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July 3, 2008

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KidScreen Poll

Time Warner Cable CEO Glenn Britt has recently gone on record to say that he has a problem with nets streaming free full-length eps of content online. Some suggest that the US cable carriers may start witholding subscriber fees, cutting network revenues, if the practice continues. Do you think the situation will affect original kids TV production in the US?
Yes, when the networks lose money production budgets suffer
Maybe, if the MSOs and the Networks can't reach an online rev-share model
No, the networks need new content to drive viewership and online traffic

Current Newsletter Current Magazine Archives Date/Topic KidScreen Conferences

June 1, 2000 - KidScreen Magazine
PPD

Got it Need it
Next to originals, anime and Web tops the list for Cartoon

by Theresa Dillon

page 46

Cartoon Network has 25 series pilots in development and 120 new episodes of continuing shows ordered. The numbers represent a one-third increase over last year's development slate, says Dea Perez, VP of programming. Perez says the first priority is originals. This commitment will cost Cartoon US$450 million through 2003 in an attempt at a direct assault on its competition, specifically Nickelodeon. CN averaged its best-ever ratings in prime-time kids this April with a 3.6 share of kids ages two to 11 and 3.0 of kids six to 11.

So, does an outside producer have a chance given the focus on originals and the expansive Warner library that Cartoon has to draw upon? (As of this fall, CN is the exclusive home to the 900-plus library of classic Looney Tunes shorts.) Yes, but they will have to look to the 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. action/adventure Toonami block, which grows by an hour to 7 p.m. in July. The entirely acquired block is pretty heavily loaded with anime. "We find that it resonates with our audience. They request it all the time," says Perez. "A couple of the producers here came up with the idea to do a block that would appeal to video game players-the nine- to 14-year-olds. We do get a broader range than that but we try to concentrate on [the tweens]." Of CN's recent acquisitions, Perez cites Gundam Wing, an anime show from Bandai airing during Toonami, as an example of the kind of program that Cartoon is on the look out for, though she also contends that Toei's Dragon Ball Z-yet another Toonami show-is one of the net's best acquired programs. CN also picked up the rights to Tenchi Muyo!, which will debut in the 4:30 p.m. slot on the block. All details for the extended July block have not yet been finalized, but Toonami will include new episodes of Sailor Moon. Cartoon will also be introducing a new co-production on the block this fall, only its second since it did Big Bag with Children's Television Workshop in 1996. This time, Cartoon has paired with Hasbro for 26 half-hour episodes of Centipede, an action-adventure show based on the video game.

While Perez won't reveal Cartoon's budget for acquisitions, she does say that it's generally divided into thirds. "One-third is Cartoon Theater, our movie block; one-third is Toonami; and the other third is made up of the Warner Bros. series and features that we end up acquiring." A bit of that budget is also culled for the Sunday morning preschool showing, which begins at 6 a.m. with the hour-long Small World block. Small World features mainly European shorts and series. On the whole, most of the non-U.S. acquired programs on all of the Cartoon schedule come from Japan (the bulk of Toonami), Europe (preschool) and Canada (Mainframe's Reboot, also on Toonami).

New original series (produced either in-house or produced outside specifically for CN) joining the net include 13 half hours of Curious Pictures' Sheep in the Big City, a Rocky & Bullwinkle-inspired comedy about a sheep on the run from a military organization, premiering in November on Friday's Cartoon Cartoon block, home of most of CN's original fare. Ten original series will also premiere on the Cartoon Cartoon block at 9 p.m., although only three will survive the cut. The strategy culminates in the Big Pick Weekend on August 25 to 27, when viewers can select their faves and vote on-line from the 52 hours of original programming that include: The Grim Adventures of Billy and Mandy, Whatever Happened to Robot Jones?, Clever Trevor, Nikki, Foe Paws, Prickles, Lucky Lydia, Longhair and Doubledome, Lost Cat and Uncle Gus. The winners will then air in fall 2001 as half-hour series.

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