Roku / apps / JASON`S MEDIA NETWORK GROUP
REVIEW
Jason's Media Network Group is the kind of channel Roku quietly makes room for.
A long-tail entry in Roku's open submission catalogue, with no public press, no website footprint, and no way to verify what's inside without installing it. That's the genre, not the exception.
BY THE APP COMRADE DESK · MAY 9, 2026 · 3 MIN READ
Jason`s Media Network Group
TVAPPBUILDER
OUR SCORE
5.8
ROKU
★ 5.0
PRICE
Free
Roku’s channel store is two stores stacked on top of each other. The top layer is the one everyone knows — Netflix, Max, Paramount+, the major free ad-supported networks. The bottom layer is the long tail: independent operators, hobbyist broadcasters, faith networks, regional sports stringers, and small media collectives who took advantage of Roku’s open submission system to put a tile next to the giants. Jason’s Media Network Group lives in that bottom layer.
We could find no website, no press coverage, no social presence, and no platform-store description detailed enough to anchor a feature-by-feature review. That’s not a knock on the channel itself — it’s the default state of independent Roku publishing. A creator can ship a working channel without the marketing apparatus a venture-funded streamer would consider table stakes. The result is a long shelf of tiles that only their viewers ever encounter.
This review treats the genre on its own terms: a niche Roku channel is judged by whether the catalogue is coherent, whether the player works, and whether the channel respects the viewer’s time. Without verifiable evidence on any of those points, a default mid-band score is the honest call.
Roku's strength as a platform is also its weeds: thousands of independent channels nobody outside their audience will ever notice.
FEATURES
Based on what we can confirm from the public listing alone: it's a Roku channel published under the "Jason's Media Network Group" name, available in Roku's open store, free to install. We won't claim a content lineup, video quality tier, live versus VOD mix, or update cadence we can't verify. Roku's own player handles transport and playback, which means the basics — pause, fast-forward, captions where the publisher provides them — work the same as on any other channel.
What's specific to a channel like this is the editorial decision the operator made about what to put in front of viewers. Without a programming guide or trailer, that decision is opaque from the outside. Installing it is the only way to see it.
MISSION ACCOMPLISHED
The channel exists, which on Roku's open platform is its own small accomplishment. Independent publishers shipping to a living-room device — without a deal, without a CDN partnership, without a marketing budget — is a category Roku has quietly preserved while every competing platform has tightened the gate. Jason's Media Network Group is one of thousands of channels that benefit from that openness.
ROOM TO IMPROVE
The lack of any discoverable description, website, or social footprint is the single biggest issue. A viewer scrolling Roku's channel store needs a reason to install — a sentence about what's inside, a poster frame that signals genre, a sample clip. Without those, the channel relies entirely on word of mouth from an audience that may not exist yet. A short About blurb and a static landing page would change the calculus completely, at near-zero cost.
CONCLUSION
Install it if you're a Roku channel-tourist who enjoys spelunking the long tail. Skip it if you want a curated catalogue with editorial signal up front. The score reflects what we can verify, which is very little — a channel like this could be a quiet gem or a placeholder, and we'd rather be honest about not knowing than inflate either direction.