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JoJo & BowBow Go Skydiving?! 🎀 The JoJo & BowBow Show Show! Season 2: Ep. 3 | Nickelodeon

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JoJo Siwa’s hit animated YouTube series The JoJo & BowBow Show Show is back for season 2 and HollywoodLife is treating fans by premiering the second episode ahead of its official release on Friday, October 4, 2019!


New episodes of The JoJo & BowBow Show Show are released every Friday on Nickelodeon’s YouTube channel but Kidzworld is giving fans an awesome first look at the third episode of season 2, which you can watch right now on kidzworld.com!

In episode 3, titled "JoJo & BowBow Go Skydiving?!", JoJo and BowBow love adventure, and today they’re going skydiving with new friends and new flight suits! But will BowBow be able to conquer her fears in time to join JoJo, Kira, and her pet pig, Hamela, in the air? Whoa whoa!

Missed Season 2, Episode 2? Watch it here!: http://nickalive.blogspot.com/2019/10/jojo-siwa-pet-dog-bowbow-have-backpack.html

JoJo Siwa is currently in the midst of her first North American tour, Nickelodeon’s JoJo Siwa D.R.E.A.M. The Tour, and will be extending her tour to the UK during Autumn 2019 and Australia in January 2020. For more information and tickets to Nickelodeon’s JoJo Siwa D.R.E.A.M. The Tour, visit http://www.jojodreamtour.com.

More Nick:Nickelodeon Star JoJo Siwa Gets Her Own Dance-Tour Mobile Game, 'JoJo Siwa - Live to Dance'!

Originally published: Thursday, October 10, 2019.
Follow NickALive! on Twitter, Tumblr, Reddit, via RSS, on Instagram, and/or Facebook for the latest Nickelodeon and JoJo Siwa News and Highlights!

Nickelodeon UK to Premiere 'Are You Afraid of the Dark?' in October 2019

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NICKELODEON GETS SET
FOR RETURN OF ARE YOU AFRAID OF THE DARK?

New Three-Part Limited Series Event Premieres This October on Nickelodeon UK & Ireland

Share it: @NickelodeonUK #AreYouAfraidoftheDark


Nickelodeon is preparing for the return of The Midnight Society with the all-new Are You Afraid of the Dark? three-part limited series event. Based on the ‘90s kids’ cult classic, and reimagined for a new generation, Are You Afraid of the Dark? will air this October on Nickelodeon UK & Ireland.

Update (11/10): Although currently unconfirmed, Digiguide is currently listing the 8:00pm slot on Wednesday 30th October 2019 are "To Be Announced", which means that there's a very good chance that Nickelodeon UK & Ireland will be airing Are You Afraid of the Dark? over three nights between Wednesday 30th October - Friday 1st November 2019 at 8:00pm! Stay tuned for more info!

Across the three hour-long episodes, Are You Afraid of the Dark? will follow members of an entirely new Midnight Society, who tell a terrifying tale of the Carnival of Doom and its evil ringmaster Mr. Tophat, only to witness the shocking story come frightfully to life. In the just-released trailer, viewers meet the new members of the Midnight Society, get a glimpse at the uncertainty that awaits and prepare for an adventure beyond their wildest nightmares.


The new members of the Midnight Society are: Rachel, played by Lyliana Wray (Top Gun: Maverick); Gavin, played by Sam Ashe Arnold (Best.Worst.Weekend.Ever.); Akiko, played by Miya Cech (Rim of the World, Always Be My Maybe); Graham, played by Jeremy Taylor (IT: Chapter Two, Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween); and Louise, played by Tamara Smart (Artemis Fowl, The Worst Witch). The Carnival of Doom’s ringmaster, Mr. Tophat, is played by Rafael Casal (Blindspotting).

Are You Afraid of the Dark? is produced by ACE Entertainment (To All The Boys I’ve Loved Before, The Perfect Date) with ACE founder Matt Kaplan and Spencer Berman serving as executive producers. The series is written by BenDavid Grabinski (Skiptrace, Happily) and directed by Dean Israelite (Power Rangers movie, Project Almanac), both of whom are also executive producers. Chris Foss is also an executive producer.


One of the Nickelodeon’s most iconic series from the ‘90s, the original Are You Afraid of the Dark? delivered riveting stories of horror to young audiences, all from a kid’s perspective. Are You Afraid of the Dark? is owned by DHX and was created by D.J. MacHale and Ned Kandel, who are also executive producers on the project.

Are You Afraid of the Dark? will make its world premiere on Nickelodeon in the U.S. on Friday, Oct. 11, at 7:00 p.m. (ET/PT), with parts two and three to follow Oct. 18, and Oct. 25, respectively.

Are You Afraid of the Dark? will air as part of Nickelodeon UK's Halloween programming highlights.


Online at nick.co.uk/nicksplat, fans can find out more about their favourite classic Nickelodeon shows from the 1990s and beyond, as well as watch video clips from iconic Nick shows.

Fans can also like the official Nickelodeon UK Facebook page, follow Nickelodeon on Twitter and Instagram, and subscribe to the official Nickelodeon UK YouTube channel for the latest Nick news, highlights, The Scoop about their favourite stars, and videos.

About Nickelodeon

The Nickelodeon Network is a top-performing commercial kids TV network in the UK and Ireland with Nickelodeon channels available in over 13 million cable and satellite homes. Having launched in 1993 Nickelodeon UK comprises seven dedicated entertainment channels for kids aged 4-15 (Nickelodeon, Nicktoons, Nick Jr., Nick Jr. Too, Nickelodeon HD, Nick+1, Nick Jr.+1) and their families, and is a joint venture between Viacom International Media Networks and BSkyB.

More Nick:intu Lakeside to Open Nickelodeon Adventure Lakeside During Autumn 2019!

Originally published: Thursday, October 03, 2019.
Follow NickALive! on Twitter, Tumblr, Reddit, via RSS, on Instagram, and/or Facebook for the latest Halloween on Nickelodeon UK and Are You Afraid of the Dark? News and Highlights!

Nickelodeon’s Brand-new Preschool Series 'Blue’s Clues & You!' Bows Monday, Nov. 11, at 9 A.M. (ET/PT)

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Update (9/28) - The first three episodes of Blue's Clues & You are now available to watch on Vudu! The episodes are "Meet Josh!", "Playdate with Magenta" and "Big News with Blue". The episodes are free to view, however, you do need to sign in to watch them.

Update (9/12) - Vudu, the Walmart-owned ad supported streaming service, will exclusively debut the first three episodes of Blue's Clues & You on Friday, September 27, 2019, ahead of the show's premiere on Nickelodeon in November!

Original Nickelodeon Press Release:

Nickelodeon’s Brand-new Preschool Series Blue’s Clues & You! Bows Monday, Nov. 11, at 9 A.M. (ET/PT)

FORMER BLUE’S CLUES HOSTS STEVE BURNS AND DONOVAN PATTON TO REPRISE ORIGINAL ROLES IN SERIES PREMIERE

Share it: @NickJr #BluesCluesAndYou

August 26, 2019 11:04 AM Eastern Daylight Time


NEW YORK--It’s time to pull up the Thinking Chair and follow the paw prints as Blue and her crew return in Nickelodeon’s brand-new preschool series Blue’s Clues & You!, debuting Monday, Nov. 11, at 9 a.m. (ET/PT). Steve Burns (Steve) and Donovan Patton (Joe) will reprise their roles in the series premiere, “Meet Josh!,” and help new live-action host Josh (Joshua Dela Cruz) and the audience solve their first game of Blue’s Clues.

Blue’s Clues & You! will feature brand-new elements alongside refreshed iconic items from the original series, including:

  • New CG-animation for Blue and Magenta;
  • An updated Handy Dandy Notebook equipped with a new blue crayon and smartphone technology, allowing Josh and Blue to receive emails and video calls;
  • An all-new Handy Dandy Guitar;
  • The return of fan-favorite characters: Tickety Tock, Slippery Soap, Shovel, Pail, Mr. Salt, Mrs. Pepper, Cinnamon, Paprika, Felt Friends, Sidetable Drawer and Mailbox, plus the original Thinking Chair;
  • And the introduction of Mr. Salt and Mrs. Pepper’s newest additions—twins Sage and Ginger.

Nickelodeon is further deepening the interactivity of Blue’s Clues & You! with the launch of brand-new play-along videos in Noggin, Nick’s top-ranked interactive learning subscription for preschoolers. Launching alongside the series’ linear premiere, the play-along videos will allow users to explore the stories in an immersive way, and engage with live-action host Josh and the animated characters, by tapping, touching or swiping to navigate through enhanced learning experiences. Preschoolers will also have the ability to customize elements, like the color of the clues or the creation of birthday cards for Blue, and then see their designs appear throughout the video. The classic Blue’s Clues library is currently available on Noggin and additional Blue’s Clues & You! play-along videos will continue to roll out into next year.


Following the series premiere of Blue’s Clues & You!, NickJr.com and the Nick Jr. App will feature original short-form content and full-length episodes. Episodes will also be available on Nick Jr. On Demand and Download-To-Own services.


Live-action host Josh and beloved puppy Blue, in Nickelodeon's brand-new Blue's Clues & You!

A remake of the groundbreaking, curriculum-driven interactive series Blue’s Clues, Blue’s Clues & You! follows Blue as she invites viewers to join her and Josh on a clue-led adventure and solve a puzzle in each episode. With each signature paw print, Blue identifies clues in her animated world that propel the story and inspire the audience to interact with the characters.


The original Blue’s Clues series launched in September 1996 to critical praise from educators, parents, and preschoolers and ran for six groundbreaking seasons. Created by Traci Paige Johnson, Todd Kessler, and Angela C. Santomero, Blue’s Clues drew acclaim and high ratings for its unique interactivity that helped change the way kids watch television and has remained one of the most popular preschool shows of all time. The landmark series also raised the bar in preschool television by exploring advanced subject matter such as sign language, geography, physics, emotions, and anatomy.

Nickelodeon, now in its 40th year, is the number-one entertainment brand for kids. It has built a diverse, global business by putting kids first in everything it does. The brand includes television programming and production in the United States and around the world, plus consumer products, digital, location based experiences, publishing and feature films. For more information or artwork, visit http://www.nickpress.com/. Nickelodeon and all related titles, characters and logos are trademarks of Viacom Inc. (NASDAQ: VIA, VIAB).

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To celebrate today's announcement, Nick Jr. released brand-new clip of the Blue's Clues reboot. As you can see above, this new clip follows Blue as the famous pup makes a request, but the new host Josh has trouble figuring out what's going on.

The clip begins with Josh telling fans he's unsure of what Blue wants with their snack, but he doesn't get too upset. He pulls out his handy dandy notebook which has gotten a big upgrade. Now, the book is part paper and part phone, so Josh takes a second to ring up some familiar faces.

First, Josh calls up Joe who is working at a present store. The pair talk for a moment before Steve is added to the call. The original host is working at the Blueprints Detective Agency where finding clues is what he does. As the pair all talk about Blue, Steve and Joe decide to chat with Blue directly, and they solve the mystery.

As it turns out, there is only one thing to do. Blue wants to play Blue's Clues, but the pair do one last thing before hanging up. Steve asks to talk to the viewers for a second, and he asks everyone to help Josh.

"Will you help my cousin Josh? Great because I can tell he's going to need a lot of help like I did," Steve says.

From Romper:

'Blue's Clues & You!' Brings Blue Back For New Adventures — EXCLUSIVE

Blue's Clues is back, in a slightly different — but nevertheless familiar — form on Nickelodeon. The revival, Blue's Clues & You!, exclusively debuts three episodes on the streaming service Vudu on Sept. 27 before it officially premieres on Nick on Nov. 11. Blue's Clues & You! brings Blue back for new adventures, along with some old friends and a new host, Joshua Dela Cruz. You can see them all in this exclusive clip [here on romper.com].

In many ways, the revived series is a lot like the original show. It follows a dog named Blue who leaves paw print-shaped clues on various objects to help her pal (owner? roommate?) Josh solve a puzzle. The level of audience interaction remains the same; there are gaps left in the dialogue so viewers can chime in and answer questions. The show still makes kids feel like they're part of what's going on. But there are a few technological updates, too.

This clip offers a glimpse at the new series, along with a hearty dose of nostalgia. In the episode "Playdate with Magenta," several fan favorite characters find themselves back on that beloved red couch. Blue's bestie Magenta is over for a visit, but when it comes time to take a photo together, several more friends pile into the frame. It doesn't look like Blue's Clues & You! has forgotten anyone.

The clip opens with Blue and Magenta bounding onto the couch while Josh walks by, with what looks like his Handy Dandy Notebook in his hands. Right away it's clear that the show is visually a little different, thanks to advances in animation since the original. But the vibe remains the same. Josh happily announces that it's picture time while Blue and Magenta act adorable in the background: they high-five their ears and tumble around just like the playful puppers they are.

Josh takes no notice of the explosion of cuteness behind him because he's focused on snapping a picture. To do that, he needs help from you, the viewer. He asks the viewer to hold his phone, which is when the update to the classic notebook becomes obvious. The notebook is no longer just a notebook, it also includes a handy dandy smartphone. Josh hands it over and the viewer brings it up to eye-level, so while you're watching it seems like you're looking right at the phone screen.

The pups are more than ready for their closeup, but when Josh tells them to move closer together, some other characters take the opportunity to jump into frame. Shovel and Pail arrive, with Mr. Salt and Mrs. Pepper joining soon after. The crew's all here! Josh excitedly gets them into position and encourages them to smile, at which point the viewer snaps the perfect shot. Then Josh asks Blue to take a picture of him with you, which she does using her ears. Unfortunately, you don't get to see how that one turned out.

The clip concludes with Blue using her ears to take a ton of selfies, because it's 2019 now and dogs know how to take selfies. Blue's Clues & You! has definitely been updated for a modern audience, but it seems to share its predecessor's fun spirit.

Blue's Clues & You! premieres on Nick on Nov. 11, with three episodes debuting early on Vudu on Sept. 27.

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From the Los Angeles Times:

Why Nickelodeon’s new ‘Blue’s Clues’ may feel very, very familiar

It won’t take an expert detective to sniff out the similarities between Nickelodeon’s upcoming series “Blue’s Clues & You” and its source material, “Blue’s Clues.”

After comparing the first three episodes of “Blues Clues & You” — currently available on Vudu — to their original counterparts on Amazon Prime, The Times has concluded the forthcoming reboot of the popular children’s program will follow mysteries nearly identical to those of its namesake. Key differences, such as a fresh host and updated technology, will separate the old from the new.

“Blue’s Clues,” which ran on Nickelodeon from 1996 to 2007, followed Steve Burns and his dog, Blue (voiced by co-creator Traci Paige Johnson), as Steve deciphered the meaning behind Blue’s barks by tracking strategically placed paw prints — with assistance from the show’s young viewers.

Each episode adhered to the same easily digestible formula: The live-action host collects three clues — drawing a symbol for each in his handy-dandy notebook along the way — that add up to Blue’s message of the day. Once Blue’s owner and the audience find every hint, the host returns to his “thinking chair” to solve the puzzle. The learning program earned eight consecutive Emmy nominations for preschool children’s series between 1998 and 2005.

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“Blue’s Clues & You” sees Johnson reprise her voice role as the title pup opposite newcomer Josh, played by Joshua Dela Cruz, who takes up Steve’s mission to hunt for Blue’s clues. In the pilot, Josh also benefits from additional guidance, courtesy of former “Blue’s Clues” hosts Steve and Joe (Donovan Patton), who replaced Burns’ character in 2002.


Though the series uses newly recorded voice performances, the scripts and animated movements remain largely unchanged, as each episode closely matches the corresponding original — with a few exceptions. Because the new show runs about two minutes shorter than “Blue’s Clues’” 25 minutes, certain sequences that aren’t crucial to the plot — such as Blue painting elephants or assembling doll outfits out of felt — have been cut, while others more integral to the story have been shortened.

Among the modern elements to be featured in the reboot are Broadway star Dela Cruz’s jazzy spins on classic “Blue’s Clues” tunes, advanced CG animation for Blue and her canine pal, Magenta, and a tricked-out take on the host’s trademark notebook, which now doubles as a smartphone. In the second episode of “Blue’s Clues & You,” “Playdate With Magenta,” Josh’s notebook/phone comes in handy as the final clue, hinting that Blue wants to take a photo with Magenta during her visit. In the original, “Magenta Comes Over,” the final clue is a camera from the pre-smartphone era. Similarly, instead of receiving handwritten letters in the mail like Steve, Josh simply opens emails from pen pals on his phone.


Steve gets a letter from Mailbox in “Blue’s Clues.”(Screenshot by Christi Carras via Amazon Prime)


Josh gets an email notification from Mailbox in “Blue’s Clues & You.”(Screenshot by Christi Carras via Vudu)

Familiar friends such as Tickety Tock, Slippery Soap, Shovel, Pail, Mr. Salt, Mrs. Pepper, Cinnamon, Paprika, Felt Friends, Sidetable Drawer and Mailbox will return to accompany Josh and Blue on their adventures, along with some small additions — two of whom make their debut in the third installment of “Blue’s Clues & You.” While the original episode “Blue’s News!” introduced Paprika as Mr. Salt and Mrs. Pepper’s new baby girl, the updated version, “Big News With Blue” reveals Paprika’s littlest siblings, twins Sage and Ginger.

Amid an industrywide influx of new franchise installments, there are no set rules for remakes or revivals, though “Blue’s Clues & You” sticks closer to its predecessor than other animated TV reboots. The Times compared writing credits and episode synopses on more than 30 animated remakes — nearly all geared toward children — to their respective originals and concluded that none hewed as tightly to their initial iteration as the first three chapters of “Blue’s Clues & You.”

“For me, it’s kind of an homage to what I did, coming back to exactly the ... format that I created, which, at the time — and still, now — is completely unique to television,” “Blue’s Clues” co-creator Todd Kessler, who is not involved in the production of “Blue’s Clues & You,” told The Times in a phone interview, referring to the episodes now streaming on Vudu.

