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| Fuse Takes Aim at MTV | ||
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New network lives for rock videos We feel like MTV felt twenty years ago," says Marc Juris, the
president of Fuse, a small but flourishing cable channel that's staking
its future on a Fuse has been emphasizing metal, hip-hop, punk and emo. "The good thing about the channel is that it is seriously concentrating on rock music," says Linda Ferrando, senior vice president of Atlantic Records. Ferrando credits Fuse's support of Taproot for the metal band's near-gold sales. Pete Loeffler, lead singer of alt-metal band Chevelle, agrees. "[Fuse] really supports rock music," he says, "our fans always say they saw us on there." Fuse's competition doesn't seem worried. "That 'Where are the music videos on MTV?' thing," says David Cohn, general manager of MTV2. "I'm not sure anybody's that fussed about it except Fuse. And you notice Fuse never mentions MTV2." Still, the channel recently made a failed attempt to lure Fuse's breakout-star VJ, Juliya, for Headbangers Ball. Fuse programming essentially centers around music videos, a strategy that MTV all but abandoned after learning it was difficult to get ratings with music clips. To date, ratings for Fuse have been decent -- though not great enough to kill the infomercials that still populate the channel. Juris remains optimistic, citing the success of iTunes as his inspiration. |
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