TV Is TV Again

In the living room, the television is now experienced as one environment. Viewers move between broadcast, streaming, FAST, apps and pay-TV interfaces on the same screen, often in the same session, with little regard for the distinctions the industry still uses to define and sell them. The market, however, continues to measure and monetise that experience through inherited distinctions: linear versus streaming, TV versus CTV, panel logic versus platform metrics, GRP versus CPM.

VIDAA’s CEO, Guy Edri, had a disarmingly simple mantra at Stream TV Europe: TV is TV.

What sounds like a slogan is, in practice, a shift in how the market can be defined. It rejects the industry’s habit of treating linear, streaming, FAST, and connected TV as separate economic worlds when, on the sofa, they have already collapsed into a single lived experience. The viewer does not navigate categories. The viewer navigates a screen.

That makes “TV is TV” more than a neat simplification. Because once the screen is treated as a single environment, the distinctions the industry relies on begin to look like outdated ways of measuring, pricing and protecting value. And once that shift happens, the implications are immediate: measurement can no longer behave as though it is observing different systems, and the question of how value is defined moves to the centre of the screen economy.

Edri’s other points are even more important. Television, in this view, is not a larger mobile device, and it should not be treated as one any longer. It is a distinct and different system. Mobile is personal, always-on and built around individual utility. Television is shared, household-based and shaped by context, routine and collective experience. One produces a constant stream of personal data; the other reflects the logic of a household. That distinction is not cosmetic. It is economic. It suggests television should not simply inherit the business logic of mobile and social platforms, even as the interface becomes more data and software-driven.

That is why measurement sits at the centre of the story.

VIDAA’s V Index, as presented in Lisbon, is not just another attempt to improve audience reporting. It is a claim to measurement authority. The proposition is straightforward: if millions of connected devices can observe usage in real time, then panel-era systems begin to look thin, slow and structurally limited by comparison. If the viewer experiences one screen, VIDAA’s position is that measurement must stop treating television as though it were still several separate markets. The more consequential implication is not just greater precision and long-overdue transparency. It is a claim over jurisdiction. The layer that defines how attention is counted is moving closer to the layer that controls the interface. 

The OS is no longer just distributing value. It defines the terms on which value is recognised and captured.

For broadcasters, this is both a threat and an opportunity. The key decisions about how audiences are surfaced, measured and compared are increasingly set at the system level, rather than shaped indirectly through scheduling, distribution and content strength. But Edri is not arguing for a flat market in which all viewing is equal. He preserves a hierarchy for premium content and national broadcasters to command more than scaled creator inventory. The tension is clear: one measurement logic, but not one value hierarchy. Standardisation applies to how viewing is counted, not to what merits a premium.

For operators, the bigger story is not measurement. It is disintermediation. If the operator proposition is absorbed into the television itself, the set-top box ceases to be a strategic foothold and becomes legacy hardware. The Deutsche Telekom partnership signals that shift clearly: distribution, aggregation and access move into the OS layer. In exchange, operators gain scale, lower costs and a cleaner experience, but relinquish control over the interface in which that experience is defined.

For advertisers, the shift is direct. If the same system layer controls prominence, measurement and commerce surfaces, then the OS is no longer just an environment in which demand is created. It becomes an environment in which demand can be captured, compared and priced with increasing system-level control. VIDAA is positioning V-Shop to make that explicit. What begins as brand presence and discovery moves toward identity, payments and on-screen transactions. In this model, the operating system is no longer just an attention layer. It is becoming the commercial layer of the household screen.

This is where the model reveals itself. VIDAA’s OS is presenting itself as the force that can restore simplicity to television: a cleaner experience, fewer boxes, more coherent measurement, less fragmentation. That is what makes the premium car engine metaphor useful. The engine is not the thing the viewer admires, but it still determines what the vehicle can do. The less visible the operating logic becomes, the cleaner the experience feels, and the easier it becomes for value-setting power to concentrate beneath the surface.

That is the real significance of “TV is TV.” It is not a description of converged viewing. It is a viewer-side truth being used to justify a market redesign of measurement, value and control.

The television operating system is no longer just the front door to fragmented content and scattered ad impressions. It is becoming the layer that claims the right to define the household operating screen itself: how television is experienced, how it is measured, where it is surfaced, what is granted premium status, whether the box still matters, and how far the screen can move from viewing into transaction.

And in doing so, it is quietly restoring something the industry has spent years fragmenting: a single, coherent idea of what television is:

TV is TV again.

Annie Krukowska

Annie Krukowska is CEO and founder of annimoIQ, a company that helps TV platforms, operators and content owners redesign monetisation, sharpen strategy and accelerate growth.

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