A pioneer in interactive TV, the first “Blue’s Clues” engaged its preschool-age fans by breaking the fourth wall and inviting them to help solve Blue’s riddles. In 2019, “Blue’s Clues & You” will take the interactivity up a notch with play-along videos available on Noggin, Nickelodeon’s youth-facing educational subscription service.

“They made a couple minor changes,” Kessler said. “But, literally, you’ll see they follow the shots and the animation pretty much in a paint-by-numbers way.”

“With any property, there’s a need to refresh it,” he added. “Our budget for ‘Blue’s Clues’ was about one quarter of what the budget for other Nickelodeon shows was at the time. So now the animation and the backgrounds are much more robust than they were originally. ... And also, they have a host who’s from mixed cultures and will have a much easier time being identified with around the world.”

The network also offered its perspective on how the updated “Blue’s Clues” nods to the show’s earlier days.

“The new series is not a shot-for-shot remake. We have refreshed a number of the original scripts and added modern touches,” a representative for Nickelodeon, which declined to make the producers of the reboot available for comment, said in a statement to The Times. “There are similarities, including ‘Easter eggs’ for the fans, and there are instances where the scripts adhere closely to the original as well as having many new moments.”

“Blue’s Clues & You” premieres Nov. 11 on Nick Jr.

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More Nick:Nickelodeon Announces First Licensing Partners for 'Blue’s Clues & You!'!

Originally published: Monday, August 26, 2019 at 19:28 BST.

Press release via Business Wire; H/T: TheWrap; Additional sources: ComicBook, Deadline, Nickandmore!, Anime Superhero Forum /@kanc.
Follow NickALive! on Twitter, Tumblr, Reddit, via RSS, on Instagram, and/or Facebook for the latest Nickelodeon Preschool, Nick Jr. and Blue's Clues & You News and Highlights!

GANZE FOLGE | Die Panzer-Jagd 🐷 | Aufstieg der TMNT | Nickelodeon Deutschland

KIRA KOSARIN en Nienke RAPPEN voor SpongeBob 😎 | Special | Nickelodeon Nederlands

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KIRA KOSARIN en Nienke RAPPEN voor SpongeBob 😎 | Special | Nickelodeon Nederlands



Vorige week zag je Nienke en Kira samen door Nick Land stormen, op zoek naar de hints om de geheime prijs te vinden! Nu moeten ze drie challenges doen om bij de prijs te komen, check nu de video en hoor als eerste de rap-hit van Nienke en Kira!

Meer Nick:'De Ludwigs' Returns with a Sixth and Final Season on Nickelodeon Benelux in October 2019!
Follow NickALive! on Twitter, Tumblr, Reddit, via RSS, on Instagram, and/or Facebook for the latest Nickelodeon Netherlands, SpongeBob SquarePants and The Thundermans News and Highlights!

44 Cats | "44 Cats" song [KARAOKE]

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44 Cats | "44 Cats" song [KARAOKE]



Have fun singing along with the Buffycats!

Visit the official 44 Cats show website at 44cats.tv to find out more about the show and its musical stars, as well as watch exclusive video clips, play pawesome games and download purr-tastic activities!

More Nick:Rainbow's '44 Cats' Renewed for Season Two!
Follow NickALive! on Twitter, Tumblr, Reddit, via RSS, on Instagram, and/or Facebook for the latest Nick Jr. and Nickelodeon Preschool News and Highlights!

Shimmer and Shine | Sing Along : The Exciting Chase | Nick Jr. UK

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Shimmer and Shine | Sing Along : The Exciting Chase | Nick Jr. UK



Sing along with Shimmer, Shine and Leah as they chase after Zeta!

Watch all your favourite Nick Jr. friends everyday on Nick Jr. and Nick Jr. Too! For more magical Nick Jr. activities and games visit NickJr.co.uk and download the Nick Jr. Play app!

More Nick:intu Lakeside to Open Nickelodeon Adventure Lakeside During Autumn 2019!
Follow NickALive! on Twitter, Tumblr, Reddit, via RSS, on Instagram, and/or Facebook for the latest Nick Jr. UK, Nickelodeon Preschool and Shimmer and Shine News and Highlights!

Upside Down John | Wayside | FULL EPISODE | KEEP IT WEIRD

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Upside Down John | Wayside | FULL EPISODE | KEEP IT WEIRD



The kids attempt to help Upside Down John stand upright in order to avoid the “failures” of his upside down ancestors… only to realize that John’s family accomplished more on their head than most people ever do standing on their feet.

Want to watch more full episodes of Wayside? You can find tons more here!: http://nickalive.blogspot.com/search/label/Wayside

Stay Weird & SUBSCRIBE! https://goo.gl/XHGzks

More YTV:YTV Asks Fans To "Keep It Weird" As Channel Fetes 30th Anniversary!
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International Day of the Girl 👧 w/ PAW Patrol, Dora & More! | Nick Jr. Fan Favorite Moments: Ep. 4

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International Day of the Girl 👧 w/ PAW Patrol, Dora & More! | Nick Jr. Fan Favorite Moments: Ep. 4



Celebrate International Day of the Girl with the awesome girls of Nick Jr. Go on adventures with Skye from PAW Patrol, Molly from Bubble Guppies, Starla from Blaze and the Monster Machines, Dora the Explorer, and Abby Hatcher! You can find more of your favorite shows weekday mornings on Nickelodeon and everywhere you find Nick Jr.

Happy International Day of the Girl! 👧

PAW Patrol | Skye Celebrates International Day of the Girl! | PAW Patrol Official & Friends



Are you ready to fly with Skye?! PAW Patrol is celebrating International Day of the Girl! No job is too big, no girl is too small!

Reach for the stars and fly high like Skye! Happy International Day of the Girl!

View this post on Instagram

this day goes out to all the fierce ladies 💪👑

A post shared by Nickelodeon (@nickelodeon) on


More Nick:Nickelodeon to Premiere 'Blue's Clues & You' in November 2019!

Kids can watch their favorite Nick Jr. shows weekdays on Nickelodeon and all week long on the Nick Jr. channel: http://nickjr.com/tvschedule/

Preschoolers can watch full episodes online, play games, and discover silly surprises in the free Nick Jr. App and at NickJr.com. Stream Nick Jr. for free in the Nick Jr. App on Roku and Apple TV or download full episodes for offline viewing on iTunes or Google Play.

You can also download premium apps featuring your child's favorite Nick Jr. shows on iTunes, Google Play, and Amazon, including Nick Jr. Draw and Play and Nick Jr. Let’s Learn!

Watch more Nick Jr. everyday for FREE on Nick Jr. Pluto TV!

More Nick:Nick Jr. Live! "Move To The Music" U.S. Theatrical Tour Dates!
Follow NickALive! on Twitter, Tumblr, Reddit, via RSS, on Instagram, and/or Facebook for the latest International Day of the Girl on Nick Jr. and Nickelodeon Preschool News and Highlights!

Happy Halloween from Josh & Blue! 🎃 Blue's Clues & You! | Nick Jr.

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Happy Halloween from Josh & Blue! 🎃 Blue's Clues & You! | Nick Jr.



Learn some spooky new Halloween dance moves and listen closely to guess the costumes of your favorite Nick Jr. friends. Enjoy the Halloween fun all month long, everywhere you find Nick Jr.

What are YOU dress up as for Halloween this year?! 🎃

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Tag the Magenta to your Blue 💗💙🐾

A post shared by Nick Jr. (@nickjr) on


More Nick:Nickelodeon to Premiere 'Blue's Clues & You' in November 2019!

Kids can watch their favorite Nick Jr. shows weekdays on Nickelodeon and all week long on the Nick Jr. channel: http://nickjr.com/tvschedule/

Preschoolers can watch full episodes online, play games, and discover silly surprises in the free Nick Jr. App and at NickJr.com. Stream Nick Jr. for free in the Nick Jr. App on Roku and Apple TV or download full episodes for offline viewing on iTunes or Google Play.

You can also download premium apps featuring your child's favorite Nick Jr. shows on iTunes, Google Play, and Amazon, including Nick Jr. Draw and Play and Nick Jr. Let’s Learn!

Watch more Nick Jr. everyday for FREE on Nick Jr. Pluto TV!

More Nick:Nick Jr. Live! "Move To The Music" U.S. Theatrical Tour Dates!
Follow NickALive! on Twitter, Tumblr, Reddit, via RSS, on Instagram, and/or Facebook for the latest Halloween on Nick Jr., Nickelodeon Preschool and Blue's Clues & You! News and Highlights!

Aang's Journey Season 1 🌊 Avatar: The Last Airbender | NickRewind

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Aang's Journey Season 1 🌊 Avatar | NickRewind



The first season is so intense as Aang fulfills what it means to be the Avatar! What type of Avatar video do you want NickRewind to make next? Let them know in the comments on YouTube!

Watch more of your favorite shows on Nickelodeon!

Watch all your ‘80s, ‘90s, and ‘00s Nickelodeon favorites on NickRewind, your late-night destination for your favorite childhood Nickelodeon cartoons and live-action shows! NickSplat doesn't question football-shaped heads, but embrace them - along with Reptar bars, a Big Ear of Corn, orange soda, and even slime for Pete (and Pete's) sake. Make your slime-covered Nickelodeon childhood dreams come true every night at 11 PM ET/PT on TeenNick USA, and anytime you want on NickSplat on VRV AND NOW ON Nick Pluto TV!

Like NickRewind on Facebook, subscribe to the NickRewind YouTube channel and follow NickRewind on Twitter and Instagram for exclusive digital content from all of your throwback favorites like Rugrats, Hey Arnold!, iCarly, Victorious, Kenan & Kel, CatDog, Doug, Rocko’s Modern Life, The Amanda Show, Clarissa Explains It All, The Ren & Stimpy Show, Are You Afraid of the Dark?, and so much more!

Join Nickelodeon's official I Was A Nick Kid Facebook Group!: https://www.facebook.com/groups/IWasANickKid/

More Nick:Netflix to Host Open Casting Call for Live-Action 'Avatar: The Last Airbender' Series!
Follow NickALive! on Twitter, Tumblr, Reddit, via RSS, on Instagram, and/or Facebook for the latest Nickelodeon, NickRewind, Avatar: The Last Airbender and The Legend of Korra News and Highlights!

The Ultimate Scary Story is Coming | Are You Afraid of the Dark? | Teaser Trailer | Nickelodeon

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The ultimate scary story is coming. Are You Afraid of the Dark? Part One premieres tonight at 7p/6c on Nickelodeon USA and YTV Canada!


Nickelodeon is preparing for the return of The Midnight Society with the all-new Are You Afraid of the Dark? three-part limited series event. Based on the ‘90s kids’ cult classic, and reimagined for a new generation, part one of Are You Afraid of the Dark? will debut on Friday, Oct. 11, at 7:00 p.m. (ET/PT), with parts two and three to follow Oct. 18, and Oct. 25, respectively.

Across the three hour-long episodes, Are You Afraid of the Dark? will follow members of an entirely new Midnight Society, who tell a terrifying tale of the Carnival of Doom and its evil ringmaster Mr. Tophat, only to witness the shocking story come frightfully to life. In the just-released trailer, viewers meet the new members of the Midnight Society, get a glimpse at the uncertainty that awaits and prepare for an adventure beyond their wildest nightmares.

The new members of the Midnight Society are: Rachel, played by Lyliana Wray (Top Gun: Maverick); Gavin, played by Sam Ashe Arnold (Best.Worst.Weekend.Ever.); Akiko, played by Miya Cech (Rim of the World, Always Be My Maybe); Graham, played by Jeremy Taylor (IT: Chapter Two, Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween); and Louise, played by Tamara Smart (Artemis Fowl, The Worst Witch). The Carnival of Doom’s ringmaster, Mr. Tophat, is played by Rafael Casal (Blindspotting).

Are You Afraid of the Dark? is produced by ACE Entertainment (To All The Boys I’ve Loved Before, The Perfect Date) with ACE founder Matt Kaplan and Spencer Berman serving as executive producers. The series is written by BenDavid Grabinski (Skiptrace, Happily) and directed by Dean Israelite (Power Rangers movie, Project Almanac), both of whom are also executive producers. Chris Foss is also an executive producer.


One of the Nickelodeon’s most iconic series from the ‘90s, the original Are You Afraid of the Dark? delivered riveting stories of horror to young audiences, all from a kid’s perspective. Are You Afraid of the Dark? is owned by DHX and was created by D.J. MacHale and Ned Kandel, who are also executive producers on the project.

Follow Are You Afraid of the Dark? on Facebook!

Visit the Carnival of Doom in Fortnite!

More Nick:'Are You Afraid of the Dark?' Reboot Sneak Peek: Watch the New York Comic Con 2019 Footage!
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CBS TV Studios Names Alec Botnick Head of Animation; To Oversee Nickelodeon's 'Star Trek' Series

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The promotion comes as the studio makes a push into animated content, including two series in the 'Star Trek' universe.


CBS Television Studios has promoted comedy executive Alec Botnick to lead its animation efforts.

Botnick, who's been part of the studio's comedy team since 2015, will now have the title of Senior Vice President (SVP), Comedy Development and Head of Animation. His promotion marks the first time CBS TV Studios has had a dedicated animation executive.

In the new post he will supervise the studio's current animated projects — the forthcoming animated Star Trek series aimed at kids on Nickelodeon, Showtime's Our Cartoon President, and CBS All Access'Star Trek: Lower Decks— as well as all future development. Botnick will continue to report to Kate Adler, Executive Vice President (EVP) of Comedy Development for CBS TV Studios.

"Alec has proven to be a huge asset not only to our department, but to the company as a whole," said Adler. "I am constantly impressed by his versatility, character, knowledge of the marketplace, and the number of phone calls he can make in one day. Our hope is that with the news of his expanded responsibilities, people will stop calling him 'Alex.'"


Showtimes 'Our Cartoon President'

Botnick's promotion comes about a year after CBS TV Studios started production arm CBS Eye Animation. The David Stapf-run studio plans to expand its offerings with the help of former 20th TV and Cartoon Network animation executive Katie Krentz, who inked an overall deal there in early 2018.

"You can do five animated shows for the price of one live-action drama," Krentz told THR when CBS Eye Animation launched. "The hope is one of those animated shows pops and becomes a big success with not only viewers but also merchandising."

Botnick originally joined the studio in 2015 as VP of comedy development and was promoted to Senior VP in 2018. Prior to that he worked as an agent in the television literary department at WME. He began his career in the mail room at Endeavor. Since joining CBS TV Studios’ comedy department, Botnick helped supervise the development of shows such as American Vandal and Dead to Me for Netflix; No Activity for CBS All Access; Man With a Plan, The Neighborhood, The Unicorn, Carols’ Second Act and the upcoming Broke for CBS; as well as the upcoming Diary of a Female President for Disney+.

CBS TV Studios first got into animation with the Showtime series Our Cartoon President, which was spawned from a recurring bit on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert. The studio is also currently prepping two animated Star Trek shows — one for Nickelodeon (Nickelodeon Star Trek) from Kevin and Dan Hageman and the upcoming Star Trek: Lower Decks for CBS All Access from Rick and Morty head writer Mike McMahan.

Deadline first reported the news of Botnick’s promotion.

The news comes as CBS and Viacom are set to combine into one company, ViacomCBS, Inc.

Congrats on your promotion, Alex.. erm, I mean, Alec! :)

More Nick:Nickelodeon's 'Star Trek' Series Won't Talk Down to Its Younger Audience!

Source: The Hollywood Reporter, Variety.
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HMC Farms Announce Ready-to-Eat Grapes featuring SpongeBob SquarePants and PAW Patrol

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Official HMC Farms® Press Release via Perishable News:

HMC Farms Announce Ready-to-Eat Grapes featuring SpongeBob SquarePants and PAW Patrol


Kingsburg, California – HMC Farms® is excited to announce the launch of SpongeBob SquarePants™ and PAW Patrol™ branded ready-to-eat fresh grapes, a delicious snack the whole family can enjoy! The grapes are available in multipacks; each multipack contains five bags of washed and ready-to-eat grapes. The grapes are fresh off the stem, free from additives and preservatives, and are available year-round.

HMC Farms® believes that the SpongeBob SquarePants™ and PAW Patrol™ branded grapes will encourage kids and adults to eat more fresh fruit through fun, eye-catching graphics of their favorite characters as seen on Nickelodeon (PAW Patrol™ is produced by Spin Master Entertainment). The 2oz bags are the perfect grab-and-go snack, great for lunch boxes, sports events, or any time healthy snack options are desired on-the-go.

Chelsea McClarty Ketelsen of HMC Farms® is excited to introduce these packs and encourage kids to eat healthy “Kids and adults love grapes, and Nickelodeon’s characters are beloved by all. This is an incredible opportunity to add excitement to a fresh and healthy snack option: fruit.”


Both the PAW Patrol™ and SpongeBob SquarePants™ grapes will be featured in the On-the-Go portion of PMA Fresh Summit’s Fresh Ideas Showcase this October in Anaheim, CA, giving attendees the opportunity to see the packs in person. Recently, the multipacks were displayed at the California Fresh Food Expo where they received the Buyers Choice award.


The collaboration was brought about by Lori Taylor of the Produce Moms, who has made it her mission to encourage everyone to eat more fresh fruits and vegetables.

For more information on how to purchase SpongeBob SquarePants™ and PAW Patrol™ branded grapes for retail, events, or concession outlets; contact Chelsea McClarty Ketelsen at chelseak@hmcfarms.com.

About HMC Farms®

HMC Farms® is a family owned and operated business that has grown fresh produce in California’s Central Valley since 1887. To learn more about HMC Farms®, please visit www.hmcfarms.com or stop by Booth #3079 at the PMA Fresh Summit in Anaheim.

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More Nick:Crunch Pak to Launch SpongeBob Branded Sliced Apple Snack Packs at Costco!

More Nick:Nickelodeon Marks 20 Years of "SpongeBob SquarePants" with the "Best Year Ever"!

