At first glance, TVii seems to be a waste of time.
Yesterday, I used Nintendo TVii, Nintendo's new way to interact with television and media, for the very first time in the comfort of my own home. It was also probably the only time I will have a meaningful interaction with Nintendo TVii.
You see, TVii in its current state is just a little bit more than a glorified search engine. Sure, it's neat that it recommends movies and TV shows for me, and I can search for specifics movies and TV shows, but little can actually be done to view these items in Nintendo TVii.
For example, if I wanted to watch Parks & Recreation, I could check the TV guide to see when it is next on, and then use the Wii U GamePad to turn on my cable box and turn on the channel. Sure, during the show I could use TV Tags to comment on the show, or view the generated TV Moments to see what I missed if I had to leave the TV, but it's a minor communal aspect of it. That is something I could just as easily do on other forms of social media with less of a hassle.
If I wanted to watch older episodes on Parks & Recreation, I can also boot up episodes on Hulu Plus. However, the method to use Hulu Plus in TVii is ass-backwards. Over the course of more than a minute, I pressed the icon to watch Parks & Recreation on Hulu Plus, watched TVii close, then saw Hulu Plus open and take me to the page where I could play the episode. It's lengthy and inconvenient.

The one aspect of Nintendo TVii that seems interesting is the Sports section. For the NFL, NBA, and NCAA Football and Basketball, every game shows up in a manner similar to ESPN Gamecasts and the multitudes of similar web or mobile applications out there. It's neat, but it's an experience that isn't that new or compelling. Still, I look forward to giving it a whirl with NFL games, and for marquee sporting events, it might be fun to pop on to see the community response.
To me, Nintendo TVii fell short of the expectations Nintendo set for it. It doesn't really offer anything new; it just offers a slightly different way to do something we can already do online with the community interaction. Aside from that, it's not much more than a search engine for cable, Hulu Plus, and Amazon Instant Video (Netflix and DVR support coming in 2013). Unless Nintendo completely overhauls Nintendo TVii in the coming months, I doubt I will ever use it with any regularity.