According to Nickelodeon International's brand new localised official "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" websites, Nickelodeon will premiere Nickelodeon's brand new CGI-animated "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" television series on Nickelodeon Brazil (Nickelodeon Brasil), Nickelodeon France (as "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles - Les tortues ninja"), Nickelodeon Germany (Nickelodeon Deutschland), Nickelodeon Italy (Nickelodeon Italia), Nickelodeon Latin America (South America), Nickelodeon Netherlands (Nickelodeon Nederland), Nickelodeon Portugal (as "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles - das Tartarugas Ninja"), Nickelodeon Russia, Nickelodeon Spain (Nickelodeon Espana; as "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles - las Tortugas Ninja"), and Nickelodeon Sweden in November 2012!
Nickelodeon UK has already announced in a press statement that Nickelodeon UK and Ireland and Nickelodeon HD UK will be premiering Nickelodeon's brand new "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" television show in October 2012.
Below is a list of website addresses to each of Nickelodeon International's brand new localized official "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" websites:
Nickelodeon Australia (Oz) and New Zealand - turtles.nickelodeon.com.au
Nickelodeon Spain (Nickelodeon Espana) - turtles.nickelodeon.es
Nickelodeon France - turtles.nickelodeon.fr
Nickelodeon Germany (Nickelodeon Deutschland) - turtles.nick.de
Nickelodeon Netherlands (Nickelodeon Nederland) - turtles.nickelodeon.nl
Nickelodeon Italy (Nickelodeon Italia) - turtles.nicktv.it
Nickelodeon Brazil (Nickelodeon Brasil) - turtles.mundonick.com.br
Nickelodeon Worldwide (global version) - turtles.nick.tv
Nickelodeon Latin America - turtles.mundonick.com
Nickelodeon Sweden - turtles.nickelodeon.se
Nickelodeon Portugal - turtles.nickelodeon.pt
Nickelodeon Russia - turtles.nickelodeon.ru
Nickelodeon UK and Ireland - turtles.nick.co.uk.
Each of Nickelodeon's international's official "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" websites features information about Nickelodeon's brand new TMNT show, character bios, exclusive online streaming "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" video clips, a photograph gallery featuring stills from the series, a 'Which Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle Are You? quiz, and an exclusive "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" online game called 'Dark Horizons'.
Tags: Novembre, Novembro, Noviembre, НОЯБРЬ
Welcome to NickALive!, bringing you the latest Nickelodeon news for Nickelodeon channels around the world.
Thursday, July 19, 2012
Reminder - Nickelodeon UK To Premiere The Last Episode Of The Nickelodeon UK Show "Summer In Transylvania" On Friday 20th July 2012 At 6.30pm
A quick reminder for British and Irish fans of "Summer In Transylvania" and Nickelodeon UK and Ireland viewers that Nickelodeon UK will be premiering the series one finale (and final episode) of the original Nickelodeon UK television series "Summer in Transylvania", called 'The Vanishing Brain', on Nickelodeon UK and Ireland and Nickelodeon HD UK on Friday 20th July 2012 at 6.30pm (repeated one hour later at 7.30pm on Nick UK's plus one (+1) timeshift channel Nick Replay UK).
In the brand new (and last) episode of "Summer In Transylvania", the Farley' discover that the problem with living with a crazy brain-in-a-jar-inventor, is that when they meddle in science they don't understand, your memory can accidentally be wiped.
British actor Kane Ricca, who plays the "Summer In Transylvania" character Bobby the Werewolf, has confirmed in a Tweet (post) on his official Twitter profile page (@MrKaneRicca) that Nickelodeon UK Productions and The Foundation have no plans to make a second series (season) of the original Nickelodeon UK television show "Summer in Transylvania":
In the brand new (and last) episode of "Summer In Transylvania", the Farley' discover that the problem with living with a crazy brain-in-a-jar-inventor, is that when they meddle in science they don't understand, your memory can accidentally be wiped.
British actor Kane Ricca, who plays the "Summer In Transylvania" character Bobby the Werewolf, has confirmed in a Tweet (post) on his official Twitter profile page (@MrKaneRicca) that Nickelodeon UK Productions and The Foundation have no plans to make a second series (season) of the original Nickelodeon UK television show "Summer in Transylvania":
Any Season 2?@MrKaneRicca: No Series 2 I'm afraid!
Popular Nickelodeon Shows Nominated For 64th Primetime Emmy Awards
Below is a list of the nominations for the 64th Primetime Emmy Awards Nominations (also known as the 2012 Emmy Awards), featuring only the awards Nickelodeon have been nominated for, from the official Primetime Emmy Awards website, Emmys.com:
Outstanding Animated ProgramAlso, from Kidscreen:
American Dad! - Hot Water - FOX - Fox Television Animation
Bob's Burgers - BurgerBoss - FOX - BentoBox Entertainment
Futurama - The Tip Of The Zoidberg - Comedy Central - The Curiosity Company in association with 20th Century Fox Television
The Penguins Of Madagascar: The Return Of The Revenge Of Dr. Blowhole - Nickelodeon - Nickelodeon and DreamWorks Animation
The Simpsons - Holidays Of Future Passed - FOX - Gracie Films in association with 20th Century Fox Television
Outstanding Children's Program
Degrassi - TeenNick - Epitome Pictures in association with Nickelodeon
Linda Schuyler, Executive Producer
Stephen Stohn, Executive Producer
Brendon Yorke, Executive Producer
Sarah Glinski, Co-Executive Producer
Stephanie Williams, Supervising Producer
Stefan Brogren, Series Producer
David Lowe, Producer
Good Luck Charlie - Disney Channel - It's a Laugh Productions
Dan Staley, Executive Producer
Drew Vaupen, Executive Producer
Phil Baker, Executive Producer
Christopher Vane, Co-Executive Producer
Erika Kaestle, Co-Executive Producer
Patrick McCarthy, Co-Executive Producer
Pixie Wespiser, Produced By
iCarly - Nickelodeon - Nickelodeon and Schneider's Bakery
Dan Schneider, Executive Producer
Robin Weiner, Co-Executive Producer
Joe Catania, Supervising Producer
Bruce Rand Berman, Producer
Victorious - Nickelodeon - Nickelodeon and Schneider's Bakery
Dan Schneider, Executive Producer
Warren Bell, Co-Executive Producer
Robin Weiner, Co-Executive Producer
Joe Catania, Supervising Producer
Bruce Rand Berman, Produced By
Wizards Of Waverly Place - Disney Channel - It's a Laugh Productions
Ben Montanio, Executive Producer
Vince Cheung, Executive Producer
Todd J. Greenwald, Executive Producer
Gigi McCreery, Co-Executive Producer
Perry Rein, Co-Executive Producers
Richard Goodman, Supervising Producer
Greg A. Hampson, Produced By
Outstanding Hairstyling For A Multi-Camera Series Or Special
Dancing With The Stars - Episode 1407 - ABC - BBC Worldwide Productions
Mary Guerrero, Department Head Hairstylist
Kimi Messina, Key Hairstylist
Jennifer Guerrero-Mazursky, Hairstylist
Rachel Dowling, Hairstylist
Cynthia Romo, Hairstylist
Sean Smith, Hairstylist
Saturday Night Live - Host: Zooey Deschanel - NBC - SNL Studios in association with Universal Television and Broadway Video
Bettie O. Rogers, Department Head Hairstylist
Jodi Mancuso, Key Hairstylist
Inga Thrasher, Hairstylist
Jennifer Stauffer, Hairstylist
Cara Hannah Sullivan, Hairstylist
Christal Schanes, Hairstylist
Victorious - April Fools Blank - Nickelodeon - Nickelodeon and Schneider's Bakery
Cyndra C. Dunn Keitel, Department Head Hairstylist
Monica Lisa Sabedra, Key Hairstylist
Terrie Velazquez Owen, Additional Hairstylist
Shawn Finch, Personal Hairstylist
The Voice - Episode 210A - NBC - One Three Inc. (a Hearst/Mark Burnett company), Talpa Media USA, Inc. and Warner Horizon Television
Shawn Finch, Department Head Hairstylist
Jerilynn Stephens, Additional Hairstylist
Cindy Costello, Additional Hairstylist
Cheryl Marks, Additional Hairstylist
Renee Dipinto Ferruggia, Additional Hairstylist
Samantha Wen, Additional Hairstylist
Outstanding Makeup For A Multi-Camera Series Or Special (Non-Prosthetic)
Dancing With The Stars - Episode 1307 - ABC - BBC Worldwide Productions
Zena Shteysel, Department Head Makeup Artist
Angela Moos, Key Makeup Artist
Patti Ramsey Bortoli, Makeup Artist
Barbara Fonte, Makeup Artist
Sarah Woolf, Makeup Artist
Nadege Shoenfeld, Makeup Artist
Hot In Cleveland - Bridezelka - TV Land - Hudson Street Productions
Lori Benson, Co-Department Head Makeup Artist
Lisa Ashley, Co-Department Head Makeup Artist
Deborah Huss Humphries, Key Makeup Artist
How I Met Your Mother - Trilogy Time - CBS - 20th Century Fox Television
Jennifer Turchi Nigh, Department Head Makeup Artist
Megan Moore Grimes, Key Makeup Artist
Kevin Haney, Makeup Artist
Saturday Night Live - Host: Katy Perry -NBC - SNL Studios in association with Universal Television and Broadway Video
Louie Zakarian, Department Head Makeup Artist
Josh Turi, Makeup Artist
Amy Tagliamonti, Makeup Artist
Daniela Zivkovic, Makeup Artist
Tom Denier, Jr., Makeup Artist
Victorious - April Fools Blank - Nickelodeon - Nickelodeon and Schneider's Bakery
Michael Johnston, Department Head Makeup Artist
Patti Brand-Reese, Key Makeup Artist
Melanie Mills, Makeup Artist
Nadege Schoenfeld, Makeup Artist
Lusine Galadjian, Personal Makeup Artist
Cartoon Network, Nickelodeon lead Primetime Emmy Children’s nominations
The nominations are in for the 64th annual Primetime Emmy Awards and Cartoon Network and Nickelodeon lead the way for kid-targeted networks with six and five nods respectively. Disney Channel snagged four nods while TeenNick and Disney XD each garnered one nomination. The Academy of Television Arts and Sciences’ annual awards ceremony, which celebrate excellence in national primetime programming, will take place on September 23 at the Nokia Theater in Los Angeles with host Jimmy Kimmel.
