- Children’s TV pioneer Peggy Charren passes away (Variety)
- What matters most to Gen Z (today’s kids) (AdAge)
- South Korea’s largest entertainment conglom CJ E&M launches animation division with eye on China (The Hollywood Reporter)
- Can Maker Studios draw traffic from YouTube to its own site, Maker.tv? (Wall Street Journal)
- Lawsuit over kids’ privacy against Viacom, Google gets tossed (Bloomberg)
- 23 network chiefs, including Ted Sarandos, dish on trends, can’t-miss TV, and their regrets (The Hollywood Reporter)
- Video game industry IPOs and M&As at an all-time high (Wall Street Journal)
- How Microsoft got its cool back (Engadget)
- Toys like Hasbro’s Hero Mashers are a hit with kids, letting them create their own stories across properties (Forbes)
- More job cuts coming for DreamWorks after string of box office disappointments (The Hollywood Reporter)
- At last, Cookie Monster gets his own PBS KIDS special (Variety)
- Paddington gets US$25-million box office opening (The Wrap)
- After failing to reach agreement on new rights deal, Netflix loses Hasbro shows (New York Post)
- With over two billion YouTube views, gamer Evan Fong reflects massive trend of online videogame watching (The Province)
- Dark art: Crayola’s Facebook page gets hacked, racy posts appear (TIME)
- The Lego Movie wins best animated film Critics’ Choice Award after Oscar snub (Cartoon Brew)
- Target is pulling out of Canada after expansion fails (The Globe and Mail)
- Children’s print book sales rose 9.1% in 2014, but the rest of the market continues to decline (The Guardian)
- A shoe-in no more, Oscar snubs The Lego Movie (Variety)
- How New York-based indie distributor GKIDS is poised to claim more animated feature Oscars (The Hollywood Reporter)
- Bitsbox Kickstarter project sends monthly shipment of coding boxes (TechRepublic)
- How SVODs are changing the way we consume our media (NPR)
- Paddington Bear gets his long-awaited time on the big screen (Cinema Blend)
- Good news for Microsoft: Minecraft Pocket Edition pulls in 30 million downloads (alistdaily)
- Is the kids biz next? Cablenet programming budgets up 13% to US$31 billion, as competition for viewers and fresh ideas grows (New York Times)
- Sony, Disney and DreamWorks seek rejection of anti-poaching lawsuit (Variety)
- An SVOD approach to TV strategy (Bloomberg)
- From iPhone to arcade game: Flappy Bird flies to new formats (Mashable)
- How this year’s Golden Globes reflects the changing face of TV (Variety)
- DreamWorks’ How To Train Your Dragon 2 earns surprise Golden Globes win over The Lego Movie (Cinema Blend)
- Why Netflix is becoming the new cable for millennials (Cartt.ca)
- Nintendo powers off direct sales in Brazil (Wall Street Journal)
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