Additional source: Google.
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Inside Nickelodeon's ‘Are You Afraid Of The Dark?’ Haus of Creep Interactive Experience in LA

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Nickelodeon is preparing for the return of The Midnight Society with the all-new Are You Afraid of the Dark? three-part limited series event, and to celebrate, the network has taken over The ROW in Downtown Los Angeles for a spooktacular event called the HAUS OF CREEP!


Lasting roughly two hours, with an interactive experience of all sorts of characters, the thrilling and fun event lets you meet all the dark and twisted storytellers. From the mischievous Mr. Happy and The Stalker, to the mysterious and insightful Thirteen, the Haus invites you to meet their weird creeps for a night you won’t forget. It’s truly something like no other for the Halloween season: think Universal’s Horror Nights, except for the part where you actually make intimate conversation and meet each individual freak and find out their stories behind their characters — if you dare ask.

The Celeb Secrets team headed to DTLA to visit the creepy experience as well as talk to the cast members of the series. Introducing a new Midnight Society, the group of kids will tell the terrifying tale of the Carnival of Doom, only to have the events of the story come to life.

The new members of the Midnight Society for this updated series are Gavin, played by Sam Ashe Arnold (Netflix’s Best.Worst.Weekend.Ever.), Akiko, played by Miya Cech (Netflix’s Rim of the World), Louise, played by Tamara Smart, Graham, played by Jeremy Ray Taylor (IT), and Rachel, played by Lyliana Wray (Top Gun: Maverick). Blindspotting star Rafael Casal will also star as The Carnival of Doom’s ringmaster, Mr. Tophat.

The event runs from Friday, September 13th to Sunday, November 3rd, so hurry and make sure to take the time to check it out for yourself! Are You Afraid Of The Dark? premieres Friday, October 11th @ 7PM ET/PT on Nickelodeon.

Scroll through the fangtastic gallery below to see more photos from the HAUS OF CREEP, courtesy of Celeb Secrets!


Reporting Credit: Max Baker for Celeb Secrets; Photo Credit: Samantha Baker

To find out more about HAUS OF CREEP, visit http://creepla.com.

Get to Know the Cast of Nickelodeon's "Are You Afraid Of The Dark?" Reboot | CelebSecretsTV



Celeb Secrets chats with the cast of Nickelodeon's "Are You Afraid Of The Dark?" reboot to learn more about the show. We also get an inside look to their new immersive experience HAUS OF CREEP, happening through November 3rd.

"Are You Afraid Of The Dark?" premieres Friday, October 11th @ 7PM ET/PT on Nickelodeon.

Follow Are You Afraid of the Dark? on Facebook!

Visit the Carnival of Doom in Fortnite!

More Nick:'Are You Afraid of the Dark?' Reboot Sneak Peek: Watch the New York Comic Con 2019 Footage!
Follow NickALive! on Twitter, Tumblr, Reddit, via RSS, on Instagram, and/or Facebook for the latest Halloween on Nickelodeon and Are You Afraid of the Dark? News and Highlights!

Nickelodeon Makes Room for 'The Casagrandes' Beginning Monday, Oct. 14

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Original Nickelodeon Press Release:

NICKELODEON MAKES ROOM FOR THE CASAGRANDES
BEGINNING MONDAY, OCT. 14, AT 1:30 P.M. (ET/PT)

New Series Follows Adventures of a Multigenerational Mexican-American Family
in Spinoff of the Emmy Award-Winning The Loud House

Eugenio Derbez, Carlos Alazraqui, Carlos PenaVega and Alexa PenaVega Bring the Family
to Life, Along with Melissa Joan Hart and Ken Jeong Lending Voices as Their Neighbors

Share it: @nickelodeon @thecasagrandes


BURBANK, Calif.–Sept. 4, 2019–A new home in the city holds big adventures, laughs and love around every corner in Nickelodeon’s new original animated series The Casagrandes, premiering Monday, Oct. 14, at 1:30 p.m. (ET/PT). A spinoff of Nick’s animated hit The Loud House, The Casagrandes tells the story of 11-year-old Ronnie Anne who moves to the city with her mom and older brother to live with their big, loving family, the Casagrandes. Following its premiere, the series moves to its regular timeslot on Saturdays at 11:30 a.m. (ET/PT) beginning Saturday, Oct. 19, on Nickelodeon.

Starring Izabella Alvarez (Westworld) as 11-year-old Ronnie Annie, Carlos PenaVega (Big Time Rush) as her brother Bobby and Sumalee Montano (Nashville) as her mom Maria, the series showcases the culture, humor, and love that’s part of growing up in a multigenerational Mexican-American family. After moving in with their grandparents in Great Lakes City, Ronnie Anne adjusts to her new life living under one roof and over the family-run mercado (local market), which is a gathering place for everyone in the neighborhood.

Alvarez, PenaVega and Montano bring these characters to life, alongside: Carlos Alazraqui (The Fairly OddParents) as Carlos, “Tio;” Roxana Ortega (The League) as Frida, “Tia;” Alexa PenaVega (Spy Kids) as Carlota; Jared Kozak (Born this Way) as CJ; Alex Cazares (The Boss Baby: Back in Business) as Carl; Ruben Garfias (East Los High) as Hector, “Abuelo;” and Sonia Manzano (Sesame Street) as Rosa, “Abuela.” Additionally, Eugenio Derbez (Dora and the Lost City of Gold) gives voice to Dr. Santiago, a physician living and working in Peru, who is Ronnie Anne and Bobby’s father.


Ronnie Anne’s new apartment building holds new friends and neighbors, including: Ken Jeong (Dr. Ken) as Stanley Chang; Melissa Joan Hart (Sabrina the Teenage Witch) as Becca Chang; Leah Mei Gold (Legion) as 12-year-old Sid Chang, Ronnie Anne’s new friend; and Lexi Sexton as Adelaide Chang, Sid’s 6-year-old little sister.

In the first episode, “Going Overboard,” Ronnie Anne finds out her Tio Carlos was a famous skateboarder and she begs him to teach her some new moves. Then, in “Walk Don’t Run,” Ronnie Anne and Sid start a dog-walking business to save up for a new skateboard in a plan that quickly gets out of hand.

The Casagrandes premiere will encore at 3:30 p.m., 5:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. (ET/PT) on Nickelodeon. The Casagrande family was first introduced in the The Loud House special, “The Loudest Mission: Relative Chaos,” which premiered May 2017 and ranks as the highest-rated premiere for the series in Live+7 with both K2-11 (6.6/1.8M) and K6-11 (8.1/1.3M).


The Casagrandes is produced by Nickelodeon in Burbank, Calif. The series is executive produced by Michael Rubiner (The Loud House), with Karen Malach (The Loud House) serving as producer, Alan Foreman as supervising producer and Miguel Puga as supervising director. Award-winning cartoonist Lalo Alcaraz (Coco) serves as consulting producer and cultural consultant.

About Nickelodeon

Nickelodeon, now in its 40th year, is the number-one entertainment brand for kids. It has built a diverse, global business by putting kids first in everything it does. The company includes television programming and production in the United States and around the world, plus consumer products, online, recreation, books and feature films. Nickelodeon’s U.S. television network is seen in more than 90 million households and has been the number-one-rated basic cable network for 20 consecutive years. For more information or artwork, visit http://www.nickpress.com. Nickelodeon and all related titles, characters and logos are trademarks of Viacom Inc. (NASDAQ: VIA, VIAB).


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From TV KIDS:

TV KIDS: And you have The Casagrandes, a spin-off of The Loud House, coming up.

ROBBINS: I can’t take credit for that. It was happening before I got here. But I must say I’m super proud of the show. First of all, it’s the first animated show starring a multigenerational Mexican-American family. And it couldn’t be a better time to have that show. Besides that, it is hilarious. It’s so well written and the characters are so good. And I can’t wait to share it with the world. I think the show is terrific.

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From The San Diego Union-Tribune:

Cartoonist Lalo Alcaraz’s journey from Lemon Grove to Hollywood to improve Latino representation

Lemon Grove native Lalo Alcaraz has long been an advocate for better representation of Latinos in America. Now, it’s his day job.

A shy, but artistically-inclined kid from Lemon Grove has become a bold artist whose influence can be felt far outside Southern California — not just across the U.S. but around the world.

Lalo Alcaraz got his start as an editorial cartoonist at San Diego State University’s student newspaper The Daily Aztec before going on to create the first nationally-syndicated, politically-themed Latino daily comic strip, “La Cucaracha.” More recently, he’s worked as a cultural consultant on the Pixar film “Coco” and the upcoming animated Nickelodeon show, “The Casagrandes.”

“It’s a job I wish didn’t exist, you know, because if we had adequate representation, if we had culturally competent people that really knew their stuff, you wouldn’t need to drop me in from outer space on a project,” Alcaraz said at a panel at the L’ATTITUDE conference in San Diego last month. “To Pixar’s credit, they were like, ‘We want this done right.’”

He recently met with The Conversation podcast at The San Diego Union-Tribune to talk about growing up in the San Diego region, what inspires his art, the challenges of publishing an editorial cartoon in the politically charged climate of 2019 and how he’s taken all he’s learned to Hollywood.

Here are some excerpts of the interview. Listen to the entire conversation here.

What was growing up in the San Diego region like for you?

“I grew up a kind of typical Mexican border kid. My mom came through Tijuana. She lived there for 10 years in the ‘50s from 1948 to 1958 and then was undocumented for a bit and then got her papers as a nanny in La Mesa. My dad came, I think, through Texas from Zacatecas, Mexico. My mom came from Mazatlán, Sinaloa and they met at Helix High School, the high school I went to, in an English as a Second Language (ESL) class, sometime early 1961 or 1962. Their desire to assimilate and fit in and learn English — it only took my mom 50 years to learn English — got them together and created me. And then I eventually graduated from that high school. I’d like to find that class where they met and put a plaque... they’d remove it the next day. I grew up in Lemon Grove after living in various cities and back and forth — Logan Heights and Tijuana for a tiny bit — but I grew up basically in Lemon Grove. It was like Mayberry, but SoCal style. It was a time of, kind of a lot of racism and police profiling. We’d get pulled over on our bicycles by the sheriffs. My parents were treated pretty poorly and it made me the bitter old cholo that I am today.”

Would you say growing up here influences your art?

“It is everything. That’s what kind of sharpened my sense of injustice.”

How much of yourself do you put into the characters in ‘La Cucaracha?’

“They’re definitely me. Half of me is angry all the time, wants to tell everyone how they’re wrong constantly, never has an incorrect opinion, and the other half of me just wants to chill and sit on the couch and drink a beer and watch endless hours of crap TV. Preferably science fiction crap. ... I’m usually more of the angry cucaracha.”

How would you say life for Latinos in America has changed or not changed since you’ve started illustrating it?

“Sometimes I’ll see a cartoon from 1994 and all you have to do is change the date on it because obviously we’re living in a super, hyper anti-immigrant time — not everyone, I mean, where some people think it’s ok to be that way — so, you know, I think society goes in cycles instead of progressing forward sometimes, I feel. So things have changed, they haven’t changed. The thing that has changed is, you know, society’s catching up to the things that I was saying 25 years ago, especially stuff about show biz and representation and it’s just becoming a thing. That’s why I’m fully employed. I’m fully overemployed these days in Hollywood so, you know, we’re getting more representation, but it’s still not enough.”

What can you tell us about the show you’re working on now?

“I am a consulting producer, cultural consultant and gadfly and freelance writer on this show called “The Casagrandes,” and it’s on Nickelodeon. It’s for ages 6 to11, and it’s the first animated show about a big Mexican-American family. It’s a spin-off from a show called “The Loud House,” which is one of the top shows there at Nickelodeon. The character, Ronnie Anne, is a little Mexican-American girl who was a super popular character on the loud house so they decided to spin that off, move her, her brother and her mom from Royal Woods, this Michigan suburb where “The Loud House” is set, to Great Lakes City, which is like a fake Chicago kind of amalgam of a bunch of cities — to go live with the mom’s family. They live in a big apartment building. The abuela, the grandma, is the building supervisor and they have a market, a mercado, on the ground floor. ... We’re making it as authentic as possible.”

Is it funny? Serious?

“It is very funny and it’s a good co-viewing show. I watched 10 years of Nickelodeon shows when my kids were little, so if you are that parent, you can watch this show because we sneak in a lot of funny adult things that kind of get by everybody but not the grown ups watching.”

“The Casagrandes” premieres on Nickelodeon on Oct. 14.

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From Animation Magazine:

‘The Casagrandes’: A Giant Step for Latinx Representation

***This story originally appeared in the November ‘19 issue of Animation Magazine (No. 294)***


Michael Rubiner and Miguel Gonzalez

Bursting onto television screens this fall, The Casagrandes follows a large, loving family living together in the big city. A companion to the Emmy Award-winning The Loud House, the new 2D-animated series highlights the culture, humor and love of growing up in a multi-generational Mexican-American family, and is set to debut October 14 on Nickelodeon.

The Loud House, which debuted in May 2016 and is centered around 11-year-old Lincoln Loud and his 10 sisters, gives an inside look at what it takes to survive the chaos of a huge family. The Casagrandes moves the action to Great Lakes City, where Lincoln’s friend Ronnie Anne embarks on a new life which promises to be an adventure, especially now that she lives under one roof with her grandparents, aunt, uncle, cousins and a sass-talking parrot. The household is set up above the family-run mercado, which serves as a gathering place for the entire neighborhood.

The Casagrandes are no stranger to television, having made their debut in The Loud House special “The Loudest Mission: Relative Chaos” in Season 2. The family appeared throughout the third season of The Loud House and had a five-episode arc in Season 4, beginning with the premiere episode, “Friended!” Additional crossover episodes are also in the works for Season 5.

Both series are executive produced by Mike Rubiner (KaBlam!) and produced by Karen Malach (The Legend of Korra, Bunsen Is a Beast), with the animation completed in Canada by Jam Filled Entertainment. Award-winning cartoonist Lalo Alcaraz serves as a cultural consultant and consulting producer on The Casagrandes, and Alan Foreman (Welcome to the Wayne) is supervising producer.

Fresh, New Territory

Rubiner, who has worked on The Loud House since it began production in 2014 and helped develop The Casagrandes, was gratified to see the positive reaction the new characters received following their debut in “Relative Chaos.” “We really liked the characters a lot, and we just thought, ‘Well, maybe there’s a series here,’” he recounts. “The idea of featuring a Latinx family gave us a lot of new territory to explore,” he continues, noting that moving the characters from the rural setting of The Loud House into a big city, and adding a large, multi-generational family, reflected the lives of the Latinx community in a way that would be relatable.”

“It just gave us all these new places to go,” Rubiner continues. “What is it like living in the city? What is it like being part of a big, multi-generational family living in this building together? And what can we explore and portray about Mexican-American and Latinx culture? I think a lot of cultures in this country can relate to that kind of family situation. We wanted The Casagrandes to be relatable to kids, grounded in real stories about real families. But we also knew that we really wanted it to accurately reflect Mexican-American culture, so we really kept an eye on both of those things as we developed the show.”

Alcaraz, who is the creator of the first nationally syndicated, politically themed Latino daily comic strip, La Cucaracha, and has previously served as cultural consultant on projects like Pixar’s Oscar-winning animated feature Coco, says he’s been waiting for a show like The Casagrandes “since television was invented,” noting that — next to immigration — Mexican-American representation in Hollywood has always been a primary cause for him. “It’s hugely important because I remember growing up and not seeing any brown people on TV. But we’ve been inching forward,” he says.

“I did not think I was ever going to see this many shows that have Latino characters,” Alcaraz observes. “It’s just a handful, but that’s a huge shift from zero, you know? And then, when they’re done right, it’s just the world. I mean, look at Coco. We did that right, and people responded to it because everything was true, authentic, honest.”

The star of The Casagrandes is 11-year-old Ronnie Anne Santiago (voiced by Izabella Alvarez), who moves to Great Lakes City with her big brother, Bobby (Carlos PenaVega), and their mother, Maria Casagrande Santiago (Sumalee Montano), to live with their extended family. Bobby works at the family’s mercado, which he hopes to take over one day, and Maria is a hardworking nurse who treasures her time with her kids.

Other family members include Ronnie Anne and Bobby’s uncle, Carlos “Tio” Casagrande (Carlos Alazraqui); his wife, Frida “Tia” Casagrande (Roxana Ortega); and their four kids: confident, vintage-inspired eldest daughter, 17-year-old Carlota (Alexa PenaVega); sunshiny 13-year-old CJ (Jared Kozak), who has Down Syndrome; the precociously ambitious eight-year-old Carl (Alex Cazares); and playful, rambunctious, non-verbal one-year-old toddler, Carlito. At the head of the family is Carlos and Maria’s father, Hector “Abuelo” Casagrande (Ruben Garfias), who is a professor of cultural studies at a local college, and their mother, Rosa “Abuela” Casagrande (Sonia Manzano), a gifted cook who has a sixth sense about knowing when anyone in her house is hungry.

Rounding out the cast, Eugenio Derbez lends his voice as Ronnie Anne and Bobby’s father, Dr. Santiago, a physician who is living and working in Peru; Ken Jeong voices neighbor Stanley Chang, a friendly and patient train conductor; and Melissa Joan Hart voices Stanley’s wife Becca Chang, a quirky, smart and funny zoologist.

Cultural Inspirations

The Casagrandes shares the visual style of The Loud House, but with a vibrant color palette that puts Mexican heritage fully in the spotlight. Art director Miguel Gonzalez (The Loud House, Uncle Grandpa, Book of Life) describes the aesthetic of The Loud House as based on mid-century Sunday comics. “The Loud House uses a lot of browns and earth tones, but with our world we wanted to be a little bit more bold and vivid with the color scheme,” he explains, noting that he and his team of 12 artists took inspiration from things found in Mexican culture like the colorful papel picado garlands of cut paper, luchador masks and the vibrant sugar skulls of Día de los Muertos. “We just wanted to incorporate as much of that as possible into our world,” he says.

