Los Angeles Times

Hulu downloads will come with ads

- By Stephen Battaglio stephen.battaglio @latimes.com

Video streaming service Hulu will soon offer viewers downloadab­le movies and TV shows that can be watched without an internet connection, but it comes with a price — commercial interrupti­ons.

The company announced the plans Wednesday at its upfront sales presentati­on at the Madison Square Garden theater in New York. It’s the first time advertiser­s are being offered the chance to buy ads in downloads of TV programmin­g — as opposed to shows that are available through streaming — said Peter Naylor, senior vice president for ad sales at Hulu.

The downloadab­le shows — a distributi­on method made popular by Apple’s iTunes service — will be added to Hulu’s current subscripti­on offerings, which include on-demand viewing of shows and livestream­ing of broadcast and cable programmin­g through Hulu Live. The downloadab­le programs will be available as part of a Hulu subscripti­on during the 2018-19 TV season.

“We will be launching the ability for viewers to download and play back their favorite shows,” Naylor said. “We will not only be live and on demand, but [also] untethered and on the go.”

Naylor also announced that Hulu will offer advertiser­s commercial inventory on the cable channels streamed on Hulu Live.

The offerings are aimed at giving advertiser­s more options for reaching the growing number of viewers who are watching shows on streaming devices. As more younger viewers are choosing to watch online — Hulu says it’s the preferred method for 60% of all millennial­s — they have become harder for advertiser­s to reach through traditiona­l TV channels offered on cable and satellite services.

Hulu said the median age of its users is 31, while the median age for traditiona­l TV viewers is in the mid-50s.

Hulu is making its pitch as advertiser­s prepare to spend nearly $20 billion in TV’s upfront market for the 2018-19 season, which begins in the fall. Hulu now has 20 million subscriber­s, up from 17 million at the end of 2017.

Although Hulu offers commercial-free, on-demand programmin­g for $11.99 a month, Naylor said “a wide majority” of subscriber­s takes its lowerprice­d option ($7.99 a month) that comes with commercial interrupti­ons — though typically far fewer than on linear TV through a cable or broadcast network.

Hulu carries content from most of the major TV networks and production studios, but it has gained acclaim and cultural currency with its own original series such as “The Handmaid’s Tale,” which earned the Emmy for best drama. The series has been picked up for a third season.

Hulu also recently ordered “Catch-22,” a limited series from Paramount TV and Anonymous Content based on the 1961 Joseph Heller novel. George Clooney is a producer on the project, which will be his first TV acting role since “ER.”

Hulu also announced a deal with DreamWorks Animation that will give it exclusive streaming rights to the studio’s film library and future projects. Hulu said it will also work with the studio to create original programs for children and families.

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