logo
TV that travels: Take Hulu + Live TV on-the-go

TV that travels: Take Hulu + Live TV on-the-go

USA Today5 days ago

TV that travels: Take Hulu + Live TV on-the-go Never miss your favorite shows and movies. Stream anytime, anywhere with Hulu + Live TV.
As someone who recently spent five days in a hotel, it was a clear reminder that TV in a hotel is not always good. The channels are limited and there's nothing that you can stream on demand (as my child demanded 'Garfield'). But, Hulu + Live TV goes wherever you go. The Hulu app is free to download on any smart device (TV, phone or tablet) for you to stream live TV, sports, news and more, or turn on any of the available content from the Hulu library, including Garfield.
Whether you're resting after a day of travels in your hotel, or downloading content to watch on an upcoming flight, Hulu + Live TV can go everywhere with you. Plus, there are packages that include Disney+ and ESPN+ to help meet all your TV streaming needs (and your child's). The best part is, there's no set-up necessary or cable boxes, just log in and stream!
Here's everything you need to know about a Hulu + Live TV subscription:
What is Hulu + Live TV?
Hulu + Live TV allows you to surf over 100 channels of TV, news, live sports and entertainment. Plus, you have access to the entire streaming library, including original content, available with a Hulu streaming subscription.
'King of the Hill' revival: Cast reveals what older Hank, Bobby, Peggy are up to now
How does Hulu + Live TV work on-the-go?
Hulu app: The Hulu app is available on iOS, Android and most smart devices, making it easy to take your TV with you wherever you go.
Mobile streaming: You can stream live TV and on-demand content through the Hulu app on your smartphone or tablet. Just log in and start watching from anywhere with an internet connection.
Multiple devices: You can stream on two devices simultaneously, or upgrade with the Unlimited Screens add-on for more flexibility.
Download content for offline viewing: You can download select shows and movies from the Hulu streaming library using the Hulu app on supported mobile devices. Some exceptions include live TV content and on-demand content from premium add-ons. To download content, you must be connected to Wi-Fi.
Note: This feature is only available for Hulu plans without ads.
How much does Hulu + Live TV cost?
Hulu + Live TV : This is the basic package, with no bundle. It starts at $81.99 per month.
: This is the basic package, with no bundle. It starts at $81.99 per month. Hulu + Live TV with ESPN+ and Disney+ (with ads) : This package is $82.99 per month, but you can test it out with a 3-day free trial before your subscription starts.
: This package is $82.99 per month, but you can test it out with a 3-day free trial before your subscription starts. Hulu + Live TV with ESPN+ and Disney+ (without ads): This package is $95.99 per month. There is no free trial associated with this subscription.
Get Hulu + Live TV now
What do you get with Hulu + Live TV? Here's what you need to know about a Hulu + Live TV subscription
What content can I watch in Hulu's streaming library?
Hulu offers thousands of TV shows and movies, including original content like 'Only Murders in the Building' and 'Paradise.' Here's a look at some of the top content available for streaming on Hulu:
'Love Island UK' Season 12: How to watch, release date, cast, more
Get Hulu + Live TV now

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Candle Media's CEO unpacks Disney's next chapter
Candle Media's CEO unpacks Disney's next chapter

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Candle Media's CEO unpacks Disney's next chapter

You can catch Opening Bid on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, or wherever you get your podcasts. The media industry is undergoing a significant moment of distress. Predicting what's coming up is easier said than done, even for top executives. But that doesn't stop folks from trying! Yahoo Finance Executive Editor Brian Sozzi talks on the Opening Bid podcast from the Spotify Beach house at the annual Cannes Lions advertising and media conference with Candle Media CEO Kevin Mayer. Mayer spent 25 years as a top Disney executive and was seen as a potential successor to CEO Bob Iger. Mayer weighs in on the future of Disney (DIS), who may succeed Iger, and why Disney may not sell its TV business. Mayer also shared his thoughts on the crumbling legacy TV industry, which has seen streamers like Netflix (NFLX) and Amazon (AMZN) trigger breakups at Comcast (CMCSA) and Warner Bros. (WBD). Candle Media is also behind the children's program Cocomelon — Mayer discusses what's next for the popular brand. Listen on your favorite podcast platform or watch on our website for full episodes of Opening Bid. Langston Sessoms produces Yahoo Finance's Opening Bid Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