The nominees within the children’s categories are:
Outstanding Short-format Animated Program
Adventure Time: Too Young – Cartoon Network/Cartoon Network Studios
Phineas And Ferb: The Doonkleberry Imperative – Disney Channel/DisneyChannel
MAD: Kitchen Nightmare Before Christmas / How I Met Your Mummy – Cartoon Network/Warner Bros. Animation
Regular Show: Eggscellent – Cartoon Network/Cartoon Network Studios
Robot Chicken: Fight Club Paradise – Cartoon Network/Stoopid Monkey and Shadow Machine, Williams Street
Outstanding Children’s Program
Good Luck Charlie – Disney Channel/It’s a Laugh Productions
Degrassi – TeenNick/Epitome Pictures in association with Nickelodeon
iCarly – Nickelodeon/Nickelodeon in association with Schneider’s Bakery
Victorious – Nickelodeon/Nickelodeon in association with Schneider’s Bakery
Wizards Of Waverly Place – Disney Channel/It’s a Laugh Productions
Outstanding Children’s Nonfiction, Reality or Reality-Competition Program
It Gets Better – MTV/ An MTV Production in association with Snackaholic Productions, Logo, Savage Media, Hypomania Content, and Octagon Entertainment
Sesame Street: Growing Hope Against Hunger – PBS/Sesame Workshop
The Weight Of The Nation For Kids: The Great Cafeteria Takeover – HBO/HBO Documentary Films and the Institute of Medicine with Mackerel Sky Films, in association with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the National Institutes of Health, and in partnership with the Michael & Susan Dell Foundation and Kaiser Permanente
The full list of nominations can be accessed here.
Tags: Cartoon Network, Disney Channel, Disney XD, Nickelodeon, Primetime Emmy Awards, TeenNick
Viacom Says DirecTV Talks Are Now At An 'Impasse'
From Bloomberg:
Viacom Says DirecTV Talks Are Now At 'Impasse'Also, from C21Media:
Viacom Inc. (VIAB), owner of MTV, Nickelodeon and Comedy Central, said program-fee talks with DirecTV stalled, signaling a longer blackout for 20 million subscribers who lost the pay-TV networks nine days ago.
“We've reached an impasse,” Denise Denson, executive vice president of content distribution at New York-based Viacom, said yesterday in a phone interview. “They’re not negotiating productively. I don’t see any end to this blackout.”
DirecTV said Viacom was misrepresenting the talks. The El Segundo, California-based satellite-TV provider said it had agreed on major points for a new fee agreement restoring the channels, and that an accord was close until Viacom demanded the movie channel Epix be included.
“Viacom insists that we carry the Epix channel at an additional cost of more than half a billion dollars,” DirecTV (DTV) said in a statement. “We know our customers don’t want to pay such an extreme price for an extra channel, they simply want the ones they had returned to them.”
DirecTV, the second-largest pay-TV provider in the U.S., pulled 17 standard-definition and nine high-definition Viacom channels on July 10 after the two companies failed to reach an agreement on a new contract. Since then, DirecTV customers have been without popular cable shows such as “The Daily Show” on Comedy Central.
DirecTV said on July 17 it was closer to restoring Viacom’s channels as talks continued. The company reiterated that view yesterday, calling Viacom’s characterization “completely inaccurate.”
Epix Channel
Viacom “made a proposal last night for our carriage of the 17 channels they pulled from DirecTV and we accepted all material terms for those channels, including an increase that was more than fair," DirecTV said in the e-mailed statement.
Epix, a movie channel that Viacom's Paramount Pictures started in 2009 with Lions Gate Entertainment Corp. (LGF) and Metro- Goldwyn-Mayer Studios Inc., has gained limited distribution on pay-TV systems. The three biggest, Philadelphia-based Comcast Corp., DirecTV and New York-based Time Warner Cable Inc. (TWC), don’t offer the channel.
DirecTV has said Viacom is asking for a 30 percent rate increase over the term of the new contract, amounting to more than $1 billion in additional costs. DirecTV has forecast that its total programming expenses will rise almost 10 percent this year.
‘Deny,’ ‘Delay,’
Viacom has countered by saying its fees account for less than 5 percent of the satellite service’s programming expenses.
Viacom's Denson said yesterday that DirecTV has spent little time on contract talks.
“They spend 10 minutes a day negotiating the deal,” Denson said. “That’s all the time they devote to this -- it’s deny, delay, deceive.”
Meanwhile, Viacom’s audience has shrunk 20 percent since the blackout began, estimates Todd Juenger, an analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. in New York.
Viacom Chief Executive Officer Philippe Dauman met with DirecTV CEO Mike White last week during Allen & Co.’s media conference in Sun Valley, Idaho, according to Denson. Over the course of a 30-minute talk, Dauman offered a compromise that White said he would consider, she said, declining to discuss specifics.
“Mike never called back,” Denson said.
Viacom, DirecTV: No deal in sightAlso, from the Associated Press via The Huffington Post:
Viacom has warned that there is “no deal in sight” in its carriage dispute with DirecTV, as the latter claimed unreasonable demands regarding paynet Epix were holding up talks.
As the war of words escalated between the two firms yesterday, DirecTV said it was “ready to close” a deal to reinstate the 17 (26 including HD feeds) channels that were pulled from its platform last week. It said it had “accepted all material terms” with Viacom to do so.
However, in a statement, the firm added that Viacom insisted it also carry Epix – its joint venture with MGM and Lionsgate – at an additional cost of more than US$500m.
“We know our customers don’t want to pay such an extreme price for an extra channel. They simply want the ones they had returned to them,” DirecTV said.
Viacom hit back, dismissing the claims as a “complete work of fiction.”
In a blog post, the company said: “We’ve offered DirecTV various compromise proposals – proposals without Epix, proposals with Epix, and proposals with significant incentives to carry Epix. DirecTV did not accept all material terms for our channels, nor are we asking for a sum of US$500m.”
Earlier in the day Viacom alleged that DirecTV had shown no urgency in working out a resolution to the spat, which saw networks including MTV, Nickelodeon and Comedy Central go dark on the platform over a week ago.
Viacom claimed that it had made “a significant and comprehensive compromise proposal to DirecTV last Thursday” that could have restored all its channels by the following morning. It also said that it had since made “several additional compromise proposals,” as recently as Tuesday night. It said negotiations were now at an “impasse.”
The news came as Time Warner Cable (TWC) issued its own statement in favour of DirecTV, claiming that “consumers are tired of these disputes and so are we.”
