Took me almost two weeks to make this, but finally made my first ever animatic. It's Libby watching the Powerpuff Girls. I took the audio from Juniper Lee and place Libby here since same voice actor. Hope you guys like it! #TheGhostandMollyMcGee#TGAMM#Disney
Sonic’s 35th Anniversary Has OFFICIALLY Kicked Off, and an interesting start for sure LOOOLL.
Little yap sesh about potential crossworlds DLC, anniversary plans & more!!!
https://t.co/8aTZIAioXf
Hard truth…
I can speak freely because I’m 65 years old and my pocketful of fucks is seriously depleted.
Working as a paralegal at various studios in LA for thirty years…I had the opportunity to observe studio executives closely.
They’re generally a slippery and clueless bunch who shouldn’t be allowed near anything remotely creative…but the new regime at Paramount is straight up evil.
I assure you.
These soulless bastards have nothing but contempt for a show about grace and redemption and the struggle against fascism.
ATLA is a mystery to them.
They. Do. Not. Value. The. Franchise.
Greg Baldwin (voz de Iroh) hizo una escalofriante revelación:
💬 "El nuevo régimen de Paramount es malvado. Esos bastardos sin alma tienen desprecio por Avatar, un show de redención y antifascista. Jamás me volverán a contratar, así que ¿por qué no soltar esto?"
I think Paramount will try keeping the whole Nickelodeon/Cartoon Network catalog of IPs but sell just one of their network operations in Europe, with a new owner having a license to broadcast either the Nick or CN programs.
I see Nick being kept but CN (minus IP ownership) sold.
We need to have conversations on how much gamers expect massive games just because it’s an anniversary
Like sure it’s cute to have things line up, but if shit’s not ready let it cook. Sonic fans ESPECIALLY should know what rushing a game for an anniversary results in
paramount executives trying to use the CN brand after selling nickelodeon but realizing all their big 2010s IPs got shopped to different streamers so they're forced to negotiate with their rivals
Paramount Skydance is reportedly willing to sell some children’s TV assets to secure EU approval for its proposed $110 billion acquisition of Warner Bros. Discovery.
EU regulators are said to be concerned about the combined market share of Nickelodeon and Cartoon Network.
1 year anniversary of Mario Kart World & we got announcement of YEAR 2 OF CROSSWORLDS DLC,
Wallahi bro you cannot make this up😭, plz Nintendo Direct come thru
Paramount Skydance Corp. is reportedly prepared to sell some of its children's television assets to secure European Union regulatory approval for its $110 billion takeover of Warner Bros. Discovery Inc.
Here are the key takeaways from the report:
Market Overlap: The European Commission is scrutinising the merger due to the significant overlap between Paramount's Nickelodeon and Warner Bros. Discovery's Cartoon Network. A combined market share exceeding 40% in any European country could trigger antitrust interventions.
Willingness to Divest: While Paramount hopes to retain its entire portfolio, the company is open to divesting kids' channels if necessary to appease EU regulators ahead of the initial 7 July clearance deadline.
Additional EU Concerns: The Commission is also reviewing how the merger might impact cinemas, specifically regarding commitments to exclusive theatrical release windows before films transition to streaming platforms.
Foreign Subsidy Scrutiny: The deal is backed by $24 billion from Middle Eastern sovereign wealth funds. This funding must clear the EU's recently adopted Foreign Subsidies Regulation. Because these investors will only receive non-voting Class B shares, their lack of governance influence may ultimately work in Paramount's favour.
Global Regulatory Hurdles: While US antitrust regulators appear ready to approve the transaction, the UK's Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) is preparing its own initial investigation, and several US states are reportedly considering legal action to block it.
Paramount executives are currently targeting a closing date in the third quarter of 2026.
Article by @business (Bloomberg) via @YahooFinance, link on the following post.
Paramount Skydance Corp. is reportedly prepared to sell some of its children's television assets to secure European Union regulatory approval for its $110 billion takeover of Warner Bros. Discovery Inc.
Here are the key takeaways from the report:
Market Overlap: The European Commission is scrutinising the merger due to the significant overlap between Paramount's Nickelodeon and Warner Bros. Discovery's Cartoon Network. A combined market share exceeding 40% in any European country could trigger antitrust interventions.
Willingness to Divest: While Paramount hopes to retain its entire portfolio, the company is open to divesting kids' channels if necessary to appease EU regulators ahead of the initial 7 July clearance deadline.
Additional EU Concerns: The Commission is also reviewing how the merger might impact cinemas, specifically regarding commitments to exclusive theatrical release windows before films transition to streaming platforms.
Foreign Subsidy Scrutiny: The deal is backed by $24 billion from Middle Eastern sovereign wealth funds. This funding must clear the EU's recently adopted Foreign Subsidies Regulation. Because these investors will only receive non-voting Class B shares, their lack of governance influence may ultimately work in Paramount's favour.
Global Regulatory Hurdles: While US antitrust regulators appear ready to approve the transaction, the UK's Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) is preparing its own initial investigation, and several US states are reportedly considering legal action to block it.
Paramount executives are currently targeting a closing date in the third quarter of 2026.
Article by @business (Bloomberg) via @YahooFinance, link on the following post.