Los Angeles Times

Altice USA buys news start-up Cheddar

The cable company is paying $200 million for online channel.

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Altice USA, the fourthlarg­est U.S. cable company, agreed to pay $200 million for news start-up Cheddar, an online channel that appeals to the younger audiences who are abandoning traditiona­l TV.

Altice, which provides video, internet and phone service to about 4.9 million customers under the names Optimum and Suddenlink, has a news division that includes the News 12 Networks, covering communitie­s around New York City. It also operates an internatio­nal news channel called i24News.

Cheddar’s programmin­g appears in gyms and cafeterias on college campuses and reaches 40 million homes that subscribe to pay TV, according to a statement Tuesday. It’s also on free services such as Pluto and the Roku Channel, which are popular with cord cutters — that is, people who have stopped subscribin­g to traditiona­l cable TV.

Altice was already an investor in Cheddar, which was started in 2016 by former BuzzFeed Chief Operating Officer Jon Steinberg as an online business news channel for millennial­s. Last year, Cheddar raised $22 million from investors such as Raine Ventures, Liberty Global and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. Existing investors included Lightspeed Venture Partners, Comcast Corp., AT&T Inc., the New York Stock Exchange and Amazon.com Inc.

Cheddar has two networks, one focused on business news and another on general news. Though it began online, Steinberg often found creative ways to distribute the channel more broadly. He cut deals so Cheddar could appear on screens at gas stations or air its programmin­g on digital UHF stations such as channel 42.5 in Kansas City, Mo.

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