2003 TV Wrap-Up, What’s in Store for 2004

Joe Strike looks at daytime TV successes of 2003 in the U.S and what we can expect from 2004. He talks to industry vet Fred Seibert and network pundits at Kids’ WB!, FOX BOX, Disney/ABC, Cartoon Network, Nickelodeon, as well as Linda Simensky, in her new role at PBS.
Posted In | Magazines: AnimationWorld

That those two new shows both originate from corporate sibling Warner Bros. Animation demonstrates the programming synergy Time Warner can bring to its kid-directed efforts. Titans is a co-development, co-production deal with the media giant’s best known animation outlet, Cartoon Network. The series premiered as a high-profile original on the cable channel then enjoyed a second window on Kids’ WB!, a playoff pattern that was reversed for the new Scooby-Doo series. It’s an arrangement that’s worked well for both networks, with Hardman looking to co-develop at least one series a year with Cartoon Network from the WB Animation studio.

A second batch of KWB shows — Yu-Gi-Oh!, Jackie Chan and others — run on Cartoon Network via a sub-licensing arrangement. The advantages in cross-promotion and amortizing production costs are obvious, and while the shows air concurrently on both nets, all involved make sure it’s never in the same timeslot. In fact, according to Hardman, “Cartoon Network counter-programs when they’re up against us in the exact same time periods. They go after a different audience and that way we don’t cannibalize each other.”

Of course, having a daily afternoon kids block that helps deliver kids to Saturday morning, while not having to deal with the FCC’s weekly three-hour educational programming requirement (a responsibility assumed by the channel’s local affiliates) help as well. Kids’ WB! holds the number-one position over all its competition in attracting boys 6-11, tweens (9-14) and male tweens. In the smaller broadcast universe, KWB is also number one with kids 2-11, boys 2-11 and kids 6-11. The network dominates the Saturday morning top 10 show lists for boys 6-11, overall tweens, and claims the top 11 slots for male tweens.

It’s a lofty perch, one that Hardman intends to hold onto in ‘04 with a barrage of new programming. This month has already seen the relaunch of Osamu Tezuka’s Astro Boy, the beloved grandfather of all anime series. It’s an acquisition from Sony Pictures Entertainment Japan, and KWB plans to air 25 episodes in the show’s first season. If kids can absorb the show’s complex backstory (and if their parents and older animation fans tune in out of childhood nostalgia) Astro Boy could shape up as a major attention-getter.

The inner-city superhero series Static Shock also returned for its fourth season in January. “It’s a show we love here in Programming,” says Hardman, “and it’s grown every single year since it premiered in 2000.” The channel also has 26 episodes of the within-the-Internet adventure, MegaMan: NT Warrior, on hand. Hardman enthuses that “we’re going to have a lot of original programming in the first, second and third quarters this year.” A 13-episode summertime CGI series is also in the works, along with a 90-minute live-action special (“with some CGI elements”) that may serve as the basis of a future series.

For those who automatically associate the WB shield with the slapstick comedy of the studio’s classic Looney Tunes, Hardman gently suggests they seek out those shorts on Cartoon Network and its spin-off Boomerang. He goes on to point out that KWB shows like ¡Mucha Lucha! and Jackie Chan Adventures “all have tremendous comedy elements, but our core audience is boys 6-11 and high adventure is the type of programming that really appeals to them.”

So it’s highly unlikely that Bugs and friends will ever be seen on Kids WB! again? “I wouldn’t say that at all. We continue to work with Warner Bros. on some of the classic franchises to see what we might bring back to our audience. We always have something like that in development and we’re always talking to kids about what would they like to see come back and how would they like to see it updated for them. You never know, we may just have something on the schedule in the fall. You never know.”

When FOX TV bailed out of the children’s programming game in the fall of 2002, 4 Kids Entertainment took over the network’s 8:00 am to noon Saturday morning block and renamed it the FOX BOX. In essence, 4 Kids runs the FOX BOX as a turnkey operation, paying a flat fee to FOX for the airtime, then acquires and schedules shows, selling the ad time and keeps the revenues it brings in. As a result, the FOX BOX has far different goals from its Kids WB! competition.







Comments


You DO realize that you posted this comment in 2010, right?