In addition to representing Mexican culture, it was also important for the production team to maintain a consistent visual style with The Loud House. “We knew Lincoln was going to appear in some of the episodes, so we couldn’t go too far from that world, because it would just look too weird to have him come into this world and be in a totally different style,” Gonzalez notes.

“It’s not every day that you get to draw characters that look like you,” Gonzalez, who is Mexican American, continues, “I don’t think people realize how important that is to kids, you know? Like, there’s someone that looks like you on TV and that’s cool. Not every culture can relate to that, but the little kids I talk to who are Mexican American, they just can’t wait to see the show, because the characters look like them.”

The Casagrandes premieres Monday, Oct. 14 at 1:30 p.m. on Nickelodeon. The show moves to its regular timeslot on Saturdays at 11:30 a.m. beginning Oct. 19.

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From Variety:

Nick Creates Multicultural World With Colorful ‘Loud House’ Spinoff ‘Casagrandes’

Nickelodeon is expanding the world of its popular toon “The Loud House” with the multicultural spinoff “The Casagrandes,” which premieres Monday, Oct. 14, at 1:30 p.m. ET/PT before moving to its regular timeslot on Saturdays at 11:30 a.m. beginning on Oct. 19.

The new series follows Lincoln Loud’s friend 11-year-old Ronnie Anne Santiago, who moves to the big city with her mother and older brother to live with their multigenerational Mexican-American family, the Casagrandes, over their family-owned mercado. Ronnie Anne and her brother Bobby were first introduced on the first season of “The Loud House” in the episode titled “Save the Date.” The extended Casagrande family appeared during season 2 in the episode “Relative Chaos.”

While the series visually still lives in “The Loud House” world, the design of “The Casagrandes” is deeply steeped in Mexican-American culture with its own color palette and designs.

“I think the color palette is definitely different and it’s something that is consciously and purposefully trying to evoke Mexican-American culture and life in the U.S.,” says executive producer Michael Rubiner, who also exec produces “The Loud House.” “We really relied on the art team and particularly people on the art team who are Mexican American, who really know that world well.”

One of those is art director Miguel Gonzalez.

“We couldn’t change it too much from ‘Loud House,’ because we knew Lincoln and those guys were going to come over to our show, but we did have some freedom with the color. That was the one thing I wanted to change with the show,” he says. “I pulled from Mexican folk art, like Papel Picado and Sugar Skulls, and the pottery and the textiles that you see in Mexico. I studied those patterns and color schemes to incorporate them into the style.”

Supervising director Miguel Puga says “The Casagrandes” is loosely based on his family. “I say ‘loosely’ because it’s a collaboration with myself and the writers. We all get together and pull things from different stuff with our families,” he explains. Puga says that the character of Abuela Rosa, Ronnie Anne’s grandmother, is based on his mother. “Just the way she is strong, makes sure you’re always eating and when she gets mad, she’ll throw you the chancla [shoe].”

Gonzalez says he used his own experiences as well to help create visual world of “The Casagrandes.” “A lot of it comes from my memory from visiting my grandma in Mexico and visiting my uncles’ and aunts’ houses. I try to incorporate some of that into the show.”

The overall looks of both “Casagrandes” and “The Loud House” are inspired by classic comic strips. “Both shows are influenced by vintage comic strips, like the ones you’d find in the newspaper,” Puga says. “It’s the quick, familiar, simple and comfortably warm shapes that we add in the ‘The Loud House’ that you’ll still find in ‘The Casagrandes.’ It’s a lot of little love letters to a lot of well-known comic-book artists like Walt Kelly (‘Pogo’), Hank Ketcham’s ‘Dennis the Menace’ and Charles Schultz’s ‘Peanuts.’ You’ll still see some of the same influences all over ‘Casagrandes,’ but with a burst of beautiful color everywhere and the music and everything in there. I can’t wait for everyone to see what we’re working on here.”

The show’s commitment to cultural representation goes beyond just its design and multicultural crew, but to its cast. The voice cast of the central Casagrande family members include Izabella Alvarez as Ronnie Anne, Carlos PenaVega as her brother Bobby, Sumalee Montano as her mother Maria, Carlos Alazraqui as her uncle Carlos, Roxana Ortega as her aunt Frida, Alexa PenaVega as her cousin Carlota, Jared Kozak as cousin CJ, Alex Cazares as cousin Carl, Ruben Garfias as her grandfather and Sonia Manzano as her grandmother. Additional cast includes Eugenio Derbez, who voices Ronnie Anne and Bobby’s father, a doctor who lives and works in Peru; as well as Ken Jeong, Melissa Joan Hart, Leah Mei Gold and Lexi Sexton as neighbors the Changs.

Says Rubiner: “One of the other aspects of ‘The Casagrandes’ I think is important to note is that it’s not just a kind of Latino show, but also a super multicultural show because the world of the Casagrandes is internationally diverse. The neighborhood they live in has people from all sorts of backgrounds. We consciously made an attempt to embrace that.”

“We’re bringing what real America looks like into this show,” echoes Puga. “You’re going to see all kinds of different diversities in these episodes where whoever watches it can point out a character in the background or point out a character that walks into the mercado and say, ‘Hey, that’s just like me.’ Or ‘Hey, that sounds like my mom.’ Or ‘Hey, that sounds like my brother or my sister.’ We have this opportunity to portray so many wonderful cultures in one show, and we’re going to need at least 30 seasons to do it.”

###



From TV Insider:

Alexa & Carlos PenaVega Talk Their Nickelodeon Series 'The Casagrandes'

Alexa and Carlos PenaVega were both iconic for kids of the late '90s and early '00s, with many wishing they could be real-life Spy Kids or a member of Big Time Rush.

And now, the singer/actors — who are all grown up with kids of their own — are bringing more entertainment to today's children with their new Nickelodeon animated series, The Casagrandes.

The show, a spinoff of Nickelodeon's Loud House, chronicles the adventures of a Latinx family much like the PenaVegas, and the couple looks forward to being part of a diverse project that showcases their own culture.

TV Insider spoke with the PenaVegas about their characters on The Casagrandes.

The Casagrandes is a spinoff of Loud House. How did this idea come about?

Carlos: Well, we were doing some work with Loud House and Nickelodeon had always talked about if these characters do well, maybe we could do a spinoff show. Alexa and I had just moved to Hawaii so I was like, 'If we ever do a real show, how would we make that work if we’re in Maui?' We kind of just wrote it off and out of nowhere Nickelodeon was like, 'Let’s give your family their own show,' and they wanted to make it work from Maui. They really had all the ideas.

Alexa: What was really cool is that it was just so well-received. You have Loud House, which is already such a popular show, but then when The Casagrandes was introduced on Loud House, those episodes were just awesome, and people related to it so much. We’re both Hispanic, so to be able to see our families represented, even within a cartoon, was really cool.

Did becoming parents over the last few years inspire you to do a children’s show?

Alexa: I think that we’ve always been big kids, if you look at me and Carlos and everything that we’ve done. I would say that our kids certainly add to wanting to do the show, but really we still love animated movies, cartoons. To throw it back to what we’ve done in our past, Spy Kids was such an awesome opportunity and movie because we were breaking the rules a little bit. You didn’t really have kids in these cool roles like that, being world-changers. And then, it being a Latino family.

Spy Kids was kind of a break into that mold and then now to see where we are is such a fun time. It’s not just in our movies and TV, but we’re seeing it in our cartoons, it’s so colorful and so diverse and that’s what you see when you go to school every day. You don’t see one type of person.

Did you have any shows like this representing your culture growing up?

Alexa: Actually, yeah. Back in the day, we used to watch the George Lopez show, and I know Carlos used to watch it a lot. It was so fun, we really loved it. But I think what I really love about right now is that — at least for me — I don’t look at it like 'oh, that’s a Latino television show' or 'this represents that culture.' Now it’s just one big melting pot. It’s just, 'this is a show about people,' and I love that. It’s become so normal to have such a diverse group of people together that you don’t even think about it anymore.

What did you think about One Day at a Time being canceled on Netflix (before being picked up by Pop)? What can we do moving forward to get shows like The Casagrandes and One Day at a Time on TV?

Alexa: I didn’t actually know, we live on an island, so I don’t know too much about the backlash, but I think it comes down to the audience. At the end of the day, studios and all these people would love to put out great content and things that they love, but sometimes some of the shows that happen to be favorites unfortunately don’t always have the best ratings or views. Financially it isn’t feasible for networks to always keep them on for whatever reason so I think it does come down to audience.

For us, we’re super fortunate to have awesome relationships with our fans to where it helps push them into wanting to watch the projects that we’re a part of and it helps get an audience there for the show. I think it really comes down to, if you like a show or if you like a movie, whatever it is, you as a fan or as an audience member have to support it in any way you can. Because at the end of the day, if it’s not being watched — regardless of if it’s meaningful or important — it all comes down to, a lot of times, the finances.

Carlos: I think for people to take it personally, I just don’t agree with it. Like Alexa said, shows get canceled all the time.

Alexa: We’ve been on so many canceled TV shows.

Carlos: Whether people want to believe because it was a Latino show or whatever, to me, at the end of the day, it’s still a business. The people running that business are going to make the best decisions for them and people can’t take that personally.

Are there any characters on the show that are based on people that you know in real life?

Alexa: [Laughs] Not that I’m aware of but it cracks me up because Carlos’ character Bobby, it’s not that I’m biased, he’s my favorite. He makes me laugh, he’s goofy and looney and that literally is who my husband is. I feel like Bobby might be just like a spinoff of you in real life.

Carlos: [Laughs] Come on now.

Alexa: Maybe just slightly goofier, with a higher voice.

What about you Alexa?

Carlotta is a girly girl. She’s a fashion-forward, feisty little thing. It’s fun because that’s not who I am but I really enjoy playing her. But at the end of the day, what I love about this show is that it's all about family. So, what I love is that they can get into all these crazy antics and fight with one another, but they all come together for the love of the family and those family values. I think it’s really great for kids to see these days.

You both have been on TV and in movies, how has it been venturing to voice acting?

Carlos: It’s been great, Nickelodeon has been so accommodating. We literally live in the middle of the ocean and we do our voiceover recordings and get it done. Lex and I are just super thankful that they’ve been willing to make it work. I’m currently in the process of building a little vocal recording studio in the house so that we could do our sessions right from home and they’ve been helping us out. Who knows, hopefully we get picked up for many seasons and we could keep doing this for a long time and literally do it from our home.

Alexa: But it’s definitely a different experience. People don’t realize, but voiceover is hard.

Carlos: Yeah, it’s exhausting.

Alexa: Because it’s a lot of high-energy packed into a small amount of time. When you come out of a session, usually your voice is shot, you’re exhausted because you’ve been singing and laughing and jumping. There’s just so much energy packed into such a small amount of time.

Carlos, we know you from your time in Big Time Rush. Is there any chance you’ll be singing on the show?

Carlos: I think I did sing a little bit, whether it was serious singing or not, I don’t remember.

Alexa: I think you did sing a little bit before in Loud House, no?

Carlos: I think I do sing a little bit and there may be some more singing coming.

The show has an incredible cast, with voice talent like Ken Jeong and Melissa Joan Hart. How has it been working with them?

Alexa: I think that’s another hard part about animation, we're all separated, so the only time you really get to see people is during press. But since I just had a baby, we actually haven't left the island and we haven't spent time with anybody. It's really cool to be on a show with these people. I think everybody going to be super-excited just about the show, about the people lending their voices, and to see such a fun, diverse group of people in one place.

The Casagrandes, Series Premiere, Monday, October 14, 1:30/12:30c, Nickelodeon

###

From MarketWatch:

Lalo Alcaraz, a cultural consultant for the Oscar-winning ‘Coco,’ helps Disney and Nickelodeon avoid lazy stereotypes

‘Some productions use Google to figure out Latino stuff’

'I wish the job didn’t have to exist, because I wish everybody was culturally competent and we had mass diversity all over and equal representation — but we don’t,' said Lalo Alcaraz [...].

In a perfect world, Hollywood wouldn’t need consultants like Lalo Alcaraz to get it right.

Disney prompted outrage in 2013 after attempting to trademark the phrase “Día de Los Muertos” — the Mexican holiday Day of the Dead — for what would eventually become its Oscar-winning animated film “Coco.” Alcaraz, a writer, producer and nationally syndicated cartoonist, voiced his dissent in a cartoon depicting Mickey Mouse as a skeletal “Muerto Mouse” on a rampage. “It’s coming to trademark your cultura!” the illustration blared.

Disney took notice. Alcaraz later found himself working for Pixar as a cultural consultant on “Coco,” helping the filmmakers avoid similar missteps. And the movie, which featured an almost entirely Latino cast, earned praise for its portrayal of Mexican culture and went on to score Academy Awards in 2018 for best animated feature and best original song.

Today, the Southern California native serves as a cultural consultant and freelance writer for the Nickelodeon animated series “The Casagrandes,” a spinoff of “The Loud House” about a multigenerational Mexican-American family set to premiere Monday. The show follows the exploits of 11-year-old Ronnie Anne Santiago (Izabella Alvarez) after she moves to a city with her mother (Sumalee Montano) and brother (Carlos PenaVega), featuring voices from actors like Melissa Joan Hart and Ken Jeong.

It’s a weird job, Alcaraz said. But, he added, “It’s great.”

“I wish the job didn’t have to exist, because I wish everybody was culturally competent and we had mass diversity all over and equal representation — but we don’t,” Alcaraz, 55, told MarketWatch during last month’s L’Attitude conference in San Diego. (MarketWatch parent Dow Jones served as a media partner to the conference.)

Alcaraz, who grew up in San Diego as the son of two Mexican immigrants, says he wants “Casagrandes” viewers from multigenerational Latino families to see stories that reflect their lives — reacting along the lines of “That’s just like my abuela!” rather than “I’ve never heard a Latino say that before,” he said.

“I want them to not be pulled out of the moment — when I watch something and it’s got a bad, fake, obviously-Hollywood take on something Latino, it just takes me out and I don’t enjoy the experience anymore,” he said. “Some productions use Google to figure out Latino stuff and put Spanish in things, and it always fails. It’s always awful.”

Alcaraz’s “Casagrandes” gig includes reviewing scripts, making suggestions about language, and monitoring Spanish pronunciations in recordings, he said — for example, coaching lead actress Alvarez on how to correctly pronounce abuela and abuelo, grandmother and grandfather in Spanish. The Nickelodeon series also contains scenes featuring la chancla, a sandal turned “fearsome weapon of discipline” wielded by Abuela Rosa (Sonia Manzano).

“Initially in the writer’s room we were shy about introducing it, thinking it might not be approved of by standards and practices, but the storyboard artists took the initiative and put a chancla in an episode,” Alcaraz said. Its addition proved “hilarious, authentic and traumatizing” for some show staff who came from Mexican and Latino upbringings, he said. (Memes have also captured this shared experience.)

Early on, Alcaraz also gave notes on the family structure and relationships unique to a family like the Casagrandeses, including the deference paid to elders. There was a moment where Ronnie Anne grabs her grandfather by the collar in a moment of anger, he said. “I said, ‘No, that would not happen in a regular big, Mexican family — that kid would be buried out back.’” Similarly, he said he reiterated to writers that Abuela was the head of the household.

The U.S. Hispanic population totals 58.9 million, translating to an estimated 18% of the population. Still, one 2014 study co-commissioned by Columbia University found that “with few exceptions, Latino participation in mainstream English-language media is stunningly low.” “Even further, when Latinos are visible, they tend to be portrayed through decades-old stereotypes as criminals, law enforcers, cheap labor, and hypersexualized beings,” the report’s authors added.

When the topic of Ronnie Anne’s father arose, Alcaraz said he “insisted that he be a professional.” The character, who would eventually be voiced by the prolific Mexican actor Eugenio Derbez, was written as a physician who lives and works in Peru. “That’s a win for me, in my book,” Alcaraz said.

Others have also lent their expertise to help boost the authenticity of film and TV projects. For instance, Américo Mendoza-Mori, a professor of Quechua and Spanish at the University of Pennsylvania, consulted for Paramount Pictures on the script for the new live-action Dora the Explorer film, “Dora and the Lost City of Gold.”

In the same vein, Disney reportedly brought on cultural advisers for last year’s live-action “Aladdin,” presumably to avoid criticisms of the original 1992 film that centered on Islamophobia and crude portrayal of Arab culture. (In the end, the remake still didn’t escape controversy.)

The hiring of cultural or diversity consultants on such projects has become a growing trend, said Rashad Robinson, president of the racial-justice organization Color of Change, which has provided pro-bono cultural consulting for shows including “Grey’s Anatomy,” “Being Mary Jane” and “Seven Seconds.” “More and more, consumers of color and white consumers want to see full, accurate portrayals of the world that we live in,” Robinson told MarketWatch.

But as valuable as cultural experts’ insights are, Robinson said, it’s important that consultants aren’t simply employed to avoid enacting more structural changes to writers’ rooms — like hiring people of color and giving them a platform to tell stories. Less than 14% of 3,817 writers on scripted shows in 2017 were people of color, according to a report commissioned by Color of Change.

“We can come in and consult — but we also don’t want to use our consulting to allow the networks [to] avoid having to actually deal with the diversity challenges,” he said.

When used properly, however, it can make all the difference to films and TV shows. For “Seven Seconds,” a Netflix crime drama about the death of a black teenager, Robinson’s organization brought people who had been impacted by police violence into the writers’ room, he said, and provided writers with videos of actual bail hearings.

###

More Nick:Culture & Comedy: LatinX Artists and Writers Tap Into Their Heritage for 'The Casagrandes'!

Originally published: Wednesday, September 4, 2019 at 17:09 BST.
Follow NickALive! on Twitter, Tumblr, Reddit, via RSS, on Instagram, and/or Facebook for the latest Nickelodeon, The Loud House and The Casagrandes News and Highlights!