The definitive ranking of all 29 Pixar movies (including 'Elio')
The definitive ranking of all 29 Pixar movies (including 'Elio')

USA Today

timean hour ago

  • USA Today

The definitive ranking of all 29 Pixar movies (including 'Elio')

The definitive ranking of all 29 Pixar movies (including 'Elio') Show Caption Hide Caption 'Elio' trailer: Boy meets alien BFF in Pixar's sci-fi movie A lonely 11-year-old boy dreams of being abducted by aliens and winds up on a spaceship in Pixar's animated sci-fi comedy "Elio." Love movies? Live for TV? USA TODAY's Watch Party newsletter has all the best recommendations, delivered right to your inbox. Sign up now and be one of the cool kids. No animation outfit has made us laugh as loud and cry as hard as Disney's Pixar. From the best friendship of Woody and Buzz in "Toy Story" to tear-jerking moments in "Coco" and "Up" that turned us into weepy mush, Pixar has been entertaining kids of all ages for three decades with a slew of beloved movies and even some Oscar winners. The latest is an original tale: The sci-fi comedy "Elio" (in theaters June 20) follows an 11-year-old boy (voiced by Yonas Kibreab) who wants desperately to be abducted by aliens and winds up going on an intergalactic adventure. How does it compare to the rest of the Pixar canon? We ranked all 29 movies so far, from worst to best. (And if you need to catch up, the previous films are streaming on Disney+.) 29. 'Cars 2' (2011) Oh, "Cars 2." What to say about you? You were the movie that made us lose confidence in Pixar, ever so briefly. We get why you exist, we do, but we'd prefer to pretend otherwise. 28. 'Cars 3' (2017) What the third installment in the "Cars" franchise has going for it mostly is that it's not "Cars 2." Despite adding a laundry list of talent (including Kerry Washington and Chris Cooper) to the voice cast, it's mostly just a slightly less disappointing "Cars" film. 27. 'Cars' (2006) Are we noticing a pattern here? The "Cars" sequels have unfortunately tarnished the memory of the original a little bit. We're not mad at the first "KACHOW!"-fest, but Lightning McQueen and Co. just don't bowl you over like many Pixar films do. 26. 'The Good Dinosaur' (2015) "The Good Dinosaur" gets an unfortunate rap. It's not top-tier Pixar by any stretch, but the tale of a dino and a Neanderthal boy has a big heart − and any movie with Sam Elliott as a T. rex can't be all bad. 25. 'Onward' (2020) We'll forever refer to this as "the movie about the pants." This offbeat fantasy road movie centers on two elf brothers (Chris Pratt and Tom Holland) traveling with their dead dad's sentient legs – and learning to say goodbye to him in the process. 24. 'Monsters University' (2013) "Monsters, Inc." has one of the best Pixar endings, so it was best the studio didn't make a sequel. The prequel they gave it instead is fun – think "Animal House" for kids – yet misses the sense of wonder and themes about childhood that made the original so great. 23. 'Elio' (2025) Pixar throws back to the days of "Explorers" and "The Last Starfighter" with this familiar sci-fi project, where a young boy disaffected by Earth gets abducted and becomes BFFs with an alien. Best for a kid who's never seen "E.T." 22. 'Elemental' (2023) Like "Zootopia" but with more casual racism, the film overreaches trying to be both peppy rom-com and emotional immigrant story. We do adore hot-tempered Ember (Leah Lewis) and sensitive watery sort Wade (Mamoudou Athie) as a couple, though. 21. 'Brave' (2012) "Brave" had so much potential and gave Pixar its first female protagonist, but it just couldn't click. Maybe it was the structure of the story, subpar humor or failed attempts at feminism. The lesson here: Fairy tales are strictly old-school Disney's game. 20. 'Lightyear' (2022) Pixar's meta version of 'Star Wars," the straightforward sci-fi "Toy Story" spinoff casts Chris Evans (aka Captain America) as a young Buzz Lightyear, who trains up a bunch of rookies to take on the evil Zurg, and actually pulls off a meaningful LGBTQ moment. 19. 'Incredibles 2' (2018) The sequel arrived 14 years after the original blew audiences away in theaters. Superhero cinema has dominated since then, and Brad Bird's visual style and humor feel less novel. Still, it's an entertaining ride with many of the familial themes that made the first one great. 18. 'A Bug's Life' (1998) Not all Pixar projects have to be convoluted and emotionally manipulative. Sometimes, it's fine for a kids' movie just to be about little critters, and this underrated gem is refreshing in its simple premise, slapstick humor and endearing cast of tenacious ants and quirky bugs. 17. 'Finding Dory' (2016) Another of Pixar's sequels more than a decade after the original film, "Dory" mostly recaptures the themes of family and loneliness but more importantly puts the spotlight on Ellen DeGeneres' forgetful title fish, giving depth and context to her disability. 