Many Fox News viewers will be cheering: Fox News will soon offer a 24-hour streaming service called Fox Nation, Mediaite and other outlets reported.

Fox News aired its first commercial for Fox Nation during Thursday night football, featuring conservative commentator Tomi Lahren advertising the subscription service.

“This is our time, and this is going to be our place,” Lahren says in the television ad.

Fox News has “defied the downward trends in the television business,” as The New York Times said in its coverage of the new service.

Fox enjoyed its highest-rated year in 2017 — while other networks saw audiences dwindle.

“But the mass migration of viewers away from traditional cable and satellite packages is accelerating,” noted The Times, and Fox News is planning its future in the digital realm that rivals such as CNN have put off.

Fox Nation will feature new specials and documentaries — and best of all — will not require a cable subscription to watch.

Fox News has hired conservative pundit Britt McHenry to provide commentary on the streaming service, according to The Wrap.

McHenry is current host of “Like It Or Not” on Washington, D.C.’s local WTTG station (Fox 5), and also contributes to The Federalist.

Sure to stir up some controversy: McHenry is also known for a viral video in which she was seen berating a towing company employee — and for saying that she was demoted from a previous job at ESPN because she was white and too well-paid.

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Fox Nation will not overlap with Fox News — not even Fox News reruns — because of the channel’s contractual agreements with cable operators, said Mediaite.

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“Fox Nation is designed to appeal to the Fox superfan,” John Finley, who oversees program development and production for Fox News, told The Times, as Mediaite noted.

“These are the folks who watch Fox News every night for hours at a time, the dedicated audience that really wants more of what we have to offer.”

Fox News viewers “value our product so much, they go to hotels and if they can’t have Fox, they send us emails. They go on cruises, and if they can’t have Fox, they send us emails,” he added. “This is a way for us to meet that demand.”