Nickelodeon India Plans 200+ Hours of Original Content Over the Coming Year in Aggressive Content Strategy

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Nickelodeon plans 200+ hours of original content in aggressive content strategy

Nickelodeon announces its 8th indigenous show with “Golmaal Jr.” on SONIC


Kids are the most dynamic and versatile audience and entertaining them is no mean feat. Nickelodeon, India’s leading kids’ entertainment franchise has been at the forefront of engaging kids through bringing to life iconic characters like Motu Patlu, Shiva and Rudra amongst others, thereby emerging as the No.1 franchise in reach and engagement in the category. Post the resounding success of 7 Intellectual Properties (IPs), the franchise is all set to launch the 8th Indigenous IP, Golmaal Jr. on Sonic!

Bolstering the brand’s content portfolio, Golmaal Jr. on-boards kids on a journey of endless fun, laughter and Golmaal. Produced by Nickelodeon and created by Reliance Animation and Rohit Shetty Picturez the 8th IP of the franchise will recreate the magic of the iconic movies through a fun animated series that will entertain kids starting Monday 13th May 2019 at 13:30 on Sonic.

Based on one of the most popular movie franchises of Hindi Cinema – Golmaal, this show brings to life a heady mix of slice-of-life friendship, relatable characters, humor and loads fun – all rolled into an enthralling joyride. Golmaal Jr. follows the fun face-off between two groups helmed by Gopal and Madhav respectively. Together, they are fun, chaotic, mischievous and are sure to entertain and engage kids.


Nickelodeon has always identified white spaces and launched characters that are ground breaking. Each of the local home-grown Nicktoons from Pakdam Pakdai, India’s first chase comedy, Motu Patlu– the only adult protagonist in the kids’ animation category, Shiva, India’s whiz kid, Gattu Battu, India’s first animated detective series, and Rudra Boom Chik Chik Boom– India’s first Magictoon have all introduced kids to new genres of entertainment. With the launch of Golmaal Jr., the Nickelodeon franchise will set into motion the aggressive content strategy for the year. With over 500 hours of content the franchise today has the largest, immersive and the most versatile local content library in the category. The coming year will see the further scaling of the content library with over 200 + hours of content, expected to be added through shows as well as made for television movies.

Speaking about the success of the home-grown characters, Nina Elavia Jaipuria, Head – Hindi Mass Entertainment and the Kids TV Network at Viacom18 said, “Understanding of kids, their choices and their diverse entertainment needs has been central to Nickelodeon. We have hence always introduced characters that are relatable, engaging and clutter breaking. The new show Golmaal Jr. is set to bring further diversity and scale to the wide content library of Nickelodeon.”

She further added that “Going forward, we will continue to enthrall kids with great stories and characters and maximize ROI so that we can introduce kids to more such immersive and engaging content experiences.”

Speaking about the 8th IP launch of the Nickelodeon franchise, Anu Sikka, Head – Content, Kids Entertainment Cluster, Viacom18 said, “Bollywood is an important part of every Indian kids’ life and they have always loved films and always adored these characters. Golmaal has been a very successful franchise, much loved by kids and the animated series Golmaal Junior with its unique take on fun, friendship and humor is sure to get the same patronage and love from our young fans. The addition of Golmaal Jr. will bring further depth and repertoire to our squad of indigenous Nicktoons.”

Speaking about the Golmaal franchise, filmmaker and Golmaal movie director Rohit Shetty said, “Golmaal franchise is very close to my heart. The film has already been popular amongst the family audience and new PRANK GANG- Gopal, Madhav, Laxman and Lucky are all set to entertain children on Sonic. The concept of Golmaal Jr. had been in place for a while and I’m very excited about the partnership with Nickelodeon, to bring this high decibel concept and show to life. Each character and their traits are so carefully crafted that I’m confident kids will love the Golmaal Jr. Prank Gang.”

Commenting on the Golmaal series, Shibasish Sarkar, Group CEO, Reliance Entertainment said, “Golmaal is extremely popular with kids and extending the franchise through a special animated series for kids was a great idea to increase affinity for brand Golmaal. Nickelodeon franchise being the category leader enjoying a lot of love from children was hence the ideal partner to bring this iconic brand to life for kids.”


The show’s launch will be supported by a dynamic 360 marketing and communication plan which will include an aggressive TV plan, within the Viacom18 network and outside the network. A high decibel outdoor plan along with mall visibility is sure to capture eyeballs across the country. Fun photo opportunities with the iconic Golmaal tandem bike and audio standees at multiplexes playing the catchy Golmaal title track is sure to break the clutter.

There are various innovations lined up on the digital front, starting with the innovative YouTube unskippable ad that is a category first. There would be a large influencer campaign reaching out to the digital audience. Keeping in mind the sensibility of the social media natives, a whacky challenge has been devised, #GolmaalJrChallenge where kids would be asked to replicate the popular Golmaal dance step!

Golmaal Jr. premieres Monday 13th May 2019, airing daily at 1:30pm on Nickelodeon Sonic!

In additional news, Nickelodeon India has relaunched their official Sonic Gang website, https://www.sonicgang.com, with a brand-new look!

From Adage India:

We Want Sonic to be the 2nd Leader Channel, So that Nick and Sonic Together Can Dominate the Network Share in the Genre: Nina Elavia Jaipuria, Viacom18

Highlights:

- To launch 200+ hours of original animated content in the coming fiscal
- About 20% of the viewership on Sonic comes from Shiva. It is in the top 10 characters of the Small Wonder study of Ormax
- Nickelodeon gets 35% of its viewership from young parents, which also helps in driving advertisers for the channels.
- Nickelodeon have witnessed a 14% increase in the toplines for the cluster

As the summer is in full throttle and kids are home enjoying vacations, Nickelodeon, the kids' cluster of Viacom 18, has announced the launch of its eighth local IP - Golmaal Jr, to be telecast on Sonic. For the past couple of years, the cluster has been putting a lot of weight on Sonic - its second channel in the kids’ space. Nick, the flagship kids channel of the network, is already leading the genre for over three years now. The focus is now on Sonic.

About two years ago, the network shifted its high performing IP, Shiva, on Sonic. Now, the new IP Golmaal Jr will be telecast on Sonic, starting May 13 at 1:30 PM.

Nickelodeon intends to scale its content library by 200 hours of content, adding to the existing 500 hours of programming, through shows and movies. Nina Elavia Jaipuria, Head, Hindi Mass Entertainment and the Kids TV Network at Viacom18, said, “We have always introduced characters that are relatable, engaging and clutter breaking. The new show Golmaal Jr. is set to bring further diversity and scale to the wide content library of Nickelodeon.”

The kids' network has been trying to enter different sub-genres of content and fill in the gaps. Speaking about why the new show is being launched on Sonic and not Nick - the flagship channel in the cluster, Jaipuria said, “Nick has been stabilised, it has 20% share in the genre. We want Sonic to be the second leader channel in the genre and to turn all eyeballs towards it, we are putting newer content there so that together, the two channels dominate the network share in the genre.”

The characters of the show belong to Rohit Shetty, who owns the Golmaal franchise for the movies too. Reliance is the production house, while Nickelodeon owns the IP for everything that they create.

Speaking about how has Shiva done on Sonic and whether the viewership has suffered after taking it off the flagship channel, Jaipuria said, “About 20% of the viewership on Sonic comes from Shiva. It is in the top 10 characters of the Small Wonder study of Ormax. Six out of the top 10 characters are from the Nickelodeon cluster of channels.”

About Ads and Audience

Golmaal has had four movies, while the fifth is expected to be released soon. Speaking about the viewership expectations, Jaipuria said, “It’s not just a kids franchise, but a lot of adults also love the Golmaal franchise, so, I expect this to garner a lot of co-viewing for us. The movies have been adapted for children and hence, it is a safe environment. With this, our core TG would be seven-years-old and above.”

The under-indexation of the genre has always been a point of concern for the broadcast players. Even right now, for an 11% contribution to the viewership, the genre garners merely 2% of AdEx. Speaking about the need to grow this, Jaipuria added, “We have witnessed a 14% increase in the toplines for the cluster. Yes, there is a disparity between viewership generated, versus advertising revenues, but the pester power is growing and the trajectory is upwards. Nickelodeon gets 35% of its viewership from young parents, which also helps in driving advertisers for the channels.”

The cluster doesn’t have sponsors for individual shows, but it is working with a lot of brands on product licensing, sponsoring movies, school contact programs, Kids Choice Awards (KCA), along with the regular TV advertising.

The network launched Rudra, around the same time of the year in 2018. Vouching for its success, Jaipuria told that Rudra and Motu Patlu have been fighting for the No. 1 and 2 shows in the category for the whole year. So, Rudra has grown significantly well for the channel.

Now that Jaipuria has been given a larger portfolio that also includes the Hindi mass channels of the network, she has some learnings to point out. “A lot of learning has come from what the family is watching and the synergies are better, with a lot of cross-pollination between the Hindi GECs and kids cluster,” she shared.

Creators’ speak on Golmaal Jr.

The show is produced by Nickelodeon and created by Reliance Animation and Rohit Shetty Picturez, aimed to recreate the magic of the iconic movies through a fun animated series.

Based on one of the most popular movie franchises of Hindi Cinema – Golmaal, this show brings to life a heady mix of slice-of-life friendship, relatable characters, humour and loads fun – all rolled into an enthralling joyride.

Rohit Shetty said, “Golmaal franchise is very close to my heart. The film has already been popular amongst the family audience and new prank gang Gopal, Madhav, Laxman and Lucky are all set to entertain children on Sonic. Each character and their traits are so carefully crafted that I’m confident kids will love the Golmaal Jr Prank Gang.”

Shibasish Sarkar, Group CEO, Reliance Entertainment, said, “Golmaal is extremely popular with kids and extending the franchise through a special animated series for kids was a great idea to increase affinity for brand Golmaal. Nickelodeon franchise being the category leader enjoying a lot of love from children was hence the ideal partner to bring this iconic brand to life for kids.”

Anu Sikka, Head, Content, Kids Entertainment Cluster, Viacom18, said, “Bollywood is an important part of every Indian kids’ life and they have always loved films and adored these characters. Golmaal has been a very successful franchise, much loved by kids and the animated series Golmaal Jr. with its unique take on fun, friendship and humour are sure to get the same patronage and love from our young fans. The addition of Golmaal Jr. will bring further depth and repertoire to our squad of indigenous Nicktoons.”

The Marketing Stunt

The new show’s launch will be supported by a dynamic 360-degree marketing and communication plan which will include an aggressive TV plan, within the Viacom18 network (regional channels and roadblocks) and outside the network. A high decibel outdoor plan along with mall visibility is sure to capture eyeballs across the country. The network is innovating, in terms of audio standees in malls, along with the fun photo opportunities with the iconic Golmaal bike and audio standees at multiplexes playing the catchy Golmaal title track. Also in store are partnerships with gaming zones. Cinema is also a crucial part of the plan, considering a lot of interesting launches in the coming months. The network has partnered with Fever for radio pranks, while influencers and mommy bloggers will soon be reviewing the show for their communities.

There are various innovations lined up on the digital front, starting with the innovative YouTube unskippable ad that is a category first. There would be a large influencer campaign reaching out to the digital audience. Keeping in mind the sensibility of the social media natives, a whacky challenge has been devised, #GolmaalJrChallenge where kids would be asked to replicate the popular Golmaal dance step!

###

From Indian Television Dot Com:

Viacom18's Nina Jaipuria on Nick's success & breathing new life into Sonic

Nickelodeon’s top-line has grown by 14%, Jaipuria said.

MUMBAI: After installing Nickelodeon at the top of the viewership throne, the band of programmers at Viacom18's kids' cluster now aim to fuel Sonic's rise.

Viacom18 head – Hindi mass entertainment and the kids TV network Nina Elavia Jaipuria zeroed in on two reasons behind Sonic's slide - competition from the likes of Sony and Discovery and headwinds in the distribution value chain.

"Nickelodeon got through (during new tariff order implementation) because it was the number one channel and had a great pull from the viewers as well," she added.

Viacom18's top executives have now rolled up their sleeves in order to push Sonic up the viewership ratings charts. Among the high-profile initiatives the company has taken up is the launch of its 8th indigenous IP “Golmaal Jr”

Produced by Nickelodeon and created by Reliance Animation and Rohit Shetty Picturez, the 8th IP of the franchise will recreate the magic of the movies through a fun animated series starting May 13 at 1:30 pm on Sonic.

The show’s launch will be supported by a 360 marketing and communication plan which will include an aggressive TV plan, within the Viacom18 network and outside the network on channels like Star Plus and Mastiii.

While Sonic’s performance is a cause for worry, Nickelodeon, however, has provided the company plenty of cheer.

“We have been in the number one position for five years in a row. Nickelodeon leads with a fairly decent margin for the full year of 2018-2019. So, from the market share perspective, we are the leaders, not just in viewership share, but also in revenues,” said Jaipuria.

While the company's primary focus now is to propel Sonic into the top three channels in its genre, Jaipuria has made it clear to her team to not take its foot off the pedal when it comes to Nick.

“So the effort is to sustain Nick’s number 1 position and grow Sonic. We are not just looking at it from the viewership perspective but also from the monetisation standpoint,” she explained.

Providing further evidence of Nickelodeon’s surge, Jaipuria revealed that the channel’s top-line had grown by 14 per cent.

“As I have said, animation is an expensive investment to be in and it makes more sense for us to maximise our top-lines which also enhances our bottom-line. We have also grown our EBITDA year-on-year. We are one of the most profitable businesses for Viacom18,” she said.

The channel not only leads in terms of viewership share but also revenues. The broadcaster’s power ratio of 1+ validates the claim, said Jaipuria.

Citing reasons of why advertisers love the brand, the senior media executive pointed out that the channel has worked with them to add value via product integration, product and promo licensing among other things.

“Nickelodeon reaches 44 million children and that is why we have these many advertisers. We have a good mix with kids' advertisers like Britannia, Parle and among others, apart from them, we also have advertisers like banks, insurance, FMCG, consumer durables etc. There’s also one more reason why advertisers are with us because 35 per cent of viewership comes from 22-40 year group, which usually is young parents,” she added.

Nickelodeon currently has Hindi, Telugu, Tamil, and Kannada language feeds. Going forward, it plans to add four more language feeds in the year. “We will look at HSM and might also add the Malayalam language to our bouquet," Jaipuria stated.

She also highlighted the fact that kids’ TV has grown despite the fragmentation as well as attempts by GECs and OTT platforms to woo the kids. According to Jaipuria, last year, the time spent on the kids’ category was an hour and four minutes, which has now increased to an hour and twelve minutes.

Apart from offering over 200 hours of content in the summer, the channel will air all-new episodes for its existing shows in an attempt to become the one-stop entertainment destination for kids. Nickelodeon is likely up its investment in a bid to draw more kids to the television screens with some high-quality programming.

“Rs 30 lakh investment for an episode and a few above that, so you can multiply it to the hours of content and you’ll know how much we have been investing to produce content. We will be launching all-new episodes of every show,” Jaipuria concluded.

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From Exchange4media:

Kids genre drawing banks, auto, FMCG advertisers too: Nina Elavia Jaipuria, Viacom18

Jaipuria, Head – Hindi Mass Entertainment and Kids TV Network at Viacom18, talks about the launch of Nickelodeon's 8th IP 'Golmaal Jr', to be aired on Sonic from today, the NTO's effect and more

Nickelodeon, which recently launched its 8th IP ‘Golmaal Jr’ for Sonic, has seen a 14 per cent rise in the top line, says Nina Elavia Jaipuria, Head – Hindi Mass Entertainment and Kids TV Network at Viacom18. Speaking about the franchise’s growth in the last couple of years, Jaipuria said the franchise has set a target of achieving 200+ hours of content for FY 2019-20.

“We are number one for the fifth year in a row. Nickelodeon led the pack with a fairly decent margin in 2018-19. From the market share perspective too, we are the leaders. We are not just the leader in terms of viewership but in revenue as well. That’s a good proposition for me this year because there were a lot of headwinds. The economy was a little slow to begin with and then of course we got hit by the NTO. Despite having a year like that, Nickelodeon had a 14 per cent rise in the top line. We have grown our EBITDA year on year. We are one of the most profitable businesses for Viacom 18. But more importantly, as we better our ROI, it helps us to put our investment back in the content. We are also one of the few players in the market whose revenue share is higher than the market share. So our power ratio is actually 1+.”

Speaking about the advertisers’ interest in the genre, Jaipuria said, “Apart from the usual suspect advertiser, 50+ other advertisers, banks, auto, FMCG are also joining in. It shows how pester power is moving. There’s one more reason for that - 35% of our viewership is in the 22-40 age group.”

Elaborating on the channel’s content, she said, “Nine out of 10 kids want to watch animation. That’s why 95 per cent of content in this category is animation. Last year, kids’ time spend on the category was an hour and four minutes and this year it is an hour and 12 minutes. Despite the fragmentation, all GECs trying to woo away the kids, the category has only grown.”

But this year, besides keeping Nickelodeon in the leadership position, the franchise wants to make sure Sonic gets bigger. That is also one of the reasons why ‘Golmaal Jr’ was launched on Sonic.

“Nick has been number 1 for five years and recently, we were at 20 per cent market share. After this, we will have to hit the moon. Rather than over-leveraging one platform, it is best to start creating a second strong channel which will help us not just from the viewership perspective but from the monetisation side too. Sonic has been ailing because of competition from Discover and Sony YAY! And then there is the whole distribution problem that Sonic had to deal with. Nickelodeon got through as it was number 1 and there was lot of pull for the channel.”

The network is planning to promote the show in a big way with promotions on channels outside the Viacom 18 network as well. “We are going outside Viacom 18 network so that we can get some of the non-Viacom 18 viewers as well. We are looking at Star Plus, 9xM and Masti,” Jaipuria revealed.

