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Blockbuster CEO Denies Conspiracy Deals

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ASSOCIATED PRESS

The chief executive of Blockbuster Inc. testified Wednesday that the video-rental giant competed vigorously with other video retailers, but that it considered large chains as its major rivals, rather than independent stores.

John F. Antioco was called as a hostile witness by the plaintiffs suing Dallas-based Blockbuster and top Hollywood movie studios for alleged antitrust violations.

The plaintiffs--three small video-store operators--claim the studios and Blockbuster conspired on special revenue-sharing deals in the late 1990s to monopolize the video-rental market and drive them out of business.

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Under revenue sharing, Blockbuster paid less up front for tapes and then split the rental revenue with the movie studios.

Before the revenue deals, Blockbuster and others typically paid a set fee for a tape and kept all of the income generated.

Antioco denied that any improper conspiracy existed and said the studios were free to make revenue-sharing deals with Blockbuster’s competitors.

Just before Antioco’s testimony, James Sweeney, an economist from Stanford University, told jurors that his analysis of Blockbuster’s revenue-sharing deals with the studios led him to believe that an illegal conspiracy existed that hurt independent video retailers.

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