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YouTube eyes movie rental biz

San Francisco - YouTube's coming attractions now include movie rentals.

The internet's most popular video channel will make its debut as a rental outlet on Friday to help promote some of the movies that will be shown at the upcoming Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah.

It's part of a test that YouTube hopes will encourage more studios to rent movies through its site, eventually creating a new financial stream to supplement the internet ads that bring in most of its revenue.

The first five films available to rent through YouTube will cost $3.99 for a 48-hour viewing period. Movie studios will be able to set their own prices, with rental viewing windows ranging from one to 90 days. YouTube will get an unspecified commission from each rental.

The expansion announced on Wednesday marks the latest step in YouTube's evolution from a quirky and sometimes edgy website that showed free clips posted by wannabe stars, showoffs, bored teens, lonely hearts and video pirates.

While YouTube still has plenty of eclectic entertainment, the site increasingly has been trying to reel in more traditional fare from movie, television and music producers.

Persuading movie studios

The reason: most major advertisers are more comfortable placing their commercials next to professionally produced videos than alongside wacky - and potentially offensive - clips posted by amateurs.

The strategy appears to be paying off for YouTube and its owner, Google Barclays Capital analyst Douglas Anmuch expects YouTube to generate about $700m in revenue this year, an estimated 55% increase from 2009. If YouTube hits that target, it likely will turn profitable, helping to justify the $1.76bn in stock that Google paid for the site more than three years ago.

YouTube says it is diversifying into movie rentals to meet user demand and provide an alternative means of distribution for movie makers that don't want ads cluttering up their work.

There already are plenty of places to rent movies that can be downloaded or streamed over high-speed internet connections. The major vendors include Apple's iTunes store, Amazon.com, Netflix and Blockbuster.

YouTube's biggest challenge figures to be a familiar one: persuading movie studios to make their digital rentals available at the same time the films are released on DVDs and Blu-ray discs. The studios aren't keen on that particular idea, partly because selling DVDs and Blu-ray discs is so profitable.

- AP

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