There will be promotions on the network’s channels, in-show integrations, branding in malls and transit media marketing too, she said. The franchise will also get into influencer marketing with mommy bloggers. They, along with a few, kids will get to review the show. On the digital front, there is the innovative YouTube unskippable ad that is a category first.
Jaipuria also shed some light on how TRAI’s NTO order impacted the channels and the advertisers. “It is still a blackhole. We still don’t have any subscriber report to tell us how the channel has been accepted. From the ratings perspective, we are pretty much sure we are in all the homes where kids have been already watching us. While the pecking order of the other competitors has changed, Nick and Sonic have actually improved. If I were to show the last few weeks’ data, Sonic is already at number 4.

“We did have a bad quarter because of NTO. Advertisers weren’t clear about what would be the reach of the channels. We are still not clear what is going on but we have a sense. As a franchise, we are trying to over-leverage our vacations. Therefore, if we get April-May-June and October-November-December right, we are pretty much home.”

Nickelodeon also hopes to increase the language feed count from four to 8 languages this fiscal which will be mostly be HSM languages and Malayalam.

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From ET BrandEquity:

Viacom18 goes bullish on its three kids channels - Nick, Nick Jr and Sonic

The network plans to push of Sonic to number third-fourth place, as main channel Nickelodeon will hold on to its prime position

Viacom18, the 51:49 joint-venture between Network18 and Viacom Inc, plans to focus on improving the ratings of its second rung kids channel - Sonic and third rung kids channel - Nick Jr, in an effort to increase its revenues, as it’s flagship kids channel, Nickelodeon (Nick) will continue to compete to remain the number one channel, in the genre.

“While Nickelodeon will have to work towards maintaining the number one position, Sonic will have to play catch up, to grab either the third or fourth position. As a franchise we are looking at growing all the smaller flanking brands versus the mother brand sustains its leadership,” Nina Elavia Jaipuria, head - Hindi mass entertainment and the kids TV network, Viacom18.

According to Network18’s earnings release for the fourth quarter FY19, Nick continues to be the number one channel in the kids genre, with 18.2% share in the viewership pie. Between Nick, Sonic and Nick Jr, the kids portfolio commandes a 26.5% market-share.

Further the network plans to bolster kids content across the three channel. Original animated content across the three channel will increase by 36.6% to 205 hours in FY20, from 105 hours in FY19. It also plans to add four new regional feeds for Nick including one in Malayalam and the rest in Hindi speaking markets. Nick on standard-definition is currently aired in four languages including Hindi, Tamil, Telugu and Kannada. Nick HD is aired in English. As for Sonic, the network launching a new animated show Golmaal Jr. from May 13.

According to Jaipuria Nickelodeon is monetising the regional feeds with regional advertisers via geo targeting through Amagi. “When I started to work on this category, kids as a genre had 7%-9% share in the total viewership pie. However the share in advertisement pie was under 1%. We have moved the needle and now it is around 2%-3%,”she explained.

As per Ficci-EY 2019, while the total advertising share on TV is expected to reach Rs 28,000 crore (exclusive of GST) in CY2019, of this kids channels’ contribution would be around Rs 800 crore. According to industry estimates, a 10 second ad spot on a kids channel costs anywhere in the range of Rs 3,500 - Rs 4,000. However unlike a Hindi general entertainment channel (GEC), a kids channel doesn’t have a prime time.

“Even as there isn’t any prime time in the kids genre, there are certain times of the day, where the viewership grow. For instance, viewership is higher during the afternoon time vis-à-vis the evening time. Besides holiday season another time of the year when kids tend to view more,” Anu Sikka, head of content, kids entertainment cluster, Viacom18, explained.

According to industry estimates, the cost of producing an animated show ranges anywhere between Rs 30 lakh per episode to Rs 50 lakh per episode.

Additionally the network earns from sponsorship revenue. “We try and integrate brands into our content and characters. We have done a lot of promo licensing where our characters talk about products. We also get TV movies sponsored,”Jaipuria added.

Industry observers noted that kids genre is extremely under indexed, and with a lack of typical prime-time monetisation can be a challenge.

“All kids channels are undervalued and the advertisers aren’t paying much.. In the Indian market, most of the advertisers, target the female audiences and kids’ channels performs exceedingly well among the female audience. Kids channels need to have different monetisation strategy as the GEC formula of a prime time, doesn’t work in this case,” Sujata Dwibedy, head, buying and trading, Amplifi - the media trading division of Dentsu Aegis Network (DAN), said.

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From Best Media Info:

Viacom18 aims to scale Sonic’s position with new show Golmaal Jr.

The network also wants to scale its content library with 200 + hours of local content. It is expanding Nickelodeon’s reach to eight languages and plans to strengthen its overseas syndication deals in MENA, CIS, South East Asia and Central America

Attracting kids and catering to their choices of entertainment is one of the toughest propositions across entertainment platforms, be it films, television or digital. Viacom18 is one such network that has been catering to this shifting audience for several years. For around five years, the network has managed to secure top spot for its kids’ channel Nickelodeon and has been working on building Sonic as a strong second in the genre.

In 2018-19, Nick had 18% market share and a 14% increase in the top line. Despite the setback suffered due to the implementation of TRAI’s NTO, the channel has enjoyed around 9% to 10% of category growth and is said to reach around 44 million kids in the country.

Nick being a top channel has managed to survive the turbulent distribution ecosystem after TRAI’s NTO implementation but Sonic witnessed an impact in its top line. As a result, the network has now decided to focus on strengthening the position of Sonic with the new franchise. In order to attract viewers on Sonic, the network will launch a new IP, ‘Golmaal Jr.’, which will be an animated series based on the popular Golmaal franchise. Produced by Nickelodeon and created by Reliance Animation and Rohit Shetty Picturez, the new animated series will go on air from May 13 at 1.30pm.

Nina Elavia Jaipuria, Head, Hindi Mass Entertainment and the Kids TV Network at Viacom18, said that rather than overachieving with one platform, it is better to start building the second strong channel, which will not only help us to build from viewership perspective but from the ad revenue perspective as well.

“Sonic was ailing because there was a lot of new competition with the launch of Discovery Kids, Sony Yay. It was affected due to the changes in the distribution ecosystem, Nick survived because it is a number one channel and there is a lot of pull for that channel whereas Sonic is dealing with distribution perspective. This is why it makes complete sense for us to create and put a popular franchise for which I don't have to create enough awareness to make sure I get enough eyeball on that channel,” she further added.

With the launch of Golmaal Jr., the network will bolster the brand’s content portfolio with a total of eight IPs. Earlier, the network had launched some of the popular IPs such as Pakdam Pakdai, Motu Patlu, Shiva, Gattu Battu, Rudra Boom Chik Chik Boom on Nick. Golmaal Jr. will be aired exclusively on Sonic.

Golmaal Jr. launch will be supported by a 360-marketing and communication plan, which will include an aggressive TV plan within the Viacom18 network and outside the network. A high-decibel outdoor plan along with mall visibility will include photo opportunities with the iconic Golmaal bike and audio standees at multiplexes playing the catchy Golmaal title track.

“We have several innovations lined up on the digital fronts like the YouTube unskippable ad, which is a category first. These days several kids and mom blogs are becoming influencers on social media, and keeping them in mind, we have launched an influencer campaign. We have initiated an online challenge, #GolmaalJrChallenge, where kids would be asked to replicate the popular Golmaal dance step,” Jaipuria said.

Viacom18 has over 500 hours of content and in the coming year, it is aiming to scale its content library with 200 + hours of local content. The network is planning to expand the library with the launch of shows, telefilms and movies. Jaipuria said the format of these shows will differ according to its demand. “There will be various formats from 90 minutes to 10 minutes capsules. We are planning to launch seven new films. Nowadays we have witnessed that kids are not keen on watching repeats. Hence, all existing shows will witness the launch of new episodes. There will be a launch of some new shows as well,” she said.

Speaking about the consumption trends among kids, Anu Sikka, Head, Content, Kids Entertainment Cluster, Viacom18, said, “Today there is no defined prime-time for kids and that is the beauty of it but at the same time, they are based on seasons. There are certain seasons where viewership will either grow in the afternoon time, compared to evening prime time. Especially during the holiday season, kids tend to view more during the afternoon period because of several reasons like summer heat when they are not allowed to go out, so they consume content at home. Whereas, evening is the only time when they can go out and play so during that time they viewership is low so that trend changes. But, overall during school days, they are available throughout the day.”

Going forward in 2019, the network is also expanding Nickelodeon reach to eight languages from its existing four languages. It is also looking into strengthening its overseas syndication deals with MENA, CIS, South East Asia, Central America among others.

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From Television Post:

Viacom18 firms up strategy to grow kids TV biz in FY20

MUMBAI: Viacom18-owned kids franchise Nickelodeon’s strategy for FY20 includes stepping up its content offering, strengthening Sonic, and launching more language feeds to expand the audience reach.

Nickelodeon plans to launch 200+ hours of original content across genres in the ongoing fiscal. The kids franchise is also rolling out its eighth IP ‘Golmaal Jr.’, which will air on Sonic from 13th May. The aim of launching the new show on Sonic is to help it compete with Discovery Kids and Sony Yay!.

It also plans to add four new language feeds to its existing offering of four language feeds which include Hindi, Tamil, Telugu, and Kannada.

The kids genre is of strategic importance for the Viacom18 network. After entertainment channels, kids is the most important revenue contributor for the network.

Speaking to reporters, Viacom18 Hindi & Kids TV Network Head Nina Elavia Jaipuria said that the Nickelodeon franchise comprising of Nick, Sonic, Nick Jr., and Nick HD+ has seen a 14% growth in topline notwithstanding the disruption caused by the implementation of the new tariff order (NTO).

“We are one of the most profitable businesses for Viacom18,” Jaipuria asserted.

Talking about the content plan for FY20, she stated that the franchise has built a library of 500 hours of content over the years. With the addition of 200+ hours of content, the library will expand to 700+ hours of content. In FY19, the kids network had added 150 hours of content to its library.

Nickelodeon’s existing IPs include ‘Keymon Ache’, chase comedy ‘Pakdam Pakdai’, ‘Motu Patlu’ – the only adult protagonist in the kids’ animation category, India’s whiz kid Shiva, Gattu Battu, India’s first animated detective series, and Rudra Boom Chik Chik Boom – India’s first Magictoon.

“From the 150 hours that we made in 2018-19, we’re actually going to make 200 hours this year, across our IPs across the various formats and IPs that we have. By the end of the year, we are expected to have 700 hours of animation content. We have a very big summer plan. We are pretty much launching new episodes of almost every show that we own,” Jaipuria stated.

Jaipuria also stated that the volume of the content that Nickelodeon has created has helped to retain the number 1 position in the category. She further stated that the kids network will launch four big movies and three mini-movies during the summer.

“Therefore, we are experimenting with formats, durations, genres and creating a very holistic library that is helping us achieve the number one position in the space,” she noted.

Talking about the plans to launch new language feeds, Jaipuria said, “We’re available in four languages in Hindi, Tamil, Telugu, and Kannada and we will expand that to eight languages in the coming year. Regional is the buzzword, it’s really buzzing, and therefore we thought, why not we go regional as well and therefore we will do eight language feeds this year.”

The biggest focus area for the franchise will be to strengthen Sonic through a comprehensive content and marketing strategy. Jaipuria conceded that the Sonic had seen some erosion in viewership in FY19. To overcome that, the franchise is launching a big bang show like ‘Golmaal Jr’ on the channel.

Produced by Nickelodeon and created by Reliance Animation and Rohit Shetty Picturez, ‘Golmaal Jr.’ is based on the successful Hindi movie franchise ‘Golmaal’. It will air on Sonic from 13th May at 1:30 pm daily.

Jaipuria stated that Nick has hit a peak in the kids genre with 20% share. The idea is to build a second strong channel rather than over leveraging one platform. This will help the franchise not just from a viewership perspective but will help it from a monetisation perspective as well.

Viacom18 has also created a 360-degree marketing campaign to ensure that ‘Golmaal Jr.’ to create awareness about the show. Promos to promote the show will be aired across Viacom18 network. It will also look at integrations with ‘Rising Star’ and ‘Khatra Khatra Khatra’.

The show will also be promoted on other TV viewers to get some of the non-viewers of Viacom18. The show will also be promoted heavily through outdoor including mall activations and branding, transit media, and so on.

Jaipuria also highlighted that the kids channels are increasingly becoming an important vehicle to reach not just kids but also their parents. According to research conducted by the network, the key trend that has emerged is that the involvement of kids in purchase-related decisions in the household has increased.

The Nickelodeon franchise, Jaipuria said, has a healthy mix of advertisers. Almost half of its advertiser base comprises of the usual suspects like Britannia, Parle, ITC, Kellogg’s, and Mattel. The other half, she stated, comprises of non-traditional advertisers like auto, banks, and insurance. The non-traditional advertisers are coming on to the platform because 35% of the kids network’s viewership comes from 22 to 40 age-group.

Nickelodeon is working with advertisers to make sure that they get value from the ad dollars that they spend. Rather than plain vanilla advertising of 30 seconds ad, Nickelodeon has tried to deliver value to the advertisers through product integration both passive and active integration.

“We have also done some product licencing. We have got into some promo licensing. We have got some very happy sponsors on Kids Choice Awards (KCA), which we do year after year. We bought some very happy sponsors for the school contract programmes that we do in the year,” she stated.

Jaipuria also noted that the emergence of new screens and the competition from other genres has not impacted the kids TV genre. To buttress her point, she pointed out that nine out of 10 kids want to watch animation. She also highlighted that the time spent on the kids category has increased to 1 hour 12 minutes from 1 hour 4 minutes

“Despite all the GECs trying to move away from the kids, and despite all the OTT platforms that are out there for children today, broadcast and kids category continues to grow. And it has grown by healthy sum,” she averred.

Queried about the impact of the NTO, Jaipuria said that the new regime is still a black hole of sorts because broadcasters have still not got the subscriber reports. She further stated that the Q4 FY19 witnessed a slowdown in advertising due to the NTO implementation.

“We did have a bad quarter because of NTO. There was an ad slowdown because no advertiser was clear about what is the kind of reach the channels are going to deliver and whether consumers are actually buying the broadcast package, or they are buying the DPO package, or they are going a la carte. We were not very clear and we are still not very clear about what is going on,” Jaipuria stated.

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From AnimationXpress:

There’ll be more from Sonic this year” : Nina Elavia Jaipuria on the launch of ‘Golmaal Jr.’

After a hugely successful 2018, Nickelodeon has revealed its aggressive content strategy for FY 2019-20 and its plans for Sonic which will find a better pushing from the authorities this year.

Post huge success and popularity of seven IPs, the kids franchise has launched the 8th Indigenous IP Golmaal Jr. on SONIC. This newest kids animated series starts on 13 May, 2019 at 1:30 pm. Golmaal Jr. brings on board an entertaining and exciting show which promises endless fun, laughter and ‘golmaal’ to kids.

Based on one of the most popular movie franchises of Hindi cinema – Golmaal, which has been immensely popularised by known filmmaker Rohit Shetty. The animated show brings to life a mix of slice-of-life friendship, relatable characters, humour and loads of fun – all rolled into an enthralling joyride. Golmaal Jr. follows the fun face-off between two groups helmed by Gopal and Madhav respectively who indulge in pranks and funny encounters at Golden Hills Hostel. Together, they are fun, chaotic, mischievous and are sure to entertain and engage kids.

According to the latest BARC report, Nickelodeon has seen a 14 per cent increase in share and revenue whereas Sonic stands last in the list. Thus, being an integral part of Nick, Sonic is going to get more focus this year. Produced by Nickelodeon, Golmaal Jr. is created by Reliance Animation and Rohit Shetty Picturez is thus an attempt to pull up Sonic and keep it going in the race.

“We have been in the number one position for five years in a row. Nickelodeon leads with a fairly decent margin for the full year of 2018-2019. So, from the market share perspective, we are the leaders, not just in viewership share, but also in revenues. So the effort is to sustain Nick’s number one position and grow Sonic. We are not just looking at it from the viewership perspective but also from the monetisation standpoint,” explained Viacom18 Hindi Mass Entertainment and the Kids TV head Nina Elavia Jaipuria.

Nickelodeon has always identified white spaces and launched characters that are ground breaking. From Pakdam Pakdai to Motu Patlu to Shiva to Gattu Battu to Rudra Boom Chik Chik Boom, they have introduced kids to new genres of entertainment. With the launch of Golmaal Jr, the Nickelodeon franchise is set the motion for the aggressive content strategy for the year.

With over 500 hours of content the franchise has today, 2019 will see further scaling of the content library with 200+ hours of content which is expected to add shows as well as television movies.

What is more exciting is that Nickelodeon has improvised the character of Bhavani Shankar played by Utpal Dutt in the 1979 classic Gol Maal as the principal, in order to pay homage to the veteran.

Unlike its other shows Golmaal Jr. has a 2D animation format of 11 minutes which will be showcased in the usual half an hour slot. Answering to AnimationXpress, Sikka unveiled, “Kids, I don’t think differentiate between 2D and 3D. In fact, we’re planning to do more shows in 2D. 3D can go out of fashion but 2D will never feel archaic. Almost all classics are in 2D. And it’s also easy as it’s not high on effects as well as monetisation.”

Speaking about the Golmaal franchise Rohit Shetty said, “Golmaal franchise is very close to my heart. The film has already been popular amongst the family audience and new PRANK GANG- Gopal, Madhav, Laxman and Lucky are all set to entertain children on Sonic. The concept of Golmaal Jr. had been in place for a while and I’m very excited about the partnership with Nickelodeon, to bring this high decibel concept and show to life. Each character and their traits are so carefully crafted that I’m confident kids will love the Golmaal Jr. Prank Gang.”

Bollywood has been the wholly accepted religion of India which has entertained kids and adults alike. Commenting on the similar line, Viacom18 Kids Entertainment Cluster content head, Anu Sikka commented, “Bollywood is an important part of every Indian kids’ life and they have always loved films and always adored these characters. Golmaal has been a very successful franchise, much loved by kids and the animated series Golmaal Jr. with its unique take on fun, friendship and humor is sure to get the same patronage and love from our young fans. The addition of Golmaal Jr. will bring further depth and repertoire to our squad of indigenous Nicktoons.”

