YouTube’s Conversational AI Assistant Has Finally Come to Television

YouTube tests conversational AI on TVs, consoles, and streaming devices for Premium Labs users.
YouTube is expanding its conversational AI tool to smart TVs, gaming consoles, and streaming devices in a limited experiment that brings Gemini-powered assistance directly to your home screen.
The feature, previously available only on mobile devices and the web, allows users to ask questions about the content they are watching without pausing or switching devices. Eligible users can click an "Ask" button on their TV screen to summon the AI assistant, which offers suggested questions based on the video or accepts voice queries via the remote's microphone button.
The test is currently available to a select group of users and supports five languages including English, Hindi, Spanish, Portuguese, and Korean. YouTube has not announced a timeline for wider availability.
The feature is enabled at the video level, meaning it may not appear on all content even for users within the test group. According to YouTube's support page, viewers can ask questions about recipe ingredients, song lyrics, or other video details and receive instant answers without leaving the app.
The expansion to TVs comes as YouTube's television viewership reaches historic levels. A Nielsen report from May 2025 found that YouTube accounted for 12.4% of total television audience time in the United States, surpassing major platforms like Disney and Netflix.
That makes smart TVs prime territory for AI integration, particularly as Google pushes to embed AI across every surface where users consume content. The company first launched its conversational AI tool in 2024 to help viewers explore content in greater depth, and the TV experiment represents a shift toward ambient computing, putting AI wherever users happen to be.
Passive TV watching is giving way to interactive experiences. The feature allows the platform to capture data on what viewers want to know, how they interact with content, and where they get stuck.
On supported smart TVs and streaming devices, the Ask button appears on the video playback interface and is marked with a Gemini sparkle icon. Users can activate the feature using the microphone button on a compatible remote control.
Once activated, viewers can submit voice queries related to the video currently playing, and the AI assistant generates responses similar to those available on mobile and desktop versions of YouTube. The feature also offers canned prompts which are suggested questions generated by the system based on the video’s content.
Sample use cases listed by YouTube include asking "what ingredients are they using for this recipe?" or "what's the story behind this song's lyrics?." The assistant is trained on each video's content, allowing it to provide contextually relevant answers without requiring users to search elsewhere. The feature can also provide summaries of key moments, request related video recommendations, and handle follow-up questions.
YouTube is not alone in pushing conversational AI into the living room. Amazon rolled out Alexa+ on Fire TV devices, enabling users to engage in natural conversations, ask for tailored content recommendations, hunt for specific scenes in movies, or ask questions about actors and filming locations. Roku has enhanced its AI voice assistant to handle open-ended questions about movies and shows.
By integrating conversational AI directly into YouTube rather than relying on third-party assistants, Google ensures it retains control over the user experience and the data generated by those interactions.
What Does This Mean for Creators?
For creators, the feature presents both opportunity and risk. An AI assistant that can answer viewer questions might reduce confusion and increase watch time, particularly for instructional or educational content.
But it could also mean viewers get the information they need without watching the full video, potentially impacting retention metrics that determine algorithmic promotion. Creators may need to optimize content with the assumption that AI will surface key points independently.
The experiment is part of YouTube’s broader AI strategy. The platform has been steadily adding AI features across its product, including a comments summarizer that helps viewers catch up on video discussions, an AI-driven search results carousel, and a feature that automatically enhances videos uploaded at lower resolutions to full HD.
In January, YouTube announced that creators will soon be able to make Shorts using AI-generated versions of their own likeness. Last week, the company launched a dedicated app for Apple Vision Pro, letting users watch content on a theater-sized virtual screen.
The real question is whether viewers actually want to talk to their TVs. Voice interfaces have struggled to gain mainstream adoption beyond simple commands, and adding conversational AI to passive entertainment is a bet that interaction will enhance rather than disrupt the viewing experience.