Satellite TV provider DirecTV reportedly is considering buying streaming video service Hulu, which would strip away some or all ownership from Comcast Corporation, News Corporation and Walt Disney Company. A similar scenario took place two years ago when DirecTV initially wanted to own Hulu.
Mashable has reached out to DirecTV. Hulu declined to comment. A source close to the matter told The Wall Street Journal that DirecTV is mulling an agreement that could expand its TV Everywhere service, which lets subscribers access programming from the web and on mobile devices. Meanhwile, Bloomberg Businessweek reports, via two unnamed sources, the discussions between DirecTV and Hulu are "at an early stage."
This video explains DirecTV's TV Everywhere, which Hulu could be weaved into:
Hulu viewers streamed 1 billion videos in the first quarter of this year, and on average, they stayed on Hulu for 45 minutes per session. Additionally, Hulu's premium video service, Hulu Plus, has doubled its user base in the past 12 months, surpassing 4 million paying subscribers since launching Hulu Plus in 2010.
Hulu, which launched in 2007, earned $695 million in revenue in 2012 and currently has 470 content partners, 57,000 hours of content, 70,000 TV episodes, 2,500 TV series and 1,000 brand advertisers. Hulu recently told Mashable 11 series and season premieres arrive on Hulu this summer and fall.
Image by Mashable's Emil Lendof
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