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As a production company, Turner Entertainment also created original in-house programming, such as documentaries about the films it owns, new animated material based on Tom & Jerry and other related cartoon properties, and once produced made-for-television films, miniseries, and theatrical films such as Gettysburg, Tom and Jerry: The Movie, Fallen, The Pagemaster and Cats Don't Dance under the ...
Most shorts were from The Golden Age of American animation. Each of the three shorts focused on a common theme. Most shorts came from Warner Bros., MGM, Paramount (the latter studio provided the Popeye cartoons; these were in Turner's hands by this point), but during the show's first season Cartoon Alley featured shorts from the Gaumont Film ...
On October 22, 2016, AT&T disclosed an offer to acquire Time Warner for $108.7 billion, including assumed debt held by the latter company. The merger would bring Time Warner's various media properties, including The Cartoon Network, Inc., under the same corporate umbrella as AT&T's telecommunications holdings, including satellite provider DirecTV and IPTV/broadband provider AT&T U-verse.
Cartoon Planet premiered on TBS in July as a response to Ted Turner enjoying watching the Space Ghost episode on TBS. TBS' children's programs became part of the Disaster Area block in March 1996. The block's branding featured an offscreen reporter inside a talking tornado of junk. [4] Turner was bought by Time Warner in 1996.
Turner Entertainment (American Film Technologies) [657] T. Title Year produced Year colorized Distributor and color conversion company A Tale of Two Cities: 1935:
Turner Broadcasting System (via Turner Entertainment Co.) took over the library in 1986 during Ted Turner's brief ownership of MGM/UA. When Turner sold back the MGM/UA production unit, he kept the MGM library, including the Warner Bros. Pictures films and Popeye cartoons from the a.a.p. library, for his own company.
Turner Broadcasting System traces its roots to a billboard company in Savannah, Georgia, purchased by Robert Edward Turner II in the late 1940s. [10] Turner grew the business, which later became known as Turner Advertising Company. [10] Robert Edward Turner's son, Ted Turner, inherited the company when the elder Turner died in 1963. [10]
Turner Feature Animation and Warner Bros. Feature Animation [st 2] [st 3] Quest for Camelot: May 15, 1998: Warner Bros. Feature Animation [st 2] The King and I: March 19, 1999: Rich Animation Studios and Rankin/Bass Productions [st 2] South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut: June 30, 1999 [st 4] Comedy Central Films, Scott Rudin Productions and ...