Instagram moved into the living room with a TV app and started testing long-form video, episodic series, and Live on the big screen. That is not a small product update — it changes what a creator should make, how it is structured, and which screen each piece is for. Here is the strategy, the format implications, and the production system that makes it survivable.
For its entire life, Instagram has been a phone app — a thing you hold, scroll with your thumb, and watch in short bursts while half-distracted. In June 2026 that assumption started to crack. Instagram for TV, the company's living-room app, expanded to Samsung Smart TVs (2020 model year and newer), joining Amazon Fire TV, where it launched in December 2025, and Google TV, which it reached in February 2026. And on June 22, Instagram said it would begin testing the formats a television actually wants: longer-form video, multi-episode series, and live creator broadcasts on the big screen.
That is a bigger shift than a new device checkbox. The phone and the television are different machines for different moods. The phone is lean-forward — quick, restless, built for a feed you flick through. The television is lean-back — you sit down, you commit, you want something to watch for a while. By moving onto the TV with long-form and episodic content, Instagram is no longer just competing for the gaps in your day. It is competing for your evening, on the same screen where YouTube and the streaming services already live. This guide is about what that means for what you make.
Strip the announcement to its parts. There are three format experiments and one distribution expansion, and they are not all equally far along.
Instagram is testing video that runs well past the short Reel the app was built on. The logic is simple: a couch audience will sit through something longer than a phone-feed audience will, and short clips alone do not hold a living-room session. This is the format that most directly puts Instagram in YouTube's lane, and it is the one with the least history on the platform — which is exactly why it is an opening for creators who can produce length.
The episodic push leans on a separate feature, "Series," that Instagram began rolling out to select creators in early June 2026. Series lets you group Reels into sequential episodes with a dedicated hub on your profile that viewers can tap through, save, or follow for updates. The strategic difference between a Series and a pile of Reels is retention: a numbered show with a hub gives an audience a reason to come back, and gives the algorithm a reason to surface the next episode to someone who watched the last. It turns scattered posting into a returning program.
Instagram is also testing live creator broadcasts on the television — the first time Live has been aimed at the living room rather than the phone. A live stream that plays on the TV feels closer to appointment viewing than a quick phone broadcast, which raises both the opportunity and the production bar. Instagram has not detailed monetization for longer and episodic content, so treat the money side as unsettled.
Underneath the format tests, the app reached more screens and got easier to use. Discovery on the TV is organized around interest-based channels — curated feeds for comedy, sports, music, and specific creators — so a group can find something to watch together instead of scrolling one person's feed. You can cast Reels and items from your Saved tab from your phone to the TV, and the app now supports watching Stories on the larger screen. The phone becomes the remote; the TV becomes the screen.
It is worth being honest: these are experiments, not a finished, broadly available product, and Instagram has a long history of testing things that quietly disappear. You should not torch your short-form strategy on the strength of a press release. But the move still matters for two reasons that hold regardless of how this specific test plays out.
First, the direction is unambiguous across the whole industry. Every major platform is chasing the television, because that is where the longest watch sessions and the most valuable ad inventory live. Instagram pushing onto the TV is one move in a broad migration, and the creators who learn to make living-room content early will be ready for the surface wherever it lands — not just on Instagram. Second, the competition on Instagram's TV surface is thin today. YouTube has owned the living room for years and is saturated; a new surface with few established players is precisely where an early, consistent show can build an audience before the crowd arrives. The asymmetry favors moving early even with uncertainty.
The temptation is to read "Instagram wants long-form" as "stop making short-form." That is the wrong lesson. Discovery still happens in the phone feed, where short vertical Reels do the work of finding you new viewers. What changes is that short-form stops being the whole strategy and becomes the top of a funnel that now has somewhere deeper to go.
The coherent strategy is layered. Short vertical Reels remain your discovery engine — the clips that surface in the feed and pull a stranger in. The long-form or episodic piece becomes the destination — the thing a viewer commits to once you have earned the click, the content that fills a living-room session. The two are not competitors; they are stages. The short clip is the trailer, the episode is the show, and the same idea should exist as both. The creators who struggle will be the ones who treat a 45-second Reel and a 12-minute episode as two unrelated jobs. The ones who win will produce them as one piece of content expressed at two lengths for two screens.
Episodic format rewards a different instinct than viral short-form. A one-off Reel optimizes for the single hit — maximum reach on this post. A Series optimizes for the returning viewer — someone who follows the hub and comes back for episode four because episodes one through three earned it. That means consistency becomes a feature, not a constraint: a recognizable host, a repeatable structure, a predictable cadence. The recurring elements that feel limiting on a feed are exactly what build a show on a TV.
Because TV discovery is organized around interest-based channels, niche clarity matters more in the living room than it does in a personalized phone feed. A channel surfaces topics, not just personalities, so content that sits cleanly in a recognizable category — and stays there — is easier to place in front of a couch audience looking for that category. The scattershot account that posts a bit of everything is harder to channel-sort than the one that owns a clear lane.
