Fox plans movies, TV shows for download
By ANICK JESDANUN, AP Internet Writer

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060814/ap_on_hi_te/fox_movie_downloads_7

NEW YORK - The new "X-Men" movie and television shows like "24" are 
coming to a computer near you. Fox will tap into a platform now used to 
sell video games and let visitors buy movies and television shows that 
they can download for computer playback and transfer to devices running 
Microsoft Corp.'s Windows Media Player technology.

Movies available in October include "X-Men: The Last Stand," "Garfield: 
A Tail of Two Kitties," "The Omen" and "Thank You for Smoking." 
Availability through Fox's Direct2Drive service will be concurrent with 
the DVD release.

Also, Direct2Drive will make available Fox's "24" and "Prison Break" and 
FX's "It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia" within 24 hours of each 
episode's broadcast.

Other movies and shows will be added later.

Movies will sell for about $20 and TV shows for $1.99 an episode.

Apple Computer Inc.'s iTunes Music Store already sells many television 
shows, including "24" and others from Fox, for $1.99 apiece, but those 
can only be played on the company's market-leading iPod devices or 
through its iTunes software on a computer.

The movies and TV shows from Twentieth Century Fox will carry copy 
protection, limiting playback to two Windows computers, each supporting 
one portable device. Sales will be limited to the United States.

Direct2Drive is a service offered by IGN Entertainment Inc., which Fox's 
parent, News Corp., bought last year for $650 million.

Over the next year, video sales will come to other Fox sites as well, 
including MySpace.com, the popular online hangout that is now second 
only to Yahoo Inc. (Nasdaq:YHOO - news) in U.S. page views.

Mickie Rosen, general manager for entertainment at Fox Interactive 
Media, said each site will likely use the Direct2Drive technology but 
offer a different user experience and different movies and shows, the 
offerings tailored to the site's audience.

Earlier this year, Fox made available free and for-sale downloads of 
"24" on MySpace. It also sold about 200,000 audio and video clips of 
performances at AmericanIdol.com.


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