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‘Fahrenheit 9/11’ hits the airwaves

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Michael Moore’s Bush-bashing “Fahrenheit 9/11” got a last-minute reprieve when it was aired on pay-per-view and satellite television as well as the Internet on Monday night, the eve of the U.S. presidential election.

The satellite-based Dish Network, owned by EchoStar Communications Corp., reported “strong interest” on the part of its 10-million-viewer subscriber base. Still, citing corporate policy, the company declined to say how many of them paid to watch the film, which, with nearly $120 million in box-office receipts, is the highest-grossing feature-length documentary ever.

Video-on-demand service CinemaNow streamed the film online to more than 30 million households with broadband Internet access. The Los Angeles-based TVN Entertainment delivered it to about 1 million homes through various satellite systems. How many people actually watched either feed wasn’t immediately known.

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Though the deal with TVN was cut last week, details of the arrangement with Dish and CinemaNow were still being hammered out as late as Monday afternoon. Each outlet charged $9.95 per showing. The Moore camp said it was donating its portion of the profits to a veterans’ charity.

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