Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
On August 4th, 2003, Nickelodeon aired Summer Slime Live which was a summer edition of Slime Time Live where it was hosted by Dave Aizer, Jonah Travick and Jessica Holmes of Slime Time Live and Brent Popolizio and Candace Bailey of U-Pick Live with Nickelodeon stars often appearing as co-hosts, and it aired until August 29th, 2003.
Romeo! is a sitcom that aired on Nickelodeon from 2003 to 2006, totaling 53 episodes. The filming was done in Vancouver , British Columbia , while the show takes place in Seattle , Washington . The show stars Romeo as a fictionalized version of himself, known as "Ro".
The show aired on two channels owned by MTV Networks: Noggin (as part of its nighttime teen block, The N) [2] and Nickelodeon. The show consists of two hour-long specials and 13 half-hour episodes. The first special premiered on Noggin on August 1, 2003, and an encore showing was played on Nickelodeon on August 24.
A number of television films and long-form special episodes of original television shows have been produced for broadcast on American children's cable network Nickelodeon since 1998 and have been broadcast under the banner "Nickelodeon Original Movie". [1]
In 1996, Albie Hecht, then-president of Film and TV Entertainment for Nickelodeon, met with Nickelodeon artists to brainstorm an idea for a new Nicktoons studio. Nickelodeon's new facility, named Nickelodeon Animation Studio, would eventually open on March 4, 1998; Hecht said, "For me, this building is the physical manifestation of a personal ...
Nick got a new look and then, last month, an old one, at a time when throwbacks are all the rage. Reboots or revivals of the TV hits of the era of Presidents Reagan, Clinton and George W. Bush are ...
On April 1, 1979, the channel expanded into a national network named Nickelodeon. The first program broadcast on Nickelodeon was Pinwheel, a preschool series created by Dr. Vivian Horner, who also conceived the idea for the channel itself. [1] At its launch, Nickelodeon was commercial-free and mainly featured educational shows.
Previously on Saturdays, Nickelodeon themselves ceded the 8 p.m. timeslot to the vintage sitcoms [2] of the channel's late night programming block, Nick at Nite. [3] Then-Nickelodeon president, Geraldine Laybourne, wanted to expose the myth that there is no audience for kids and teen programming on Saturday nights. Laybourne was a purveyor of ...