Third-party measurement showed that Tubi delivered 91% incremental reach versus the same campaigns running on linear, and the platform is rolling out new ad formats, including pause-to-participate units and shoppable in-scene placements.
Tubi also touted category-level performance lifts: 21% for retail, 37% for QSR, 25% for auto, and roughly a 4:1 ROAS for CPG.
Sports, predictably, dominated the back half of the presentation.
Fox is just weeks out from the FIFA World Cup, with 70 matches on Fox, 34 on FS1, and all 104 matches streaming on Fox One, the company’s streaming service.
Comedian James Corden took the stage to announce a new program, After Hours with James Corden, a late-night recap of the day’s matches hosted alongside former England captain Rio Ferdinand and comedian Ian Karmel.
Tom Brady, Rob Gronkowski, and Erin Andrews closed the show on the NFL slate, which includes a Week 10 NFL tripleheader with a Germany game, and Thanksgiving and Christmas Day matchups. The MLB also got a marquee push, with Derek Jeter, David Ortiz, and Alex Rodriguez out to promote the All-Star Game, NLCS, and World Series.
On the entertainment side, Fox brought out the cast of its Baywatch reboot, previewed dramas including Memory of a Killer, Doc, and Best Medicine, and announced The Interrogator, a new drama starring Stephen Fry and Jenna Elfman.
And Fox Creative Studios, a new IP-development arm partnering with creators across genres, was introduced by Gordon Ramsay and Johnny Knoxville, who’s also hosting a new Fear Factor.
Fox News, meanwhile, used its slot to argue it’s outgrown the cable label. Bret Baier and Martha MacCallum noted the network is averaging 3.1 million viewers in weekday prime—beating NBC—and that the Fox News website pulls 143 million monthly unique visitors and generated 4.5 billion YouTube views in the past year.
Why it matters:
Fox’s pitch ran almost counter to the prevailing upfront playbook of more, more, more.
CEO Lachlan Murdoch told the room the company doesn’t “pursue scale just for scale’s sake,” and Collins’ first-principles keynote was rooted in the idea that Fox stripped its business down to reach, engagement, and performance and rebuilt from there.
For a marketplace where buyers are increasingly skeptical of buzzwords and fragmentation, the tidy framing is meant to read as a competitive advantage.
The harder sell was the tech story. With Fox AdStudio, the company is now claiming over 1,000 advertiser campaigns measured through the platform with double-digit lifts on outcomes like in-store sales and foot traffic.
Pairing that with Hildebrandt’s pitch is Fox’s attempt to keep pace with NBCUniversal and Disney’s outcomes-and-AI stories without compromising its “we don’t chase scale” positioning. Whether buyers see AdStudio as differentiated or as table stakes will shape how Fox lands in this year’s market.
The other through-line is the World Cup, which is less than two months away. Collins told ADWEEK last week that the vast majority of World Cup inventory has already cleared, and the upfront stage was largely a victory lap.