Jaipuria further noted, “Rs 30 lakh investment for an episode and a few above that, so you can multiply it to the hours of content and you’ll know how much we have been investing to produce content. We will be launching all-new episodes of every show.”

The launch of Golmaal Jr. will be supported by a dynamic 360 degree marketing and communication plan which will include an aggressive TV plan, within the Viacom18 network and outside the network. A high decibel outdoor plan along with mall visibility is sure to capture eyeballs across the country. Fun photo opportunities with the iconic Golmaal bike and audio standees at multiplexes playing the catchy Golmaal title track is sure to break the clutter.

It’s now a matter of time to see if Golmaal Jr. too turns into a phenomenon!

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From IWMBuzz:

Golmaal Junior will take Sonic to new heights: Nina Jaipuria, Head – Hindi Mass Entertainment and The Kids TV Network at Viacom18

In conversation with Nina Jaipuria, Head – Hindi Mass Entertainment and The Kids TV Network at Viacom18.

In keeping with the maxim that nothing appeals to kids more than Bollywood, Viacom 18’s children’s division, Nickelodeon, has decided to partner with well-known producer-director, Rohit Shetty, for an animated version of his super-hit franchise, Golmaal.

“Golmaal Junior kicks off on Sonic channel today at 1.30 pm (as with animation protocol, 2 fresh episodes will be telecast back to back). We plan to have at least 100 episodes,” added Nina Jaipuria, Head – Hindi Mass Entertainment and The Kids TV Network at Viacom18.

The new series brings to life a heady mix of slice-of-life friendship, relatable characters, humor and loads of fun – all rolled into an enthralling joyride. It follows the fun face-off between two groups, helmed by film characters, Gopal (Ajay Devgn) and Madhav (Arshad Warsi) respectively. Together, they are fun, chaotic, mischievous and are sure to entertain and engage the kids.

Nina says, “Although our series is based on Rohit Shetty’s Golmaal, we have also created the character of the stern principal, which will remind you of Utpal Dutt’s character in the old Golmaal (Hrishikesh Mukherjee).”

“Research has shown that today kids don’t want only positive characters. Rather, they want guys who have lots of fun, who might even border on the grey. Today, kids have really matured and get life.”

Going on, Nina adds, “Nickelodeon has always identified white spaces and launched characters that are ground-breaking. Each of the local home-grown Nicktoons, Pakdam Pakdai, India’s first chase comedy, Motu Patlu – the only adult protagonist in the kids’ animation category, Shiva, India’s whiz kid, Gattu Battu, India’s first animated detective series, Rudra Boom Chik Chik Boom, India’s first Magictoon, have all introduced kids to new genres of entertainment. With the launch of Golmaal Jr, the Nickelodeon franchise will set into motion an aggressive content strategy for the year. With over 500 hours of content, the franchise today has the largest, most immersive and the most versatile local content library in the category. The coming year will see further scaling of the content library with over 200 + hours of content, expected to be added through shows as well as made-for-television movies.”

“Not resting on our laurels, we plan to grow aggressively in the south regional markets as well. Our homegrown IPs have also worked in other, non Indian markets, thereby increasing our revenue streams,” says Nina.

Talking about children’s channels’ prime time band, Nina opines, “Ideally, we don’t have any fixed time slot, but yes, during summers and winter breaks, which is our core season, kids tune in more in the noon hours.”

When we ask as to why Golmaal Junior was shot in animation and not real life, Nina says, “Kids still prefer animation as the vehicle to let their imaginations fly. We have tied up with Reliance Animation for the same. In keeping with digital, the series will stream on Voot as well.”

The channel is leaving no stone unturned in creating buzz about Golmaal Junior. “Apart from promos running on all Viacom channels (Colors, MTV), there is also an extensive reach out programme via billboards and mall activations going on across major cities,” says Nina.

Nina admits that Sonic has not done well and hence they were bringing in Golmaal Junior to fire it up. Any cross-channel telecast? “No, all our brands remain loyal to their mother channels.”

She also accepts that the market is in a flux right now with TRAI guidelines kicking in.

In closing, Nina adds that they would love to make a short or long film (as they do with all original characters) with Golmaal characters as well. “But as the rights remain with Rohit Shetty, let’s see how things work out.”

We hope that Golmaal Junior gives blockbuster numbers just as its cine franchise does on the Box Office.

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From The Hindu:

‘Understanding the audience holds the key’


Anu Sikka

Creating content for children is no child’s play, says Anu Sikka, a pioneering presence in Indian animation industry
Anu Sikka’s career has revolved around children because she has been engaged with what kids enjoy the most — animation. Currently executive vice-president — programming, content and research, Kids Cluster, Viacom 18, which owns Nickelodeon India, Sonic and Nick Junior India, Anu was in Thiruvananthapuram to attend Toonz Media Group’s Animation Masters Summit where she was honoured for outstanding contribution to Indian animation. “It feels surreal. We were just doing our jobs and if that culminated in contributing to the industry, that gives me a huge high,” says Anu, who has worked with Hungama TV and SAB TV. With runaway hits such as Motu Patlu, Pakdam Pakdai, Shiva, Gattu Battu and Rudra under its belt, Nick has been on a roll and Anu has seen the growth of the channel and the industry from close quarters. Excerpts from an interview where she talks about creating Indian content and the challenges en route:

Local vs foreign

There was a time when most kids’ channels were totally dependent on foreign acquisition. When I joined Nick in 2006, we had original content from our parent network in the US, besides those from Japan, Korea, UK and France. Children were also happy and it didn’t matter whether the characters looked Indian or not. Although there were animation films on television, the genre was primarily mythology.

Our first step in making non-mythological, local content was the animated-cum-live action television series J Bole To Jadoo (2005) based on the movie Koi...Mil Gaya. There was a lull after that. That’s when Green Gold Animation set an example with Chhota Bheem [on Pogo]. It had an interesting combination — while the characters were not contemporary, the stories were. That was a learning experience and we felt that if stories can be contemporary, characters too could be modern. Thus we launched Keymon Ache [about a boy who has a magical school bag named Keymon], which was a decent success.

Then you had a string of successful shows...

Motu Patlu was the game changer for us. In fact, we took a big risk with the show. One, the characters were adults and there was no precedence of any animation show with adult characters. Secondly, these two characters from the comic strip in Lot Pot magazine were known to people of my generation but not to the present crop of viewers. Yet, we decided to go ahead with the adult characters but gave them attributes of children, such as innocence and warmth. The third risk was that we decided to make 78 episodes straight away, instead of the usual trend of producing 13 to 26 episodes and then repeating those episodes. We felt that children would like to see new stories. The show became so popular that we had spin-offs, television movies, 19 of them till now, and a theatrical version as well.

We experimented with slapstick chase comedy in Pakdam Pakdai, a project with Toonz Animation. The series was tough because it was a silent show and we added dialogues later. That was followed by Shiva for our superhero-loving audience. We pushed the envelope with a 22-minute episode, which was not a popular format then. We could take the risks because we had success behind us.

Other genres we took up was adventure-comedy-action in Gattu Battu, again with Toonz, and magic in Rudra. Now Nick has only Indian content and Sonic has 95% of it. Nick Junior has only English content.

Your take on how the channels influence children’s language skills?

My nieces who grew up in the US could not speak a word of Hindi and so my brother bought the whole package of Hindi animation shows for them. Another side to the trend is that parents of pre-school kids insist that children watch the content only in English and not Hindi because they believe a child will easily pick up communication skills from those shows.

How competitive has the industry become?

There is immense competition. There might be over a dozen national channels that cater to the kids’ category and most have Indian content and regional language feeds.

Yet our shows are not on a par with international content?

That is because of the quality of animation, which has a direct relation to the kind of investment we can afford to make. We can’t compare the two. At the same time, there is no generic taste as such in the Indian context. Children living in metros won’t be watching the same content as those who stay in small towns.

What is the key to creating content for kids?

You need to have a good story. The first step in creating such content is to understand the audience. There is a risk involved in animation, but it should always be a calculated risk. We should know what is going in their lives. You have to think like them. It is not child’s play because it is difficult to keep pace with their changing behaviour, attitude, likes and dislikes and lifestyle.

Your favourites

I enjoy watching kids’ content more than those for adults, be it our shows or those on other broadcasters. I like Shaun The Sheep, which we acquired from the UK eight years ago.

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From AnimationXpress:

“I hope the kids’ category continues to grow”: Anu Sikka exclusive at AMS 2019

Toonz Media Group celebrated its 20th anniversary this year and managed to gather the animation industry under one roof for its 2019 edition of Animation Masters Summit (AMS). The event saw dignitaries from the industry grace the dais and give away valuable insights to the audience.

AMS 2019 honoured two masters for their contribution to the world of animation, professor Raman Lal Mistry and Nickelodeon India/ Viacom 18 head of content, kids entertainment cluster Anu Sikka. AnimationXpress, in a candid talk with Sikka asked her views about the ever growing animation industry, especially the kids’ sector.

How does it feel on being honoured for your outstanding contribution to Indian animation?

Well it’s an honour to be recognised by the industry, with which I have been associated since 2004. But this achievement and recognition is incomplete without my entire team’s effort and contribution and of course without Viacom 18’s vision to take all the risk in pushing the envelope year on year.

What do you think brings the Indian kids or their parents to Nickelodeon?

Obviously the biggest pull factor is the acceptance of its content by kids of all age group in the kids’ category. And the popularity of these shows are driven by characters like Motu Patlu, Shiva, Rudra, Gattu Battu to name a few, which kids either find relatable or inspirational. Also we did manage to identify the need gaps in the category before anybody else got that trend right.

So it was a culmination of all these factors which led to the creation of shows, which has given us the edge over our competitors and led us to the success of this channel. Nick continues to be No.1 (all India two to 14 age group) for the fifth consecutive year. And it goes without saying that the constant and innovative marketing has further strengthened all our channels – Nick, Sonic, Nick Jr. and Nick HD+.

How do you think the growth of OTT platforms has affected the content in the kids’ genre?

Both screens, TV and digital help build a more dynamic ecosystem and are complementary to each other. TV continues to gain the same patronage from kids as is evident in the leadership standing and genre share. In the case of Nickelodeon, VOOT Kids that rests on our digital platform VOOT has contributed to the popularity of the Nickelodeon characters is evident through the fact that top six of the top 10 characters on the platform continue to be from the Nickelodeon franchise.

What is the current trend that you can see in the kids’ genre?

Presently, the two shows that are completely dominating the kids’ genre are Rudra and Motu Patlu. Indian content is completely dominating the kids’ landscape. Today every kids channel in India is investing heavily in the local content. This trend will continue to grow along with the audience appetite for different and unique characters and stories. This creates a challenge for the storytellers, broadcasters and the studios to recognise that ever changing and ever growing need of the audience and bring about that variety in our offering on various platforms.

The way of communicating a story cannot be similar to what we had in 2010, when we started. The audience is evolving extremely rapidly and we (broadcaster and studios) have to keep pace with that.

When a project is pitched to you, what do you look for in the content?

We have a slightly different way of doing things. The concept development happens in-house. So whenever we create a new show, we first identify the need gap in the market. Post-that we sit with the writers, flesh out the concept in detail, decide the characters, the backdrop of the show and then start getting the scripts developed. Once we have completed the entire process, we then approach the studio to partner with us to execute these concepts. So we approach the development of the show differently. We do get pitches and if there is any particular concept that really catches our eye, we work closely with them to develop it, which we believe will resonate well with the audience. But presently everything that you see on air, both on Nick and Sonic, is something that has been developed in-house.

Where do you see the kids’ sector growing in the coming years?

We hope that the category continues to grow. I would say it is still a relatively young genre in our country, but the success of the category is for everybody to see considering the number of national kids’ channels which have come up. And we continue to hear that more and more channels in regional space are getting launched as well. We sincerely hope that this upward trend continues at an even higher pace which will probably end up helping the animation industry to grow at perhaps the same rate or even better than it has managed to achieve so far.

What changes need to be brought in the animation industry considering the kids content to make it reach a larger number of audiences?

It’s difficult to say what changes are required in the animation industry as animation and VFX industry has been growing at a steady pace of approximately 17 per cent every year. But looking at the pace at which the demand for local content is increasing, we definitely need to have more studios to cater to that demand. With the growth of kids universe at three to four per cent every year, animated content will no longer be restricted to the kids channel but will eventually be consumed on GEC’s as well.

Which is your favourite show from the channel?

Well that’s the most difficult question. It’s really hard and unfair to pick up just one. Each show is unique and caters to a different emotion, so picking up one is almost impossible.

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From AdAge India:

Facts About the Kid's Genre

- Kids genre is the least affected by NTO, witnessing a marginal drop
- Kids genre on TV contributes to almost 30% to the overall TV viewership
- Kids genre on TV contributed to almost 3% to the overall AdEx
- Cost of one animated episode is around Rs 3-4 million
- A 10-sec ad rate on kids channels is about Rs 5000-7000

It’s been almost 11 years since Chhota Bheem first arrived on the television screens and took the kids viewership by storm. Having got rejected for a good half a decade, the 9-year-old in orange dhoti finally found a spot on Pogo, pushing the channel to the top in no time. It was then that Turner must have realised how important it was to own the IP, which, by the way, still lies with the production company Green Gold Animation. Quickly after, Turner launched Roll No. 21 with Kris - a modern take on the story of Krishna and Kansa.

Since then, we have seen many local faces on kids TV. However Motu Patlu was the first property to arrive, outside Turner. Nickelodeon, today has eight local IPs that drive the majority of the viewership on the four-channel-kids cluster. The genre currently enjoys about 50% of local content.

The kids genre is one of the least affected by the New Tariff Order (NTO). It is expected to grow the subscription revenues for the genre. Siddharth Jain, Managing Director, Turner India, said, “The MRP regime has seen a marginal drop in the size of the genre. We are a 'pull' not 'push' genre. Even though there is a change in the display for the consumer on their television screen, the relative share of our network has improved. As the MRP regime has not had a real effect on the size of the genre, the subscription revenue also remains unchanged.”

However, Nina Elavia Jaipuria, Head, Hindi and Kids TV Network (Colors and Nickelodeon India), Viacom18 Media, feels that subscription on the genre will grow because of NTO. But TV ad sales will remain the biggest driver.

The contribution of kids genre to the overall TV viewership stands at about Rs 30%, while its contribution to the advertising pie is still at a meagre 3%. The genre has been tackling under-indexation right from the start.

Jaipuria said, “The contribution to the ad pie has almost doubled in the last 10 years, from about 1%, versus a 3% that it is today. I would obviously like this to be a faster growth, but I am happy that we are in the right direction. Major reasons for this growth are the fact that kids today are the in-house consultants for every purchase; co-viewing and brand solutions being offered beyond 30-seconder vanilla spots.”

The genre is a strong Rs 600 crore in advertising sales, with a steady growth rate of about 10% y-o-y. However, under-indexation is an issue which needs to be dealt with, more seriously.

Jain said, “The Kids genre continues to be under-indexed, but we are seeing far more new clients than we used to in the past. More and more client categories want to work with us and reap the benefits of a parental co-viewing demographic. As they recognise the significant influence that kids have on household purchasing, we will see this equation start to change. So-called 'non-traditional' categories that we are seeing growth in includes Auto, Consumer Durables, Tourism and E-commerce.”

Co-viewership on the genre has been very crucial from both advertising and viewership points of view. It has been growing as more and more parents are keen on becoming friends with their kids. With this lifestyle and mindset change in parenting, knowing their favourite stars and talking the kids’ own lingo becomes of utmost importance. This has been giving co-viewing a huge push, along with the policing that parents have always been doing.

The genre enjoys close to 30-35% co-viewership, giving advertisers a huge benefit of catching the young ones along with the decision makers.

Jain said, “Co-viewership is a trend on the rise. Parents want to play an active role in their child’s entertainment choices and laugh along with them. A good cartoon should be able to entertain someone of any age. As many Indian households still have just one screen, grown-ups do still tend to control the remote. A third of kids’ watch-time is on Kids channels, followed by GEC, movies and music.”

In the recent past, a kids channel Animax India was shut down and replaced by Sony Yay, while Toonami and ZeeQ were also shut down. The genre, however, has not witnessed much impact, since none of these were major viewership or advertising contributors to the genre.

Jaipuria explains, “Kids genre has been growing year-on-year, despite all the segmentation and other launches. The content on the channel, though, has evolved to be more local and contemporary, reflecting the society. We are a huge country with 400 million kids out there. I don’t think the genre is in the situation of cannibalising each other. It is growing steadily with a consistent increase in time spent. Currently, the time spent in the genre is a healthy over an hour. The category has really expanded with the launch of Sony Yay and Discovery Kids. It is a fierce competition but that’s good for the genre, since then, the kids get to watch variety of the best content.”

Within kids, Hindi claims the biggest viewership share, with about 71%, followed by English that captures 21% of the viewership. The remaining comes from Telugu, Tamil, Malayalam and Kannada. Geographically, Nickelodeon gets close to 40% of its viewership from the southern markets, despite the fact that it is the only regional market to have kids channels.

“It is an ‘All-India’ genre. 40% of our viewership comes from the southern markets. We are trying our level best to localise our content to suit that market. Kids content, technically, doesn’t have boundaries. They are as receiving for Ninja Hattori, or Dora and Peppa Pig, as they are for Rudra and Shiva. Our channel is currently available in English, Hindi, Tamil, Telugu and Kannada and we are in the process of launching four more language feeds,” shares Jaipuria.

Cartoon Network was the first channel to be launched in the genre in India, in 1995. Since then, the genre has seen about 12-15 players, including pre-schoolers, action-adventure, regional and Tweens. While the local content has been the hero in the genre, lately, international IPs have an equal pull. Jain said, “As we have seen with the popularity of shows like Bheem (2008) and Roll No. 21, the demand for homegrown IP will continue to increase. However, international IP and popular shows from around the world will still appeal to Indian viewers, who have an increasingly globalized mindset. Overseas animation can also be localised through investment in dubbing in local languages and careful curation or what we call transcreation which is where we don’t do an exact dub of the script into local language but instead localize it so that it sounds authentic and relatable in the local context. IP ownership is important because of long-term sustainability. It allows content owners to extend a franchise beyond video and develop deeper engagement with fans through merchandise, games, events and location-based entertainment.”