TWC is currently embroiled in its own carriage dispute with Hearst, with 13 of the latter’s local stations going dark on its platform last week as a result.
“Television networks can’t continue to demand huge price increases and expect us to silently pass those cost increases on to our customers,” said TWC, citing its own platform, DirecTV and satellite rival Dish Networks, which recently dropped AMC’s channels in a carriage dispute.
“We will continue to stand up for consumers against programmers’ outrageously large price increases that serve no purpose other than to line network pockets at our customers’ expense.”
Hearst Television president David Barrett hit back: “Warner Cable is refusing to participate in a negotiating process that has enabled us to conclude more than 150 agreements, without service interruptions, in recent months,” he said.
He criticised TWC for conducting a “public relations bandwagon” that included “various unrelated negotiations with programme providers.”
Andrew McDonald
19-07-2012
©C21Media
TAGS: Cable TV, Carriage, Channel distribution
PEOPLE: David Barrett
COMPANIES: AMC, DirecTV, Dish, Epix, Hearst, MTV, Nickelodeon and Comedy Central, Time Warner Cable, Viacom
COUNTRIES: US
TV Channel Blackouts Stall ProfitsAlso, from the Lost Angeles Times:
LOS ANGELES — Channel blackouts such as the one that resulted from the recent spat between Viacom and DirecTV have become far more common over the past three years. Consumers can thank the changing dynamics of the entertainment industry.
Media companies such as Viacom and Disney have become steadily more profitable since the gloom of the recession lifted in early 2010. But the cable and satellite providers that pay to carry their channels have seen profitability virtually stagnate as they fight each other for subscribers.
The squeeze has prompted distributors such as Dish and DirecTV to revolt against higher programming costs. Consumers are left in the crossfire.
DirecTV subscribers haven't been able to view Viacom channels such as Comedy Central, MTV, Nickelodeon and VH1 since Tuesday, when the two companies failed to reach a contract agreement over content fees. The companies are still negotiating, but the channel blackout for consumers has continued through the weekend.
The industry's cost pressures mean such fights are likely to continue.
"I think this is the new normal," says Barton Crockett, an analyst with Lazard Capital. "It's getting to be a little bit more of a battle between life and death for these guys."
The rising number of disputes is largely the result of the stagnant market for pay television. Simply put, there aren't many new households being formed in the sluggish economy, and those who want to pay for TV already do. Some 101 million American households subscribe to cable or satellite service. That's about 87 percent of homes, a proportion that has remained unchanged since 2009, according to Leichtman Research Group, which studies media and entertainment.
TV distributors pay media companies a few cents per channel per subscriber each month. In turn, they try to sell packages of channels for more. As costs for those channels rise, so do monthly service bills, but not always by enough to offset the increasing fees cable and satellite providers are paying to media companies. In addition, distributors spend money on special promotions to woo subscribers from competitors. As a result, some companies' expenses are rising faster than revenue.
That has prompted cable and satellite service providers to fight back against cost increases, even when it means blacking out channels until they can eke out a better deal. Satellite TV companies like Dish and DirecTV are in an even tighter squeeze than cable companies because they can't make up for higher costs by providing Internet or phone service.
Major cable and satellite TV distributors DirecTV, Dish, Time Warner Cable, Cablevision and Charter have increased profitability over the last few years, but that's tapered off, according to an Associated Press review of FactSet data.
Back in December 2009, they kept 15 cents of profit after subtracting operating expenses from every dollar of services they sold. That grew to 19 cents last September. But since, cable and satellite companies haven't found a way to wring more profitability from their business.
Meanwhile, prominent media companies that produce and bankroll the shows – Disney, Time Warner, News Corp., Viacom, Discovery, CBS and AMC – have kept expanding their profit share. They grew operating profits from 16 cents to 19 cents per dollar over the same period. That kept climbing to 20 cents per dollar by March.
Media companies have posted gains in part by extracting higher fees from distributors in bare-knuckle contract negotiations. Those gains have come directly at the distributors' expense.
To be sure, each company is different. Disney, for instance, has assets such as theme parks that skew the analysis.
But distributors are no longer enjoying a post-recession bounce. The media companies are. These diverging fortunes have coincided with an outsized revolt by distributors.
In the first six and a half months of this year, 22 fee disputes involving the price of broadcast TV signals have caused channel blackouts, according to the American TV Alliance. That's up from 15 blackouts in all of 2011. There were just four in 2010.
Dish Network Corp. dropped AMC Networks Inc. channels on July 1, two weeks ahead of the premiere of the final season of "Breaking Bad" on Sunday. DirecTV dropped more than a dozen Viacom Inc. channels on July 10. Time Warner Cable Inc. gave up on a Fox Sports channel covering the San Diego Padres in April and on July 9 it let 15 Hearst television stations go dark, complaining of a four-fold fee hike demand.
Distributors say they must hold the line on their biggest expense _programming_ even if they risk having customers defect.
"I don't think the industry can sustain this kind of behavior," says DirecTV's executive vice president of strategy, Derek Chang, who accuses Viacom of trying to raise rates by 30 percent. "Ultimately, it'll drive costs up to the end user."
Viacom argues that DirecTV is out of step with higher-paying competitors now that its seven-year-old contract has ended.
Amid the war of words, one thing is clear: the price of TV is going up.
People already have been paying more and more. In April and May, 1,369 Americans who were surveyed by the Leichtman Research Group reported that their monthly TV bill rose an average of 7 percent from a year ago, to $78.63. That's largely in line with annual single-digit percentage increases historically.
What's different for distributors lately is that they also have to pay for broadcast TV station signals, which they used to get for free in exchange for carrying upstart new channels. In recent years, broadcasters like CBS have demanded cash from TV distributors for broadcast signals, even though consumers who go through the trouble of setting up an antenna could get them over the air at no charge.
Such "retransmission fees" are expected to double industry-wide from $1.8 billion this year to $3.6 billion in 2017, according to research firm SNL Kagan.
"That's an expense that really didn't exist five or 10 years ago," says Leichtman Research Group's president Bruce Leichtman. "That's putting the biggest stress on the system."
The battle ends up hurting consumers the most.
Russell Hawkins, a 36-year-old food company marketer in Clinton, Mich., says that because of the dispute between Dish and AMC, he's decided to end his four-year relationship with Dish and has asked his Internet provider, Comcast Corp., to hook up cable TV in a week. He had no problems paying $70 a month, but the prospect of losing AMC was too much.
"They can't be dropping channels on people," he says.
Now he'll save $40 a month by getting Internet and phone service bundled, and Comcast threw in HBO and Showtime for 2 years for free. His friends are contacting him about how to get the same deal. "A lot of others are going to do the same thing."
David Jacobs, a 48-year-old social media consultant in Damascus, Ore., says he signed up with Dish just six months ago to pay for upwards of 100 channels for around $50 a month. But now, he's locked into a two-year contract and will have to pay hefty penalties if he cancels. He'll now have to scramble to find a way to watch the premiere of "Breaking Bad," his favorite show, which airs on AMC.
AMC has offered to stream the episode free online for Dish subscribers. But he's not sure what to do. His options include paying extra for a download from Apple's iTunes or Amazon.com, or resorting to an unauthorized download from a pirate site.
"These are big multimedia corporations," Jacobs says. "But me – the little guy who's struggling every day to get by and live life – I'm left holding the bag. That's what makes me the most angry."
Nickelodeon ratings tumble from loss of carriage on DirecTVAlso from the Lost Angeles Times:
"SpongeBob SquarePants" has taken a hit from losing DirecTV viewers. (Nickelodeon / July 16, 2012) Ratings for Viacom's Nickelodeon have fallen dramatically in the days since the channel was dropped from satellite broadcaster DirecTV over a fee dispute.
On July 10, the last day Nickelodeon had distribution on DirecTV, its total day audience was about 1.8 million. On July 11, that figure fell 33% to 1.2 million. On Friday, the average was up slightly to 1.3 million.
Losing carriage on DirecTV couldn't have come at a worse time for Nickelodeon. The cable network, which caters its programming to kids and teens with shows that include "SpongeBob SquarePants" and "Dora the Explorer," has seen its audience shrink over the past year while rival Disney Channel has made gains.
While talks are ongoing between DirecTV and Viacom, neither side has indicated that a deal is near. Viacom took out a full-page ad in the Los Angeles Times today encouraging DirecTV subscribers to switch services.
A Viacom spokesman noted that the ratings drop is not surprising given how popular Nickelodeon is on DirecTV. "It's the most watched cable network on DirecTV," the spokesman said.
