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Fuse is an American television channel owned by Fuse Media, LLC, that launched in 1994. It was originally known as MuchMusic USA, a localized version of the Canadian cable channel Much, and was dedicated to music-based programming; the channel relaunched under its current branding in 2003. Fuse was acquired by SiTV Media in 2014 and, after ...
Fuse Media, LLC is a Latino-owned entertainment company based in New York City. The company's portfolio includes its namesake cable channel and its spin-off, FM (Fuse Music); a streaming division, including SVOD Fuse+ and various FAST Channels ; Fuse Studios; Ignition Studios; as well as a branded content and live events business.
EBS Musika. ERT Music (streaming only) Eska Rock TV. Eska TV. Eska TV Extra. Fly Music. Foxtel Smooth. Fuse. FM TV (aka First Music Television) (Lebanon)
Fuse Media has secured distribution for two of its free, ad-supported streaming television (FAST) channels — Fuse Backstage and Fuse Beat — on Amazon Freevee. Amazon’s Freevee, formerly IMDb ...
No. 1 Countdown. NOFX: Backstage Passport (2008) Pants Off Dance Off (2005–07) Pitbull: Beyond Worldwide. Rad Girls (2007–08) The Read with Kid Fury and Crissle West. Rock and Roll Acid Test (2008–09) Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony. The Sauce (2007–08)
IMX (Interactive Music Exchange) was an American music television program that aired daily from 2002 to 2004 on MMUSA (renamed Fuse TV in May 2003). Described as a "fully converged music industry simulation game" and "part TV show, part Internet game," the program asked viewers to register at the network's website and buy "stock" in popular artists, songs, and albums.
Juliya Chernetsky Denning (Ukrainian: Юлія Чернецька, Yulia Chernetska; born July 10, 1982), is a television personality [1] best known for her stage name Mistress Juliya and the popularity on the music-themed network Fuse. [2] She also hosted the heavy metal -themed program Uranium and a call-in and email advice program called ...
In each episode, five contestants striptease to a music video, while interviews, soundbites and photos reveal stories about each so-called "pancer". For the first two seasons, the audience selected each episode’s winner by texting their vote.