Hulu confirmed Wednesday that it’s working on a cable-like TV service to be delivered over the internet before its newfront presentation at Madison Square Garden Theater.

Hulu is working to include local broadcast signals in the new service, which is expected to cost approximately $40 per month, reports Variety. Doing that requires Hulu to cut deals with TV stations in local markets across the U.S., a task that has thwarted other companies, such as Apple, who have set out to create similar services.

Potentially helping Hulu is the fact that it’s owned by 21st Century Fox, Comcast NBCUniversal and The Walt Disney Co., which own the Fox, NBC and ABC owned TV stations, respectively. Hulu also is in talks with CBS, which doesn’t own a piece of the service. CBS Chairman and CEO Leslie Moonves made it clear during the company’s first-quarter earnings call on Tuesday that it might be willing to deal with Hulu but at a fair-market price.

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Hulu, which came on strong at its newfront last year with the announcement that it had acquired Seinfeld from Sony for a reported $160 million, said it has grown 30 percent in the past year and expects to reach 12 million subscribers this month.

The service also announced some new projects, including the launch of a documentary film series. The first movie in that series will be Ron Howard’s Eight Days a Week, which features “rare and exclusive” footage and was produced with the full cooperation of surviving Beatles Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr as well as Yoko Ono Lennon and Olivia Harrison.

Producing along with Howard are his producing partner Brian Grazer of Imagine Entertainment as well as White Horse Pictures’ Nigel Sinclair and Scott Pascucci. Also executive producing are Apple Corps Ltd’s Jeff Jones and Jonathan Clyde as well as Imagine’s Michael Rosenberg and White Horse’s Guy East and Nicholas Ferrall.

The film, which focuses on the early part of the Beatles’ career, will premiere simultaneously in theaters and on Hulu this fall.

Hulu also will air a second election special featuring Triumph, the Insult Comic Dog, voiced by Robert Smigel.

The service previously announced such new series as The Handmaid’s Tale, starring Mad Men’s Elisabeth Moss, Shut Eye and Chance.

On the veteran side, Hulu renewed The Path, a drama about a cult starring Breaking Bad’s Aaron Paul and Hannibal’s Hugh Dancy, for season two, and The Mindy Project, which Hulu picked up from Fox, for season five.

RELATED: Hulu Reveals Key Art for Latest Original Series ‘The Path’

READ MORE: Variety

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