Other Viacom channels have also seen a loss of viewers. MTV's total day average went from almost 500,000 viewers on July 10 to 273,000 on July 13, a 43% dip. VH1 has dropped almost 30% of its audience and Comedy Central is off 21% for the same period.
Nickelodeon ratings down 20% after DirecTV drops networkAlso from the Lost Angeles Times:
The kids' channel is one of several Viacom-owned networks that have disappeared from DirecTV viewers' homes as the companies argue over a new distribution deal.
SpongeBob SquarePants is getting the life squeezed out of him.
Ratings have plummeted more than 20% at Nickelodeon, home of "SpongeBob SquarePants," "iCarly" "Dora the Explorer" and other popular shows, in the week after satellite broadcaster DirecTV stopped carrying the kids' channel.
Other Viacom Inc.-owned networks, including MTV, Comedy Central and VH1, have also seen their ratings fall since disappearing from the homes of about 20 million DirecTV subscribers.
The two companies have been arguing over terms for a new distribution deal. DirecTV has said the long-term agreement that Viacom is seeking is an increase in value of $1 billion over the previous contract. Viacom countered that the number is "significantly less than that."
The battle has been particularly nasty. Viacom has been running ads in print, television and radio using its TV characters to encourage DirecTV consumers to find a new pay-TV provider. DirecTV has fired back that Viacom is trying to gouge its subscribers and that "moms and dads are already fed up with Viacom using SpongeBob and Dora to frighten their children."
The situation may only get worse. A top Viacom executive said Wednesday that the company had stopped negotiating with DirecTV.
"I really don't see any end in sight, truthfully," said Denise Denson, Viacom's executive vice president of content distribution. "Nothing about negotiating with them is productive."
Whether that is a negotiating ploy is likely to become apparent in the days ahead. A spokesman for DirecTV said it had a deal to put the channels back on its service when Viacom pushed for carriage of its movie channel Epix at a cost of more than $500 million as part of the pact.
"We know our customers don't want to pay such an extreme price for an extra channel.... We stand ready and willing to work with Viacom to get this done and, once again, ask Viacom to do the right thing and restore these channels to our customers immediately," the DirecTV spokesman said.
Fights between programmers and distributors are nothing new, but usually agreements are reached without channels being dropped. Once that point of no return is crossed, however, negotiations can drag on as neither feels deadline pressure to reach an accord and both sides start to dig in their heels. In 2010, News Corp.'s Fox went off Cablevision in the New York City area for two weeks until a new deal was struck.
In the short term, it is Viacom that is absorbing more punches. Nickelodeon's rivals have seen significant ratings gains in the days since DirecTV stopped carrying the channel.
Walt Disney Co.is benefiting the most from Nickelodeon's woes. Not only has Disney Channel's audience jumped 20%, DirecTV has also added Disney Jr., a relatively new network, to its service to help fill the void left by Nickelodeon. The numbers for Disney Jr. have been solid enough that DirecTV said it will continue to make it available to all of its subscribers even after it reaches a new accord with Viacom and brings back Nickelodeon.
For Nickelodeon, the loss of DirecTV couldn't come at a worse time. The cable network has already seen its ratings fall sharply this year. A long, drawn-out fight with DirecTV may make it difficult for the channel to fully recover.
"The central question is: How much of that audience will come back when Nickelodeon returns?" said Sanford C. Bernstein analyst Todd Juenger. "Certainly a percentage of the kids will get hooked on Disney programming and stay with it."
Other, smaller kids' channels such as the Hub and Sprout are also picking off discarded Nickelodeon viewers. The Hub said its total audience was up more than 100% and among kids 6 to 11 it saw a gain of almost 80%. Sprout's audience grew more than 60%.
"We're definitely getting a spike from this," Sprout President Sandy Wax said.
DirecTV could eventually face blow-back from the fight with Viacom as well. Although DirecTV spokesman Robert Mercer said the El Segundo company has lost only a few subscribers since the Viacom channels came off, that could change if no new deal is imminent.
"Disconnects should be a greater issue as the dispute drags on," Greenfield said in a recent report. Although Viacom is "clearly in pain," Greenfield noted that it will be easier for the programmer to recapture lost advertisers and viewers than for DirecTV to replace lost subscribers.
Viacom's Denson said the New York company will start aggressively persuading other cable and satellite operators that carry its channels to use that to market against DirecTV.
Some rival distributors, including Cox Cable, have made a point of publicly siding with DirecTV in its battle with Viacom. But others are finding subtle ways to let consumers know there are other options. Satellite broadcaster Dish Network Corp. has ads on Facebook that include characters from popular Nickelodeon, MTV and Comedy Central programs. SomeComcast Corp.cable systems are running radio ads encouraging consumers to switch pay- TV providers.
"They are actively marketing behind the scenes, taking advantage of the situation," Denson said. "Everyone is starting to play against DirecTV."
Viacom and DirecTV continue to negotiate but remain far apartAlso, from The Hollywood Reporter:
Viacom and DirecTV are still trying to hammer out a new deal that will bring MTV, Comedy Central, Nickelodeon and more than a dozen other channels back to the satellite broadcaster.
But in between the talks, the two sides are still taking shots at each other.
Interviews with the chief negotiators for both parties reveal that there is still a wide gulf dividing the companies.
"Their ratings have dropped on a lot of their major networks. It's hard to justify significant increases," said Derek Chang, a DirecTV executive vice president. DirecTV claims that Viacom wants an increase of 30% to carry its channels, which translates into $1 billion.
Viacom's Denise Denson, executive vice president of content distribution, countered that the media giant's channels represent 20% of all viewing on DirecTV and yet "we get about 5% of their license fees. That's the real crux of it."
DirecTV's Chang said there is more than money dividing the two companies. He does not like that Viacom puts much of its content on its websites for free.
"It certainly undermines the value of what they are selling to us," Chang said, adding, that "if people are viewing their stuff online and not on our platforms, why would we pay as much?"
Denson responded that Viacom's research has not shown that free offerings of its shows online have hurt the ratings for its cable channels.
"We use it as a marketing tool to drive people back to our channels," Denson responded when asked why the company offers so much content for free online.
As for reaching an agreement, both sides expressed optimism that it will happen but neither would specify when.
"We don't expect this to last too long," Chang said. "We're in open discussions and working hard to try to close a deal," Denson added.
Chang said DirecTV is willing to put the channels back on while talks continue, but Viacom isn't interested.
For DirecTV subscribers wondering about getting a rebate or some sort of discount for the days they were deprived of Viacom's channels, Chang said that would be determined "down the road."
Analysts Weigh in on Viacom-DirecTV Carriage Dispute
One analyst calls the stand-off a "lose-lose" situation, while another one says it could be "a serious mistake" for any pay TV operator to not carry the Viacom channels.
Analysts late Tuesday started to weigh in on the networks carriage dispute between entertainment conglomerate Viacom and satellite TV giant DirecTV, predicting who would be hit harder by any fallout if the two sides don't reach an agreement quickly.
Most highlighted Viacom's broad viewership strength despite near-term ratings challenges at some flagship networks. But before Viacom channels, including MTV, Nickelodeon and Comedy Central, went dark in DirecTV homes at midnight ET, Evercore Partners analyst Alan Gould described the showdown as a lose-lose situation for the two companies.
"We estimate that DirecTV represents 12-13 percent of Viacom's domestic media affiliate and advertising revenue," he wrote in a report. "Viacom claims its programming represents 20 percent of the viewing on DirecTV, so we would assume DirecTV would lose some subscribers, particularly families that want Nickelodeon."
He estimated that Viacom generally receives about $3 per subscriber per month for its 17 channels, or 26 when including HD feeds. Given their just-ended carriage deal is seven years old, DirecTV likely pays less than $2.50 per subscriber per month, he added.
In his worst-case scenario, Viacom's channels would be off DirecTV for a full year. "We estimate the impact would be about $300 million after-tax to Viacom, or 63 cents per share, a 13 percent hit to our fiscal year 2013 [earnings] estimate," Gould said. "If the channels were off for a year, it would likely reduce Viacom's aggressive share repurchase plan."
Credit Suisse analyst Spencer Wang also warned that Viacom could be exposed to risk in the carriage showdown. Viacom draws a big audience, but doesn’t own a broadcast network, broadcast stations or a major sports asset, which peers like News Corp. can use for leverage during carriage and re-transmission consent talks, he argued.
Nomura's Michael Nathanson said though that Viacom should end up getting things its way, highlighting that of total live TV viewership, Viacom has eight channels in the top 30.
