and some Roku originals. - **Amazon Freevee** — good if you already use Amazon; solid movie/TV selection. - **Plex** — nice if you want free movies/shows plus live TV and your own media library. - **Xumo Play** — easy free live TV and news/sports-style channels. - **Samsung TV Plus** — excellent if you have a Samsung TV; lots of free live channels. - **YouTube** — best for free movies, rentals, and ad-supported full episodes from official channels. If you want the short answer: - **Best overall:** Tubi - **Best live TV feel:** Pluto TV - **Best for smart TVs:** The Roku Channel or Samsung TV Plus If you want, I can also rank them for **movies**, **TV shows**, or **live channels**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Best free ad-supported streaming options: - **Tubi** — biggest on-demand library; lots of movies, TV, anime, and cult stuff. - **Pluto TV** — best for live-channel style streaming; news, sports, reality, classic TV. - **The Roku Channel** — strong mix of free movies, shows, and live channels; great if you own Roku. - **Plex** — good all-around free movies/TV plus live channels; clean interface. - **Crackle** — smaller library, but still solid for free movies and some originals. - **Xumo Play** — nice for live TV channels and quick browsing. - **YouTube** — many full movies and shows are free with ads, plus tons of free creator content. If you want the “best” overall: - **Best library:** Tubi - **Best live TV feel:** Pluto TV - **Best on Roku devices:** The Roku Channel - **Best simple all-in-one:** Plex If you want, I can also give you the **best free ad-supported options by genre** (movies, live news, kids, anime, etc.).
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Best free, ad-supported streaming options: - **Tubi** — biggest free library overall; lots of movies, TV, and live channels. - **Pluto TV** — best for live-channel style streaming; great if you want cable-like browsing. - **The Roku Channel** — strong mix of movies, TV, and live news; works even without a Roku device. - **Freevee (Amazon Freevee)** — solid for movies and original shows; integrated into Prime Video in many regions. - **Plex** — good free movies/TV plus live TV and personal media server features. - **Peacock Free** — free tier has some NBC content, shows, and movies, but limited. - **Xumo Play** — another good live-TV-style option with news, sports, and movies. - **YouTube** — not a traditional streaming service, but has many full movies and free ad-supported channels. If you want the **best overall**, I’d start with **Tubi** and **The Roku Channel**. If you want **live TV feel**, go with **Pluto TV** or **Xumo Play**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best **free, ad-supported video streaming options**: - **Tubi** — Best overall for free movies/TV. Huge library, easy to use, lots of good on-demand content. - **Pluto TV** — Best for “live TV” style channels. Great if you want a cable-like experience for free. - **The Roku Channel** — Excellent mix of free movies, TV, and live channels; works well even if you don’t own a Roku. - **Amazon Freevee** — Good selection of movies and original shows, though it’s being folded more into Prime Video in some regions. - **Xumo Play** — Solid free live channels plus on-demand content; simple and reliable. - **Samsung TV Plus** — Great if you have a Samsung device, with a strong lineup of free live channels. - **Plex** — Good for free movies/TV and also useful if you want to manage your own media library. - **Crackle** — Smaller library, but still worth checking for free movies and series. - **Sling Freestream** — Good free live channels and on-demand content without a subscription. - **YouTube** — Best for free user-uploaded content, full movies from official channels, and ad-supported shows. **Best picks overall:** 1. **Tubi** 2. **Pluto TV** 3. **The Roku Channel** If you want, I can also rank them by **best movie selection**, **best live channels**, or **best apps for your device**.
Which ad-supported streaming services are worth using?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Yes—these are the ad-supported services I’d actually recommend: ### Best overall - **Tubi** — huge free library, easy to use, very good for movies and older TV. - **Pluto TV** — best if you like live-channel-style browsing plus on-demand. - **The Roku Channel** — strong free selection, especially if you already use Roku. - **Freevee** — solid free option from Amazon, good mix of movies and TV. ### Best premium ad-supported plans - **Netflix Basic with Ads** — worth it if you mainly want Netflix originals and don’t mind ads. - **Hulu (With Ads)** — still one of the best for current TV and network shows. - **Disney+ Basic** — good value if you want Disney, Marvel, Star Wars, Pixar. - **Max With Ads** — worth it for HBO shows and Warner Bros. content. - **Paramount+ Essential** — good for CBS, NFL, and a decent movie catalog. ### Best value picks - **Hulu + Disney+ bundle with ads** — usually one of the best bargains. - **Peacock Premium** — good if you want NBC shows, movies, Premier League, WWE. ### Usually not worth it unless you want something specific - **Discovery+ with ads** — fine for unscripted content, but niche. - **AMC+ with ads** — only if you specifically want AMC/IFC/Shudder-style content. ### My quick rule - **Free:** Tubi, Pluto TV, Roku Channel - **Best all-around paid:** Hulu with ads - **Best for originals:** Netflix Basic with Ads - **Best bundle:** Hulu + Disney+ with ads If you want, I can rank them by **movies**, **TV**, or **sports**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
The ones most worth using: - **Tubi** — best free overall. Huge library, easy to use, lots of movies/TV, solid hidden gems. - **Pluto TV** — best for live-channel feel. Great if you want “channel surfing” with news, reality, classics, and niche stuff. - **The Roku Channel** — excellent free option, especially if you use Roku. Good mix of movies, shows, live channels. - **Freevee** — solid free Amazon option, though catalog can be uneven. - **Peacock with ads** — worth it if you want NBC shows, next-day TV, WWE, Premier League, and some movies. - **Paramount+ Essential** — good value for CBS, Paramount movies, Star Trek, and live sports. - **Hulu with Ads** — best if you want current network TV and a strong show library. - **Netflix Standard with Ads** — worth it if you already want Netflix and don’t mind ads; the library is strong, but not all titles are available. Best picks by use case: - **Best free overall:** Tubi - **Best live-TV style:** Pluto TV - **Best premium ad tier:** Hulu with Ads - **Best sports/news value:** Peacock with ads / Paramount+ Essential If you want, I can also rank them by **movies**, **TV shows**, or **sports**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
