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RealNetworks, MTV join forces to compete with Apple

New company signs an exclusive deal to be Verizon Wireless' platform for its wireless music service


RealNetworks and MTV Networks have formed a new company that will combine their online music services and have an exclusive deal with Verizon Wireless to be the platform for its wireless music service. The companies are joining forces to compete with Apple's enormously successful iTunes online music service.

Michael Bloom, the leader of MTV's Urge music service, will be at the helm of the new company, called Rhapsody America, said Van Toffler, president of MTV Networks Music on a conference call Tuesday. MTV plans to formally begin marketing the new service at its MTV Music Awards show, which will be held Sept. 9 in Las Vegas.

RealNetworks' Rhapsody subscription service will now replace MTV's Urge brand for its own online music service, Toffler said. Verizon's VCast music service will be the exclusive mobile platform for Rhapsody America's music service, he said.

On the conference call, RealNetworks Chairman and CEO Rob Glaser said the new company will deliver on RealNetworks' vision of the "jukebox in the sky everywhere" that it has promoted since it first launched its RealPlayer digital media player.

Rhapsody offers access to its entire catalog for a monthly fee. This subscription model is not as attractive as iTunes' model of selling music per song, which is why Rhapsody has not been as successful as iTunes, said Josh Bernoff, a research vice president with Forrester Research.

"Certainly almost all of the money is going to iTunes," he said. "Most people are not really comfortable with [the subscription] model right now. It has a serious weakness, [which is] once you stop subscribing, the music stops working."

Another subscription service, eMusic, is more appealing because it's an MP3 download service that lets users keep the songs they've downloaded during their subscription period even after they are no longer a subscriber, he added.

Rhapsody does offer a nonsubscription option that lets users purchase songs from its library of more than 4 million, said Kevin Nakao, vice president of marketing for Rhapsody America. But the company has not done a successful job marketing that, which will change now that RealNetworks and MTV are joining forces to promote Rhapsody. As with iTunes, songs cost $0.99 on Rhapsody for nonsubscribers, while subscribers pay $0.89 each.

"One of the things we want to do is use this as an opportunity to show the marketplace the benefit of our unlimited [subscription] model ... but how we also offer other options for people that want to purchase tracks and want to use Rhapsody to manage that," Nakao said. "We're a total music-service solution."

Rhapsody's unlimited subscription service costs $12.99 a month for users who want to play music from their PCs and $14.99 for users who use compatible portable music player.

Until Urge and Rhapsody converge, Urge users can use their log-in information for that service to log into Rhapsody, Nakao said. Though Rhapsody users cannot do the same with Urge, RealNetworks is already making available to Rhapsody subscribers some specialized content from MTV and VH-1 television networks that was previously only available on Urge, he said.

MTV Networks, owned by Viacom, runs Urge, a music download service it launched in May 2006 in partnership with Microsoft. Nakao said that MTV's Urge deal with Microsoft was set to expire this year, so the relationship between the two companies for the service will end.

The move to cozy up to Microsoft's competitor RealNetworks was a logical one for MTV since Microsoft launched a competitor to Urge, the Zune Marketplace, in conjunction with the launch of its digital music player Zune last November, said Susan Kevorkian, a program manager at analyst firm IDC.


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