"We expect Viacom to ultimately receive affiliate fee step-ups of at least high single digits with DirecTV over the life of the deal, consistent with prior guidance," he said. "We do not believe Viacom is worried about the short-term quarterly impact, and although companies try to avoid public negotiations, we believe Viacom should be able to use this spotlight to prove its affiliate fee worth."
He entitled his report "Will DirecTV Make Dora Cry?" in a reference to Nickelodeon character Dora the Explorer, which the company showed crying during a carriage dispute with Time Warner Cable a few years ago. "Viacom ultimately largely received the increases they were seeking during the company’s Time Warner Cable affiliate fee negotiations on New Year’s Eve Dec. 31, 2008," Nathanson highlighted.
BTIG analyst Richard Greenfield also wondered if DirecTV CEO Mike White was risking too much with a stand-off with Viacom. "Will Mike White Make the Same Mistake as Charlie Ergen?" his report asked in reference to the Dish chairman who has been in various high-profile carriage battles.
"While Viacom’s ratings have definitely softened from where they were 12-18 months ago (MTV's Jersey Shore highs along with Nick's share loss to Disney Channel), we believe a multichannel video programming distributor would be making a serious mistake to not carry the Viacom suite of channels," Greenfield wrote. "While the demographics of Viacom’s cable network viewers may be the most exposed to finding Internet-based alternatives, the viewership of online programming is still dwarfed by the size and scale of Viacom’s content."
Nickelodeon Musician Jill Sobule ("Harriet The Spy", "Unfabulous") To Perform At The 22nd Annual GrassRoots Festival Of Music And Dance In Trumansburg, New York, USA
According to PressConnects.com, the American singer-songwriter Jill Sobule, who has contributed music to the popular original Nickelodeon television series "Unfabulous" and also guest stars on Nickelodeon Movies' "Harriet the Spy" soundtrack, singing the song "The Secretive Life" for Nickelodeon Movies' first ever Nickelodeon Movie, "Harriet the Spy", will be a performing artist at the 22nd annual GrassRoots Festival of Music and Dance at Trumansburg Fairgrounds in Trumansburg, New York, USA on Sunday 22nd July 2012 at 12:45 p.m. on the Grandstand:
GrassRoots takes hold in T-burg
Local favorites, famous faces fill four-day music festival
Beginning [Wednesday 18th July 2012], the 22nd annual GrassRoots Festival of Music and Dance returns to the Trumansburg Fairgrounds, offering four days of many genres of roots music from various parts of the world. Founded by host band Donna the Buffalo, whose members were inspired by playing and performing at similar festivals up and down the East Coast, GrassRoots will feature dozens of bands performing on four stages over four days.
Many familiar festival favorites will return, [...]. And festival organizers have brought in some new headliners, including country legend George Jones and '90s indie pop favorite Jill Sobule.
Tickets for GrassRoots are available at the gate. A weekend pass costs $110 (children until 12 get in free, but must be accompanied by parent or guardian); daily passes are $40 today and Friday, $45 on Saturday, and $30 on Sunday.
You can learn more about GrassRoots by picking up a festival program at several locations around Ithaca and Trumansburg or download a schedule at www.grassrootsfest.org.
With that in mind, here's a day-by-day rundown of some of the festival highlights, mostly focusing on out-of-town bands:
[...]
Sunday
[...]
- Jill Sobule will make her GrassRoots debut at 12:45 p.m. on the Grandstand. Known for her mid-90s hit "I Kissed A Girl," Sobule has released several albums, including 2009's "California Years," as well as performing on NPR and Air America and doing the music for the Nickelodeon Network's "Unfabulous."
Else Holmelund Minarik, The Author Of The 'Little Bear' Pictures Books, Dies Aged 91
From The Washington Post:
Else Holmelund Minarik, 91, was author of the ‘Little Bear’ pictures books
Else Holmelund Minarik, a children’s writer whose simple yet elegant prose in the “Little Bear” picture-book series has helped generations of youngsters learn to read, died July 12 at her home in Sunset Beach, N.C. She was 91.
Her death, from congestive heart failure and complications from a heart attack, was confirmed by her sister, Anne Lester.
Mrs. Minarik wrote more than 40 children’s books during her five-decade career, none of them more widely read than her debut volume “Little Bear.” That book, released in 1957 with illustrations by Maurice Sendak , became the first in a line of her celebrated ursine tales.
It was also the first book in the "I Can Read!" series launched by Ursula Nordstrom, the influential Harper & Row children’s editor who cultivated Sendak as well as writers including E.B. White, author of “Charlotte’s Web” (1952), and Shel Silverstein, who penned the zany poems of “Where the Sidewalk Ends” (1974).
“Little Bear” book sales today exceed 12 million copies, according to the publishing house HarperCollins. Mrs. Minarik’s youngest fans have followed the adventures of Little Bear in animated Nickelodeon TV programs and home videos as well as on the printed page.
Mrs. Minarik began her professional writing career after teaching first grade for several years on Long Island. Precious few books, she discovered, were both accessible and engaging for readers who barely managed to sound their way through syllables. "Dick and Jane" books helped children learn phonics, but the dry story lines did little to instill a love of literature.
"I considered one day, while setting out the spring garden, that plants and children are alike in this respect," Mrs. Minarik once wrote, according to a blog by Atlanta-based bookseller Charles Bayless. “They flower beautifully if placed in the right setting, and subjected to no gaps of neglect, either by us, or by nature.”
Mrs. Minarik first wrote and illustrated stories for her daughter and later mimeographed them for her students, hoping that the books would sustain the children’s interest in reading during the summer vacation before second grade.
Her achievement, critics have noted over the years, was the creation of beginner books with heart.
In “Little Bear’s Visit” (1961), also illustrated by Sendak, Little Bear asks his grandfather to tell him a goblin story.
“Yes,” Grandfather tells the cub, “if you will hold my paw.”
“I will not be scared,” Little Bear replies.
“No,” Grandfather says. “But I may be scared.”
Mrs. Minarik’s books over the years included “The Little Giant Girl and the Elf Boy” (1963), with illustrations by Garth Williams; “The Winds That Come From Far Away” (1964), a collection of poems with illustrations by Joan Phyllis Berg; and “Percy and the Five Houses”(1989), with illustrations by James Stevenson.
Her collaboration with Sendak included “No Fighting, No Biting!” (1958), “Father Bear Comes Home” (1959), “Little Bear’s Friend” (1960) and “A Kiss for Little Bear” (1968). Sendak died in May at 83.
Mrs. Minarik told the Star News of Wilmington, N.C. that “Sendak’s take on our collaboration was: ‘Minarik conceived and Sendak delivered.’ ”
Mrs. Minarik’s final book, “Little Bear and the Marco Polo,” published in 2010 with illustrations by Dorothy Doubleday, explored the cub’s relationship with his once sea-faring grandfather.
Else Holmelund was born Sept. 13, 1920, in Fredericia, Denmark. “Little Bear is me in Denmark,” she told the Star News. “I was cuddled and loved.”
She came to the United States with her family when she was 4 and grew up in New York City, where she learned English by listening to her mother translate children’s conversations on the playground. Mrs. Minarik later became a naturalized U.S. citizen.
She was a 1942 psychology graduate of Queens College in New York and later received a master’s degree in education from the State University of New York at New Paltz.
During World War II, she worked as a reporter at the Daily Sentinel of Rome, N.Y., before beginning her teaching career.
Mrs. Minarik spent much of her adult life in Nottingham, N.H., where she worked on her books writing in longhand because she never learned to type. She told the Star News that she first submitted “Little Bear” to the Random House publishing house, where an editor asked her to recast the bears as humans. She declined and took the manuscript to Nordstrom.
Two years later, a New York Times book reviewer wrote that the first “Little Bear” volume had a “seemingly unforced feeling for the imaginative life of childhood” and that it promised “to be a classic not only for readers who are just finding their way among the mysteries of type but also for their younger brothers and sisters.”
Mrs. Minarik’s first husband, Walter Minarik, died in 1963. Her second husband, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Homer W. Bigart, died in 1991 after 20 years of marriage. Brooke Minarik, a daughter from her first marriage and her only child, died in 2000. Survivors include a sister and a granddaughter.
Else Holmelund Minarik, 91, was author of the ‘Little Bear’ pictures books
Else Holmelund Minarik, a children’s writer whose simple yet elegant prose in the “Little Bear” picture-book series has helped generations of youngsters learn to read, died July 12 at her home in Sunset Beach, N.C. She was 91.
