-->
Save your seat for Streaming Media NYC this May. Register Now!

Verizon/AOL to Launch Go90 This Week, Publicis Signs an Exclusive

Article Featured Image

As advertising week 2015 began in New York City, Verizon and AOL threw a massive coming out party for Go90—Verizon's recently announced streaming video service for young adults—inviting hundreds of brand and agency representatives that they hoped would take an interest. Called the AOL Future Front, the Monday evening event promised a look at what's coming next—and what's coming is an OTT service that's geared for the young.

Go90 will launch on Thursday, and the service isn't nearly as cloistered as it first seemed. Rather than being confined to Verizon subscribers, Go90 will be available to anyone through free iOS or Android apps. The event offered an early look at the service, which puts a fresh millennial spin on an OTT bundle. Navigation along the bottom of the home screen offers four choices: My Feed, Following, Profile, and Explore. Notice that there isn't a traditional channel guide. Go90 is organized thematically and socially. The closest thing to a channel guide is the Following area, which shows the channels, shows, people, and crews (yes, crews) that the viewer choses to follow.

Social features look clever and well integrated (we didn't get hands-on time with a working Go90 device). Chat is integrated in the viewing area in a way that supports spontaneous conversations, and viewers can create quick clips from what they're watching to share on the platform or through their other social networking accounts.

Verizon and AOL were proud to announce that Go90 has already gotten major agency support. Publicis Groupe has purchased an exclusive on Go90's first three months for its agencies and clients, starting in Q4 2015. It will continue on nonexclusively until Q3 2016.

While early reports suggested Verizon was going it alone on Go90 and not using AOL for ad support, that is not the case. The launch celebrated the union of Verizon's distribution and AOL's ad technology and content.

Go90 is "a product that's built on the backbone of Verizon's mobile experience, and combines that with AOL's mobile technology and sales engine," said James M. Norton, AOL's global head of media sales, in an interview.

While the presentation didn't go in-depth on content, Verizon says Go90 will have 15 of the 30 most-watched cable networks (ESPN, Adult Swim, Comedy Central, VH1, Nickelodeon, MTV, Spike, Food Network, TLC, Discovery Network, FXX, NFL Network, HGTV, BET, and Investigation Discovery) and 9 of the most-watched multi-channel networks. Go90 video will be free and ad-supported.

"AOL will be your partner to help you through this disruption," said Bob Lord, president of AOL, Inc., wrapping up the evening's pitch to advertisers. "The disruption is now and it's here. The revolution has begun."

A Go90 screen

Streaming Covers
Free
for qualified subscribers
Subscribe Now Current Issue Past Issues
Related Articles

Verizon Closing Go90 in July, Ending Nearly Three-Year Run

Serving videos to mobile-first teens seemed like an easy money grab, but Go90 is the latest in a long line of platforms to never find an audience.

Go90 Becoming Part of Oath, Focusing on Multi-Platform Delivery

With Oath focused on distribution at scale and building an audience across platforms, a standalone video service just didn't make sense.

Season Two of Go90's Streaming Hit MVP Plays in the Big Leagues

There are some major sports stars on Go90 series MVP—including New England Patriot Rob Gronkowski, one of the show's producers—but they're not the ones throwing pitches.

AOL Builds a Live TV Studio in the Heart of Greenwich Village

The AOL Build Studio isn't just the home of the company's popular online chat show—it's a multiplatform celebrity-driven content-generating machine.

A Change in Direction for Go90 as Verizon Fires 155 Workers

Verizon's free app-based video bundle for mobile-using millennials never found an audience. Now, the team behind Vessel will rebuild it.

Condé Nast Entertainment Signs Deal With Comcast; AOL Goes Live

AOL Build, a live celebrity interview show, is getting a public-facing street level studio in Manhattan's Greenwich Village this fall.

Verizon and Hearst Partner to Create Online Video for Millennials

RatedRed.com will target young adults in the heartland, while Seriously.TV will offer news-based humor clips throughout the day.

Verizon Partners With NBA to Bring Games and Clips to Go90

Go90 viewers will soon be able to watch daily NBA highlights and some exclusive content, and purchase access out-of-market games.

Online Video Advertising Taking Heavily From TV Ad Budgets: AOL

In its yearly look at the state of online video advertising, AOL finds that online video budgets are rising at the expense of TV ad budgets.

Traditional Pay TV Model Will Go Away Soon, Predicts DramaFever

The Korean TV SVOD also predicts that Go90 and Watchable will have a difficult time reaching their desired millennial audience.

AOL Shows TV in Transition in Programmatic Advertising Report

With fewer people watching broadcast television, broadcasters have had to increase ad loads to generate revenue. But then ad impact is diluted.

Verizon Will Acquire AOL for $4.4B, Mobile Video a Central Reason

In a move few saw coming, Verizon will purchase AOL in an all-cash transaction. Attracting mobile viewers and advertisers is a chief reason why.

Morgan Spurlock Gets Connected on AOL

Today, AOL debuts its biggest online video experiment yet: Connected, a reality show in which real people document their real lives. We sat down with producer Morgan Spurlock for this exclusive interview.