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Wednesday
April 29, 2003
New Info On Britney's NASCAR Film
Project
L.A. office targets growth for NASCAR
through new media.
The pet slogan in NASCAR is "Grow
the sport."
With 59% of Winston Cup fans between the ages of 18 and 44, where do you grow
it? How about the under 18s, the fans of tomorrow? And how do you reach them?
Why, Britney Spears, of course.
NASCAR has aligned itself with the pop singer for a movie about the excitement
and drama of stock car racing, on and off the racing surface. Spears will not
play a driver —— she will be the daughter of a team owner —— but she
will co-star with the Winston Cup regulars.
That project, scheduled to begin production this summer, is one of the many
ideas formulated and developed by the Los Angeles office of NASCAR.
Located on the 30th floor of Century Park East, the office is the first for a
major sports organization to be located in Los Angeles.
Paul Brooks, vice president for broadcasting and digital entertainment, heads
a staff of 16 who direct all of the sport's broadcasting, entertainment
programming and new media ventures from there.
"Everything we do here is to help grow the sport, to bring added value to
all of our teams, sponsors and tracks," said Brooks, a former paramedic
who has been with NASCAR for 10 years and opened the L.A. office in 2000.
"The Britney film will be an authentic look at our sport, not a hokey one
that most auto racing pictures portray. Britney has a huge following and her
fans will come whether they know about NASCAR or not. After seeing the film,
they'll know, and we hope they'll like what they see." From his perch on
the 30th floor, Brooks can see his major partner, Fox and its family of
networks. NASCAR is in the third year of a six-year television partnership
with Fox, NBC and TNT. "Being close to them has been invaluable,"
Brooks said. "Speed Channel is the eighth-fastest growing cable network
overall, in 60 million homes, and NASCAR is its heart and soul."
As evidence of NASCAR's overpowering popularity, Fox's telecast of the
Virginia 500 two weeks ago at Martinsville Speedway drew more U.S. households
(5,631,000) than the combined nine races this season for the Indy Racing
League, CART and Formula One (4,664,000 for nine races, three each).
The Britney Spears movie is only one of many new ideas developed by Brooks and
Jeffrey Pollack, managing director for broadcasting and new media.
Night racing is another project. Seven Winston Cup events are at night this
year, six on Saturdays and the Coca-Cola 600 on Sunday, May 25, after the
Indianapolis 500.
"We're always looking for opportunities to grow our audience and bring in
new fans," Brooks said. "We think night races are a great way to do
that."
California Speedway, which is lobbying for a second Cup race to go with
Sunday's Auto Club 500, is considering a night race, although at the moment
the track's use permit with San Bernardino County does not allow it.
"When NASCAR announced 'Realignment 2004' and mentioned that more night
races would be considered, we started to take steps to consider lights at
California Speedway," track President Bill Miller said. "We have
gone through the due diligence of what it would take to light this facility,
and we are in the process of revising our conditional use permit that would
allow the speedway to host racing events into the evening."
There is much more going on in the L.A. office than just TV programming,
Pollack said.
"Network television is the killer application for NASCAR, but NASCAR.com,
NASCAR TV, NASCAR IN CAR, and NASCAR Radio all extend and support the
experience," he said.
•• NASCAR.com is the sport's official site on the Internet. It logged more
than 1.25 billion page views last year, a 25% increase from 2001. Among its
features are a fantasy league and online chats.
•• NASCAR TV offers a block of programming that is anchored by
"Totally NASCAR," which airs Monday through Friday on Speed Channel.
Fox, Fox Sports Net, FX and Speed Channel air the first half of the Winston
Cup season. NBC and TNT take over July 5 with the Pepsi 400 from Daytona
International Speedway. Twenty-eight Cup races appear on network TV, with 11
others on cable.
Last February's Daytona 500 on Fox drew a 9.8 national rating, which
calculates to 29.4 million viewers. According to figures released by the
Nielsen Media Research, the Busch series is the second most viewed motor
sports series in the country.
•• NASCAR IN CAR is a subscription TV package that offers fans
flag-to-flag in-car camera coverage for Winston Cup races. Developed by
Digital Entertainment, it offers viewing from seven sequential digital
channels, with each channel offering the in-car perspective of a different
driver.
In addition to the Spears movie, NASCAR also is working with IMAX Corporation
on a film based on the Winston Cup racing family. Some of the footage will be
shot this weekend at California Speedway.
"We hope it will expand the public's knowledge and understanding of the
complex world of high-speed racing from the standpoint of the drivers, teams,
tracks and sponsors," Brooks said. Distribution is scheduled for spring
2004.
"Television is full of reality shows these days, but every race we run is
reality."
nascar.com
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Britney MTV's 4th Greatest Video Star
The complete list:
1. Madonna
2. Eminem
3. Janet Jackson
4. Britney Spears
5. No Doubt
6. Guns N Roses
7. Michael Jackson
8. TLC
9. 'N SYNC
10. Mariah Carey
11. Red Hot Chili Peppers
12. Aerosmith
13. Missy Elliott
14. Nirvana
15. Bjork
16. Jennifer Lopez
17. Foo Fighters
18. Beastie Boys
19. Nine Inch Nails
20. Dr. Dre
21. U2
22. Beck
23. Busta Rhymes
24. P. Diddy
25. Limp Bizkit
mtv.com
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More On Britney's Hair
Britney's Dark Side
She's working on her fourth album, winning
big in Las Vegas and easing up on the workouts. But the biggest change is her
surprising new brunette look.
What about bob? On April 17 Britney Spears shocked fans when she got her hair
styled in a brunette chin-length do. "I just said, 'Can we please cut all
my hair off, pretty please?' And they just cut it to my shoulders, and I feel so
refreshed," says Spears. "I think it makes life so much fun to change
up things. . . . When you grow as a person, you grow as an artist too."
Bad-hair days: Though her third album went multiplatinum, it sold less than her
first two. She'll have a chance to burnish her image with a new album, due this
fall, and she's attached to star in an upcoming racecar movie.
New highlights: While recording the album, she has been bouncing between New
York City, Los Angeles, her home state of Louisiana and Texas, where she was all
smiles while taking in a NASCAR event with her mom and sister. On March 31
Spears won $25,000 at the Palms casino in Las Vegas, where she hung out with
hotel tycoon George Maloof. "That started all the crazy rumors that she was
dating him," says a friend, "but he was just hosting her and her
friends."
Washing that man outta her hair: As for that other guy, Spears swears there is
"nothing new, nothing going on" with Justin Timberlake.
Letting her hair down: Lately, Britney is kicking back a little, cutting down on
the intense workouts and switching to yoga ("my muscles get smaller, and I
look tinier, and when I work out a lot I get kind of bulky"). She's trying
to stick to a fish diet, although she does indulge her addiction to chai tea
latte. "I'm at the stage," she says, "where I'm very
low-key."
people.aol.com
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Britney On The Lycos Top 50: Week 193
Britney moves up two more spots this
week to the #8 spot this week
on the Lycos 50, for the week ending 04/26/03. She has been on the list for
193
weeks.
50.lycos.com |

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