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Extreme view: AOL targeting youth with action sports site.


AOL (A division of Time Warner, Inc., New York, NY, www.aol.com) The world's largest online information service with access to the Internet, e-mail, chat rooms and a variety of databases and services.  has come to Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850.  in search of the ultimate wave. And the ultimate vert-ramp. And the ultimate motocross motocross

Form of motorcycle racing in which cyclists compete on a closed course marked out over natural or simulated rough terrain. Courses vary widely but must be 1.5–5 km (1–3 mi) in length, with steep inclines, hairpin turns, and mud.
 course.

The Internet giant is launching an action sports portal, called Lat (Local Area Transport) A communications protocol from Digital for controlling terminal traffic in a DECnet environment.

LAT - Local Area Transport
34.com, and is on the hunt for office space on the West Side. The site is a joint venture between AOL and Fusion Entertainment, a Portland-based production company that specializes in extreme sports extreme sports

Sports events characterized by high speed or high risk. Such sports include aggressive inline skating, wakeboarding, street luge, skateboarding, and freestyle bicycle events (wherein tricks such as back flips are performed on a bicycle).
 programming.

AOL, based in Dulles, Va., is the latest entrant to the skate park. Fox Entertainment launched FuelTV and its companion Web site FuelTV.com in L.A. in L.A. In is a compilation of studio recording by Various Artists. It was originally released in 1979 as an LP by Rhino Records. Track listing

 
Side One
The Kats
 2003 with more than 100 employees; and El Segundo-based GrindTV.com launched last year, backed by Newport Beach Newport Beach, residential and resort city (1990 pop. 66,643), Orange co., S Calif., on Newport Bay and the Pacific Ocean; inc. 1906. It is a popular seaside resort and yachting center. Manufactures include electrical and medical equipment, computers, boats, and adhesives.  venture capital firm SoftBank Capital. And don't forget ESPN's EXPN EXPN Expand .com, the official site for the X Games X Games Sports medicine The official Olympics of 'extreme sports' sponsored by ESPN, held annually during the summer. See Extreme sports.  and extreme sports; social networking powerhouse MySpace also has action sports pages.

"L.A. is the unofficial home of action sports," said Lat34.com Chief Executive Jeff Rowe, a former senior vice president at AOL.

Lat34, which took its name from the GPS coordinates of Los Angeles, launched the first week in June. Yahoo! Inc., whose Yahoo Sports division is based in Santa Monica, does not have an action-sports specific portal, though it does cover the X Games, according to a spokesman.

The company will have about 20 employees in its soon-to-be leased headquarters. And to hear Rowe describe the site, the company is trying to draw from all the current youth-market buzzwords Below is a list of common buzzwords which form part of the business jargon of Corporate work environments. General Conversation
  • Alignment []
  • At the end of the day [0]
  • Break through the clutter[1]
: it aims to become the MySpace.com, YouTube.com, iTunes, instant message, mobile content and blogspot for action sports kids.

"Our goal is to create a new space, a home for interactive sports online," Rowe said.

With AOL's marketing muscle behind it, Lat34 already has a media partnership with the Dew Action Sports Tour, the professional competitive tour owned by NBC Universal Inc. and Live Nation, sponsored by Mountain Dew. The site signed up Jeep as its first sponsor. It will combine traditional media coverage of sports events, as well as social networking and viral video content.

Emerging sector

The action sports world is still fragmented. Though the surf, skate and snowboard culture has gained more mainstream popularity over the past 10 years, the juggernaut of standard pro sports has proved a tough nut to crack.

EXPN.com launched in 1997, built around the summer and winter X Games, but has struggled to gain traction the rest of the year. The company is currently "at a crossroads" with the action sports site, according to X Games General Manager Chris Stiepock. It is trying to figure out the best way to span the action sports realm.

"It's hard to be all things to all people," said Andy Tompkins, director of action sports retailer trade shows produced by VNU VNU Volontaires des Nations Unies (French)
VNU Verenigde Nederlandse Uitgeversbedrijven (Dutch)
VNU Virtual Network User
 Expositions Inc.

Other companies are sticking to a fragmented approach. TransWorld Media, owned by Time Warner Inc., publishes TransWorld Surfing, Snowboarding, Skating and motocross magazines and has separate affinity Web sites for each one. So does Primedia Inc., publisher of Surfer, Snowboarder, Skateboarder, Climbing, Slam, Powder and Bike magazines. Action sports retailers also now boast their own sites--Australian surf retailer Billabong bil·la·bong  
n. Australian
1. A dead-end channel extending from the main stream of a river.

2. A streambed filled with water only in the rainy season.

3. A stagnant pool or backwater.
 International Ltd. offers a Web community surrounding its Billabong Pro Surf events. Nike Corp. recently launched an action sports site, called NK6.0, which features only Nike's extreme sports athletes. It also encourages users to send in their video clips.

"Most sites have a core competency: they can cover skateboarding, or they can cover surf--but they can't do both," Tompkins said.

At least that's been the popular wisdom in the industry.

Maintaining credibility and staying "true" to the sport is a big concern for retailers in this niche, and broad sites like Lat34.com, EXPN.com and GrindTV.com may not attract the core brands that drive these sports.

"We've found that most skateboarders stick to skateboarding sites," said Eladio Correa, brand marketing manager for Etnies, a skate-driven footwear and apparel brand owned by Lake Forest-based Sole Technologies Inc.

Extreme community?

There are those who disagree with that popular wisdom. PureVideo Networks Inc. launched GrindTV.com last year as a video community for action sports of all kinds. It encourages submissions, and the site has a rich selection of user-generated clips of kids "hitting sick jumps." Videos are divided into categories: skate, surf, snow, dirt, water, air and stunts. It now streams 80 million videos per month to 5 million users, boasting advertisers such as Nissan Xterra and Sony Corp.'s PlayStation Portable.

"When EXPN.com started, there was probably an average of 10 skate parks per state," Stiepock said. "Now there's 100 skate parks per state, and at every skate park there's a group of kids with digital cameras."

GrindTV sends crews to the U.S. Snowboarding Championships to cover Olympic medalist Shaun White, or to the Van's Triple Crown of Surfing The Vans Triple Crown of Surfing is the world's premier series of professional surfing events, offering three events to men and three events to women. For the men, those events are the Reef Hawaiian Pro at Haleiwa Ali'i Beach Park; the O'Neill World Cup of Surfing at Sunset Beach;  in Hawaii, producing profiles of the female athletes in the competition. Those videos will be featured alongside video clips from users of their own "epic tubes" in Hawaii. Lat34 wants to do the same thing. So does EXPN.com.

"People say you need to be sports-specific in order to be credible," said Erik Hawkins, chief executive of PureVideo Networks. But he sees action sports as an all-encompassing lifestyle: die-hard snowboarders are still interested in people who surf or skate. "It's why ESPN ESPN Entertainment and Sports Programming Network  doesn't just cover football," he said.

BY HILARY POTKEWITZ

Staff Reporter
COPYRIGHT 2006 CBJ, L.P.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:NEWS & ANALYSIS
Comment:Extreme view: AOL targeting youth with action sports site.(NEWS & ANALYSIS)
Author:Potkewitz, Hilary
Publication:Los Angeles Business Journal
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jul 3, 2006
Words:897
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