Skip to main content

Apple reportedly planning to launch its own TV shows this year

apple original shows 2017 playstation vue tv
Image used with permission by copyright holder
Apple is well aware that a good deal of the money in the tech world is made with content. That’s why it’s looking to get in on the original programming scene that Amazon and Netflix have been having such success with. By the end of 2017, Apple will have its own scripted, original content and there’s even a suggestion it could start making movies in the future.

Apple Music fans will be pleased to learn that, as the rumor coming out of the WallStreetJournal’s report (via 9to5Mac) has it, access to these shows will be bundled into existing subscriptions. This would be another parallel of Amazon’s strategy of including much of its original programming and other content as part of its Prime service, which also offers free postage, music, and Ebooks.

Even as it adopts this proven strategy in terms of subscription systems, purportedly Apple wants to bolster its Music service in order to compete more directly with Spotify. The latest numbers suggest that Apple Music is currently used by around 20 million people, which while impressive, isn’t a patch on Spotify’s 40 million-plus subscriber base, not to mention its 10s of millions of ad-based freeloaders.

This wasn’t necessarily Apple’s original plan with its first-party programming, though. The initial plan was to team up with existing networks to showcase content or to stream it through Apple’s own services, but no deal could be struck, so now Apple is looking to go it alone.

Apple has previously shown an interest in programming that complements its Apple Music service, and it is believed that one of its first series will be the project Vital Signs, which is expected to be a gritty, semi-autobiographical series about the music business starring Apple’s own Dr. Dre, alongside Sam Rockwell (Confessions of a Dangerous Mind) and Mo McCrae (Sons of Anarchy). The company is also currently said to be working on a competitive app-based reality show, called Planet of the Apps.

Updated by Ryan Waniata 1-12-2017: added more information about Apple’s scripted content, including the series starring Dr. Dre, Vital Signs.

Jon Martindale
Jon Martindale is the Evergreen Coordinator for Computing, overseeing a team of writers addressing all the latest how to…
6 new and returning TV shows you need to watch in June 2024
Three men stand and sit in an office in The Bear season 3.

Once summer arrives, you’ll want to spend more time outside soaking up the sun. But there are also nights in, rainy days, and even commute and travel time when you’ll want to sink your teeth into a new show. What’s coming in June? There are tons of great series returning with new seasons, like The Boys, The Bear, and House of the Dragon. But there are also great new shows, too.

Along with these three aforementioned returning series, we have rounded up three more for a list of six TV shows you need to watch in June. Four are returning shows and two are new, including one that serves as a spinoff set in the future and arriving seven years after the original ended its run.
Star Wars: The Acolyte (June 4)
The Acolyte | Official Trailer | Disney+

Read more
Don’t let these 3 hidden May streaming TV shows fly under your radar
Will Forte standing outside in a black puffy jacket talking into a recorder in a scene from Bodkin.

Are you looking for something unique to watch this May while you wait for the June premieres of The Bear and The Boys? Well, there's a ton of high-profile shows in May, like the third season of Hacks and the latest season of Doctor Who. You might still be trying to decompress from last month's Baby Reindeer as well!

If you’re looking for something off the beaten path that you might not have heard of, we have some picks for you, including a compelling Holocaust drama and a murder mystery set in Ireland. Check them out while you wait for your favorite shows to return next month.
Bodkin (2024)

Read more
YouTube TV: plans, pricing, channels, how to cancel, and more
An NFL Sunday Ticket multiview option on YouTube TV.

Remember when Netflix was just a mail-order DVD service? Now that VOD platforms all but rule the world, every big entertainment brand is striving for its shot at streaming stardom. With new apps and services landing regularly, it can be hard to tell what platforms to pay attention to. But heed our words, friends: trust in YouTube TV. 

Similar to Hulu With Live TV, Sling TV, FuboTV, and DirecTV Stream, YouTube TV offers linear and on-demand YouTube movies and shows. There are several other perks to enjoy too, and we’ve broken everything down in this complete guide to YouTube TV.

Read more