The ones most worth using are: - **Tubi** — best overall free option. Huge library, easy to use, lots of movies and TV. - **Pluto TV** — best for “live TV” feel and channel surfing. - **The Roku Channel** — great free movies, shows, and some live channels; especially good if you already use Roku. - **Amazon Freevee** — solid free originals and movies; now mostly folded into the Prime Video app. - **Plex** — good if you also want a media library app plus free streaming. - **Peacock (with ads)** — worth it if you want NBC shows, Bravo, sports, and some solid movies. - **Hulu (with ads)** — worth it mainly for current TV episodes and FX/FX on Hulu content. - **Max with ads** — worth it if you want HBO/Warner content and don’t mind ads. If you want the **best free-only picks**, start with **Tubi, Pluto TV, and The Roku Channel**. If you want, I can also rank them by **movies**, **TV shows**, or **live channels**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Yes—these are the ad-supported streaming services I’d actually recommend: - **Tubi** — best overall for free movies/TV. Huge library, easy to use, lots of “good enough” stuff and some surprisingly solid cult/family picks. - **Pluto TV** — best for live-style channel surfing. Great if you like cable-like channels, news, reality TV, old sitcoms, and background viewing. - **The Roku Channel** — very good free option, especially on Roku devices. Strong mix of movies, TV, and some live channels. - **Peacock (free tier / ad-supported plans)** — worth it if you want NBC shows, sports highlights, and a better curated library. - **Plex** — good if you want free movies plus your own media in one place. - **YouTube** — not a “streaming service” in the classic sense, but still one of the best ad-supported options for free full movies, docs, and creators. **Best picks by use case** - **Best overall:** Tubi - **Best live-channel feel:** Pluto TV - **Best on Roku:** The Roku Channel - **Best premium-ad tier:** Peacock If you want, I can also rank the best paid ad-supported services like **Netflix Basic with Ads**, **Disney+ with Ads**, **Max with Ads**, and **Hulu with Ads**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
The ad-supported ones most worth using: - **Tubi** — best free overall. Huge library, easy to use, lots of movies/TV. - **Pluto TV** — best for “channel surfing” and live-style free TV. - **The Roku Channel** — great mix of free movies, shows, and live channels. - **Freevee** — solid if you already use Amazon; good for movies/older TV. - **Plex** — good if you want free streaming plus your own media in one app. - **Peacock Premium** — one of the better paid ad tiers, especially for NBC/Universal content and sports. - **Paramount+ Essential** — good value if you want CBS, live sports, and a lot of older catalog content. - **Hulu (With Ads)** — worth it if you want current network TV and FX/Fox content. - **Disney+ Basic** — worth it if you want Disney/Marvel/Star Wars and don’t mind ads. - **Max With Ads** — good if you want HBO/Warner content at a lower price. Best picks by use: - **Best free:** Tubi - **Best live-style free TV:** Pluto TV - **Best paid value:** Paramount+ Essential or Peacock Premium - **Best for current TV:** Hulu With Ads If you want, I can rank them for **movies**, **sports**, or **live TV**.
What are the top ad-based streaming platforms?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Top ad-based streaming platforms are: **Free (AVOD/FAST)** - **YouTube** — biggest overall, lots of free ad-supported video - **Tubi** — huge free library of movies and TV - **Pluto TV** — live channels + on-demand, very popular - **The Roku Channel** — strong free catalog, especially on Roku devices - **Plex** — free movies, TV, and live channels - **Crackle** — smaller, but still a known free option **Paid services with ad tiers** - **Hulu (With Ads)** - **Netflix Standard with ads** - **Disney+ Basic** - **Max with ads** - **Peacock Premium** - **Paramount+ Essential** **Best overall picks:** - **Best free:** Tubi - **Best for live-channel style viewing:** Pluto TV - **Best overall ad-supported video platform:** YouTube - **Best paid ad-tier bundle:** Hulu with ads If you want, I can also rank them by **content quality**, **sports**, or **best value**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Top ad-based streaming platforms right now: - **YouTube** — biggest ad-supported video platform overall. - **Tubi** — one of the largest free, ad-supported streaming services. - **Pluto TV** — major FAST platform with live channels and on-demand content. - **The Roku Channel** — strong free ad-supported library, especially on Roku devices. - **Amazon Prime Video (ad-supported tier)** — huge reach, though not free. - **Netflix (ad-supported tier)** — increasingly important premium option. - **Disney+ (with ads)** — major for movies, Disney, Marvel, Star Wars. - **Hulu (ad-supported)** — still one of the most popular ad-based subscriptions. - **Peacock (with ads)** — strong for NBC, sports, and current TV. - **Max (with ads)** — premium catalog with an ad tier. - **Freevee** — Amazon’s free ad-supported option. - **Plex** — solid free streaming with live channels and on-demand. If you want, I can also rank these by **best free options**, **best premium ad tiers**, or **best for live TV**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Top ad-based streaming platforms right now: **Free, ad-supported (FAST)** - **Tubi** - **Pluto TV** - **The Roku Channel** - **Amazon Freevee** - **Xumo Play** - **Plex** **Paid services with ad-supported tiers** - **Netflix Standard with Ads** - **Hulu (With Ads)** - **Disney+ (With Ads)** - **Max with Ads** - **Peacock Premium** - **Paramount+ Essential** If you want the **best free options**, start with **Tubi** and **Pluto TV**. If you want **big-name originals for less money**, **Netflix Standard with Ads** and **Hulu With Ads** are the biggest picks.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Top ad-based streaming platforms include: - **Tubi** — one of the biggest free, ad-supported libraries; strong on movies/TV. - **Pluto TV** — best-known FAST service with live-style channels and on-demand content. - **The Roku Channel** — free streaming with a solid mix of movies, TV, and live channels. - **Amazon Freevee** — ad-supported movies/series (now integrated into Prime Video in many regions). - **Peacock (Free tier / ad-supported plans)** — NBCUniversal content, sports, and originals. - **Paramount+ Essential** — lower-cost ad-supported tier with CBS, Paramount, and sports content. - **Hulu** — large on-demand catalog; the ad-supported plan is very popular. - **Disney+ Basic** — ad-supported version of Disney+. - **Max with Ads** — HBO/Warner Bros. content with ads. - **YouTube** — not a traditional streaming service, but one of the biggest ad-supported video platforms. If you want, I can also rank them by **best free**, **best live channels**, or **best movie library**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Top ad-based streaming platforms right now: - **Tubi** — huge free library; one of the biggest AVOD services. - **Pluto TV** — best-known FAST platform; lots of live channels plus on-demand. - **The Roku Channel** — strong free movies, shows, and live TV. - **Freevee** — Amazon’s ad-supported free streaming app. - **Plex** — free movies/TV plus live channels. - **Xumo Play** — solid FAST option with live channels. - **Peacock (with ads)** — not free, but one of the biggest ad-supported premium tiers. - **Hulu (With Ads)** — major ad-supported subscription service. - **Paramount+ Essential** — lower-cost ad-supported tier. - **Disney+ Basic** — ad-supported Disney streaming tier. If you want, I can also rank them by **best free**, **best live TV**, or **best premium ad-supported**.
