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YouTube wants to take on TikTok with Shorts videos for your TV

YouTube Shorts, the Google giant’s TikTok-alike feature, has become one of the video website’s latest obsessions, with more than 1.5 billion users watching shortform content on their devices every month.

And now YouTube wants to expand that number by bringing full-screen, vertical videos into your TV, MIT Technology Review can reveal.

From today, users worldwide will see a row of videos from Shorts high up their display on YouTube’s smart TV apps. The videos, which will be integrated into the standard homepage of YouTube’s TV app and will sit alongside longer, landscape videos, are presented based on prior watch history, similar to the YouTube Shorts tab on cell phones and the YouTube website.

“It is challenging taking a format that’s traditionally a mobile format and finding the right way to bring it to life on TV,” says Brynn Evans, UX director for the YouTube app on TV.

The time spent developing the TV app integration is testament to the importance of Shorts to YouTube, says Melanie Fitzgerald, UX director at YouTube Community and Shorts. “Seeing the progression of shortform video over several years, from Vine to Musical.ly to TikTok to Instagram and to YouTube, it’s very clear this format is here to stay.”

One major challenge the designers behind YouTube Shorts’ TV integration had to consider was to what extent to allow Shorts videos to autoplay. At present, the initial design will require viewers to manually scroll through Shorts videos once they’re playing to move on to the next one by pressing the up and down arrows on their TV remote.

“One piece we were playing with was how much do we want this to be a fully lean back experience, where you turn it on and Shorts cycle through,” says Evans. Evans’s team decided against that option at launch, but does not rule out changing that for future iterations of the app.

The design presents a single Shorts video at a time in the center of the TV screen, surrounded by white space that changes color depending on the overall look of the video.

One thing they didn’t test—at least as of now? Filling the white space with ads. YouTube spokesperson Susan Cadrecha tells MIT Tech Review that the experience will be initially ad-free. The spokesperson did say that ads would likely be added at some point, but how those would be integrated into the Shorts on TV experience was not clear.

Likewise, the YouTube Shorts team is investigating how to integrate comments into the TV viewing experience for future iterations of the app. “For a mobile format like this, you’d be able to maybe use your phone as a companion and leave some comments and they can appear on TV,” says Evans. 

YouTube’s announcement follows TikTok’s own move into developing a TV app of its own. First launched in February 2021 in France, Germany and the UK, then expanded into the United States and elsewhere in November that year, TikTok’s smart TV app hasn’t largely altered how the main app works. (Nor, arguably, has it become an irreplaceable part of people’s living room habits.)

However, the shift to fold in Shorts into the YouTube experience on TV suggests how strongly YouTube feels the shortform model is to its future. “It’s very clearly a battle for attention across devices,” says Andrew A Rosen, founder and principal at media analyst PARQOR. “The arrival of Shorts and TikTok on connected TVs makes the competitive landscape that much more complex.” Having ceded a head start to TikTok, YouTube seems determined to play catchup with the ByteDance-owned app.

The team behind the initiative still aren’t fully certain how adding shortform video into the YouTube on TV experience will be embraced. “It still remains to be seen how and when people will consume Shorts,” admits Evans—though she tells MIT Tech Review that informal polling and qualitative surveys, plus tests within the Google community suggest “a very positive impression of Shorts from people who are watching YouTube on TV.” (YouTube declined to share its own data on much time the average user currently spends watching YouTube on TV, but did point to Nielsen data showing viewers worldwide spent 700 million hours a day watching YouTube content on TV.)

“Will it be a gamechanger in the living room? Yes and no,” says Rosen. “Yes in the sense that it will turn 15 second to 60 second clips into competition for every legacy media streaming service, and Netflix is betting billions on content to be consumed on those same TVs. No, because it’s not primed to become a new default of consumption.”