Her death, from congestive heart failure and complications from a heart attack, was confirmed by her sister, Anne Lester.
Mrs. Minarik wrote more than 40 children’s books during her five-decade career, none of them more widely read than her debut volume “Little Bear.” That book, released in 1957 with illustrations by Maurice Sendak , became the first in a line of her celebrated ursine tales.
It was also the first book in the "I Can Read!" series launched by Ursula Nordstrom, the influential Harper & Row children’s editor who cultivated Sendak as well as writers including E.B. White, author of “Charlotte’s Web” (1952), and Shel Silverstein, who penned the zany poems of “Where the Sidewalk Ends” (1974).
“Little Bear” book sales today exceed 12 million copies, according to the publishing house HarperCollins. Mrs. Minarik’s youngest fans have followed the adventures of Little Bear in animated Nickelodeon TV programs and home videos as well as on the printed page.
Mrs. Minarik began her professional writing career after teaching first grade for several years on Long Island. Precious few books, she discovered, were both accessible and engaging for readers who barely managed to sound their way through syllables. "Dick and Jane" books helped children learn phonics, but the dry story lines did little to instill a love of literature.
"I considered one day, while setting out the spring garden, that plants and children are alike in this respect," Mrs. Minarik once wrote, according to a blog by Atlanta-based bookseller Charles Bayless. “They flower beautifully if placed in the right setting, and subjected to no gaps of neglect, either by us, or by nature.”
Mrs. Minarik first wrote and illustrated stories for her daughter and later mimeographed them for her students, hoping that the books would sustain the children’s interest in reading during the summer vacation before second grade.
Her achievement, critics have noted over the years, was the creation of beginner books with heart.
In “Little Bear’s Visit” (1961), also illustrated by Sendak, Little Bear asks his grandfather to tell him a goblin story.
“Yes,” Grandfather tells the cub, “if you will hold my paw.”
“I will not be scared,” Little Bear replies.
“No,” Grandfather says. “But I may be scared.”
Mrs. Minarik’s books over the years included “The Little Giant Girl and the Elf Boy” (1963), with illustrations by Garth Williams; “The Winds That Come From Far Away” (1964), a collection of poems with illustrations by Joan Phyllis Berg; and “Percy and the Five Houses”(1989), with illustrations by James Stevenson.
Her collaboration with Sendak included “No Fighting, No Biting!” (1958), “Father Bear Comes Home” (1959), “Little Bear’s Friend” (1960) and “A Kiss for Little Bear” (1968). Sendak died in May at 83.
Mrs. Minarik told the Star News of Wilmington, N.C. that “Sendak’s take on our collaboration was: ‘Minarik conceived and Sendak delivered.’ ”
Mrs. Minarik’s final book, “Little Bear and the Marco Polo,” published in 2010 with illustrations by Dorothy Doubleday, explored the cub’s relationship with his once sea-faring grandfather.
Else Holmelund was born Sept. 13, 1920, in Fredericia, Denmark. “Little Bear is me in Denmark,” she told the Star News. “I was cuddled and loved.”
She came to the United States with her family when she was 4 and grew up in New York City, where she learned English by listening to her mother translate children’s conversations on the playground. Mrs. Minarik later became a naturalized U.S. citizen.
She was a 1942 psychology graduate of Queens College in New York and later received a master’s degree in education from the State University of New York at New Paltz.
During World War II, she worked as a reporter at the Daily Sentinel of Rome, N.Y., before beginning her teaching career.
Mrs. Minarik spent much of her adult life in Nottingham, N.H., where she worked on her books writing in longhand because she never learned to type. She told the Star News that she first submitted “Little Bear” to the Random House publishing house, where an editor asked her to recast the bears as humans. She declined and took the manuscript to Nordstrom.
Two years later, a New York Times book reviewer wrote that the first “Little Bear” volume had a “seemingly unforced feeling for the imaginative life of childhood” and that it promised “to be a classic not only for readers who are just finding their way among the mysteries of type but also for their younger brothers and sisters.”
Mrs. Minarik’s first husband, Walter Minarik, died in 1963. Her second husband, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Homer W. Bigart, died in 1991 after 20 years of marriage. Brooke Minarik, a daughter from her first marriage and her only child, died in 2000. Survivors include a sister and a granddaughter.
Nickelodeon's Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Toys To Hit Toys"R"Us Stores Across North America This Month
Below is a Toys"R"Us, Inc. Press Release announcing Nickelodeon News about Nickelodeon's upcoming "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" merchandise line via PRNewswire:
Nickelodeon's Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Toys Hit Toys"R"Us® Stores Nationwide This MonthAlso, from Kidscreen:
Kids Can Have "Turtle Time" With Action Figures, Playsets and Vehicles Available at The World's Greatest Toy Store®
WAYNE, N.J., July 18, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- Nickelodeon's Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles toys are making their debut at Toys"R"Us® stores nationwide, and Toysrus.com this month. The lineup of action figures, vehicles, role play items and playsets developed by Playmates Toys, will excite and entice fans new and old. The all-new, CG-animated series which explores the camaraderie of four teenage brothers training to become heroes in a half shell, premieres Saturday, Sept. 29, at 11:00 a.m. (ET/PT) with a one-hour special event.
"Nickelodeon has a hit on its hands with this relaunch of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, and we fully expect kids to be clamoring to play with their favorite heroes in a half shell," said Lisa Harnisch, Vice President, General Merchandise Manager, Toys"R"Us, U.S. "We worked closely with Nickelodeon and Playmates Toys to create Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles merchandise and be able to offer these items in our stores so fans can experience the magic of 'Turtle power' even before the show airs."
Ninja Turtles Leap From Sewer Lair Into Toys"R"Us Stores
The new Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles line is currently displayed within a dedicated space at each Toys"R"Us store. Designed to look like the Sewer Lair of the Ninja Turtles, the area features images of all four Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles above a grey brick wall that opens into an image of a sewer pipe. Lined with piping to evoke a realistic sewer feel, the area will be expanded once again as more of these products begin to arrive in Toys"R"Us stores in August.
"We're excited that Toys"R"Us is rushing Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles toys to their shelves, proving the strength of 'Turtle Power'," said Manuel Torres, Senior Vice President, Global Toys, Nickelodeon Consumer Products. Creating the atmosphere of the Ninja Turtle's sewer lair in their stores makes it look like the Turtles are leaping out of our TV series and into kids' hands."
"Working with Toys"R"Us to offer this updated version of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles in their stores is absolutely the best way to reintroduce kids to these iconic characters," Karl N. Aaronian, Sr. Vice President, Boys Marketing, Playmates Toys. "This innovative toy line gives everyone the opportunity to recreate that unique 'Ninja Turtles' experience and fans will love the incredible Toys"R"Us exclusive products based on the show."
Digital Amphibians – Ninja Turtles Take the Fight Online and Get Social
Those interested in purchasing the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles toys online can visit Toysrus.com/NinjaTurtles to browse the spectacular assortment. Beginning in August, the dedicated page will become a hub of ninja excitement with downloadable content for Turtle fans, including wallpapers and coloring sheets. Additionally, kids can preview videos of Nickelodeon's Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles TV show.
Fans of the Toys"R"Us Facebook will also get "Turtle Time" when they visit Facebook.com/Toysrus with trivia, product information and more about the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles posted on the company's wall.
The following Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles items from Playmates Toys are now available at Toys"R"Us stores across the country and online at Toysrus.com/NinjaTurtles. Images of these items can be found at https://toysrus.sharefile.com/d/s669c63df68344b4a.
Nickelodeon™ Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles action figures
Leonardo, Donatello, Raphael and Michelangelo are ready for ninja-action in new figures that flip out of their new animated series. The four brothers, each wearing his signature bandana, are ready for battle and come with their core ninja weapons and an added weapons rack for hours of ninja playing excitement. Individually sculpted, the Turtles range in height from 4.25 to 4.75-inches, reflecting their new look and heights.
Toys"R"Us Exclusive Nickelodeon™ Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 10.5-inch action figures
Fans can find 10.5-inch oversized versions of Leonardo, Donatello, Raphael and Michelangelo based on their new design from the upcoming Nickelodeon animated series with these special edition action figures. Packaged with their signature weapons and additional accessories, each Turtle is individually sculpted with multiple points of articulation. Plus, the back shell on each Turtle opens to offer weapon and accessory storage.
