Streaming video service recommendations are still simple unless you use platform-specific tools like Google. Gemini for TVbut that is finally changing. Tubi has started ChatGPT’s first native streaming app makes it easy to find movies and shows on Fox’s free streaming service using more natural-sounding queries.
All you have to do is join Tubi program From the ChatGPT app store and start a request with “@Tubi”. From there you can ask for recommendations that will defy many conventional search engines. You can ask him to find a surreal movie that isn’t scary or a 90s show that both kids and adults can enjoy. In theory, you can find missing or buried titles in common search queries.
Tubi says the program also includes a trivia game for avid viewers. Its application is trained by 1 billion viewing hours per month from more than 100 million viewers.
What does ChatGPT’s first streaming video app mean for movies and TV?
You can find more shows using AI rather than search boxes
By itself, Tubi’s native ChatGPT implementation has only limited impact. As a free service with advertising supportit doesn’t have as large a catalog of blockbuster movies and TV shows as its subscription-based rivals like Amazon Prime Video and Netflix.
However, the integration shows how streaming service recommendations could work going forward. Instead of launching a service app, you can tap into the AI platform you already use to compose emails and get shopping advice. Companies like Tubi can come to you rather than insist that you come to you. Amazon and Netflix have experimented with artificial intelligence, but only on their service portals.
The Tubi app could also push competing services to offer their apps through ChatGPT, Claude and other AI systems. If so, you can regularly turn to AI for movie night tips instead of scrolling through results lists.
This, in turn, may affect the content services it creates. If AI platforms like ChatGPT become key factors in the success of a particular title, you may see shows designed to appear in their recommendations more often. It can also lead to unexpected hits, such as shows popping up through new popular polls — movies that run away from recent events, for example. If nothing else, you should spend more time watching the video than finding it.




