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  2. Warner Bros. Animation Inc. [2] is an American animation studio which is part of the Warner Bros. Television Studios, a division of Warner Bros., which is a subsidiary of Warner Bros. Discovery and serves as the animation division and label of Warner Bros.

  3. Warner Bros. Pictures Animation [a] (WBPA), formerly known as Warner Animation Group (WAG), is an American animation studio that serves as the animated feature film label of Warner Bros.' theatrical film production and distribution division, Warner Bros. Pictures.

  4. This is a list of animated feature films, shorts, specials, and television series produced by the American animation studio Warner Bros. Animation, which is part of the television division of Warner Bros. Entertainment, which is owned by Warner Bros. Discovery.

    • (October 11, 1960-1967) Color version. The Porky Pig Show version. The Road Runner Show version. Visuals: A generic variant of the 1955-1967 Warner Bros.
    • (September 3, 1967-1970) Visuals: Another generic variant of the TV logo of the era, this time for the 1967 Warner Bros.- Seven Arts TV logo. Variants
    • (September 1972-March 8, 1992) Visuals: Same as before, except the LT characters stand beside the 1972 WBTV logo (the Big "W" logo) or the Warner Bros.
    • (September 28, 1979-November 20, 1980, November 20, 1987-November 6, 2000) Visuals: There is the concentric circles, with "WARNER BROS. INC. ", "WARNER BROS.
  5. warnerbros.fandom.com › wiki › Warner_BrosWarner Bros. Animation

    • 1972 - 1989: Restarting The Studio
    • 1989 - 1997: Moving Into Television Animation
    • 1997 - 2003: The Rise and Fall of Warner Bros. Feature Animation
    • 1996–Present: Acquisitions and Warner Bros. Animation Today

    The original Warner Bros. Cartoon studio, as well as all of Warner Bros.'s short subject production divisions, closed in 1969 due to the rising costs and declining returns of short subject production. Outside animation companies were hired to produce new Looney Tunes-related animation for TV specials and commercials at irregular intervals. In 1976,...

    Beginning in 1989, Warner Bros. moved into regular television animation production. Warner’s television division was established by WB Animation President Jean MacCurdy, who brought in producer Richard Williams and much of his staff from Hanna-Barbera Productions' A Pup Named Scooby-Doo series. A studio for the television unit was set up at the She...

    Warner Bros., as well as several other Hollywood studios, moved into feature animation following the success of Disney's The Lion King in 1994. Max Howard, a Disney alumnus, was brought in to head the new division, which was set up in two studios: one in Sherman Oaks near the television studio, and the other in nearby Glendale. Turner Feature Anima...

    Warners' parent company Time Warner merged with Turner Broadcasting System in 1996, not only reacquiring the rights to the pre-August 1948 color Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies (plus all the B&W Merrie Melodies except Lady, Play Your Mandolin! and the post-Harman/Ising B&W entries, which WB had held on to since 1967 after merging with Seven Arts P...

  6. Feb 27, 2020 · Warner Bros. Animation began when producer Leon Schlesinger, who was distantly related to the Warner Brothers who founded their namesake studio, hired a pair of animators, Hugh Harman and Rudolf Ising, veterans of Walt Disney's Kansas City cartoon studio.

  7. Warner Bros. Pictures Animation (previously Warner Animation Group) is an American animation studio that serves as the feature film label of Warner Bros.' theatrical film production and distribution division, Warner Bros. Pictures.

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