Sergio Lopez (not verified) | Sat, 04/10/2010 - 22:09 | Permalink

keep it Tokyo Mew Mew!!! hollywood mew mew sounds soo stupid!!! and you better release it this summer/fall!!! not 2005!! i mean..how long does it TAKE to dub episodes??? GRR!!!!! so just..work on it faster!! by the way.. I HATE THE WINX CLUB!!! i like tokyo mew mew waaaaaaay better!!!!!

Copy Xbox 360 Games (not verified) | Tue, 02/02/2010 - 03:14 | Permalink
I LOVE Dave the Barbarian.
Kate M (not verified) | Fri, 01/20/2006 - 01:00 | Permalink
Oh my...what has this country come to? Is it really such a crime for kids to know that there are other countries out there? I thought education was GOOD. Isn't that right, 4Kids? Have you forgotten Sailor Says? I thought you WANTED us to learn things. Or do you just want us to learn AMERICAN things? You big fat hypocrites. Either way, my main concern is that it will be dubbed so horribly that 5-year-olds will tune in and come to school with cat ears...Likewise, their big sisters and brothers will learn about it, and broadcast it all over school as a kiddy show, thereby forcing me and my friends into a higher level of geekdom, when intentionally, the cartoon was meant for PRETEENS. Geez! Is it really so hard to grasp this concept? If Barney was an anime meant for little kids, would you broadcast it as a TEEN show? Didn't think so. (Nobody's THAT cruel...) Ergo, henceforth, and in conclusion...DIE 4BAKA!!! -throws random kitchen appliances at 4Baka-
Kiwi (not verified) | Sun, 10/10/2004 - 00:00 | Permalink
Oh Lord, I believe Mia and Reiko can handle a few unimportant changes to the show, considering the fact that the Anime is absuloteley NOTHING like the manga.
C- mathis (not verified) | Sun, 09/12/2004 - 00:00 | Permalink
Tokyo mew mew already has a wide demographic of fans since the release of the manga. By changing it, many people who would normally wake up at 8 in the morning for it, will choose to sleep in. Changing the names, titles or plots will no doubt turn people away, rather then capture their attention. This is true, based on other anime brought to the US. On Cartoon network’s Adult Swim, anime is one of their main sources of income yet they have never had to drastically change it. If Tokyo mew mew is changed I know that the true fans, the ones who would be willing to buy merchandise and watch every single day will all flee and all that will be left are children who either don’t care, or are to bored with it to watch anything else. Keep Tokyo Mew mew alive. It is beautiful and changing it will make it someone else’s work, rather then the fragile creation Mia Ikumi worked many sleepless nights to bring forth. Do the right thing. Thank you. Emi-Chan.
Emi-Chan (not verified) | Wed, 09/01/2004 - 00:00 | Permalink
This is INSANITY!!!!Me and my friends read the series and we loved it! And then when we found out it was coming to FoxBox we were so excited. But changing the name,so 4Kids Entertainment, but that's just wrong *shakes head disapprovingly*I saw the preview thing,then you didn't even give it a proper 1st name,just "Mew Mew"Total rip.And another thing,why does Ichigo's name have to be Zoe?It's so sad *sobs* I mean I knowit's aimed for an "American" auidience,but this is ridiculous!What's wrong with Japanese Names?
TMM Fan (not verified) | Sun, 08/15/2004 - 00:00 | Permalink
please i love the show as it is and it appeals to me and all of my girlfriends. we don't want you to change tokyo mew mew to hollywood mew mew. there is absolutely nothing wrong with the original.
Kish's kid (not verified) | Sun, 08/01/2004 - 00:00 | Permalink
AUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUGGGGGGGGGGHHHHHHH!!!!!! That was a scream of anguish! I am personally peeved about what is happening to Tokyo Mew Mew. I know they want kids to enjoy it but the manga gave girls a feeling that they could make a difference. A sense of power. I love that series not because it's cute or magical, I love it because it is something to keep in your heart, and little girls will like it much more if you keep that magic and power in there.. and I know that if 4kids makes Mint a brat, I am definitley going to stop watching it!
Mew-Mew Fan (not verified) | Fri, 07/30/2004 - 00:00 | Permalink
Tokyo Mew Mew sonds a lot better than Hollywood Mew Mew because throughout the manga series some of the Fights take place at the Tokyo tower which is not located in Hollywood, California. Please,please change the title back to Tokyo Mew Mew. Thank You
mew mew fan (not verified) | Mon, 07/26/2004 - 00:00 | Permalink

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