Nickelodeon™ Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Deluxe Power Sounds FX action figures
Each of these 5.5-inch action figures spring to life, delivering realistic battle phrases with awesome sound effects. Kids can grip the arms and legs of their favorite Turtle to hear signature phrases such as, "I'm invincible" and "Hiiiiiiii-yaa!"
Nickelodeon™ Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Ninja Gear
Kids can "Turtle up" and take on the role of their favorite character with this selection of role play items. Each set features one of the Turtle's signature bandana and weapon, as well as two ninja throwing stars, allowing kids to transform into Leonardo with his katana, Donatello with his bo staff, Raphael with his sais and Michelangelo with his nunchuks to battle the evil forces of the Shredder.
Nickelodeon™ Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Shellraiser
When the Turtles need to hit the road and take command and control with them, they all pile into the Shellraiser. Built to run either on the subway rails or on the busy streets of New York City, the Shellraiser delivers all the fire power needed for the Turtles to travel together to take down Shredder and the Foot Clan! With entrances on the top, in the front and on the side of the car, up to eight Basic Action Figures can fit inside. The Shellraiser really packs a punch with Ninja Battle Boost technology, including a spring loaded cannon on the top of the car and a side door that automatically opens with the touch of a button, sending kids' favorite hero in a half shell flying out the side with 360 degree Ninja flip-kicking action, to wage battle on anything standing in its way!
Nickelodeon™ Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Vehicles
This assortment of vehicles really helps the Turtles get moving. The Sewer Spinnin' Skateboard looks just like the one featured in the TV show and includes "Ninja Battle Boost" technology that allows it to perform over 10 different skateboard tricks. The Rippin' Rider comes complete with classic Turtle details and textures, including chopper front forks, quadruple rear exhaust and a T-shaped headlight. The Ninja Stealth Bike, with a Raphael action figure, features a textured Turtle shell that reveals its rider with the flip of a button. The Foot Soldiers can try to escape with the Dragon Chopper, which lets riders do a 360 degree flip over the handle bars to lands on their feet, ready for battle. The Dragon Chopper also comes with an exclusive Foot Soldier action figure.
Toys"R"Us Exclusive Nickelodeon™ Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Secret Sewer Lair Playset
Kids can bring the Turtles back to their base with this oversized, 42-inch high, playest that recreates the Sewer Lair home and the building above, available exclusively at Toys"R"Us stores nationwide and online at Toysrus.com/NinjaTurtles. Packed with 20 different ninja features, the Turtles can keep track of the city with a telescoping periscope, practice battle skills on a Shredder dummy, douse intruders with ooze (not included) and attach lines to objects to rappel into battle and more! Additionally, an elevator can transition the Turtles between floors while Donatello can visit his computer lab to master his latest invention. (Available in August)
Toys"R"Us stores nationwide and Toysrus.com/NinjaTurtles will continue to receive Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles items throughout the year.
Nickelodeon's Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles begins as the turtles emerge from their hidden lair in the sewers for the very first time, ready to confront the wondrous and hostile world of New York City and face enemies more dangerous and pizza more delicious than anything they could have imagined. Funnier and with more Ninjutsu than ever before, the show will explore the companionship of four teenage brothers learning to rely on themselves and one another as they unravel the mystery of their existence and grow to become the heroes in a half-shell that they are destined to be. The premiere episode was executive produced by Ciro Nieli, Joshua Sternin & Jeff Ventimilia and Peter Hastings.
The 26-episode, half-hour action-comedy series breathes new life into the wildly popular band of reptile brothers played by Jason Biggs (American Pie) as "Leonardo," Sean Astin (Lord of the Rings) as "Raphael," Greg Cipes (Teen Titans) as "Michelangelo" and Rob Paulsen (Planet Sheen) as "Donatello" (Paulsen also voiced the original "Raphael" from 1987-1996 in the very first TMNT series).
About Toys"R"Us, Inc.
Toys"R"Us, Inc. is the world's leading dedicated toy and juvenile products retailer, offering a differentiated shopping experience through its family of brands. Merchandise is sold in 874 Toys"R"Us and Babies"R"Us stores in the United States and Puerto Rico, and in more than 625 international stores and over 145 licensed stores in 35 countries and jurisdictions. In addition, it exclusively operates the legendary FAO Schwarz brand and sells extraordinary toys in the brand's flagship store on Fifth Avenue in New York City. With its strong portfolio of e-commerce sites including Toysrus.com, Babiesrus.com, eToys.com and FAO.com, it provides shoppers with a broad online selection of distinctive toy and baby products. Headquartered in Wayne, NJ, Toys"R"Us, Inc. employs approximately 70,000 associates annually worldwide. The company is committed to serving its communities as a caring and reputable neighbor through programs dedicated to keeping kids safe and helping them in times of need. Additional information about Toys"R"Us, Inc. can be found on Toysrusinc.com. Follow Toys"R"Us, Babies"R"Us and FAO Schwarz on Facebook at Facebook.com/Toysrus, Facebook.com/Babiesrus and Facebook.com/FAO and on Twitter at Twitter.com/Toysrus and Twitter.com/Babiesrus.
About Playmates Toys
With a history of over 40 years, Playmates Toys is today among the most well-respected and innovative marketing and distribution companies in the global toy industry with a proven history in the creation of imaginative products as well as the development and management of profitable, long-term brand franchises. Key brands include TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES, HEARTS FOR HEARTS GIRLS and WATERBABIES. From its offices in Hong Kong and California, Playmates designs, develops, markets and distributes its products in over 60 countries worldwide. For more information, visit http://www.playmatestoys.com or http://facebook.com/playmatestoys
About Nickelodeon
Nickelodeon, now in its 33rd 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 100 million households and has been the number-one-rated basic cable network for 17 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, VIA.B).
SOURCE Toys"R"Us, Inc.
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http://www.toysrus.com.
Toys 'R' Us debuts new Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles toysAlso, below is a second Toys"R"Us® Press Release from PRNewswire:
Leonardo, Donatello, Raphael and Michelangelo will hit US Toys ‘R’ Us shelves this month with the retail launch of new Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles action figures, vehicles, role-play items and playsets from licensee Playmates Toys.
The rollout comes in advance of the one-hour US premiere on September 29 (11:00 a.m. ET/PT) of the new CG-animated Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles series.
The new toy line, which is also available at Toysrus.com/NinjaTurtles, is featured in dedicated areas of each US Toys ‘R’ Us store location and modeled after the Turtles’ sewer lair. The areas will be expanded in August with the release of additional items.
Tags: Playmates Toys, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Toys 'R' Us
'Why Shop Anywhere Else For Toys? Why?' asks Toys"R"Us®, As It Raises The Curtain On 2012 Holiday SeasonAlso, from The Huffington Post:
During a Special Preview Event, Chairman and CEO Jerry Storch Announced Company's New Hot Toy Reservation Program to Ensure Customers Can Secure the Hottest Toys of the Holiday Season
Toys"R"Us Intends to Compete on Differentiation, Which Includes Depth and Breadth of Product Assortment and Exclusive Items Across All Categories
Free Layaway, Plus Aggressive Marketing Programs, Coupled with Company's Enhanced Omnichannel Capabilities Make Toys"R"Us the Go-To Destination for Toys
WAYNE, N.J., Sept. 12, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- Toys"R"Us, Inc. today raised the curtain on its plans for the 2012 Christmas season at a special preview event in New York City, laying out some of the key strategic initiatives it will employ to win with consumers during the important shopping months ahead. Asking 'Why shop anywhere else for toys? Why?' the company detailed its significant customer advantages heading into the holiday season, which include a brand-new Hot Toy Reservation program, along with the previously announced Free Layaway and new additions to its omnichannel capabilities.
Additionally, the company showcased its breadth of product assortment and highly differentiated merchandise mix, which features aisle upon aisle of items that can't be found anywhere else – from proprietary brands to entire lines of exclusives from branded manufacturers.
"At Toys"R"Us, we believe that product differentiation, our unmatched breadth of selection, unique services, great value offerings and our toy-trained team continue to set us apart as a specialty retailer, and will catch the attention of consumers this holiday season," Jerry Storch, Chairman and CEO, Toys"R"Us, Inc. told reporters. "We've been preparing all year long and we're ready to deliver a winning holiday season to toy shoppers as they seek to find that special gift for the children on their wish lists."
'Why Shop Anywhere Else for Toys? Why?'
