| Company type | Second screen |
|---|---|
| Founded | 2008 |
| Headquarters | , |
Key people | Brad Pelo, co-founder and CEO Justin Whittaker, co-founder Carlton Cuse, Advisory Board Member |
| Products | tvtag application software for iOS, i.TV application software for iOS, Android and Kindle Fire, Nintendo TVii for Nintendo Wii U (co-created with Nintendo), |
| Website | i.TV |
i.TV (pronounced i dot TV) is a second screen and social television technology company, and creator of tvtag, a second screen app for iPhone. [1] [2]
i.TV is also behind the popular namesake app for iOS [3] and Android, [4] [5] and is co-creator of Nintendo TVii for the Nintendo Wii U video game console. [6]
i.TV has standing partnerships with AOL, Huffington Post and Entertainment Weekly magazine (EW), for which it powered viEWer, a social television platform that enabled television viewers to interact with each other and EW editors, [7] and product integration agreements with TiVo, [8] Netflix, [9] Hulu, [10] and Comcast. [11]
i.TV's financial backers include venture capital firms Union Square Ventures (backer of Twitter, Tumblr and other companies), RRE Ventures, Rho Ventures, Time Warner Investments, DIRECTV, and others. [12]
i.TV's advisory board includes Carlton Cuse, executive producer of ABC's Lost and A&E's Bates Motel , who in 2010 was named to the Time 100, an annual list of the "100 most influential people in the world"; [13] and Gordon Ho, former executive vice president of Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainment. [14]
i.TV was founded in 2008 by Brad Pelo, who serves as CEO, and Justin Whittaker. Pelo previously co-founded Folio Corporation and served as founding CEO of the parent company of Ancestry.com, [15] among other ventures and projects.[ citation needed ]
In May 2011 i.TV and AOL together re-launched AOL's online destination for TV viewers, AOL TV, based on i.TV's technology platform. AOL TV receives 1.6 million hits per day. [16]
In November 2013 i.TV acquired GetGlue, maker of a leading second screen and social TV check-in platform. [17] Headquartered in New York City, GetGlue reportedly has over 4.5 million registered users. [12] [2]
In January 2014 i.TV launched tvtag, a second screen iPhone app that provides a feed of television moments that users can then share, doodle on and comment on in a variety of ways. These moments in a “tagline” are captured and curated by a team of 50 staffers. [1]
A year later, tvtag was shut down. [18]