V10 Entertainment, the company behind the forthcoming docuseries highlighting ARCH Motorcycle Company’s entry into the Mission Super Hooligan Championship Series, has just inked an exclusive global distribution deal with MotoAmerica to bring race fans more than 100 live races across eight premier classes.
That includes Superbike, Supersport, Stock 1000, King Of The Baggers, Twins Cup, Royal Enfield Build.Train.Race., Super Hooligan National Championship, and the newly launched Talent Cup.
The upcoming documentary series, which stars Keanu Reeves and Gard Hollinger, follows the ARCH Racing team action across ten races, and is described as “a character-driven documentary series that centers around the team and their personal narratives and relationships.”
The series is slated to premiere in Q1 of 2026 and will featuring racing at legendary race tracks including Daytona International Speedway, WeatherTech Raceway Laguna Seca, and Circuit of The Americas. But where can you watch it? Well, that just got a lot easier.
V1 Entertainment’s deal with MotoAmerica, though, gives V10 exclusive rights to the race organization’s full content library, to include eight original series currently in the works, including ‘Pressure to Rise’ and ‘Generation Speed: MotoAmerica’s Road To MotoGP.’
According to Samantha Cooper, Head of Global Distribution at V10 Entertainment, “MotoAmerica’s been on an incredible run over the past few years, and with Gard and Keanu’s team surging in the Super Hooligan National Championship, we saw a clear opportunity to help amplify the sport’s momentum.” Chuck Aksland, COO of MotoAmerica, added that “partnering with V10 Entertainment is a significant milestone for MotoAmerica as we grow our sport, increasing the visibility of American motorcycle road racing.”
What’s unclear, though, is just how V10 Entertainment will distribute the racing content. As it stands, MotoAmerica Live+, the race organization’s proprietary streaming platform, saw more than 2.5 million digital video views this season, which included their extensive archive of content, including past races and behind-the-scenes features. But is that the only way we can watch MotoAmerica’s upcoming 2026 season, which spans 12 race weekends across ten states? Or will V10 Entertainment seek to distribute the plethora of content that MotoAmerica creates on larger, more mainstream services like Netflix, Hulu or Amazon?
As it stands, a one-month subscription to MotoAmerica Live+ will run you $38.97. The yearly subscription is $109.99, although there’s a 50% off discount being offered through September 30th that’ll set you back $55 for the remainder of the 2025 season. However you shake it, that’s not cheap when you compare it to other proprietary streaming services – Major League Baseball (MLB TV) for example is just $34.99 a year, while things like the NFL and NHL are available to watch through streaming services you’re likely already paying for. In their defense, though, MotoGP Video Pass will set you back €139.99 ($163 USD) annually, and Formula 1 will cost you between $84.99 and $129.99 per year depending on the package.
So, will watching MotoAmerica in the coming years be yet another subscription added onto your growing list of stream services, or will V10 Entertainment partner with other platforms to bring North American motorcycle racing to a broader audience? We hope for the latter.
And considering the acquisition of MotoGP by Liberty Media in July of 2024, and the success they’ve had bringing Formula 1 to televisions all across America, now seems like the right time to showcase the motorcycle racing that’s going on across the country, with races bringing in more than 400,000 fans across their 12 stop calendar last year.