Here is where most creators will fall off, and it has nothing to do with strategy. The plan above is correct and also brutal to execute by hand. An episodic series means a new, on-brand episode on a schedule — not when you feel inspired, but reliably, because a show that skips episodes loses the returning audience that was its whole point. Each episode needs short-form clips cut from it to feed phone-feed discovery. And the same content should reach the other platforms where your audience also looks, because a viewer who first met you on YouTube or TikTok should still find the show.
Add it up and a single weekly episode quietly becomes a long-form video, several short vertical cuts of it, and platform-native posts across the feed — every week, all sounding like the same creator, each formatted correctly for its screen. That is a production line, and it is the part the announcement does not mention. Instagram is opening a new surface; it is not producing the content to fill it. The format tests reward volume and consistency, and volume and consistency are exactly what a solo creator runs out of first.
This is the point where the strategy needs an engine, not more willpower. Kompozy is a content generation and multi-platform publishing engine, and the living-room shift is close to a textbook case for what it does — because the bottleneck here is supply and multi-screen distribution, which is precisely the problem it is built to absorb.
Start with the episode itself. Persona HeyGen generates longer-form, avatar-led video with auto-scenes and a voice and face drawn from your AI Influencer persona pool — so you can stand up a recurring show where every episode reads as the same host, without filming each one on a schedule you cannot keep. The Persona Brief governs voice across the whole run, which is what makes episode twelve feel like part of the same series as episode one rather than a different person who happened to use the same title card. For a show, that consistency is not a nicety; it is the asset.
Then solve the two-screen problem in one pass. From the same source, Kompozy produces the short vertical cuts that feed phone-feed discovery — Clipped Shorts pulls the strongest moments out of the long-form piece, and Persona Shorts generates net-new captioned vertical clips around the same idea. So the episode and its trailers come out of one production run instead of two separate jobs, which is the exact split that defeats hand production. The funnel content that surrounds a show — a Carousel breaking down the episode, a Text Post teasing it, a Blog Article or Email Newsletter for the audience that wants depth — comes from the same brief.
Finally, distribution. Because Kompozy schedules and publishes across all nine social platforms from one queue, the episode and its short-form clips land on Instagram and on YouTube, TikTok, Facebook, and the rest in the same pass — so you are building for the living-room surface without surrendering the audiences who watch everywhere else. Be clear on the boundary: enrolling in Instagram's Series test and any living-room-specific placement happen inside Instagram's own app; Kompozy produces and ships the content, not the platform enrollment. What it removes is the production ceiling — the reason most creators will read this entire shift, agree with it, and still never make the episodic content it rewards. For the format mechanics underneath, see the guide on YouTube Shorts vs long-form strategy and the glossary entries on long-form video and short-form video.
Instagram moving into the living room is not a feature you toggle; it is a signal about where attention is going. Long-form, episodic, and Live on the television change the creator's job from "make a clip that pops in the feed" to "build a show people choose to sit down with" — while still feeding the feed that gets them there. The strategy is a two-screen funnel: short for discovery, long for the couch, the same idea expressed as both. None of that is conceptually hard. The hard part, as always, is producing enough of it, consistently enough, to matter — and that is a problem you solve with a system, not with a better intention.
Instagram for TV is the app's living-room version, launched on Amazon Fire TV in December 2025 and expanded to Google TV in February 2026 and Samsung Smart TVs (2020 model year and newer) in June 2026. On June 22, 2026, Instagram said it is beginning to test longer-form video, multi-episode series, and live creator broadcasts on the TV — moving the app beyond the short Reels it started with.
It depends on where your audience watches. The TV push is an early test, not a finished product, so do not abandon short-form, which still drives discovery. The smart move is a layered approach: keep producing short vertical Reels for the phone feed, and start building longer or episodic content that has somewhere to live if living-room viewing takes off. Early movers get a thin-competition surface.
Series, which Instagram began rolling out to select creators in early June 2026, lets you group Reels into sequential episodes with a dedicated hub on your profile that viewers can tap through, save, or follow for updates. It is the building block of Instagram's episodic push — a way to turn one-off Reels into a returning show rather than disconnected posts.
On the living-room screen, yes. By putting longer-form, episodic, and Live video on the TV, Instagram is contesting the screen YouTube has dominated for years, and positioning itself against streaming services for couch attention. For creators that means a new distribution surface for the same kind of content, with much less established competition than YouTube on TV.
The hard part is supply: a recurring series needs a new on-brand episode on a schedule, plus short clips to feed discovery. A content engine like Kompozy generates longer-form avatar-led video (Persona HeyGen) with a consistent persona, cuts it into short captioned Reels (Clipped Shorts, Persona Shorts), and publishes the whole batch across nine platforms — so one production run yields the episode and its trailers.
In June 2026, Instagram expanded its living-room TV app to Samsung sets and began testing long-form video, episodic Series, and Live creator broadcasts on the big screen — an explicit bid for the couch against YouTube and streaming. For creators it changes format strategy: keep short vertical Reels for phone-feed discovery, but start building longer and episodic content that has somewhere to live if living-room viewing scales. The bottleneck is production cadence, not ideas.
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