At the event, Mr. Storch highlighted for retail industry reporters how the company will demonstrate to consumers why Toys"R"Us® is, more than ever, the go-to destination for holiday toy-buying this year. The company will offer customers incredible values each day throughout the season – both in-store and online – whether it be through deals and sales, free shipping offers online or the many special promotions planned in the months ahead. Beyond sales and competitive prices, the company has established a number of programs and offerings to help gift-givers save, including the company's 30 million-member-strong complimentary loyalty program, Rewards"R"Us®.
First-Ever Hot Toy Reservation Builds on Specialty Service Offerings
Today, Toys"R"Us announced its first-ever Hot Toy Reservation program, a complimentary service that will enable customers to reserve the hottest toys of the holiday season, putting an end to frantic searching in the days leading up to Christmas. The service will be available for the 50 items on the company's much-anticipated annual Holiday Hot Toy List – the official guide to Christmas toy-buying. Hot Toy Reservation will begin when the list is revealed – coming soon – and will continue through Halloween in all Toys"R"Us stores nationwide.* By utilizing the service, shoppers can rest assured that their "must have" toy will be under the tree on Christmas morning. The free service will be available in Toys"R"Us stores nationwide and all 50 hot toys – whether the items are in-stock at a local store or not – will be eligible for reservation.
To take advantage of Hot Toy Reservation, customers can visit the Customer Service desk in all Toys"R"Us stores nationwide to place their orders with a 20% down payment**, and shoppers can reserve items through October 31. Customers will receive an e-mail notification when their orders are available and have until December 16*** to pick up their orders. More information about Hot Toy Reservation will be available soon in-store and online at Toysrus.com/Toyreservation.
The company's significant customer advantages also include the recently announced Free Layaway through Halloween. Taking its layaway program to a whole new level this holiday season, the company is waiving the upfront service fee for all layaway orders created in its stores through October 31. Offering a free, no minimum purchase layaway program early in the season allows customers to take full advantage of the flexible payment terms provided by layaway and give themselves until December 16 to pick up their orders.
Track Record of Solid Financial Performance
During the preview event, Mr. Storch also highlighted for reporters the company's solid track record of financial performance since 2005, which includes an increase in net sales from $11.3 billion in 2005 to $13.9 billion in 2011, as well as three consecutive years of adjusted EBITDA in excess of $1 billion from 2009 to 2011.1 In addition, last December marked the sixth consecutive year of positive comparable store sales growth for the company in the U.S., speaking to the strength and vitality of the Toys"R"Us brand and the place it holds in the hearts of kids and families, especially during the holiday season.
Extensive Breadth of Assortment and Differentiated Product Offerings
A key pillar of the company's ongoing strategy is its highly differentiated assortment, which includes Toys"R"Us proprietary products, exclusive items and entire lines from branded manufacturers, the ability to bring new products to market first, and simply, more toys than any other retailer. Soaring on these strengths, Toys"R"Us has delivered six consecutive years of positive comparable store sales in the U.S. during the month of December, contributing to continued market share growth in the fourth quarter over the last four years.2 At today's preview event, the company showcased many of the thousands of toys that can't be found anywhere, except Toys"R"Us. Pointing to the company's extensive breadth and depth of assortment, Mr. Storch outlined the main components of its differentiated strategy this holiday season:
* Proprietary Products – From Imaginarium® to Journey Girls® and Fast Lane™ to Air Zone®, Toys"R"Us will offer customers great new toys from its 34 proprietary brands. It continues to focus on growing its exclusive brands business by expanding lines with new products and categories while driving quality and innovation. The company highlighted the recently introduced kid-friendly tabeo™, its first-ever wif-fi tablet loaded with the content kids want, as well as safety features desired by parents. tabeo is currently available for pre-sale at Toysrus.com and will be in stores nationwide on October 21.
* Exclusive Products from Branded Manufacturers – The company spends the year tracking the hottest items across the globe and works closely with manufacturers and inventors to offer special items from hot properties, like Lalaloopsy Sisters™ from MGA Entertainment® and Nickelodeon® Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Secret Sewer Lair Playset from Playmates, which will be offered exclusively at Toys"R"Us this holiday season.
* Similarly, the company worked to identify and create opportunities to carry exclusive lines from branded manufacturers. This season, the Technic line from LEGO® Systems, Inc., which includes 20 vehicles – will be only available at Toys"R"Us stores and online at Toysrus.com. Among others, it will be the exclusive home of Gelarti™ from Moose Toys, a new line of gel stickers with a twist, and Peppa Pig™ from Fisher-Price®, a collection of toys based on the popular TV series.
* More Toys from Branded Manufacturers – With more than 15 million square feet of dedicated toy-selling space in the United States alone, Toys"R"Us simply has more toys than any other retailer, offering an unmatchable breadth of assortment. While Toys"R"Us carries popular key items from LEGO, Playskool, Barbie and Fisher-Price sold by mass merchants, it also offers aisle upon aisle of additional products and line extensions from branded manufacturers.
* First to Market – Branded manufacturers – big and small – continue to choose Toys"R"Us as THE place for product launches, providing the company with early insights on consumer preferences. Over the last year, for example, the company has first introduced customers to hot items and lines such as Kurio®, True Hope® dolls and The Original Big Wheel™.
* 2013 Toys Available for Holiday 2012 – To the delight of children everywhere, Toys"R"Us will offer new toys for 2013 during the 2012 holiday season. The infusion of newness to its product offerings late in the season is sure to be welcome by parents and kids alike.
The company is supporting its differentiated product offerings with a fully integrated marketing program, inclusive of a Big Brand Sale catalog which features 47 dedicated pages showcasing the company's exclusive brands and products. In addition, consumers will find significant savings throughout the catalog, as well as 46 coupons providing even more value offerings. This is the beginning of an aggressive marketing cadence that will continue throughout the holiday season.
Strong e-commerce Growth Driven by Omnichannel Capabilities
The company's $1 billion e-commerce business continues to grow, increasing a significant 29% from 2010 to 2011 and either matching or outpacing the industry growth during key junctures in 2011, including Black Friday, Cyber Monday and November and December. Last year, Toysrus.com averaged more than 33 million unique visitors per month, compared to an average of 15 million in 2010. In addition, nearly 55 million unique visitors in November and December propelled the company's e-commerce business to claim an 18.6% toy share in the U.S. in 2011.3
The company's omnichannel strategy has contributed significantly to drive additional visits to its stores and provide the opportunity for add-on sales while customers shop in physical locations.
New this holiday season, the company will roll out "Ship to Store," which will allow customers to ship select online purchases to their local Toys"R"Us or Babies"R"Us store free of charge. Additionally, enhancements to existing programs, such as "Buy Online, Pick Up In Store," will be available, including merchandise pick up kiosks and dedicated omnichannel teams to streamline the in-store pick-up process.
*Hot Toy Reservation is not available at Express or Outlet stores
**Certain electronics items will require different payment terms
***Required pick up date will vary for select electronics items
About Toys"R"Us, Inc.
Toys"R"Us, Inc. is the world's leading dedicated toy and juvenile products retailer, offering a differentiated shopping experience through its family of brands. Merchandise is sold in 875 Toys"R"Us and Babies"R"Us stores in the United States and Puerto Rico, and in more than 635 international stores and over 145 licensed stores in 35 countries and jurisdictions. In addition, it exclusively operates the legendary FAO Schwarz brand and sells extraordinary toys in the brand's flagship store on Fifth Avenue in New York City. With its strong portfolio of e-commerce sites including Toysrus.com, Babiesrus.com, eToys.com and FAO.com, it provides shoppers with a broad online selection of distinctive toy and baby products. Headquartered in Wayne, NJ, Toys"R"Us, Inc. employs approximately 70,000 associates annually worldwide. The company is committed to serving its communities as a caring and reputable neighbor through programs dedicated to keeping kids safe and helping them in times of need. Additional information about Toys"R"Us, Inc. can be found on Toysrusinc.com. Follow Toys"R"Us, Babies"R"Us and FAO Schwarz on Facebook at Facebook.com/Toysrus, Facebook.com/Babiesrus and Facebook.com/FAO and on Twitter at Twitter.com/Toysrus and Twitter.com/Babiesrus.
1 Toys"R"Us Japan was not consolidated in 2005. Toys"R"Us Japan had sales of approximately $1.6 billion in 2005.
2 The NPD Group / Consumer Tracking Service
3 The NPD Group
SOURCE Toys"R"Us, Inc.
RELATED LINKS
http://www.toysrusinc.com.
Toys R Us Hot Toys List 2012
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Secret Sewer Lair
Nickelodeon Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Secret Sewer Lair Playset by Playmates, $119.99: 42-inch playset that recreates TMNT's lair.
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