16. 'Toy Story 4' (2019) Woody (Tom Hanks) and Buzz (Tim Allen) returned for a "Toy Story" that's more adventure-driven than others but still delivers a poignant sendoff to our favorite cowboy and space ranger. Plus, it gave us Forky, a spork with a death wish who's pure chaos and totally charming. 15. 'Luca' (2021) Young sea creature Luca explores the world outside the ocean with Alberto, a slightly older half-human, half-fish. The queer allegory is undeniable, as Luca grapples with identity, prejudice and acceptance, plus learns the meaning of chosen family one memorable Italian summer. 14. 'Soul' (2020) This jazzy riff on humanity and the hereafter brings a cartoon New York City to vibrant, diverse life with Pixar's first Black lead character, a band teacher (played by Jamie Foxx) who meets a jaded soul (Tina Fey), and asks big questions about the meaning of life. 13. 'Toy Story 3' (2010) Perhaps the most millennial movie that Pixar has ever made, it finds Andy getting ready for college in a tale about life transition and the inevitability of death – heady stuff for a kids' movie but it miraculously works. It's also the rare kids' movie depicting daycare as a deranged prison state. 12. 'Up' (2009) Fun fact: There's more to this movie than its opening salvo of complete emotional devastation. Imagine pitching this story: Who wants to see a movie about an old man, an outcast kid, a talking dog and another old man who's a villain? "Up" shouldn't be this powerful but it is. 11. 'Toy Story 2' (1999) All of the "Toy Story" films are about growing up and growing apart, but none so mournfully as the second installment, which introduces Jessie (Joan Cusack), a toy whose owner has grown up and moved on. It kept the essential franchise theme while also cleverly expanding the universe. 10. 'Turning Red' (2022) Like "Inside Out," "Turning Red" depicts a young girl learning to harness her emotions. Here it's a brainy, boy-crazy Chinese-Canadian teen in the throes of puberty who learns you don't have to hide the messier parts of yourself in a combo of coming-of-age movie and kaiju flick. 9. 'Ratatouille' (2007) "Ratatouille" is one of Pixar's most earnest films, turning a rat into an absolutely adorable hero. Pair that with one of the studio's best side characters, food critic Anton Ego (Peter O'Toole), and this effort manages to feel as intimate as a Parisian dinner. 8. 'Inside Out 2' (2024) The sequel introduces Anxiety (voiced by Maya Hawke) into the emotional mix, and chaos ensues inside and out of now-teenage Riley. It's a clever and ambitious exploration of puberty, and many kids (as well as adults) will feel seen in its honest depiction of mental-health struggles. 7. 'Finding Nemo' (2003) The sea tale of an overprotective father (voiced by the inimitable Albert Brooks) searching for his lost son is one of Pixar's most overt stories meant for both parents and kids, but it never lets the sentiment overpower the comedy. 6. 'Toy Story' (1995) The revolutionary film pioneered computer animation and featured all the ingredients that have become Pixar staples: emotional storytelling, action sequences, insights on the human condition, an all-star voice cast and protagonists you never would have thought of yourself. 5. 'WALL-E' (2008) With a story this harsh on humanity, it helps to have a protagonist as innocent and (literally) wide-eyed as the title trash-compacting robot left all alone on a destroyed planet Earth. A searing critique of consumerism that's still a very enjoyable movie for children (and plenty of adults). 4. 'Inside Out' (2015) The first "Inside Out" exquisitely brought a child's mind alive in the most imaginative ways. It's a madcap adventure where cheery Joy (Amy Poehler) and mopey Sadness (Phyllis Smith) have to find common ground but also a heartbreaking tale reminding parents that time is fleeting and kids grow up quickly. 3. 'Coco' (2017) Musical, magical and visually splendid, Pixar's adventure in the Land of the Dead found a new way for the studio to examine loss and grief. We dare you not to weep through the last 10 minutes when the stirringly beautiful (and Oscar-winning) "Remember Me" comes on. 2. 'Monsters, Inc.' (2001) It's easy to forget that the John Goodman-Billy Crystal buddy comedy is essentially about two guys who work at a power plant. The fact that it also tackles childhood, loss of innocence, what we're truly afraid of and the nature of good and evil is what makes it one of Pixar's most imaginative outings. 1. 'The Incredibles' (2004) Sorry, Marvel, this remains the best Fantastic Four movie ever. A family of superheroes with secret identities stars in an entertaining masterpiece about identity, with a middle-aged couple finding each other again and kids figuring out their place in the world. Contributing: Kelly Lawler and Patrick Ryan

