Google is looking to get into the paid TV business.

The company filed an application last week to provide video service to residents of Kansas City, Mo., according to The Wall Street Journal. If approved, the service could launch as soon as a month from now, according to the article, which cites a "media executive currently involved in negotiations to license channels to the service." Offerings in the video package would include live TV as well as on-demand and online access to TV channels, according to the report, which was based on an earlier article by The New York Post.

The source told the WSJ that Google plans to look beyond the Kansas City market and into other areas where Verizon's Fiber Optic Services (FIOS). Controlling the pipes to TV subscribers would offer Google a new revenue stream.

Reps from Google could not be reached for comment.

The Kansas City application coincides with another request to put a satellite antenna farm near the company's data center in Council Bluffs, Iowa. That addition could allow Google to receive movies and TV shows that could be bundled with a new Internet service in Kansas City that promises to be up to 100 times faster than the average Internet connection.

Google chose Kansas City for its ultra-fast service last March. Kansas City, Mo., and Kansas City, Kan., beat out about 1,000 other municipalities for that honor. That fiber-optic-based Internet service is expected to go live there this summer.

This isn't the first time that Google's ambitious plans for TV service have been exposed. The Wall Street Journal also reported in November that Google was in talks with Disney, Time Warner and Discovery Communications about providing content for its fiber-optic based video service in those cities.