On 11 July 2016, Molotov was officially launched at
WWDC by
Apple in
Cupertino. The service was then immediately seen by the industry as the future of television, innovating with its
interface and ease of navigation through television programmes. On 7 December 2016, the
Ciné+ option was added to the Molotov offer, giving access to six premium cinema channels. Also in December 2016, Molotov announced that it had completed a second fundraising round of 22 million euros, after an initial fundraising of 10 million euros in 2014. Molotov reaches one million users in eight months. On 14 September 14, 2017,
Médiamétrie announced that Molotov's audiences would be counted on all screens (TV, computer, cell phone and tablet) measurement and integrated into Médiamétrie's daily measurements from 2 October 2017. In October, Molotov enabled its users with a paid option to enjoy the service in
HD 1080p and
Ultra HD, with free users still benefiting from 720p HD. As of November 2018, the company claims 6.6 million users and up to 900 new paying subscribers every day, compared with around 20 in 2017. The 7 million user mark is reached at the end of December 2018. On 30 January 2019, the
Altice group announced that it had entered into exclusive negotiations to become a majority
shareholder in Molotov, with the two groups shared objective of accelerating the app's development in France and internationally, and offering Altice Group customers (via
SFR and
RMC Sport), the best digital experience and
OTT on the market for customers. However,
Jean-David Blanc made it clear that Molotov was not for sale. Almost a year later, in January 2020, negotiations with Altice having came to nothing due to the dissatisfaction of some shareholders,
Xavier Niel bailed out the company to the tune of 30 million euros and Molotov said it has passed the 10 million user mark. On January 19, 2020, Molotov joined the French Tech 120 index. In April, the last two major
DTT channels still unavailable on Molotov, (
NRJ 12 and
Chérie 25, joined the free basic offer following the resolution of a long-running disagreement with the
NRJ Group. With the first confinement caused by the
COVID-19 pandemic and the closure of schools, Molotov adapted its offer to the needs of students and in April 2020 offered the "Molotov for school" section, accessible from
kindergarten through to the final year of high school, bringing together all TV content organized by class and by theme. These courses, designed by teachers, were produced by
Toulouse-based
start-up SchoolMouv. In June, Molotov announced the launch of Molotov Solutions,
over-the-top media services for professionals. It launched
Mango (now Molotov Channels) in November, the first
advertising video on demand (AVOD) service featuring movies, documentaries and programs for children accessible from any free account. After launching its offer in
Ivory Coast at the end of December, Molotov announced in a
press release its intention to expand in
French-speaking Africa, with a short-term plan for six other countries on the continent:
Senegal in January,
Cameroon in February,
Burkina Faso in March,
Tunisia in April, followed by
Guinea and
Democratic Republic of the Congo. On 10 November 2021, Molotov was bought out for 164.3 million euros by its American counterpart
FuboTV: "This marks the start of a new era for Molotov, which is going to roll out with much greater resources, on two continents, with a real desire to form a global group," said
Jean-David Blanc, its CEO. On May 16, 2022, Molotov announced the launch of seven thematic
free ad-supported streaming television channels from its AVOD Mango offer, its free video-on-demand service financed by advertising: Mango, Mango Séries, Mango Cinéma, Mango Kids, Mango Docs, Mango Histoires and Mango Novelas. == Notes ==