WildBrain

WildBrain Ltd.
FormerlyDHX Media (2006–19)
Company typePublic
TSXWILD
IndustryTelevision production
Broadcasting
PredecessorsWildbrain Entertainment
Decode Entertainment
Halifax Film Company
Cookie Jar Group
DIC Entertainment
Ragdoll Worldwide
Founded2006 (2006)
FoundersMichael Donovan
Steven DeNure
Headquarters,
Canada
Number of locations
10
Key people
Josh Scherba (president and CEO)
RevenueIncrease CA$439.8 million (FY 2019)
Number of employees
est. 1000 (2015)
Divisions
Subsidiaries
Websitewildbrain.com
Footnotes / references
[1][2][3][4][5]
The evolution of WildBrain
1968FilmFair London is founded
1971DIC Audiovisuel is founded
1972Strawberry Shortcake brand is first developed
1974CPLG is founded
1976CINAR and Colossal Pictures are founded
1982DIC Enterprises is founded
1984Ragdoll Productions is founded
1987DIC Audiovisuel closes
1988Studio B Productions is founded
1992Epitome Pictures is founded
1993DIC Enterprises becomes DIC Entertainment
1994Wild Brain is founded‚ and Red Rover Studios is founded, DIC Entertainment brands as The Incredible World of DIC
1995Platinum Disc Corporation is founded
1996CINAR buys FilmFair's library
1997Decode Entertainment is founded
1999Wild Brain acquires Colossal Pictures' employee base
2002Nerd Corps Entertainment is founded
2004Halifax Film Company is founded, CINAR rebrands as Cookie Jar Group
2005Platinum Disc Corporation merge as Echo Bridge Home Entertainment
2006Decode and Halifax Film merge as DHX Media, DIC acquires CPLG, and Ragdoll Worldwide is formed with BBC Worldwide
2007DHX Media buys Studio B Productions and Wild Brain becomes Wildbrain Entertainment
2008Cookie Jar Group absorbs DIC and House of Cool absorbs Red Rover Studios
2010DHX Media buys Wildbrain Entertainment‚ and Peanuts Worldwide is founded
2011Decode Entertainment and Red Rover Studios closes
2012DHX Media buys Cookie Jar Group
2013DHX Media acquires Ragdoll Worldwide’s back catalogue
2014DHX Media buys Epitome Pictures, Nerd Corps, and Echo Bridge Home Entertainment's family content library, as well as Family, the English version of Disney Junior, the French version of Disney Junior and Disney XD; Cookie Jar Group is absorbed
2016The WildBrain multi-channel network launches and Studio B and Nerd Corps merge as DHX Studios
2017Wildbrain Entertainment closes; DHX Media buys Peanuts Worldwide and Strawberry Shortcake
2018Halifax Film becomes Island of Misfits
2019DHX Media rebrands as WildBrain, Epitome Pictures closes, and the WildBrain MCN becomes WildBrain Spark
2020CPLG becomes WildBrain CPLG
2021Echo Bridge folds into SP Distribution
2023WildBrain acquires House of Cool
2024WildBrain Spark merged into its parent company as WildBrain London

WildBrain Ltd. is a Canadian media, animation studio, production, and brand licensing company, mostly associated as an entertainment company. The company is known for owning the largest independent library of children's television programming,[6] including the assets of acquisitions such as Cookie Jar Group, Epitome Pictures, and Wildbrain Entertainment among others, distribution rights to the Jay Ward Productions and Ragdoll Productions libraries[a], and a stake in the Peanuts franchise.

The company was founded in 2006 as DHX Media, via a merger between Decode Entertainment and the Halifax Film Company. The company subsequently acquired other studios and assets, acquired the Canadian specialty service Family Channel in 2014 to expand into broadcasting, and established the YouTube multi-channel network WildBrain (now WildBrain London) in 2016. Building upon the strength of the division, the entirety of the company was rebranded as WildBrain in 2019.

  1. ^ "Contact Us". WildBrain.
  2. ^ Amidi, Amid (2 December 2014). "DHX Acquires Nerd Corps To Create 700-Employee Canadian Mega-Studio". Cartoon Brew.
  3. ^ McClelland, Colin. "DHX Media to rebrand as WildBrain, appoints new CFO as it works to rebound from heavy losses". Financial Post. Retrieved 2 March 2020.
  4. ^ "Profile: DHX Media Ltd (DHXb.TO)". Reuters.com. Thomson Reuters. Archived from the original on April 2, 2015. Retrieved March 6, 2015.
  5. ^ Taylor, Roger. "DHX founder Michael Donovan resigns". The Chronicle Herald. Retrieved 2 March 2020.
  6. ^ Cite error: The named reference kidscreen-cjg was invoked but never defined (see the help page).


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