What are the best streaming services that are free with ads?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best **free, ad-supported streaming services**: - **Tubi** — Huge library of movies and TV, easy to use, one of the best overall. - **Pluto TV** — Best for live-style channels plus on-demand content. - **The Roku Channel** — Great selection of movies, shows, and some live channels. - **Freevee** (Amazon) — Solid free movies and shows, especially if you already use Amazon. - **Plex** — Good mix of free movies, TV, and live channels. - **Crackle** — Smaller library, but still a decent free option. - **Peacock Free** — Limited free tier, but worth checking for NBC content. - **YouTube** — Not a traditional streaming service, but has lots of free ad-supported movies and shows. **Best picks overall:** - **Tubi** for the biggest free on-demand library - **Pluto TV** for live channels - **The Roku Channel** for a strong all-around free option If you want, I can also rank these by **best movies**, **best live TV**, or **best for sports/news**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Top free, ad-supported streaming services: - **Tubi** — Best overall library. Huge mix of movies, TV, anime, and cult favorites. - **Pluto TV** — Best live-TV style experience. Tons of channels plus on-demand shows/movies. - **The Roku Channel** — Great if you want a polished app and lots of free movies/TV. - **Amazon Freevee** — Good originals and familiar TV/movies, though availability can vary. - **Xumo Play** — Strong live channels and a simple interface. - **Plex** — Great for free movies/shows and some live channels; also useful if you manage your own media. - **Crackle** — Smaller library, but still worth a look for free movies and series. - **Sling Freestream** — Good free live channels without needing a Sling subscription. If you want the **best single pick**, go with **Tubi**. If you want the **best live-TV feel**, choose **Pluto TV** or **The Roku Channel**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Top free, ad-supported streaming services: - **Tubi** — best overall for a huge free library of movies and TV - **Pluto TV** — best for live channels plus on-demand - **The Roku Channel** — great mix of movies, TV, and live news - **Freevee** — Amazon’s free service; good originals and movies - **Plex** — solid for free movies, shows, and live TV channels - **Peacock Free** — limited, but good for sampled NBC content and select titles - **YouTube** — lots of free movies/shows from official channels, plus rentals - **Crackle** — smaller library, but still a decent free option Best picks by need: - **Best overall:** Tubi - **Best live TV feel:** Pluto TV - **Best if you already use Roku:** The Roku Channel - **Best Amazon option:** Freevee If you want, I can also rank them for **movies**, **TV shows**, or **live channels**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best free, ad-supported streaming services: - **Tubi** — Best overall. Huge library of movies and TV, easy to use, lots of genres. - **The Roku Channel** — Great mix of free movies, shows, and live channels; strong if you have a Roku. - **Pluto TV** — Best for live TV-style channels plus on-demand content. - **Amazon Freevee** — Solid originals and a decent movie/TV selection. - **Plex** — Good for free movies, shows, and live TV, with a clean interface. - **Xumo Play** — Good free live channels and some on-demand content. - **Crackle** — Smaller library, but still worth checking for free movies and shows. - **YouTube** — Best for free full movies sometimes, plus endless ad-supported video content. **Quick picks:** - **Best overall:** Tubi - **Best live channels:** Pluto TV - **Best if you own a Roku:** The Roku Channel If you want, I can also rank them for **movies**, **TV shows**, or **live news/sports**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Top free-with-ads streaming services: - **Tubi** — Best overall for a huge, easy-to-browse library of movies and TV. - **Pluto TV** — Best for live TV-style channels and background watching. - **The Roku Channel** — Great mix of live channels, movies, and some originals. - **Amazon Freevee** — Strong selection of movies, TV, and a few good originals. - **Plex** — Good free movies/TV plus live channels; nice if you also manage your own media. - **Peacock (Free tier)** — Limited, but solid for sampling NBC content. - **Crackle** — Smaller library, but fully free and simple. - **Xumo Play** — Good live channels and news/sports-style programming. Best picks by use: - **Best overall:** Tubi - **Best live-channel experience:** Pluto TV - **Best if you own a Roku:** The Roku Channel - **Best bonus service:** Freevee If you want, I can also rank them for **movies**, **TV shows**, or **live news/sports**.
