FanDuel’s Television Phase-Out Shocks Racing Industry: Or, How to Turn a Horse Into an App Icon
There was a time—not long ago, but spiritually somewhere between VHS tapes and dial-up internet—when horse racing lived in a very specific ecosystem. You didn’t scroll it. You didn’t swipe it. You sat down, turned on a television, and let a dedicated network spoon-feed you the thunder of hooves, the drama of jockey silks, and the quiet existential dread of betting your rent money on a horse named Tax Evasion II . That ecosystem just got quietly escorted out back. Because in 2026, FanDuel —the same company that turned sports into a dopamine-fueled casino disguised as a hobby—has decided that television is no longer part of the plan. And not in a gentle, “we’re exploring options” kind of way. No. This is a full-on, slow-motion euthanasia of FanDuel TV . And if you listen closely, you can hear the racing industry whispering the same thing your grandparents said when Netflix arrived: “Wait… how do people watch this now?” The Slow Death of a Channel That Refused to Scroll Let’s get...