YouTube Red, the Google-owned paid streaming service, has acquired its first big-budget, Hollywood-produced television drama, moving it into more direct competition with players like Netflix and traditional pay TV networks.

Fittingly, given YouTube's ambitions, the scripted series will be based on Step Up, the Lionsgate-controlled dance movie franchise that started Channing Tatum's acting career and has taken in more than $US650 million ($875 million) at the worldwide box office. Lionsgate will supply a full season of 10 episodes, each running about 45 minutes — a long way from the quickie cat videos for which YouTube was once known.

"Bigger, bolder" and an offering that will "drive subscription" is how Susanne Daniels, YouTube's global head of original content, described the still-untitled series in an interview. Kevin Beggs, Lionsgate's television chairman, called it "a distinctive, noisy, platform-defining series" that "multiple networks wanted."

Tatum will be an executive producer of the drama, expected to arrive next year. It will cost several million dollars per episode to make, signalling the arrival of YouTube Red as a major-league buyer of content. The series, which will feature YouTube stars as dancers and actors, will be set at a performing arts high school and be most similar in tone to the first of the five Step Up movies.

For $12 a month, YouTube Red offers advertisement-free viewing of YouTube videos, exclusive programming and a vast selection of music via YouTube Music and full access to Google's Play Music.

Daniels, best known for turning the WB network into a youth powerhouse in the 1990s, joined the company a year ago and is charged with finding YouTube Red's version of Netflix's House of Cards — a breakout series that will sell subscriptions and send a message to

Hollywood's creative community: This is a viable place for your best show pitches.

The verdict is still out. Sundar Pichai, chief executive of Google, said in an earnings-related conference call in April that YouTube Red had been "very well received.

" But the company has not released user numbers, and some analysts have been unenthusiastic, especially as more streaming competition has arisen.

"It is hard to tell whether the effort is succeeding or will succeed," Carlos Kirjner, an analyst at Bernstein Research, wrote in a client report last month. "It is possible that it might be too little too late." Notably, Kirjner cited a lack of "high-production-value content" as one of YouTube Red's shortcomings.

Daniels acknowledged in an interview that she was walking "a fine line" with programming decisions. YouTube Red's original lineup must feel familiar to ardent users of the site (teenagers and young adults) while offering something distinctive enough to convince them to upgrade from YouTube's free service. So far, efforts have included A Trip to Unicorn Island, a documentary about a world tour taken by a YouTube personality, Lilly Singh, and Foursome, a high school comedy.

"We still don't know for sure what's going to resonate," Daniels said. "You just have to sort of jump in the water."
Still, the Step Up project represents a very educated guess. "Dance videos on YouTube drive millions of hours of watch time every month," Daniels said, adding that dance is a popular genre for YouTube around the world. YouTube Red is available in the United States, Australia and New Zealand, and has plans for overseas expansion, particularly in Europe.

Music videos are also enormously popular on YouTube — the Step Up movies are known for their music-backed montages — and some of the biggest traditional television hits of the last decade, including Empire and Glee, have been rooted in song.

Kevin Beggs, of Lionsgate, said Daniels was able to nab the series in part because she was willing to commit to a full season without first making a pilot episode as a test. "That got everyone's attention," he said.

The deal got its start at a New Year's Eve party at the Los Angeles home of Erik Feig, co-president of Lionsgate's movie division. Daniels was among the guests. That night, "Erik said the studio was getting ready to talk to distributors about a Step Up TV show, and so I immediately started my hot pursuit," she said.

More than most other Hollywood studios, Lionsgate has been early to spot the promise of streaming services as buyers of high-end television shows. Lionsgate's production roster includes Orange Is the New Black for Netflix and Casual, which was renewed on US streaming service Hulu for a third season. (The now-concluded Mad Men is still Lionsgate's best-known series, however.)

Step Up provide the studio with another television hit, the kind that mints money by running multiple seasons? It is too early to say, of course, but Feig, who has been involved with the Step Up franchise from its beginning, has high hopes.

"Step Up has always relied on a relatively simple formula, one that has managed to work again and again in different contexts, with different actors," Feig said in an email. Combine innovative choreography with "the most current hip-hop tracks and an extra-large dollop of feel-good fantasy, and it's an instant party," he said.

"One that is destined to leave you maybe not all that wiser, but definitely in a better mood."