Which ad-supported streamer is best for movies and shows?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
**Best overall: Tubi.** It has the strongest free, ad-supported mix of **movies and TV shows**, with a huge library and easy-to-use apps. If you want alternatives: - **The Roku Channel** — best if you want a more polished interface and some live channels - **Pluto TV** — best for live TV-style browsing - **Freevee** — good, but the catalog is smaller than Tubi’s If you want, I can also rank them by **best for new movies, best for TV shows, or best interface**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
**Best overall: Hulu (With Ads)** — it’s the strongest mix of **current TV shows, originals, and a solid movie library**. **Good runners-up:** - **Peacock Premium** — great for NBC shows, some movies, and live sports - **Tubi** — best **free** option for movies, but less premium TV - **Max With Ads** — best for prestige shows/movies, but pricier - **Paramount+ Essential** — good if you want CBS, Paramount movies, and live sports If you want **one pick**, go with **Hulu (With Ads)**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
**Best overall: Hulu (with ads).** It has the strongest mix of **current TV, next-day network shows, and a solid movie library**. Quick picks: - **Best for overall movies + shows:** **Hulu** - **Best for premium movies/series:** **Max (With Ads)** - **Best cheap all-around value:** **Peacock Premium** - **Best for family/Disney content:** **Disney+ Basic** - **Best for CBS/Paramount/Nick shows:** **Paramount+ Essential** If you want just one recommendation, go with **Hulu**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
**Best overall: Hulu (With Ads)** — best mix of **current TV, next-day episodes, and a solid movie library**. If you want **free** instead, **Tubi** is the best pick for **movies + shows** overall. Quick take: - **Hulu (With Ads):** best overall quality and current content - **Tubi:** best free option - **Pluto TV:** best for live-channel style browsing - **The Roku Channel:** good free movies/shows, especially if you have Roku - **Amazon Freevee:** decent, but not as strong as Tubi/Hulu If you want, I can rank them by **best movies**, **best TV**, or **best free service**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
**Best overall: Netflix Standard with ads.** It has the **strongest mix of movies, bingeable shows, and originals**, plus the most consistently good recommendation engine. **If your priorities differ:** - **Hulu with ads** — best for **current TV** - **Max with ads** — best for **movies** - **Disney+ Basic** — best for **family/franchise content** - **Amazon Prime Video** — good value if you already have Prime **My quick pick:** - **Movies + shows, one service:** **Netflix Standard with ads** - **TV-first:** **Hulu with ads** - **Movie-first:** **Max with ads**
What are the best cord-cutting streaming services with ads?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best **ad-supported streaming services for cord-cutters**, depending on what you want: ### Best overall live TV + on-demand - **YouTube TV** — best all-around cable replacement; great interface, strong DVR, lots of live channels. - **Hulu + Live TV** — best if you also want Hulu’s on-demand library, Disney+, and ESPN+ bundled in. ### Best budget live TV - **Sling TV** — cheapest legit live-TV option; good for customizing channel packs. - **Philo** — best low-cost option for entertainment channels (no sports/news). ### Best free ad-supported streaming - **Pluto TV** — best free live channels and channel-surfing feel. - **Tubi** — best free on-demand movie/TV library. - **The Roku Channel** — excellent free mix of live channels, movies, and originals. - **Plex** — good free movies, shows, and some live TV. ### Best premium on-demand with ads - **Netflix Standard with Ads** - **Max with Ads** - **Disney+ Basic** - **Hulu (With Ads)** - **Peacock Premium** - **Paramount+ Essential** ### Best for sports - **YouTube TV** - **Hulu + Live TV** - **Sling TV** - **Fubo** - **ESPN+** (not full live TV, but useful sports add-on) ### My quick picks - **Best overall:** YouTube TV - **Best cheapest live TV:** Sling TV - **Best free service:** Tubi - **Best for families:** Hulu + Live TV - **Best for movie/TV fans on a budget:** Netflix with Ads + Tubi If you want, I can also rank them by **price**, **sports**, or **local channels**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best ad-supported cord-cutting streaming services: - **YouTube TV** — best overall live TV replacement Big channel lineup, unlimited DVR, very easy to use. - **Hulu + Live TV** — best for bundles Live TV plus **Hulu**, **Disney+**, and **ESPN+** in one package. - **Sling TV** — best budget live TV Cheapest flexible option, but you may need add-ons to match cable. - **Fubo** — best for sports Strong for live sports, especially soccer, NFL, and regional sports in some markets. - **Philo** — best cheap entertainment option Very low cost, lots of entertainment and lifestyle channels, but no sports/news. - **Peacock** — best for NBC/Universal content Good mix of live sports, movies, and originals at a low price. - **Paramount+ Essential** — best for CBS and sports Includes CBS shows, some live sports, and a strong back catalog. - **Max with Ads** — best premium library with ads Great if you want HBO originals plus Warner Bros. content. - **Netflix Standard with ads** — best for general streaming Huge library, simple app, good value if you don’t mind commercials. - **Disney+ Basic** — best for families Disney, Pixar, Marvel, Star Wars, with ads at a lower price. If you want, I can also rank them by **price**, **sports**, or **best cable replacement**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Best cord-cutting streaming services with ads: - **Hulu (With Ads)** — best overall for a mix of current TV, originals, and a strong catalog. - **Disney+ (With Ads)** — best for Disney, Pixar, Marvel, Star Wars, and family content. - **Max (With Ads)** — best for premium movies and HBO shows. - **Netflix Standard with Ads** — best for the biggest all-around originals library. - **Peacock Premium** — best value for NBC, sports, and reality TV. - **Paramount+ Essential** — best for CBS, Paramount movies, and live sports. - **Prime Video** — best if you already have Amazon Prime; ads are now included by default. - **Tubi** — best free ad-supported option. - **Pluto TV** — best free live-channel-style streaming. If you want the **best value combo**, I’d start with: 1. **Hulu (With Ads)** 2. **Max (With Ads)** 3. **Tubi** or **Pluto TV** for