9 Story Media Group

Canadian media company From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

9 Story Media Group

9 Story Media Group (formerly known as 9 Story Entertainment) is a Canadian media production, animation studio, and distribution company founded in September 2002 by Vince Commisso and Steven Jarosz.

Quick Facts Formerly, Company type ...
9 Story Media Group
Formerly9 Story Entertainment (2002–2014)
Company typeSubsidiary
Industry
FoundedSeptember 2002; 22 years ago (2002-09)
Founders
  • Vince Commisso
  • Steven Jarosz
Headquarters23 Fraser Avenue, Toronto, Ontario, Canada[1]
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
Vince Commisso (president, CEO)
Cathal Gaffney (COO)
Angela C. Santomero (2019–2023) (CCO)[2]
Lisa Olfman (executive producer)
Neil Court (executive chairman)
Number of employees
1,100 (2019)
ParentScholastic Corporation (2024–present)
Divisions
  • 9 Story Brands
  • 9 Story Creative Affairs
  • 9 Story Distribution International
  • Brown Bag Films
Subsidiaries
Website9story.com
Close

History

Summarize
Perspective

As 9 Story Entertainment

The company was founded in September 2002 as 9 Story Entertainment by Vince Commisso and Steven Jarosz so Vince could work on Peep and the Big Wide World.

On September 21, 2006, 9 Story launched an international distribution division headed by former Universal Studios executive, Natalie Osborne, known as 9 Story Enterprises.[4]

9 Story produced its first live-action series, Survive This, from 2008 to 2010.

On September 20, 2011, 9 Story Entertainment became the co-producer and distributor of the animated series Arthur. 9 Story would produce the series from seasons 16 to 19.[5][6]

On April 8, 2013, 9 Story announced that it would acquire the children's and family distribution library of CCI Entertainment;[7] the acquisition was completed on July 24.[8]

Thumb
Logo used from 2014 to 2018

As 9 Story Media Group

On October 10, 2014, 9 Story Entertainment rebranded as 9 Story Media Group, following Neil Court and Zelnick Media Capital becoming majority owners a few months prior.[9][10]

On August 18, 2015, 9 Story Media Group acquired the Dublin-based animation studio Brown Bag Films.[11][12]

On October 6, 2015, 9 Story announced an agreement with American toy manufacturer Mattel to relaunch/reboot Barney & Friends and Angelina Ballerina under license from HIT Entertainment for planned releases in 2017, but nothing was heard from them in terms of either production or release since then.[13][14]

On May 25, 2016, 9 Story acquired the global distribution rights to Garfield and Friends.[15][16]

On October 21, 2016, 9 Story's distribution arm, 9 Story Enterprises, was rebranded as 9 Story Distribution International and relocated operations from Toronto to Dublin.[17]

On October 15, 2017, 9 Story rebranded its Toronto 2D animation studio after Brown Bag Films, with the Irish studio becoming 9 Story's production arm for both 2D and 3D animation across Dublin, Manchester, and Toronto. At the same time, Brown Bag Films became one of 9 Story's main divisions, alongside 9 Story Distribution International.[18][19]

On January 12, 2018, 9 Story announced that they had acquired production company, Out of the Blue Enterprises, for an undisclosed amount and rebranded them to 9 Story USA. 9 Story would also acquire the rights to the Colorforms brand.[20][21]

On May 13, 2018, 9 Story unveiled an updated logo and announced the launch of 9 Story Brands, a consumer products division.[22]

On July 10, 2018, 9 Story acquired the children's and family distribution catalog and development slate of Breakthrough Entertainment.[23] On February 4, 2019, 9 Story announced that they had acquired Bali-based animation studio BASE for an undisclosed amount, and rebranded it after Brown Bag Films.[24][25]

On April 1, 2019, 9 Story signed a deal with Scholastic Corporation to distribute 230 half hours of programming, which would bring 9 Story's overall content library at the time to 4,000 half hours of programming.[26] In 2022, Vince Commisso was named alongside John Galway as a winner of the Academy of Canadian Cinema & Television's Board of Directors Tribute Award at the 10th Canadian Screen Awards.[27]

On February 5, 2024, 9 Story acquired fellow Canadian company Portfolio Entertainment, including its distribution catalogue, development slates, and production. Portfolio CEO Lisa Olfman became an executive producer at 9 Story, where she will report to Commisso.[3]

On March 12, 2024, Scholastic announced that they would acquire complete economic interest and minority voting rights in 9 Story for $186 million; the transaction closed on June 21 of that year.[28][29][30]

Original productions

More information Title, Co-produced by ...
Title Co-produced by Year(s) Notes
Peep and the Big Wide World 2004–2007, 2010–2011
If the World Were a Village 2005
Jacob Two-Two (season 5) 2005–2006 distributed by Nelvana
Skyland 2005–2007
Postcards from Buster (seasons 2-3) 2006–2012
Max & Ruby (seasons 3–5) distributed by Nelvana 2007–2013
Futz! 2007–2008
Best Ed 2008–2009
Survive This 2009–2010
Wibbly Pig 2009–2010
Harriet the Spy: Blog Wars 2010
Pound Puppies (season 1, episodes 1–7) 2010
Wild Kratts 2011–present
Almost Naked Animals 2011–2013
Daniel Tiger's Neighborhood 2012–present
Fugget About It 2012–2016
Arthur 2012–2016
Cache Craze 2013–2014
Creative Galaxy 2013–2019
Camp Lakebottom 2013–2017
Peg + Cat 2013–2018
Numb Chucks 2014–2016
Nerds and Monsters 2014–2016
The Stanley Dynamic 2015–2017
Nature Cat (seasons 1–3) 2015–2021
3 Amigonauts 2017
Furze World Wonders 2017
The Magic School Bus Rides Again 2017–2020
Top Wing 2017–2020
Let's Go Luna! 2018–2022
Xavier Riddle and the Secret Museum 2019–present
Blue's Clues & You! 2019–present
Clifford the Big Red Dog 2019–2021
Get Rolling with Otis 2021
Hello, Jack! The Kindness Show 2021–2022
Karma's World 2021–2022
Rosie's Rules 2022–present
Open Season: Call of Nature [31] 2023–2024
Dee & Friends in Oz 2024
Breaking Bear [32] TBA
Close

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.