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It’s a little bittersweet to realize that the Hulu app that first launched in the final days of October 2007 will no longer exist by 2026. However, anyone worried that this signals Hulu and its programming going the way of the dodo need not fret. On the contrary, this seems to confirm that Disney is slightly pivoting its streaming future to largely focus on Hulu, which could be a very wise move for the studio.
Disney Has Already Indicated Its Streaming Future Is Hulu-Centric

On July 8, 2025, Disney released a sizzle reel of all the big new and returning shows dropping on Disney+ and Hulu for the rest of the year. In years past, the sizzle reel would’ve been crammed full of teases for big shows based in the worlds of Star Wars, Marvel, and other major Mouse House properties. However, the only two Disney+ TV shows highlighted here were Wonder Man and a new Percy Jackson season. The Zombies 4 TV movie also got a shout-out, but that was it for Disney+ exclusives.
Meanwhile, Hulu programming like Chad Powers, All’s Fair, Alien: Earth, The Twisted Tale of Amanda Knox, King of the Hill, and Only Murders in the Building dominated the sizzle reel. The heavy imbalance in favor of Hulu programming in this sizzle reel indicates where Disney’s streaming future lies. Now that the Mouse House fully owns Hulu and Disney divisions like Lucasfilm and Marvel Television are significantly cutting down on their small-screen exploits, Hulu and its shows will be the primary driver of narrative streaming shows for this company.
Upcoming original projects for 2026 and beyond at these streamers further bear this out. Only Vision Quest and an Oswald the Lucky Rabbit show are either shooting or have finished principal photography for Disney+. Hulu, meanwhile, has a bevy of further shows on the horizon, including The Plot, The Testaments, and a Murdaugh murders show. This is a wise shift on many fronts, including how Disney+ seriously struggled to launch big, buzzy shows in its first five years of existence. National Treasure: Edge of History, Big Shot, and Turner & Hooch (among many others) just never caught on with the general public like The Bear or Only Murders in the Building.