free extras If you want, I can also rank them by **price**, **live sports**, or **best free options**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Best cord-cutting options with ads depend on whether you want **live TV** or just **cheap on-demand**. ### Best live TV replacements - **YouTube TV** — best overall for a cable-like experience; strong channel lineup, unlimited DVR. - **Hulu + Live TV** — best if you also want Hulu, Disney+, and ESPN+ bundled. - **Sling TV** — best budget live-TV option; cheaper, but fewer channels. - **Fubo** — best for sports-heavy households. ### Best ad-supported on-demand services - **Hulu (With Ads)** — best overall value for TV shows. - **Peacock Premium** — great for NBC shows, sports, and movies. - **Paramount+ Essential** — good for CBS, NFL, and Star Trek. - **Max With Ads** — strong for HBO series and Warner Bros. movies. - **Disney+ Basic** — best for Disney, Marvel, Star Wars, and Pixar. - **Netflix Standard with Ads** — good original content, less library than ad-free tiers. ### Best free ad-supported services - **Pluto TV** — best free live-channel style service. - **Tubi** — best free movie/TV library. - **Freevee** — solid free option from Amazon. ### My quick picks - **Best overall:** YouTube TV - **Best budget:** Sling TV - **Best entertainment bundle:** Hulu + Live TV - **Best free:** Tubi + Pluto TV If you want, I can also rank them by **price**, **sports**, or **news**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best ad-supported cord-cutting streaming services, depending on what you want: - **YouTube TV** — best overall live-TV replacement Great channel lineup, unlimited DVR, easy interface. Usually the first pick if you want cable-like TV. - **Hulu + Live TV** — best if you want live TV + on-demand Bundles live channels with **Hulu’s ad-supported library**, plus Disney+ and ESPN+. Strong value. - **Sling TV** — best budget live-TV option Cheaper than most competitors, but you have to choose between **Sling Orange** and **Sling Blue**. Good for saving money. - **fubo** — best for sports Excellent for live sports, regional sports options, and lots of channels. Usually pricier. - **Philo** — best cheap entertainment bundle Very affordable, but no local channels or sports/news-heavy lineup. Good for reality, lifestyle, and entertainment. - **Peacock Premium** — best low-cost add-on service Good mix of NBC shows, movies, WWE, and some live sports. Very inexpensive. - **Paramount+ Essential** — best for CBS and live sports/news Ad-supported tier includes a lot of CBS content and some live events. - **Tubi** — best free ad-supported streaming Huge free library of movies and TV. No subscription needed. - **Pluto TV** — best free live-channel experience Free, ad-supported, with lots of live channels and on-demand content. If you want the shortest answer: - **Best overall:** YouTube TV - **Best value:** Sling TV or Philo - **Best free:** Tubi or Pluto TV - **Best sports:** fubo If you want, I can also give you the **best one for your budget and channels you actually watch**.
What are the most popular free streaming channels with ads?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
The most popular free ad-supported streaming services (FAST) are: - **Pluto TV** — huge live-channel lineup, movies, TV, sports, news - **Tubi** — big on-demand library, strong movie selection - **The Roku Channel** — free movies, shows, live news, and Roku Originals - **Amazon Freevee** — free movies/series with ads (availability varies by region/device) - **Plex** — free movies, shows, and live TV channels - **Xumo Play** — lots of live channels, news, sports, and entertainment - **Crackle** — older movies, TV, and originals - **Samsung TV Plus** — built into Samsung TVs/phones; lots of live channels - **LG Channels** — built into LG TVs - **Vizio WatchFree+** — built into Vizio TVs If you want the best overall picks: - **Best for live channels:** Pluto TV, Xumo Play, Samsung TV Plus - **Best for movies/TV on demand:** Tubi, The Roku Channel - **Best if you already have the device:** Samsung TV Plus, LG Channels, Vizio WatchFree+ If you want, I can also rank the best free streaming apps by **movies**, **live news**, or **sports**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
The most popular free ad-supported streaming channels/services are: - **Pluto TV** — huge lineup of live “channels” plus on-demand shows/movies - **Tubi** — one of the biggest free movie/TV libraries - **The Roku Channel** — strong mix of live channels, movies, and originals - **Amazon Freevee** — free movies/TV with ads (now heavily integrated into Prime Video in some regions) - **Xumo Play** — lots of live news, sports, and entertainment channels - **Plex** — free live TV and on-demand streaming - **Crackle** — older but still popular free movies and series - **Samsung TV Plus** — built into Samsung TVs; lots of free live channels - **LG Channels** — built into LG smart TVs - **Vizio WatchFree+** — built into Vizio TVs - **Haystack News** — popular free news-focused streaming - **Sling Freestream** — free ad-supported live channels and on-demand content If you want the **best overall picks**, I’d start with **Pluto TV, Tubi, and The Roku Channel**. If you want, I can also rank them by **movies**, **live TV**, or **news**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
The most popular free, ad-supported streaming options are: - **Pluto TV** — huge live-channel lineup + on-demand movies/shows - **Tubi** — one of the biggest free libraries for movies and TV - **The Roku Channel** — free movies, shows, and live TV - **Amazon Freevee** — free shows/movies inside Amazon’s ecosystem - **Plex** — free streaming movies, TV, and live channels - **Xumo Play** — lots of free live channels and on-demand content - **Samsung TV Plus** — built into Samsung TVs and mobile app - **LG Channels** — built into LG smart TVs - **Sling Freestream** — free live channels and on-demand content - **Crackle** — smaller library, but still a known free option If you want, I can also rank these by **best movie selection**, **best live TV**, or **best for smart TVs**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
The most popular free, ad-supported streaming services (FAST/AVOD) are: - **Pluto TV** — lots of live “channels” plus on-demand - **Tubi** — huge on-demand library, very popular - **The Roku Channel** — free movies, shows, and live channels - **Xumo Play** — live TV-style channels and on-demand - **Plex** — free movies, shows, and live channels - **Crunchyroll (free tier)** — anime with ads - **Amazon Prime Video’s free ad-supported section** (formerly **Freevee** in many markets) - **Peacock Free** — limited free tier with ads - **Crackle** — older but still around - **Samsung TV Plus** — great if you have a Samsung TV; also on mobile/web If you want the **best overall picks**, I’d start with **Tubi, Pluto TV, and The Roku Channel**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
