More movies online
By Kenneth Li

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20060814/wr_nm/media_myspace_fox_dc_1

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Twentieth Century Fox will start to sell movies 
including "X-Men: The Last Stand" and TV shows like "24" for downloading 
from Web sites owned by parent News Corp., in what some analysts said 
could be the first step toward creating a broader online video strategy.

Fox Interactive Media said it will begin to sell movies and shows on the 
Direct2Drive download site, owned by Fox's IGN Entertainment, by 
October. The programs can be viewed on personal computers as well as 
Windows portable media devices.

The programs will be made available for purchase from News Corp.'s 
popular online teen hangout MySpace.com shortly thereafter, Fox 
Interactive Media president Ross Levinsohn said in an interview.

Twentieth Century Fox now sells its films to download services like 
CinemaNow and Movielink, but it has not invested in the Web sites unlike 
other studios including Walt Disney Co., Viacom Inc.'s Paramount 
Pictures and Time Warner Inc.'s Warner Brothers.

The new project is an early indicator of News Corp. Chief Executive 
Rupert Murdoch's ambitions to exploit Direct2Drive's technology in the 
fledgling movie download market, said one analyst.

"It's an infrastructure that they use to deliver gaming software that 
can be a horizontal platform," Gartner research director Allen Weiner, 
who was briefed on the announcement, said. "It doesn't matter what 
facade you put in front of it."

Direct2Drive, a digital media distribution system, has been contracted 
by other companies to build Internet media storefronts, and could some 
day serve as the underlying technology behind other video stores on Fox 
Interactive Media properties, including FoxSports.com, Weiner said.

Fox Interactive Media could also hypothetically court other movie and TV 
studios to sell program on its Web properties, potentially competing 
with the download services offered by other Hollywood studios.

Levinsohn was coy about future plans, but said: "The more we can 
diversify, the more it bodes well for our business."

Murdoch has time and again fostered collaboration among News Corp.'s 
myriad divisions, accomplishing what other media conglomerates have 
often attempted but often fail to do.

After buying a controlling stake in top U.S. satellite TV operator 
DirecTV Group Inc., for instance, the News Corp.-controlled NDS Group 
edged out
TiVo Inc. as DirecTV's top supplier for digital video recorders.

In contrast, the world's largest media company Time Warner has rarely 
been able to get its units working together, most notably with its AOL 
online unit.

The move comes a week after MySpace selected Google Inc. as its search 
advertising partner in a deal that guarantees to pay Fox Interactive 
Media at least $900 million.

Movies will sell for about $20 and shows for $1.99 and will be playable 
on portable entertainment devices that employ Microsoft Corp.'s copy 
protection system.


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