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Online channel TakePart TV: relevant, entertaining

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FILE - In this June 13, 2011 file photo, Dan Savage appears onstage at the 15th Annual Webby Awards in New York. TakePart TV, a brand-new YouTube channel launching Tuesday, Oct. 2, 2012m, will deliver original programming that consists of news, short-form comedy, animation and nonfiction series featuring such names as Henry Rollins, Dan Savage and Kobe Bryant. (AP photo)

NEW YORK (AP) — Hey, YouTubers! Have you danced your fill to "Gangnam Style"? Have you seen enough versions of "Call Me Maybe"?

Now video grazers can check out a brand-new YouTube channel that promises to be as amusing as any cat on a skateboard but also to engage you with ideas for changing the world.

TakePart TV, launching Tuesday, is a digital home for what the network has termed "clever, eye-opening and optimistic content around big issues that face our planet." The target audience is millennials ranging from teenage to 30.

One of YouTube's new 100-channel portfolio, TakePart TV will deliver original programming that consists of news, short-form comedy, animation and nonfiction series featuring such names as Henry Rollins, Dan Savage and Kobe Bryant.

"The mission of this channel is to create awesome stuff for people who give a s---," says Evan Shapiro, president of Participant Television. "But what we want to do is not just give them stuff that entertains them, but stuff they want to spread around: The great thing about the Internet is, you're just a click away from sharing your favorite content with a million people."

The network's flagship show is "BFD: Brain Food Daily," whose five correspondents will focus on sex, power, media, mind and the planet. Topics this week include "The Price of Vice: Making Money by Legalizing Sex, Drugs and Gambling" and "Five Worst Hells: Countdown of the World's Worst Afterlives."

Other TakePart TV fare includes:

— "American Savage": Columnist-podcaster-pundit Dan Savage sounds off on such topics as sex, religion and politics.

— "Compton Cricket": This docuseries will follow an effort to introduce troubled youth in Compton, Calif., to the gentleman's game of cricket, fusing them into an exceptional team.

— "Mission": Basketball great Kobe Bryant heads to Los Angeles' Skid Row to investigate the plague of homelessness.

— "Capitalism": Poet-writer-activist Henry Rollins hits the campaign trail with a two-month odyssey to all 50 state capitals, fueled by his own vision of the issues driving the election.

In discussing the potential for TakePart TV, Shapiro points to the thousands of "Call Me Maybe" covers and parodies that sprang up in response to the original by Carly Rae Jepsen. He cites the hundreds of millions of viewings of South Korean rapper PSY's "Gangnam Style."

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