Skip to main content

Exclusive new fashion channel hits Apple TV, along with apps from CBS, NBC

Apple TV AirPlay Streaming music
Image used with permission by copyright holder
Ahead of Monday’s launch of the sparkling new Apple TV, current users now have access to new apps from CBS, NBC and a new Apple TV-exclusive fashion channel called Made to Measure (M2M). The latter, developed by entertainment company WME/IMG, is Apple TV’s first channel of original content.

The new CBS app will show content from the network’s $6 per month standalone subscription service, CBS All Access, while NBC’s streaming app requires a cable subscription to access the content.

As the first of its kind on the device, the new fashion channel is perhaps the most interesting development. The service will show an inside look at fashion shows produced by WME/IMG, such as New York Fashion Week, as well as launching an original documentary series on designers and trends. The brand’s chief content officer Mark Shapiro called the channel “a natural extension of our business,” noting that WME/IMG currently hosts Fashion Week events in 13 cities worldwide. The ad-supported video brand will be exclusive to Apple TV devices at least through the end of the year, according to Variety.

Bringing CBS All Access to Apple TV means that subscribers will be able to view more than 7,500 episodes of CBS shows, including a vault of old content, as well as new episodes of CBS shows the day after they air. Apple TV users could previously watch CBS News and CBS Sports through the device.

Similarly, the NBC channel offers a wide swath of on-demand episodes of shows including The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon and The Blacklist. This new offering joins affiliate apps from CNBC and NBC Sports on the Apple TV.

Adding support for CBS and NBC — which join dedicated apps from Fox and ABC — is certainly helpful in expanding the Apple TV’s TV offerings, but it doesn’t address what we’re really waiting for: the technology giant’s rumored live TV service. That service, which is still zeroing in on a launch date sometime in 2016, is expected to cost $40 per month.

Chris Leo Palermino
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Chris Leo Palermino is a music, tech, business, and culture journalist based between New York and Boston. He also contributes…
NordVPN tries to scare you into using its new Apple TV app
NordVPN app listing on Apple TV.

As we've written previously, tvOS 17 opened the floodgates for VPNs to run on Apple TV hardware. And the major players are all on board, along with some you've likely never heard of because not everyone has a huge marketing budget. First it was ExpressVPN, and today NordVPN has announced its availability.

Whereas some companies tout a VPN's ability to let you watch content that's not available in your country — literally by routing your network traffic through another country — NordVPN is going with scare tactics in promoting its virtual private network on Apple TV.

Read more
Apple TV’s tvOS 17.2 beta adds a sidebar to the TV app
The new sidebar visible in the TV app on Apple TV in the tvOS 17.2 developer beta.

The new sidebar is visible in the TV app on Apple TV in the tvOS 17.2 developer beta. Phil Nickinson / Digital Trends

One of the messier pieces of the Apple TV experience on Apple TV 4K hardware has long been Apple's TV app. It's where Apple has attempted to aggregate all the things you can watch on your Apple TV, from Apple TV+ to any number of installed applications. (Another seriously messy piece is the myriad things Apple has named "Apple TV." But that's another problem for another time.)

Read more
Six things we’ve learned so far from MLS Season Pass on Apple TV
MLS Season Pass on Apple TV.

There's light at the end of the tunnel that is the 2023 MLS season. And that tunnel looks different than in previous years, for so many reasons. Chief among them is that domestic streaming rights shifted from ESPN+ to MLS Season Pass on Apple TV. That's a big deal, not because ESPN+ was doing a particularly bad job, but because it made it simple to watch every match.

But the metaphorical reality distortion field that surrounds Apple also happens to, at times, be true. It's evident in the products, and it's also apparent in the services.

Read more