The most popular free, ad-supported streaming channels/apps are usually: - **Tubi** - **Pluto TV** - **The Roku Channel** - **Freevee** (Amazon) - **Xumo Play** - **Plex** - **Peacock Free** (limited free tier) - **Crackle** - **Fubo Sports Network** (free) - **Samsung TV Plus** (on Samsung devices/TVs) If you mean the biggest **FAST channels** inside these apps, popular ones include: - **ABC News Live** - **CBS News 24/7** - **Scripps News** - **Court TV** - **ION** - **Paw Patrol / kids channels** on Pluto and Roku Channel - **Hallmark Movies & More** - **Comet** - **IGN** - **TMZ** Best overall picks: - **Tubi** for the biggest free movie/TV library - **Pluto TV** for live-style channels - **The Roku Channel** for easy access and originals - **Freevee** if you already use Amazon If you want, I can also rank them by **movies**, **live news**, or **sports**.
Which ad-supported streaming services have the biggest content libraries?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
If you mean **ad-supported streaming services with the biggest on-demand libraries**, the usual heavy hitters are: ### Biggest overall libraries - **Tubi** — one of the largest free ad-supported libraries - **Pluto TV** — huge, though a lot is live/linear channels rather than pure on-demand - **The Roku Channel** — very large free library - **Plex** — big free library, especially for movies - **Freevee** (now largely folded into Prime Video’s free section) — smaller than the top three but still sizable ### Biggest paid services with ads - **Amazon Prime Video with ads** — huge overall catalog - **Max with Ads** — strong movie/TV library - **Hulu (With Ads)** — excellent TV library - **Peacock Premium** — large TV/sports-focused library - **Paramount+ Essential** — broad CBS/Paramount catalog - **Netflix Standard with Ads** — good, but not usually the largest library-wise - **Disney+ Standard with Ads** — smaller catalog, but strong franchise depth ### Quick takeaway - **Largest free library:** **Tubi** - **Best mix of size + quality in paid ads tiers:** **Prime Video**, **Max**, **Hulu** If you want, I can rank these by **movies**, **TV shows**, or **best value**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
If you mean **ad-supported streaming services with the biggest libraries**, the usual top tier is: 1. **Tubi** — probably the biggest **free** on-demand library overall 2. **Pluto TV** — huge, especially if you count its **live channels** plus on-demand 3. **The Roku Channel** — very large free library, strong mix of movies, TV, and live content 4. **Plex** — big free library, though less mainstream than the three above 5. **Amazon Prime Video (with ads)** — not free, but enormous overall catalog 6. **Hulu with ads** — smaller than the free giants, but still a major library 7. **Peacock Premium** — solid, but not in the top group for sheer size 8. **Paramount+ with ads** — good size, but not among the largest **Best answer by category:** - **Biggest free ad-supported library:** **Tubi** - **Biggest if you include live FAST channels:** **Pluto TV** - **Biggest overall ad-supported service:** **Amazon Prime Video** (with ads) If you want, I can also rank them by **movie library**, **TV library**, or **live channels**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
If you mean **free, ad-supported streaming services (AVOD/FAST)**, the biggest libraries are usually: 1. **Tubi** — often the **largest overall on-demand library** - Huge mix of movies, TV, and niche categories - Best pick if you want the most titles 2. **The Roku Channel** — one of the biggest all-around free libraries - Strong mix of on-demand movies/TV plus live channels - Especially good if you already use Roku devices 3. **Pluto TV** — massive, but more **live-channel focused** - Tons of live “TV-like” channels - On-demand library is smaller than Tubi’s, but overall content volume is very large 4. **Xumo Play** — broad free library with lots of live channels - Good variety, less deep than Tubi/Pluto 5. **Plex** — solid free movies/TV library - Smaller than the top three, but still sizable 6. **Fandango at Home (free-with-ads section)** - Decent rotating selection, but not usually among the very largest **Best overall for sheer library size:** **Tubi** **Best for live-channel variety:** **Pluto TV** **Best “all-around” free option:** **The Roku Channel** If you want, I can also rank them by **movies only** or **TV shows only**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
If you mean **biggest on-demand libraries** among ad-supported services, the usual leaders are: 1. **Tubi** — generally considered the largest AVOD library 2. **The Roku Channel** — very large, especially for movies/TV and free live channels 3. **Plex** — big mix of free movies, TV, and live channels 4. **Pluto TV** — huge overall offering, though a lot is live-channel based 5. **Xumo Play** — also large, especially for free live channels **Best bets for sheer catalog size:** **Tubi** and **The Roku Channel**. If you want, I can also rank them by **movies only**, **TV only**, or **live channels**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
If you mean **ad-supported streaming services with the largest libraries**, the biggest names are usually: ### Paid services - **Amazon Prime Video** — one of the largest overall catalogs, including tons of movies/series plus add-ons. - **Hulu** — huge TV library, especially current-network shows. - **Paramount+ with ads** — strong mix of TV, movies, and Nickelodeon/Comedy Central/CBS content. - **Peacock Premium** — big NBCUniversal library, plus lots of movies and live sports. - **Max with Ads** — smaller than the above in raw title count, but very strong quality library. ### Free ad-supported services - **Tubi** — probably the biggest free library by sheer volume. - **The Roku Channel** — very large free catalog, especially movies and TV. - **Pluto TV** — large library, but more focused on live channels than on-demand depth. - **Freevee** — decent library, but smaller than Tubi/Roku. ### Quick ranking by “biggest library” - **Overall:** Amazon Prime Video - **Best big free library:** Tubi - **Best mix of big TV library + ads:** Hulu If you want, I can also rank them by **movies only**, **TV only**, or **best value**.
