• Cheddar is being bought by cable company Altice USA for $200 million.
  • Cheddar founder and CEO Jon Steinberg will become president of the new company’s Altice News unit.
  • The web video startup aims to be the business news service for millennials and will help Altice grow its news division.
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“Post-cable” network Cheddar is joining the traditional pay-TV ranks.

The video-news startup founded in 2016 by former BuzzFeed executive Jon Steinberg is being bought by telecom Altice USA for $200 million, the companies announced on Tuesday.

Cheddar has already raised eye-popping funding, especially considering the gloom and doom surrounding digital media. When it was just two years old, it was valued at around $160 million in March 2018 after raising $22 million in new funding.

With Cheddar, Altice wants grow its news division by taking advantage of Cheddar’s reach with professional millennial viewers. The companies already work together; Altice’s News 12 airs Cheddar’s daily Cheddar Tech Report on its seven stations in the NY Tri-State, while i24NEWS runs top stories from Cheddar. The companies said the acquisition will provide more ways to collaborate.

Cheddar is liberally distributed, on several new streaming services including Sling TV and Philo; screens on college campuses; as well as on social networks and even gas station pumps. Cheddar has expanded to roughly 40 million pay-TV homes, the company estimated.

Despite its far-reaching distribution, Cheddar's audience size has been hard to measure because it airs in so many places and there's no good ratings system to measure that audience, something Steinberg himself has acknowledged.