Disney, Fox and Warner Bros. Discovery have cancelled the planned launch of their live sports streaming service Venu Sports.
In a joint statement, the three companies said: “After careful consideration, we have collectively agreed to discontinue the Venu Sports joint venture and not launch the streaming service.
“In an ever-changing marketplace, we determined that it was best to meet the evolving demands of sports fans by focusing on existing products and distribution channels. We are proud of the work that has been done on Venu to date and grateful to the Venu staff, whom we will support through this transition period.”
Venu was first announced in February last year and intended to combine the live sports assets of Fox, WBD and Disney-owned ESPN into a single streaming service.
It was set to carry major events such as NFL, NBA, US Open, Formula 1 and FIFA World Cup and was designed to attract younger viewers who don’t subscribe to cable TV.
Venu Sports was initially meant to launch before the start of the NFL season in September, but was delayed in part by a legal challenge from internet TV platform Fubo, which claimed the platform would be anticompetitive.
However, that legal obstacle appeared to have been removed last week after Disney took a significant stake in Fubo TV, agreeing to merge it with its Hulu Live service.
Media reports suggested that further litigation may have lain ahead for Fubo from other TV firms, prompting its backers to pull the plug on the platform.
You are not signed in
Only registered users can comment on this article.
Avid and Google Cloud partner to bring agentic AI for media production
Avid and Google Cloud have signed a multi-year strategic partnership to embed Google’s Gemini models and Vertex AI directly into Avid’s solutions.
Channel 4’s longest-serving Chief Content Officer steps down
After almost nine years leading the broadcaster’s content strategy, Ian Katz, Chief Content Officer at Channel 4, will step down from his role in October 2026.
BBC to cut 2,000 jobs: "Put simply, the gap between our costs and our income is growing"
In an internal, all-staff call held today, Rhodri Talfan Davies, Interim Director General for the BBC, revealed that the organisation is planning to cut between 1,800 and 2,000 jobs.
AJA to acquire video encoding company Comprimato
AJA Video Systems has agreed to acquire Comprimato, a live video encoding and processing software provider for virtualised and cloud productions and broadcasts.
Spain’s LaLiga teams with Fastly to target streaming piracy
LaLiga is collaborating with San Francisco-based edge cloud platform provider Fastly to develop technical solutions to address illegal streaming of live sports, with a special focus on the Spanish league’s football matches.


.jpg)
