TV

Review: NBC's Streaming Service, Peacock, Is Here

Right now NBC's just copying what worked on other services. Is that enough?

Peacock

You can enjoy a lot of free Peacock programming on multiple devices

By Kirk Miller

We’ve spent a week with NBCUniversal’s new streaming service Peacock, and it was hard to come to any conclusions about it.

Because Peacock doesn’t do any one thing particularly well. Or terribly. Or really, offer anything unique at all.

What the streaming service does have is between 13,000 and 20,000 hours of programming, an interesting pricing tier and the promise of good originals and more classic series … starting next year.

Let’s break this down!

The pitch: Get original programming, sports and the library of NBC and several connected cable channels (Telemundo, USA, Syfy, Bravo, etc.) for anywhere from free to $5 a month with ads, or up to $10/month ad-free. The ad tier is basically what Hulu does, and the premium option is your Prime/Netflix competitor. What’s interesting here is what you get with “free,” which is pretty close to the paid versions minus a few shows, some big-name sports events, movies or early/next-day access to NBC shows. 

The set-up: Signing up was like any other service I’ve ever used. You can watch Peacock on a computer and/or your TV.

The streamer divides its menu into three different sections: First, there’s Channels, which resembles your cable TV grid or a free service like Pluto — it’s essentially “live” TV or on-going programming for the lazy who may just want to tune into, say, “SNL Vault” or “Today All Day” without thinking about it.

There’s also Trending, which is clips of recent shows, news and trailers. It’s a bit like an NBC-sponsored YouTube. 

And finally, we have “Browse,” which looks like any other streaming service’s home page, dividing up shows and movies by watchlist, featured, genre and made-up categories like “Your Reality Check Is Covered” and “All the Drama.” Here, it most resembles Prime Video, given that it’ll tell you what’s free to watch and what’s on a more premium tier. 

There’s also a regular Search bar. 

What worked:

What kind of worked:

What needs work:

What we don’t know:

Recommendation: The best thing Peacock has going for it, besides familiarity, is being free. Until the service gets enough original programming under its belt, there is no reason to (pay) subscribe to this — it lacks the boldness and curation prowess of Hulu, the sheer programming breadth of Netflix and Prime Video, and the quality of HBO Max (by that we mean HBO plus Search Party).

That said, the service does offer more for the average viewer than Apple TV+ or Disney+ (if you don’t have kids), and it blows Quibi and any free services like Pluto out of the water. 

Definitely download the app and check back every few months — it may be worth a second look next year when you suddenly feel the need to binge The Office, since you might not be in one anytime soon.

Oh, and bonus: If you’re an Xfinity or Cox customer, you have access to the Premium side of Peacock for free. Which, oddly, is a small reason to stick with your cable service and not do cord cutting, which Peacock seems to be all about.

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