Skip to main content

HBO, AOL Team for Comedy Web Site

Online portal AOL and premium cable channel HBO have announced they are partnering to create a comedy-based broabband video channel named This Just In. The site will be led by Steve Stanford, who founded the humor site Icebox.com, and focus on current-events humor in a blog-like format and offering extensive video content.

This Just In will replace AOL’s existing online comedy offerings; it will not feature any current HBO television programming—although HBO archival footage of standup comics might be on tap, and the site might serve as a testbed for programming which migh migrate upward to AOL’s on-demand and mobile offerings.

The move marks HBO’s first original foray into the online world as the company seeks to diversity its offerings: as the company’s core audience for paid subscription television reaches a zenith, the company is looking to expand into additional media niches. HBO’s recent talent deals with comedian Dane Cook and the Simmons Lathan Media Group have included unspecified “new media” components, and the network confirmed it has signed former Rocketboom host Amanda Congdon for on-camera and online material.

For its part, AOL seems thrilled just to be able to associate its name with HBO’s…which might be more important in the near future as parent company Time Warner increasingly considers un-merging itself with AOL. Advertising and sponsorships for This Just In will be sold through AOL Media Networks.

This Just In raises the stakes for both broadband video—and online comedy offerings—competing with TBS‘s recently announced Funny or Not? user-generated video site, as well as increasingly popular online offerings from basic cable channel Comedy Central, centered around popular series like South Park and news-show spoofs The Daily Show and The Colbert Report.

Geoff Duncan
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
The best movies on HBO right now (November 2022)
Florence Pugh drives distressed.

Although a subscription to HBO Max may be more bang for your buck, HBO remains one of the top premium cable channels. Why? It’s all in the name: Home Box Office. HBO has gone out of its way to land major motion pictures soon after they hit theaters. It also has the advantage of being able to draw directly from the rich film library of Warner Bros. Pictures, as well as a selection of movies from other studios. Plus, the multiple HBO channels curate the movies for you, so you can just turn on the TV and watch something. But with our newly updated list of the best movies on HBO right now, you don’t have to wait to make your plans.

Looking for more to watch on HBO? We've got guides to the best movies on HBO Max, the best HBO series, the best shows on HBO Max, and more.

Read more
How to download HBO Max on a Samsung smart TV
Samsung - 65 Class 7 Series LED 4K UHD Smart Tizen TV.

Samsung’s latest round of smart TVs are more ambitious than ever, utilizing a new web browser to enable video chats, cloud gaming, and much more. If you prefer using your smart TV's built-in operating system to manage your entertainment center instead of a separate streaming device, that’s an attractive option — but you’ll also need to make sure that your Samsung TV has the streaming apps you love to watch.

That brings us to HBO Max, home of everything from Elvis to House of the Dragon, plus Max-only original content like the DC series Peacemaker and popular comedy Hacks. If HBO Max is an important part of your streaming plans, you’ll need it on your Samsung TV. Here’s exactly how to do it.

Read more
Does HBO Max think you’re dumb?
hbo max discount while content cut 1

You can't swing a dead cat in the entertainment space these days without running into a headline about how the newly combined Warner Bros. Discovery — which owns HBO Max — has canceled a show that was in the planning stages. Or already was in production. Or had finished production but now will never see the light of day. Or canceled any future episodes or seasons of a strong show. Or left another in limbo. Or killed a weekly news show that was more important than not. Or unceremoniously removed hundreds of episodes from literally the most important children's series in the history of television.

Fine. That's business. The newly combined Warner Bros. Discovery reportedly is trying to shave a mere $3 billion off the balance sheet, and cuts of content and people were always going to happen.

Read more