Google Expands Gemini AI on Google TV With Three New Features
Iris Coleman Mar 24, 2026 20:10
Google rolls out richer visual answers, educational deep dives, and sports briefs for Gemini on Google TV starting March 24, 2026 in US and Canada.
Google is pushing Gemini deeper into living rooms with three new AI features for Google TV, transforming the platform from passive entertainment device into an interactive information hub. The rollout began March 24, 2026 for Gemini-enabled devices in the U.S. and Canada.
The update targets a familiar frustration: grabbing your phone mid-show to look something up. Google wants your TV to handle that instead.
What's Actually New
The first addition, richer visual help, makes Gemini's responses context-aware. Ask about a recipe and you'll get a video tutorial. Query sports scores and a live scorecard appears alongside streaming options. The AI now pulls together visuals, video, and text based on what you're actually asking for rather than delivering generic results.
Deep dives represent the more ambitious play. These narrated visual breakdowns tackle educational topics—health, economics, technology—with interactive follow-up questions built in. Google positions this as "meaningful screen time" for families, walking through subjects like cold plunge physiology or matcha production from scratch. Access comes through asking Gemini directly or hitting the "Learn" section in the Gemini tab.
Sports briefs extend Google's existing news brief format to cover live sports. The feature delivers narrated highlights and game summaries for NBA, NCAA basketball, NHL, MLB, MLS, and NWSL. For fans who miss games but want more than box scores, this fills the gap without endless scrolling through sports apps.
Availability and Hardware Requirements
Richer visual help started rolling out March 24 in the U.S. and Canada. Deep dives and sports briefs launched the same day for U.S. users on Gemini-enabled devices, with broader device support expected this spring.
International expansion follows later in 2026. Australia, New Zealand, and Great Britain get the Gemini voice assistant this spring, with additional countries throughout the year. The features require Android TV OS 14 or higher plus an internet connection—limiting access to newer hardware.
Google's AI integration strategy here mirrors its broader approach: embedding Gemini across surfaces where users already spend time. Whether TV viewers actually prefer AI-generated content summaries over traditional browsing remains the open question this rollout will answer.
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