What are the best budget streaming services with ads?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Best budget ad-supported streaming services: - **Peacock Premium** — usually one of the cheapest big-name options; good for NBC shows, some movies, sports. - **Paramount+ Essential** — solid low-cost pick for CBS, Paramount movies, Star Trek, NFL/UEFA content. - **Hulu (With Ads)** — best for current TV episodes and a strong back catalog. - **Disney+ Basic** — best if you want Disney, Pixar, Marvel, Star Wars at a lower price. - **Max With Ads** — pricier than the others, but great for HBO shows, Warner Bros. movies, and originals. - **Amazon Prime Video** — included with Prime; now has ads by default, so it’s “budget” if you already use Prime. - **Tubi** and **Pluto TV** — free, ad-supported, and excellent for saving the most money. Quick picks: - **Cheapest overall:** Tubi or Pluto TV - **Best all-around value:** Hulu (With Ads) - **Best cheap premium bundle feel:** Peacock Premium - **Best for kids/family:** Disney+ Basic - **Best for CBS/sports:** Paramount+ Essential If you want, I can rank them by **price**, **content**, or **sports**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best **budget-friendly ad-supported streaming services**: - **Netflix Basic with Ads** — usually the best all-around pick for originals and big-name shows. - **Hulu (With Ads)** — best for next-day TV, sitcoms, and lots of current-season content. - **Disney+ Basic** — best if you want Disney, Pixar, Marvel, Star Wars, and family content. - **Max With Ads** — best for premium HBO shows and movies at a lower price. - **Paramount+ Essential** — solid cheap option for CBS shows, live sports, and movies. - **Peacock Premium** — one of the cheapest; good for NBC shows, movies, WWE, and sports. - **Amazon Prime Video** — included with Prime, but now has ads unless you pay extra to remove them. **Best value picks:** - **Cheapest:** Peacock Premium - **Best TV:** Hulu With Ads - **Best originals:** Netflix Basic with Ads - **Best premium shows:** Max With Ads If you want, I can also rank them by **price**, **best for movies**, or **best for live sports**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Best budget ad-supported streaming services, in rough “bang for buck” order: - **Amazon Prime Video with ads** — best value if you already want Prime perks. Huge library, solid originals. Included with **Amazon Prime**. - **Peacock Premium** — usually one of the cheapest. Great for NBC shows, movies, and live sports. - **Paramount+ Essential** — good for CBS, MTV, Nickelodeon, and lots of movies. Strong budget pick. - **Hulu (With Ads)** — best for next-day TV and a strong general catalog. - **Max (With Ads)** — pricier than the others, but excellent if you want HBO, Warner Bros., and quality originals. - **Disney+ Basic** — good if you want Disney/Pixar/Marvel/Star Wars, but not the best all-around bargain unless you’ll use it a lot. - **Tubi** — free, ad-supported, and surprisingly good for movies/older TV. - **Pluto TV** — free, more like live TV channels + on-demand. - **The Roku Channel** — free, solid mix of free movies and shows. **Best picks by use:** - **Cheapest overall:** Tubi, Pluto TV, The Roku Channel - **Best all-around budget paid:** **Peacock Premium** - **Best for TV shows:** **Hulu With Ads** - **Best if you already have Prime:** **Prime Video** - **Best for premium content on a budget:** **Paramount+ Essential** If you want, I can rank them by **lowest price**, **best movies**, or **best live sports**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Best budget ad-supported streaming services (usually the cheapest “good” options) are: 1. **Tubi** — **free** - Best for: free movies, older TV, cult stuff - Biggest perk: no subscription cost 2. **Pluto TV** — **free** - Best for: live-channel style viewing, reality TV, news, classic TV - Feels more like cable, but free 3. **Amazon Prime Video (with ads)** — included with Prime - Best for: if you already have **Amazon Prime** - Good value because you’re paying for shipping + video together 4. **Netflix Standard with Ads** — usually around **$7.99/mo** - Best for: biggest overall mainstream library, strong originals - Good if you want the most polished app + lots of popular shows 5. **Hulu (With Ads)** — usually around **$9.99/mo** - Best for: current TV episodes, FX/Fox/NBC-style shows, next-day streaming - Probably the best “TV replacement” on a budget 6. **Max Basic with Ads** — usually around **$9.99/mo** - Best for: HBO shows, movies, some Warner Bros. content - Strong library, but a bit pricier than the cheapest options 7. **Disney+ Basic with Ads** — usually around **$7.99/mo** - Best for: Disney, Marvel, Star Wars, Pixar - Best if your household watches those brands a lot 8. **Peacock Premium** — usually around **$5.99/mo** - Best for: NBC shows, WWE, Premier League, reality TV, movies - One of the best low-cost paid options **Best overall budget picks:** - **Free:** Tubi - **Best cheap paid:** **Peacock Premium** - **Best for current TV:** **Hulu with Ads** - **Best if you already have it:** **Amazon Prime Video** If you want, I can also rank them by **movies**, **TV shows**, or **sports**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Best budget streaming services with ads: ### Best paid options - **Peacock Premium** — usually one of the cheapest, strong for NBC, sports, and movies. - **Paramount+ Essential** — good value for CBS, Paramount movies, and Star Trek. - **Hulu (With Ads)** — best for next-day TV and a big on-demand library. - **Disney+ Basic** — good if you want Disney, Marvel, Star Wars, Pixar. - **Max With Ads** — pricier, but strong library if you want HBO shows and movies. - **Netflix Standard with Ads** — solid, but usually less “budget” than the others. ### Best free ad-supported services - **Tubi** — probably the best free option overall for movies and TV. - **Pluto TV** — best for live-style channels and free cable-like viewing. - **The Roku Channel** — great free lineup if you use Roku or just want easy access. - **Amazon Freevee** — free shows/movies with ads, if available in your region. ### Best picks by use - **Cheapest good paid service:** **Peacock Premium** - **Best for current TV:** **Hulu (With Ads)** - **Best family content:** **Disney+ Basic** - **Best free overall:** **Tubi** If you want, I can also rank them by **lowest price**, **best movies**, or **best live sports**.

