The Denver Post

Watching free TV easy with Locast

- By Tali Arbel

NEW YORK» You canceled cable long ago. Your TV antenna has trash reception for ABC. But you want to host an Oscars viewing party. What to do?

A newish, under-the-radar option is Locast. It’s like an app version of a $50 antenna you can get from Best Buy, and it’s free and easy to use.

For someone weaned on Netflix, Locast is too simplistic to be a major part of my TV addiction. It’s a stopgap, excellent the few times a year when I want to watch what everyone else is watching, at the same time they watch it.

But it’s useful for those who regularly watch TV live — sports lovers, devotees of morning shows such as “Today,” ‘’Bachelor” fans who live-tweet each episode.

You don’t have to pay for it, as you do with cable, and it’s available on more gadgets than you’d get with just a TV antenna. For those who don’t have a TV, it’s one of the easiest ways to watch over-theair stations for free.

How it works

Locast makes local stations available for free, in real time, online. You can watch on its website, locast.org, or on apps for iphones and Android phones. A Roku app or sharing from your phone with Chromecast or Apple’s Airplay lets you stream to the TV.

In New York, I get stations for ABC, CBS, Fox, NBC, CW, PBS, Univision, Telemundo, Ion and a handful of others. Cable channels are not available free on the public airwaves.

You can start watching as soon as you let Locast know your location and sign in with your email or Facebook account. A basic TV guide tells you what’s on now and the next six days. Audio and video quality is good. I haven’t had issues with buffering or shows not loading.

The landscape

The internet’s abundance of video — such as Youtube and Netflix — has pushed millions to cancel cable TV and diminished the appeal of live television.

Locast fits into a crowded field of devices and services aiming to replace or complement cable. There are cable-like streaming services such as Youtube TV, Directv Now or Playstatio­n Vue, which offer packages of TV channels, typically for $40 or $45 a month. Hulu and apps from the likes of ABC and NBC post episodes online in the days after they air. Netflix and Amazon Prime have whole seasons months after they’re on TV.

You can also buy a TV antenna and hope for good reception of local stations.

But wait ...

You need to live in one of the nine markets where Locast has set up antennas — Denver, Boston, Chicago, Dallas, Houston, New York, Philadelph­ia, Baltimore and Washington, D.C.

I’ve gotten used to watching shows at my leisure, and Locast doesn’t fit in with that. There’s no digital video recorder, or DVR, to let you watch shows later.

Enjoy while you can

A few years ago, a startup called Aereo tried to offer local broadcast stations over the internet. Broadcaste­rs sued and won, forcing Aereo to shut down in 2014.

Locast has been around for about a year already and may have found a legitimate loophole because it’s a nonprofit, as federal law says nonprofits can retransmit broadcaste­rs’ signals without violating their rights.

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