The cost of producing one animated episode stands at around Rs 30-40 lakh, versus a live action show on Hindi GEC which costs around Rs 7-8 lakh for a regular episode (without a wedding celebration or outdoor shoot). The cost of content on kids genre is high, but so is the value of library content. Kids can watch a single piece of content over and over again, for an innumerable amount of time.

Cartoon Network stood as the leader in the genre for a long time, post that, its sister channel Pogo climbed the top on the back of Chhota Bheem. For close to 15 years, Turner enjoyed the lead, which was finally broken by Nickelodeon around three years back. The Nickelodeon cluster with four channels (Nick Jr, Nickelodeon, Sonic and Nick HD) grabs 32% market share. This is the first time the cluster has climbed to the top, toppling Disney’s kids cluster with 26% share. Nickelodeon currently has both its channels, Nick and Sonic, on the top two positions.

Lastly, consumer products are key for the genre, as the kids want to own up the character they love and want a tag on everything that they use/consume throughout.

Jain said, “The brand licensing industry is a natural extension for an animated IP. If a fan loves one of our shows, they also want to 'own' something from it and have something tangible. Take for example Cartoon Network Enterprises (CNE), the merchandising and licensing arm that represents Warner Bros. Consumer Products and Cartoon Network originals in India. It has seen a healthy double-digit growth rate over the last few years. CNE has recently forged some very interesting partnerships in area of fashion with ace designers Manish Arora and Nandita Mahtani.”

As for Nickelodeon, Jaipuria said that with the biggies operating in the consumer products segment, Nickelodeon is still taking baby steps. She added, “We operate in almost 40+ categories in consumer products across our IPs. We have about 500+ video games on the website. Voot Kids is also a place where kids can engage with us beyond TV. Consumer Products contributes about 5-10% of our overall revenue.”

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From AnimationXpress:

#FeatureFriday: Where is the Indian Animation Industry headed? Experts weigh in


Nickelodeon programming head Anu Sikka

Indian animation is at an inflection point. From being outsourced service providers to content creators and intellectual property owners, the Indian animation industry has gone through quite a metamorphosis.

With a surfeit of channels like Disney, Pogo, Cartoon Network, Nick, Discovery Kids and Sony YAY! catering to more than 200 million kids, the kids’ genre has seen a conspicuous rise in viewership over the years.

Big players in the Indian animation industry, like Green Gold Animation, Cosmos-Maya, DQ Entertainment, Toonz Animation and others are increasingly gaining recognition globally, thanks to their continuous efforts to penetrate international territories with their original IPs, or acquisition of local companies, or setting up outposts in those regions.

Amidst the glory and success, the sector has had its own share of ups and downs. Animation enthusiasts and aficionados continue to pose questions like: Can the Indian animation sector enter the mainstream of animated content globally, just like any series or movie emerging from the US, Japan, Canada or France? Additionally, when will the studios, broadcasters, and OTT platforms expand the animation landscape from a purely kids’ category to a diversified mix of family-oriented animated content or a genre that also caters to older audiences?

Shares Nickelodeon programming head Annu Sikka: “We started our journey in 2010 with local content. And we have come a long way exploring different genres, formats, target groups. However, we still have many more miles to go in terms of genres. In the next few years, I think the time will come when animation will no longer be perceived in India as a medium for kids because I think a generation that has grown up on animation is ready for adult animation.”

The generation she is referring to is Gen Z that consumed a diet of Indian and western animated content in the nineties. They were kids then; they are in their twenties now and have witnessed a paradigm shift in the zeitgeist. Having tasted kids animation, observers believe that they could have an appetite for adult animation as well, which spells opportunity for those in the sector.

Sikka goes a little further. Says she: “I think animation as a genre is something that is ready now to be consumed not just by kids, but it should be presented in a manner so that families and teenagers can also consume it.” While animation content has progressed by leaps and bounds from 2D flash and cell animation to 3D CGI and a larger share of kids’ eyeballs, revenues and the bottomlines have not kept pace.

Sony YAY! Programming head Ronojoy Chakraborty says the advertisers will have to step up their investments in the kids: “Animation as an industry is growing at a healthy pace of 10 per cent but producers depend on broadcasters who in turn rely on advertisers for financing. The kids’ category is one-fourth the size of the entire general entertainment channel category and it only gets one-tenth of the overall advertising revenue. Once the monetary aspect improves, more animation programs will be commissioned including a variety of programs which is eventually going to help the entire industry. We are ultimately appealing to the citizens of the future.”

Reliance Animation COO Tejonidhi Bhandare gives another perspective. Shares he: “A lot of things are opening up for animation. When we talk about animation there are three separate categories that we talked about one is a preschool, then we have a six to nine years category and then there is a slightly older age-group that has actually not been tapped in India. Above all, we have family-oriented animation. We need to focus on the talent and how we build up that talent. Talent and pre-production aspects are really critical for us right now.”

Creating a global IP

Over the past decade, India has given rise to a fleet of original IPS; out of which many have managed to strike a chord with the global audience yet media observers feel that’s merely the tip of the iceberg. Notwithstanding the enormous success, there is still a whole lot of ground to cover and inputs to absorb in the animation space before we can conceive many IPs capable of resonating beyond our borders.

How do we tell Indian stories that appeal to international audiences?

Sharing insights about the ways in which Indian animators can appeal to overseas viewers, DQ Animation COO Manoj Mishra says: “The demands vary from country to country. As far as the US is concerned, it’s more of a demand for original programming which is coming in. As far as Europe is concerned, it’s all the classic shows that play an important role. If companies are not getting the desired ratings and monetisation domestically, you’ve got to go after the audience that goes beyond India.”

Having paved the way for domestic content with India’s most popular homegrown IP Chota Bheem, Green Gold Animation has championed the IP revolution and made massive waves worldwide. Especially with its recent benchmark IP Mighty Little Bheem that has been rocking on Netflix at number one in the preschool category.

Says Green Gold founder Rajeev Chilaka: “What I would love to see is more successful studios. As someone who has been running a studio, for the last eighteen years or so, I realise their pain. In the sense, at first, you have to deal with the cash-flow problem which every studio has. On the other hand, we have challenges like having to constantly keep on upgrading. Every year, the hardware that releases is far better than before. We also have software upgrades. Pretty much, by the time you do all this, you know, you can’t pay salaries. Then there are new technologies being invented. New creative ideas are coming through. We will make content for teenagers to sixty-year-olds to young adults; all that will happen, Yes, but most importantly, we need more successful studios.”

Highlighting the problems that afflict the animation scene, he says, “Another problem that we want to eradicate is that we need more young guys coming in who are as passionate as we saw in the batches of 2005-2010. We need more young blood coming into this industry. The advantage for India is that we have so many kids’ channels and OTT players looking at us. We have the opportunity to reach out to the Indian diaspora. I think we need to do global shows.”

Co-productions

The world is steadily shrinking into a global village and co-productions treaties are testaments to that. Digital platforms have played a key role in facilitating the reach of content to different parts of the globe. Cosmos Maya’s content has aired in more than 150 countries, reaching almost all corners of the world.

Says Cosmos Maya senior veep revenue & corporate Strategy Devadutta Potnis, “We produce to the tune of 50 half hours of animation per month. And the fact that India is growing so much on all fronts, digital is coming up, broadcasters are also growing, there are many opportunities. So that’s really a great area for us to be there in. We just finalised nine new shows in the domestic market. A couple of months before that.. we had signed off three European co-production deals. As far as co-productions are concerned, there are virtually 12 new shows going on at the moment.”

Addressing the regnant need to grow up the value chain in the co-production space, DQ Animation COO Manoj Mishra expresses: “What I feel very strongly is that we don’t need to be the minority co-production partner on international shows; we need to be the lead producer. We need to have stories coming out. We need to have those partners getting tied up from Europe or US or other parts and we need to have those anchor broadcasters from the international community. And we have been successfully doing it. On our shows like Jungle book Robin Hood, Peter Pan or The New Sammy Show which we just released in China on CCTV and it’s the number one there at this moment.”

Reflecting on the subject of creating globally-relatable content, Sikka points out, “The only way we can go up the value chain is when we start telling our stories. With the belief, that our stories are strong enough.”

Demand for Government Subsidies

While the governments in the west have facilitated the cause of animation with an enormous amount of subsidies, the same can’t be said about India. Speaking about the importance of government subsidies in the animation sphere Potnis says, “In the last couple of years I have had conversations with studios from Ireland, Canada and Australia. And just to kind of compile the kind of support that they get by way of subsidy amount; the tune of the volume that they get is like 30 to 40 per cent of the budget. And we stand nowhere in that sense. What these international producers find fascinating is the volumes that we deliver because one has to play on the strengths. We don’t have the government support, as evolved an audience and spending power. One thing that co-productions have helped us do is scale up on the quality front. I think the greatest story ever is an Indian story. It has all the masala. In the era of OTT platforms, there are many opportunities.”

While roaring successes like Pakdam Pakdai, Jungle Book and Mighty Little Bheem have managed to capture imaginations across the globe, we are yet to ride the international wave in the larger scheme of things. Indian storytellers are beginning to get a firmer grasp over global sensibilities; traces of which can be found in the OTT specials and co-production deals that are being increasingly stitched in service of richer and resonant animated content streamed for global consumption.

Given the rapid digitalisation, efficient workforce, cheap data rates and cost-effective production environment, we are sure the industry will scale greater heights in the years to come!



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More Nick:Nickelodeon India's Sonic to Premiere 'Golmaal Jr.' on Monday 13th May 2019!

Originally published: Sunday, May 12, 2019.

Sources: BizAsia, Indian Television Dot Com; Additional sources: Wikipedia, Anime Superhero Forum /@animegamer (II).
Follow NickALive! on Twitter, Tumblr, Reddit, via RSS, on Instagram, and/or Facebook for the latest Nickelodeon India and Golmaal Jr. News and Highlights!

Blackburn Boy Who 'Defied All the Odds' After Being Given 0 Percent Survival Rate Wins Paw Patrol Little Heroes Awards Award for Strength

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Blackburn boy 'defied all the odds' after being given 0 per cent survival rate


Joshua Fallon while on a dinosaur hunt at Witton Park.

A five-year-old boy who defied all the odds after his parents were told he had no chance of survival has won an award for his strength.

Joshua Fallon was born at 30 weeks after his mum Rebecca, who was expecting twins, was rushed into surgery for an emergency c-section.

Tragically, Joshua’s twin brother Jacob did not survive the complications of birth, and Joshua was in such a critical condition with a rare combination of illnesses that doctors told his parents he had a very low chance of survival.

But after five months in neonatal care at Royal Manchester Children’s Hospital, Joshua and his family were finally allowed back to their Blackburn home.

Mrs Fallon told the Lancashire Telegraph: “Joshua is the only recorded case of a person in the world to be born with his combination of conditions.

“He had a seriously rare skin disease called congenital erosive vesicular dermatitis, which essentially means parts of his skin were eroding.

“He was also born with oesophageal atresia, which is a birth defect that affected his ability to swallow anything. We were told by many doctors that they didn’t know if there was anything they could do, but we felt he was getting better.”

Joshua has since had a normal upbringing – even gaining a 100% attendance rate in his first year of classes at Griffin Park Primary School.

A support worker Mrs. Fallon added: “It is a very bittersweet feeling we have been dealing with over the past five years. We are extremely lucky to have a now fit and healthy young boy who loves his monster trucks and playing with his friends, but at the same time, birthdays and events can be difficult without Jacob.”

Blackburn Rovers fan Joshua will now have a once-in-a-lifetime chance to travel down to London for an awards ceremony and VIP shopping trip after his dad James entered him in to the Paw Patrol Little Heroes Awards– where he was selected for the Rubble Award for his strength. This makes Joshua just one of eight children across the country to have been chosen for an award, inspired by Nickelodeon and Nick Jr.'s popular PAW Patrol CG-animated preschool series that airs on Nick Jr.

Mr. Fallon said: “Our little hero has faced a number of challenges since he was born and very sadly, we lost his twin brother at birth and Joshua was born with a number of serious health conditions. He still faces challenges, of course, but is the strongest person we know and we are so proud of him.”

In addition to such a fun-packed weekend, all winners will also receive tickets to Nickelodeon Land in Blackpool. Speaking about finding out Joshua was a winner, Mrs Fallon said: “It was a lovely moment, we are both so proud of him.

“He has come through so much and he deserves to be recognised for his strength.”

Daniel Thompson, Senior Marketing Manager, Consumer Products at Nickelodeon said: “We want to thank everyone for taking the time to write about all their little Heroes because every single one of the entries was special – we would have loved for everyone to win.”

For more information about Paw Patrol Little Heroes Awards, visit http://pawawards.co.uk.

Congrats Joshua! :)

More Nick:intu Lakeside to Open Nickelodeon Adventure Lakeside During Autumn 2019!

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Nickelodeon to Premiere New 'SpongeBob SquarePants' Halloween Special 'The Ghost of Plankton' in October 2019

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Things are going to get spooky in Bikini Bottom this October when Nickelodeon premieres the brand-new SpongeBob SquarePants Halloween special "The Ghost of Plankton" this October!


SpongeBob SquarePants: The Legend of Boo-Kini Bottom

In the all-new spooktacular SpongeBob SquarePants Halloween episode "The Ghost of Plankton", Plankton becomes a ghost to steal the secret formula, but requires a few lessons from the Flying Dutchman.

The episode will air alongside the new SpongeBob episode "A Cabin in the Kelp"!

Update (10/3) - Nickelodeon USA will premiere "The Ghost of Plankton; A Cabin in the Kelp" (#259A; #262A) on Saturday, October 12, 2019 at 11:00 a.m. ET/PT!








According to the trailer, the new Halloween episode will premiere in two weeks on Nickelodeon USA - either Saturday, October 12 or Sunday, October 13, 2019!

Although an exact U.S. premiere date "The Ghost of Plankton" (259B) has yet to be announced, the all-new spine-chilling episode of Nickelodeon's beloved animated series will premiere on Nickelodeon channels internationally this October, including on:

Nickelodeon Africa on Saturday 19th October 2019 as part of the channel's SpongeBob ScarePants stunt.

"The Ghost of Plankton" will also premiere on YTV in Canada on Friday, October 25 at 4 p.m. (ET/PT) as part of the channel's Best Scarepants Ever stunt.

Although unconfirmed, it is thought that Nickelodeon will (Nick or) Treat fans to a phantasmic sneak-peek during the network's "SpongeBob Appreciation Day!" panel at NYCC 2019.

More Nick:Nickelodeon Announces 'SpongeBob SquarePants: The Bikini Bottom Experience' Pop-Up; To Open in LA in October 2019!

Originally published: Monday, September 16, 2019.

Additional source: Encyclopedia SpongeBobia; H/T: Special thanks to @TheAGames10 for the trailer!
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'Are You Afraid Of The Dark?' Set Visit with OG Midnight Society Member Ross Hull | ET Canada

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Nickelodeon's Are You Afraid of the Dark? revival feature a whole new Midnight Society, however, the cast of Nick's brand-new Are You Afraid of the Dark? limited series treated original Midnight Society member and Global News Meteorologist Ross Hull, who played Gary in the original series in the '90s, to a spooktacular set visit! Check out what happens below, and make sure to tune into brand-new Are You Afraid of the Dark?, Fridays at 7:00 p.m. (ET/PT), only Nickelodeon USA and YTV Canada!



‘Are You Afraid Of The Dark?’ Set Visit | ET Canada

“Are You Afraid of the Dark” is back for a three-part limited series event! The reimagining of the kids cult classic follows members of a new Midnight Society who tell the terrifying tale of the carnival of doom. Original Midnight Society member and Global News Meteorologist Ross Hull brings ET Canada on set in Vancouver for an exclusive behind-the-scenes tour of the spooky series. Tune in to “Are You Afraid of the Dark?” on Friday, October 11 at 7 p.m. ET/PT on YTV.

Across the three hour-long episodes, Are You Afraid of the Dark? will follow members of an entirely new Midnight Society, who tell a terrifying tale of the Carnival of Doom and its evil ringmaster Mr. Tophat, only to witness the shocking story come frightfully to life. In the just-released trailer, viewers meet the new members of the Midnight Society, get a glimpse at the uncertainty that awaits and prepare for an adventure beyond their wildest nightmares.

In Are You Afraid of the Dark?"Part One: Submitted for Approval", members of the Midnight Society tell a terrifying tale of the Carnival of Doom and its evil ringmaster, Mr. Tophat, only to witness the shocking story come frightfully to life. (#101)


The new members of the Midnight Society are: Rachel, played by Lyliana Wray (Top Gun: Maverick); Gavin, played by Sam Ashe Arnold (Best.Worst.Weekend.Ever.); Akiko, played by Miya Cech (Rim of the World, Always Be My Maybe); Graham, played by Jeremy Taylor (IT: Chapter Two, Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween); and Louise, played by Tamara Smart (Artemis Fowl, The Worst Witch). The Carnival of Doom’s ringmaster, Mr. Tophat, is played by Rafael Casal (Blindspotting).

Are You Afraid of the Dark? is produced by ACE Entertainment (To All The Boys I’ve Loved Before, The Perfect Date) with ACE founder Matt Kaplan and Spencer Berman serving as executive producers. The series is written by BenDavid Grabinski (Skiptrace, Happily) and directed by Dean Israelite (Power Rangers movie, Project Almanac), both of whom are also executive producers. Chris Foss is also an executive producer.

One of the Nickelodeon’s most iconic series from the ‘90s, the original Are You Afraid of the Dark? delivered riveting stories of horror to young audiences, all from a kid’s perspective. Are You Afraid of the Dark? is owned by DHX and was created by D.J. MacHale and Ned Kandel, who are also executive producers on the project.

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