The rise of CTV IRL: Valuable TV audiences are no longer just sitting at home
The rise of CTV IRL: Valuable TV audiences are no longer just sitting at home
Blake Sabatinelli for Atmosphere TVFri, April 3, 2026 at 7:00 PM UTC
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People surround a bar where multiple TVs stream a football match. - Atmosphere TVThe rise of CTV IRL: Valuable TV audiences are no longer just sitting at home
For decades, the advertising industry fixated on the living room and linear television viewership. Connected TV then reshaped how audiences stream and engage with content at home and on second-screen devices. But a new frontier is gaining momentum, and it looks a lot more like real life, Atmosphere TV reports.
Call it CTV IRL: connected TV in the places where people are more frequently spending time, such as restaurants, gyms, bars, and airports. Reaching them where they gather, socialize, and are often considering their next purchase. This isnāt a theoretical shift. Itās happening.
Research from McKinsey found that 65% of Gen Z consumers are prioritizing experiences over material goods, gravitating toward shared environments like fitness studios, bars, restaurants, malls, and wellness destinations. Research from Deloitte reinforces this, noting that physical venues are no longer just transactional, theyāre becoming hubs for connection and entertainment. And according to Placer.ai, foot traffic is steadily rebounding across categories, from gyms to restaurants to offices, signaling a broader (and enduring) return to routines outside the home.
In other words, the āthird spaceā is no longer on the sidelines. Itās where culture is happening, and thatās changing the role of TVs in those environments.
For years, TV in public spaces wasnāt relevant or entertaining: Long-form dramas, game shows, muted cable news, and talking sports analysts that fill a screen but rarely won attention. But these environments are evolving, fueled by cross-channel viewing behaviors extending beyond TV to channels like TikTok and YouTube, where people are increasingly engaging with compelling, sound optional, short-form content. More and more, screens are becoming part of the experience itself.
CTV IRL is helping advertisers get in front of this shift, rethinking what content looks like when itās designed specifically for these settings: visual, contextual, and built for what earns peopleās attention outside the living room.
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A new study from advertising research firm MediaScience proves linear TV no longer dominates what people are watching, and creator-inspired content is earning attention and delivering impact through āthird spaceā TVs. Using eye-tracking technology in real-world viewing environments, the study found that audio-optional, visually-arresting programming can drive 12% more visual attention than traditional linear TV programming. In some cases, viewers spent significantly more time actively watching this content than when TV dramas or sports highlights were playing on an adjacent TV.
More importantly, brand recall was meaningfully higher, suggesting that when content is purposefully designed to be social, visual, and situational, it also becomes more impactful.
Attention today isnāt just about reach or screen size. Itās about relevance to the moment.
CTV IRL sits at the intersection of three powerful shifts:
The return to IRL experiences among consumers.
The preference for shared, public TV viewing occasions.
The evolution of TV content and advertising to earn attention across viewing environments.
For marketers, this opens up a different kind of opportunity. Itās not just about reaching audiences. Itās showing up in moments that feel natural, social, and authentic.
Because increasingly, the most valuable screen isnāt the one in your home. Itās the one you didnāt plan to watch, but did.
This story was produced by Atmosphere TV and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.
Source: āAOL Entertainmentā