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The merger creates a powerful ad platform by combining Tubi's free on-demand (AVOD) service with the Roku Channel's linear-style streaming. With minimal audience overlap, the combination triples their ad sales reach, creating a powerhouse with a portfolio of formats to rival Disney and YouTube.
Tubi's CEO argues that the media industry's focus on consolidation misses the bigger story. The more profound shift is the convergence of the creator economy and traditional Hollywood, which is fundamentally changing how content is made, distributed, and consumed by the next generation of viewers.
Marketers often view advertising platforms through a mobile lens (iOS, Android). However, Roku is the third-largest operating system in the US overall and the #1 TV OS. This massive, often underestimated, scale provides advertisers with unparalleled reach and data for the living room screen.
The Fox-Roku merger highlights a key vulnerability in streaming: services without a distinct, defensible value proposition (like sports for ESPN or kids' content for Disney) will struggle to remain independent. Companies with a generic content library are prime targets for acquisition in the ongoing media consolidation wave.
Fox's acquisition of Roku is a decisive move away from its declining linear TV business. The deal provides Fox with a direct-to-consumer relationship with over 100 million households and a massive trove of first-party data, positioning it to compete with YouTube and Netflix in the ad-supported streaming market.
Netflix wisely spun off its streaming device project into Roku. This allowed Netflix to focus on being a content *network* available on all devices, while Roku focused on being the agnostic *platform* that hosted all networks. This strategic separation enabled both to become market leaders in their respective domains.
Rather than burn billions building a streaming service from scratch like rivals NBC (Peacock) and Disney (Disney+), Fox is acquiring an established distribution platform. This gives Fox an immediate, large-scale entry into streaming without enduring the years of heavy losses its competitors faced.
In its acquisition of Roku, Fox is effectively valuing Roku's 100 million streaming users far more than its own. The deal structure implies that in the modern media landscape, a dedicated streaming platform's audience is the core asset, while a legacy media company's viewers hold comparatively little value.
For emerging media companies, distributing content on platforms like Roku is a strategic play to increase enterprise value, not just generate immediate revenue. It diversifies distribution and revenue streams, creating a more enduring and attractive business for potential investors or acquirers.
Fox is acquiring Roku not just for its user base, but for its dominant platform with over 40% of connected TV watch time. This strategy vertically integrates Fox's content and ad machinery with Roku's distribution to capture the massive shift of ad dollars from linear TV to streaming.
Roku's strategic value lies in its chokehold on streaming access. It serves as the starting point for 44% of U.S. big-screen television viewing, a dominant position three times larger than its nearest competitor, Amazon. This gives its owner immense influence over the entire media ecosystem.