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Rupe's on a roll
Murdoch's spree is turning Web heads By JILL GOLDSMITH, BEN FRITZ
After promising to build an Internet empire, News Corp. has now spent about $1.5 billion on Web properties since the Fox Interactive Media unit launched in mid-July. News Corp. inked its third major deal in two months on Thursday, buying online vidgame media company IGN Entertainment for $650 million in cash.
Deal comes after the conglomconglom recently bought MySpace.com parent Intermix Media for $580 million and college sports site Scout Media. Rupert Murdoch seems most interested in the huge number of eyeballs, mostly young and male, that IGN will bring. It operates a network of vidgame news and review sites, as well as movie sites Rotten Tomatoes and FilmForce and male lifestyle site AskMen.com. In addition, IGN provides online services to a number of vidgame publishers, offers games for download and recently launched an in-game advertising service.
If MySpace and IGN were integrated today, News Corp. would be the fifth most trafficked network on the Web, moving it up from a modest presence centered primarily on FoxSports.com and FoxNews.com just a few months ago.
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But the overall strategy behind the conglom's Web spending spree is not yet clear. With the reach and vidgame content of IGN; social networking capabilities of MySpace; and sports, news and entertainment content from Fox properties, News Corp. could easily put together a portal that would rival the likes of Yahoo! and AOL.
The only missing piece: a search engine. News Corp. is reported to be in talks to buy video search company Blinkx, which would give it traction in a burgeoning niche but still put it far behind Google. Murdoch has said he would spend up to $2 billion on the Internet space, potentially giving it another $500 million for Blinkx or other acquisition targets.
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(rest at www.variety.com -- subscription site )
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