Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Rainbow Studios is an American video game developer based in Phoenix, Arizona, best known for developing offroad racing games, such as Motocross Madness and the MX vs. ATV series. It was established by Earl Jarred in 1986 under the name Rainbow Multimedia Group and rebranded as Rainbow Studios in 1992.
Rainbow has collaborated with Viacom/Paramount's other company, Nickelodeon, on multiple shows, including Winx Club and Club 57. [1] The studio is based in Loreto, Marche and was founded by Straffi in 1995. Rainbow began as an animation studio, providing creative services for larger companies until it secured enough funds for original productions.
Snowball Studios: My Little Pony: Pony Life: 2020–2021: Discovery Family Treehouse TV: Boulder Media: Transformers: War for Cybertron Trilogy: Netflix: Rooster Teeth Studios Polygon Pictures: Continued from Allspark Animation (season 1) Power Rangers Dino Fury: 2021–2022: Nickelodeon (season 1) Netflix (season 2) Power Rangers Productions ...
Rainbow Brite is getting a remix from Crayola Studios and Hallmark, which are teaming to develop a new TV series and feature film inspired by the 1980s children’s franchise. The theatrical movie ...
Production on a second season began shortly after the premiere of the first. The second season debuted in Italy in 2011. That same year, Viacom gained 30% ownership of the Rainbow studio, and Huntik ' s second season premiered on Viacom's Nickelodeon networks internationally. Season two premiered on Nicktoons on April 21, 2013 in the United ...
Rainbow Studios developed the first two games of the series, before abandoning it in favor of developing MX Unleashed and the MX vs. ATV series, while passing the development of the ATV Offroad Fury series to Climax Racing, which would produce two more sequels and port them to the PlayStation Portable under different titles.
Randy Rainbow is opening up about overcoming an eating disorder and how comedy ultimately "saved" his life. (Photo: Arturo Holmes/Getty Images) (Arturo Holmes via Getty Images)
On March 10, 2011, Rainbow Media's parent company, Cablevision, as approved by its board on December 16, 2010, announced that it would be spinning off all of Rainbow Media's assets into a new publicly traded company now known today as AMC Networks, which would replace and become the successor to Rainbow Media later in 2011, and, as said in 2005, making their core cable business private.