????️ Cable-free live TV is now in 34 new metro areas.
Try YouTube TV today and watch your favorite sports & shows LIVE → https://t.co/RGKYM1RfjC pic.twitter.com/Usf8XBftAN
— YouTube TV (@YouTubeTV) December 11, 2017
Here are all the new markets:
- Albany
- Baton Rouge
- Buffalo
- Cedar Rapids
- Chattanooga
- Colorado Springs
- Des Moines
- Flint
- Fresno-Visalia
- Ft. Myers-Naples
- Ft. Smith-Fayetteville-Springdale-Rogers (Arkansas)
- Grand Rapids
- Green Bay
- Greenville (either SC or NC, whichever didn’t have it last time)
- Huntsville-Decatur (Florida)
- Jackson (Mississippi)
- Knoxville
- Little Rock
- Madison
- New Orleans
- Omaha
- Paducah-Cape Girardeau-Harrisburg
- Portland-Auburn (Maine)
- Providence
- Roanoke-Lynchburg (Virginia)
- Rochester
- Savannah
- Shreveport
- South Bend-Elkhart (Indiana)
- Spokane
- Springfield (Missouri)
- Toledo
- Tucson
- Tulsa
- Waco
YouTube TV recently added support for 60 frames per second (fps) to some channels. At first, it only worked on ESPN and FS1 sports networks. Now YouTube TV has added 60fps support to:
ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU, ESPN News, SEC Network, FS1, FS2, BTN, FX, FXX, FXM, Regional Fox Sports Networks, National Geographic, Nat Geo Wild, and Fox Soccer Plus.
60fps offers a far better experience but also means it takes up twice the amount of data because it is using double the frames every second. So many live TV services have kept 60fps for their sports-related channels.