TV Time is shutting down. The alternatives are buckling

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TV Time is shutting down: anatomy of a 25M-user demand leak | Reacham<br>Demand Leak #1 · July 6, 2026<br>25 million people are about to lose their TV tracker — and the lifeboats are sinking<br>TL;DR: TV Time shuts down July 15. Its ~25M users have days to export their data before it's deleted forever. The migration paths are already straining under the rush, with public warnings about heavy load and import hiccups. The company says there "wasn't enough demand for a paid app." The migration wave says otherwise. Here are the receipts.<br>What happened<br>On July 2, 2026, TV Time — the TV and movie tracking app with roughly 25 million users and 26.4 million lifetime installs — announced it is shutting down on July 15 (TechCrunch). Parent company Whip Media, acquired by Blue Torch Capital in early 2025, is pivoting to enterprise AI analytics. The app was still getting ~29,000 new downloads in its final 30 days.<br>The company's stated reason, verbatim:<br>"It was no longer sustainable to continue operating the service as a free app, and there was not enough demand for a paid app."<br>Hold that sentence. We'll come back to it.<br>The migration wave, measured<br>This is what a demand leak looks like when it happens in fast-forward:<br>Refract publicly warned incoming TV Time users about heavy load : the team said the app was running slower than usual, imports could hit hiccups or take longer than normal, and the servers were under strain as everyone migrated at once.<br>Even the export path was creaking : AlternativeTo commenters were already swapping backup workarounds because TV Time's own export flow was hanging for some users under the shutdown rush.<br>The community built third-party rescue tooling within days : TV Time Liberator, TV Time Out, TV Time Data Extractor.<br>TVmaze is building a TV Time importer ; Trakt already accepts TV Time exports and is being recommended as the lowest-friction exit.<br>Migration guides appeared across AlternativeTo, Korben, ResetEra, and Reddit within 24 hours of the announcement.<br>What the refugees actually want<br>The alternatives being recommended — Trakt, Simkl, SeriesGuide, Showly, BetaSeries, Serializd, Refract — are trackers . But listen to what users say they're losing:<br>"Love the immediate comments, memes and GIFs after every episode/movie I watched."— user comment on AlternativeTo<br>TV Time's differentiation was never the checkbox. It was the room you walked into right after the episode — reactions, memes, and comments from everyone else who just watched the same thing. That social layer is exactly what the spreadsheet-shaped alternatives don't replicate. (Inference, but a grounded one: it's the most-mourned feature in the public threads we reviewed.)<br>The "no demand" paradox<br>The company says there wasn't enough demand for a paid app. The observable evidence: public warnings that migration load was straining servers and slowing imports, reports of TV Time's export flow hanging, and a volunteer ecosystem of export tools built within days.<br>Both can be true — and that's the actual lesson. "Not enough demand for a paid app" at a 25M-user, enterprise-parent-company cost structure is not the same claim as "no one will pay." For an indie, converting even 0.5% of a displaced 25M-user base to a $15–20/year app is a real business. Whip Media needed a whale; a builder needs a pond. (Labeled inference: we have no access to TV Time's internal conversion data — only their one public sentence and the visible migration behavior.)<br>The opening, honestly assessed<br>The wedge: the post-episode social layer — comments, reactions, and watching-with-friends — bolted onto competent tracking with flawless TV Time import . The tracker market is crowded; the community slot is now empty.<br>What's real about it: the audience is findable right now (they're congregating in migration threads), the import path is documented, TV metadata is accessible through established APIs, and the deadline creates a natural acquisition moment that will never repeat.<br>What should give you pause (the caveats a paid report would shout):<br>Social features have a cold-start problem; 20 users in a comment room is a ghost town. A launch would need to concentrate a niche (one fandom, one genre) rather than chase all 25M.<br>The migration wave is a moment, not a channel. In 30 days the refugees will have settled somewhere. Whatever you'd build, the import-and-invite motion matters more than the feature list.<br>TV Time itself couldn't monetize this audience at their cost structure — free-tier expectations in this category are entrenched. Price testing before building would be mandatory, not optional.<br>Incumbent trackers are shipping fast under pressure (Refract's devs are visibly responsive); the window for "better importer" alone is weeks, not months.<br>Verdict, in Reacham's terms: build smaller. Not "the next TV Time" — a post-episode room for one passionate niche, with one-tap TV Time import, priced from day one.<br>This teardown is the kind of research Reacham does as a paid service: a...

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