Skip to main content

Elon Musk’s X TV is now available in your living room

The X TV app on LG smart TVs.
Phil Nickinson / Digital Trends

If what’s been missing from your life is a video-centric app from a platform that still considers itself to be the world’s town square, is run at the whims of an (ahem) extremely eccentric billionaire, and that has in many ways given up on any semblance of moderation that would make it the sort of place you’d want to admit hanging out, welcome to X TV.

The app is now live on the various app stores — we’ve found it on Google Play, LG’s app store, and the Amazon App Store (searching for it on Apple TV only returned the legacy Twitter app as I write this). There are different release dates depending on which platform you’re looking at. Amazon shows it as having been live since late July, but LG’s app store says August 29, 2024.

Recommended Videos

You have to have an X account to log in and watch anything, which is X’s modus operandi at this point across the platform. Screenshots for the app promise exclusive content, plus live events and news. From that 30,000-foot view, it very much looks like a YouTube sort of clone, only likely with far more objectionable content and lower-rent advertising (if any — CEO Linda Yaccarino previously said the app wouldn’t have ads at launch). YouTube, by the way, made $15.5 billion in advertising in the first half of 2024, and $31.5 billion for all of 2023. So just keep that in mind anytime someone calls it a YouTube competitor (or worse, a YouTube killer).

Please enable Javascript to view this content

The app description on Google Play reads: “The X app is the trusted global digital town square for everyone, on your TV! Discover a new way to experience the world of X, as we bring you unique and engaging content right to your living room.” Whether that is true remains to be seen. Early app reviews don’t appear to be helpful, but one quick look from a Digital Trends comrade resulted in them saying “the content available is a real dumpster fire.” So that’s probably pretty on brand for X in 2024. It’s also rated T for teen on one store, and 12+ on another. So there’s probably nothing to worry about, right?

It’s also worth noting that there at least are call-outs that look like links to X’s privacy policy and terms of service. You can select either one on LG’s version of the app, but not actually click to open said privacy policy or terms of service. You can’t even select them on the other versions. And Amazon helpfully suggests that others who downloaded X TV enjoy the right-wing video service Rumble, Banned Video, Real America’s Voice, and RSBN apps.

So far, so good.

Phil Nickinson
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Phil spent the 2000s making newspapers with the Pensacola (Fla.) News Journal, the 2010s with Android Central and then the…
YouTube TV now available in 5.1 surround sound on Amazon Fire TV devices
youtube tv spanish language channels

In 2021, Google's YouTube let it be known that it had finally updated its YouTube TV subscription live TV streaming service with 5.1 surround sound, a move that had been eagerly anticipated by its subscribers since, well, forever. But it only covered select smart TV platforms like LG and Samsung. Then, in early June 2022, the service announced that more devices and platforms were joining the 5.1 party, with the addition of Roku, Android TV, and Google TV. But for some reason, Amazon's Fire TV, the most popular streaming platform in the world, didn't make the 5.1 cut. Until now.

As of June 23, 2022, Amazon says that, "Fire TV Stick 4k Max, Fire TV Stick, and Fire TV Stick Lite all now support YouTube TV's 5.1 surround sound feature." Curiously, Amazon has made no mention of its other Fire TV devices, like its own Fire TV Omni 4K TV, the original Fire TV Stick 4K, or the aging Fire TV Cube. Still, it appears that now pretty much everyone who wants YouTube TV in 5.1 surround sound can get it. Oh, well except for Apple TV owners and those who use game consoles to watch live TV streaming. These folks are still stuck in two-channel stereo, at least for the time being.

Read more
The Weather Channel, G4 now live on YouTube TV
The Weather Channel as seen on YouTube TV.

A slew of new channels is now live on YouTube TV — including one of the more elusive weather options when it comes to streaming services. As promised, The Weather Channel is now available on the second-largest live streaming service in the United States. And along with it comes the rebirth of G4, with its new version of old nerd classics like Attack of the Show!, Ninja Warrior and Play.

The Weather Channel needs no introduction, of course. In addition to live weather news and radar, it has a plethora of shows that break down major world events and weather mishaps.

Read more
Plex Arcade brings classic Atari console titles to your TV for $5 per month
Plex Arcade

Plex, the company that helps people organize and access all of their movies, TV shows, and music using media server software, has announced its first subscription streaming service, Plex Arcade. As the name suggests, it's a gaming service, but unlike similar products from Apple, Google, Microsoft, Amazon, and Nvidia, Plex Arcade is focused (for now) on giving subscribers access to classic Atari console titles from the 1980s. Plex Arcade costs $5 per month, but Plex Pass subscribers get a $2 discount, bringing the price down to $3 per month. There's also a seven-day free trial period.

Plex Arcade will initially feature a 30-game selection of Atari's library of 2600 and 7800 console games, including titles like Centipede, Missile Command, Lunar Lander, Food Fight, and Gravitar. Unfortunately, many of the most popular titles for these consoles, like Pac Man, Space Invaders, Joust, and Donkey Kong are not among the available games at launch.

Read more