NEW YORK, July 9, 2026, 17:05 EDT
- Fox One’s World Cup push has turned from a ratings play into a test of how well it can hang on to subscribers.
- Fox One picked up over 1 million new subscribers in the tournament’s opening week, according to Ampere Analysis.
- Fox listed $100,000 in cash pay for its two “Chief World Cup Watchers.” That’s much less than what a single month of promotion could be worth on paper.
Fox Corporation NASDAQ:FOXA is testing if a low-cost marketing push led by creators can bring one-off event viewers into its streaming business, without spending heavily on sports rights.
The World Cup is testing Fox One as a direct-to-consumer play, not just as a TV event. Ampere Analysis said Fox One picked up over 1 million new subs in the first week. Business Insider said June nearly doubled the best month so far for new Fox One sign-ups. “We landed on a gold mine,” said Brian Borkowski, chief marketing officer for Fox’s direct-to-consumer unit. Business Insider
Strong ratings are helping out. Fox said 30 million watched the U.S.-Belgium round of 16, making it the most-watched soccer broadcast in U.S. history, the Associated Press reported. Two days later, AP said England-Mexico averaged over 21.7 million viewers, setting a U.S. English-language record for a World Cup game without the U.S. Fox’s Class A stock was at $53.74 late Thursday, up 35.5 cents from the day before, for a market cap around $23.2 billion. AP News
| Metric | Confirmed datapoint | Investor read-through |
|---|---|---|
| Disclosed creator pay | Austin Franklin and Kevin Akoto were each paid $50,000 | National stunt talent cost sits at $100,000 |
| Matches covered | Fox One streaming every one of the 104 World Cup matches live in 4K | The full slate provides day-to-day habit content |
| Subscriber response | First-week signups of Fox One seen topping 1 million, per Ampere | Tournament works as a second launch event for the service |
| Price anchor | Monthly is $19.99; promo is $19.99 total for two months, ending July 19 | A million promo users suggests roughly $20 million in gross billings before accounting for platform fees, free trials, or churn |
Fox and Indeed set up Franklin and Akoto in a glass box in Times Square to watch every game, post on social, and talk with people walking by. The campaign is small next to the bigger rights and production apparatus. One clip of Norwegian fans doing the “Viking row” outside the box hit 1 million Instagram views in a day and later passed 15 million, Fox told Business Insider. Business Insider
That’s the number investors will watch, rather than hype over the cube. CreatorIQ, an influencer-marketing firm, pegged World Cup social posts tied to FIFA or the tournament at over $4 billion in earned media value — that’s the estimated ad equivalent if a brand had paid for the exposure. Fox One is looking to convert some of that organic buzz into paying subscribers.
The playbook for creatives is changing. Ganesh Pareek, partner and creative director at First December Films, wrote in ETBrandEquity that sports ads are shifting from basic celebrity endorsements to stories that tap into fan emotion and community. Ralf Ollig, vice president of product advertising and marketing services at Sportradar Group AG (NASDAQ:SRAD), told The Drum that moments during live sports can drive a jump in attention, saying “timing really matters,” but added that many brands still deal with “lengthy approval processes.” ETBrandEquity.com The Drum
| Public company | World Cup lane | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Fox Corporation NASDAQ:FOXA | Fox, FS1 and Fox One air all 104 matches live and on demand in English for U.S. audiences | Controls the main English broadcast pathway for viewership and subscription signups |
| Comcast Corporation NASDAQ:CMCSA | NBCUniversal’s Telemundo covers World Cup in Spanish and matches stream on Peacock | Competes for U.S. soccer eyeballs, focusing on bilingual and cord-cutter fans |
| Fox One | Charges a $19.99/month starting rate, plus a temporary $19.99 two-month promo | Intro price makes signups easier but puts pressure on retention after July 19 |
Fox has more pressure across its books. The company reported $3.99 billion in revenue and $954 million in adjusted EBITDA last quarter. Advertising sales dropped to $1.56 billion, down from $2.04 billion a year ago. The decline was blamed on not airing the Super Bowl this time, but Fox pointed to growth at Tubi and expenses tied to launching Fox One.
The risk is on the table. The U.S. has exited, the final lands July 19, and there’s a good chance many of Fox’s new signups came just for this tournament, not for the company’s regular sports, news or entertainment push. That $20 million gross-billing figure is just a rough cut. It’s not actual reported revenue, leaves out free trials and platform fees, and says nothing about how many users will cancel after the tournament or promo wraps. AP News
Fox is trying to address the issue now. Business Insider says Fox One is testing user sign-up flows and offers like “buy two months, get one month free.” The company is using Haus to track cost-per-acquisition versus expected lifetime value. If those numbers make sense after the World Cup, the Times Square cube could turn out to be more of an acquisition test run for live sports streaming than just a marketing stunt. Business Insider