| The C$100 million ($89.43 million) deal 
				announced by the companies on Thursday includes plans for a Vice 
				TV network across Canada. The studio is due to launch some time 
				next year.
 Rogers, one of Canada's biggest cable and wireless phone 
				providers, hopes the deal will help it better connect with 18- 
				to 35-year-olds, who are much more likely to consume media 
				online or on mobile devices.
 
 Vice's counter-culture content and news coverage has struck a 
				chord with young people across magazines, online video, 
				television and movies. It recently showed an on-the-ground 
				reporting series from within Islamic State territory in Syria.
 
 "We're going to shake up Canada with exciting, provocative 
				content and we'll export it around the world," Rogers Chief 
				Executive Guy Laurence said in a statement.
 
 For Vice, which began as a Montreal punk magazine in 1994 but is 
				now based in New York, the deal is further proof its maverick 
				approach can attract deep-pocketed investors and partners. Last 
				month it secured $500 million in fundraising which valued the 
				group at more than $2.5 billion.
 
 "This year we return to the homeland, all our hard lessons 
				learned, to build from scratch a completely horizontally and 
				vertically integrated ultra-modern media entity," Vice founder 
				and CEO Shane Smith said in the statement.
 
 The Vice Canada studio will be run under Vice's creative 
				direction, producing bite-sized content adapted for mobile 
				devices as well as longer-form news, drama and documentary 
				programming.
 
 Wireless customers of Rogers and its cheaper brand Fido can also 
				expect some exclusive content, the companies said.
 
 (Editing by Jeffrey Hodgson and Richard Chang)
 
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