FAST Isn’t “Free TV”—It’s TV’s Next Ad Superplatform
The article argues that FAST (free ad-supported streaming TV) platforms such as Tubi, Pluto TV, The Roku Channel, and Samsung TV Plus are growing into large, data-driven advertising ecosystems, citing metrics including 100M+ monthly active users for Tubi, 80M+ for Pluto TV, and a U.S. FAST ad market estimate of $12.26B in 2025 with a projection to $27B by 2030. It describes how targeting is enabled by smart TV data (including ACR) and dynamic ad insertion, and outlines buying paths via direct sales and programmatic DSPs (e.g., The Trade Desk, Google DV360) including Roku’s self-serve political ad tools. It also notes that political/issue advertising rules vary by platform and that streaming is not regulated like broadcast by the FCC, with federal requirements mainly tied to FEC disclosures.
Key Takeaways
- FAST has reached mass scale: Tubi 100M+ MAUs, Pluto 80M+ MAUs; FAST viewing is ~5.7% of U.S. TV time (per the article).
- The monetization engine is increasingly “TV reach + digital targeting,” driven by ACR-enabled smart TV data and dynamic ad insertion.
- Buying paths are maturing: direct platform sales for premium deals, programmatic via DSPs (The Trade Desk, DV360), and Roku’s self-serve Ads Manager (including political tools).
- FAST is benefitting from subscription fatigue and is attracting younger, more diverse, and cost-sensitive cord-cutters—valuable audiences for both brands and performance-minded advertisers.
- Regulation is looser than broadcast: streaming isn’t FCC-regulated like linear TV; political/issue ad rules vary by platform, with key federal requirements centered on FEC disclosures.
Why It Matters
FAST is becoming the “third distribution lane” alongside SVOD and linear—and it’s quietly rebuilding cable’s reach inside device-level walled gardens. For streamers and OEMs, the prize isn’t just ad inventory; it’s first-party viewing signals (ACR) that improve targeting, measurement, and pricing power. For advertisers, FAST is where CPMs meet scale without the bluntness of broadcast. For policymakers, the gap between TV-grade influence and platform-by-platform rules is widening—especially for political and issue ads. The meme to watch: Free TV is the new premium ad network.
Read full article at substack.com