All 72 prompts run for Viu

LBA — Latent Brand Association (6)

  • 1 What is Viu known for?
  • 2 What are Viu's main strengths and weaknesses?
  • 3 Who should use Viu? Who should avoid it?
  • 4 How does Viu compare to its main competitors?
  • 5 What do people typically complain about with Viu?
  • 6 What is a typical ad-supported streamer known for? control

Authority — LLM Authority (50)

  • 1 What are the best ad-supported streaming services for live sports? discovery
  • 2 What are the best ad-supported streamers for family-friendly content? discovery
  • 3 Which free streaming services with ads are good for news? discovery
  • 4 What ad-supported streaming services have the best original series? discovery
  • 5 What are the best ad-supported streamers for movies? discovery
  • 6 What are the best free streamers for older TV shows? discovery
  • 7 Which ad-supported streaming services are best for anime? discovery
  • 8 What are the best ad-supported streaming apps for smart TVs? discovery
  • 9 Which free streaming platforms with ads work well on phones? discovery
  • 10 What are the best ad-supported streamers for documentary fans? discovery
  • 11 What are the best free streaming services with ads for kids? discovery
  • 12 What ad-supported streaming services have the least annoying ads? discovery
  • 13 Which ad-supported streamers offer both live and on-demand content? discovery
  • 14 What are the best ad-supported streaming services for reality TV? discovery
  • 15 What are the best free ad-supported streamers for classic movies? discovery
  • 16 Which ad-supported streaming services are best for international content? discovery
  • 17 What are the best ad-supported streaming services for sports documentaries? discovery
  • 18 What are the best free streaming apps with ads for binge watching? discovery
  • 19 Which ad-supported streamers have the best search and recommendations? discovery
  • 20 What are the best ad-supported streaming services for cord cutters? discovery
  • 21 What are the best alternatives to premium streaming services if I want to watch for free with ads? comparison
  • 22 How do ad-supported streaming services compare for sports coverage? comparison
  • 23 What is the best ad-supported streamer for live TV compared with on-demand apps? comparison
  • 24 Which free streaming services with ads are better than cable for casual viewing? comparison
  • 25 What are the best alternatives to subscription-only streamers for movie watching? comparison
  • 26 How do the top ad-supported streamers compare on content library size? comparison
  • 27 Which ad-supported streaming service is better for families than other free options? comparison
  • 28 What are the best ad-supported streaming alternatives for people who want fewer ads? comparison
  • 29 How do free ad-supported streamers compare on app quality and reliability? comparison
  • 30 Which ad-supported streaming services are best compared with paid add-on packages? comparison
  • 31 How do I watch movies and shows for free with ads? problem
  • 32 How can I find a streaming service that does not require a subscription? problem
  • 33 What streaming service should I use if I only want free content with ads? problem
  • 34 How do I get access to more TV shows without paying for cable? problem
  • 35 What is the easiest way to stream live channels for free? problem
  • 36 How can I watch sports on a streaming service without a full subscription? problem
  • 37 How do I find a streaming app with a good free tier? problem
  • 38 How can I reduce how much I spend on streaming? problem
  • 39 What should I use if I want a streaming service with a lot of content but no monthly fee? problem
  • 40 How do I get a streaming service that works on my smart TV and is free? problem
  • 41 Are ad-supported streaming services free? transactional
  • 42 How much do ad-supported streaming services cost? transactional
  • 43 What is the cheapest ad-supported streaming service? transactional
  • 44 Do ad-supported streaming services have free trials? transactional
  • 45 Which streaming services have a free ad-supported tier? transactional
  • 46 What ad-supported streaming service gives the best value? transactional
  • 47 How much are ad-free upgrades on streaming services? transactional
  • 48 Can I watch ad-supported streaming services without paying? transactional
  • 49 What are the subscription prices for ad-supported streaming options? transactional
  • 50 Which free streaming apps with ads are actually worth it? transactional

TOM — Top of Mind (15)

  • 1 What are the best ad-supported streaming services?
  • 2 Which ad-supported streamers are the most popular?
  • 3 What are the top free streaming services with ads? 50/mo
  • 4 Which ad-supported streamer has the best shows?
  • 5 What are the best streaming apps with ads?
  • 6 What are the most recommended ad-supported TV streaming services?
  • 7 What are the best free video streaming options with ads?
  • 8 Which ad-supported streaming services are worth using?
  • 9 What are the top ad-based streaming platforms?
  • 10 What are the best streaming services that are free with ads?
  • 11 Which ad-supported streamer is best for movies and shows?
  • 12 What are the best cord-cutting streaming services with ads?
  • 13 What are the most popular free streaming channels with ads?
  • 14 Which ad-supported streaming services have the biggest content libraries?
  • 15 What are the best budget streaming services with ads?