Disney CEO confidant: The next CEO must have these skills
Disney CEO confidant: The next CEO must have these skills

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Disney CEO confidant: The next CEO must have these skills

Listen, like and subscribe to Opening Bid on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, YouTube, or wherever you find your favorite podcasts. Disney's (DIS) complexity, combined with industry upheavals, makes finding a replacement for CEO Bob Iger next to impossible. It can be done, however. "You have to have a new CEO that is really good at least managing creativity," Candle Media CEO Kevin Mayer said on Yahoo Finance's Opening Bid podcast at the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity (watch above; listen below). "You got to be able to manage creative people and the egos around Hollywood." Mayer is a former longtime Iger deputy, who led the launch of Disney+ before a brief stint in 2020 as the CEO of TikTok. He was advising Iger on the CEO search last year but told Yahoo Finance he is no longer working in that capacity. Mayer added, "I think the biggest skillset you have to have is a gift of a real strategic business sense, because there's a bunch of assets at Disney that are globally deployed. It's multifaceted, from theme parks to consumer products to movies to film to TV to Disney+ to Hulu to ESPN. You got to manage a lot, and then you have to also decide, what assets do we keep? What assets do we add?" There are reportedly four internal candidates being considered for the coveted position, which Iger held from 2005 to 2020 before returning in November 2022. Those four are entertainment division co-chiefs Dana Walden and Alan Bergman, parks division head Josh D'Amaro, and ESPN chairman Jimmy Pitaro. Walden and D'Amaro are rumored to be top contenders, something Mayer agrees with. He said the next CEO of Disney will be an internal candidate. The search process must be executed flawlessly, following a high-profile bungling last time, when former CEO Bob Chapek was fired in favor of bringing back Iger. Chapek's brusque management style famously clashed with the many creatives who keep the magic inside of Disney's content and theme parks. Any new Disney CEO is getting a giant media ship contending with considerable industry change. Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD) said this month it will split up amid the shift to streaming that has financially hammered its legacy TV assets. The company joins rival Comcast (CMCSA) in separating TV operations from streaming assets. Paramount (PARA) is still trying to close its deal with Skydance. Disney has repeatedly said it has no desire to spin off its TV networks, such as ABC, despite the industry challenges that have weighed on sales and profits. Mayer's best advice to whoever gets Iger's CEO throne? Pick Iger's brain. "Stay close to Bob Iger for the first six months," Mayer said. "Really take that apprenticeship to heart because Bob is an amazing CEO. Very few like him. If you can just be at his side and look at the whole company ... Sit by his side and just learn how he does things." Brian Sozzi is Yahoo Finance's Executive Editor and a member of Yahoo Finance's editorial leadership team. Follow Sozzi on X @BrianSozzi, Instagram, and LinkedIn. Tips on stories? Email Sign in to access your portfolio

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store