Cable TV keeps losing ground in the US, and streaming has taken over most of how people watch. But here’s the thing about streaming giants like Netflix and Amazon Prime: for all their on-demand libraries, none of them replaced the linear, themed channel experience that cable once delivered. Trio TV is betting there’s still an audience for that, and it’s approaching the problem from an angle nobody else has tried.
Trio TV calls itself the first cable-style network built from the ground up for streaming. That distinction matters. Plenty of traditional networks have streaming apps now, but those apps are secondary, offshoots of a broadcast or cable channel where content airs first and migrates online later. Trio flips that. There’s no cable feed it’s derived from. The streaming platform is the network, which means fresh programming rather than content recycled from a linear schedule’s off-peak hours.
The structure follows three channels: Talk, Learn, and Entertain. Talk covers talk shows. Learn handles education and documentaries. Entertain is the catch-all for everything else. Alongside the linear channels, Trio runs a growing on-demand library, so it’s not asking viewers to give up the flexibility streaming trained them to expect. What it’s adding back is the curated, scheduled experience that pure on-demand platforms don’t really offer.
Trio is free to watch, open to anyone anywhere, and completely ad-supported, but it’s making a point of not drowning viewers in the automated ad-rolls that have become standard across streaming. The pitch is limited commercial breaks, closer to old-school broadcast pacing than the constant interruptions people have come to dread. Right now the network runs one US feed and one international feed, with plans to roll out more local feeds by late 2026. Unlike American networks that simply broadcast the same programming abroad, Trio builds in regionally relevant content and interstitials, so it reads as a local channel wherever someone tunes in.

Behind the company is founder and Executive Director Codrin Saftiuc, a European businessman who spent decades building enterprises across media, real estate, and retail, including property development and materials supply operations in Romania. In 2012 he founded Playboy Moldova, taking a recognizable American brand and reworking it for a market with its own tastes, before repositioning it as a lifestyle brand. That’s effectively the Trio playbook in miniature. He knows how American content plays in different regions and how to position it for each one, which is the whole bet behind a network that wants to feel local wherever it lands.
The ambition doesn’t stop at the network. Trio Media Group also runs Trio Pictures, its film division producing and distributing features, shorts, and documentaries worldwide, with a catalog expected to top 1,000 titles by the end of 2026. There’s Trio Radio too, a 24/7 station of talk shows, narrated dramas, and music programs available on iHeartRadio, Alexa, Amazon Fire, and Shoutcast for people who’d rather listen than stare at a screen.
Streaming gave people endless choice but took away the one thing cable did well, a channel you could just turn on and trust to deliver. Trio is betting that’s worth bringing back, and it’s giving people the chance to find out for free. You can find all three at triotv.net.





























