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  2. 1 day ago · What Happened to 4Kids Entertainment? The death of 4Kids was a slow one that began when its licensing agreement for Pokemon expired. There was a desire by The Pokemon Company to begin handling the ...

  3. Mar 25, 2021 · According to internet archives, 4Kids TV was created out of a four-year agreement reached in 2002 between 4Kids Entertainment and Fox, to lease a five-hour Saturday morning time slot previously occupied by Fox's own Fox Kids block. The target audience was children age 7-11.

    • Anna Garrison
  4. On March 29, 2011, TV Tokyo and Nihon Ad Systems (NAS) sued 4Kids Entertainment, alleging that the company entered into illegal agreements with other companies, including Funimation Entertainment and Majesco Entertainment, regarding the Yu-Gi-Oh! anime franchise.

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › 4Kids_TV4Kids TV - Wikipedia

    4Kids TV (often stylized as 4K!DSTV and formerly known as FoxBox from September 14, 2002 to January 15, 2005) was an American television programming block and Internet-based video on demand children's network operated by 4Kids Entertainment.

    • 10 4Kids Has Gone by Many Names
    • 9 4Kids Started Out Pitching Toys & Cartoons
    • 8 4Kids Held The Rights to Some Famous Characters & People
    • 7 The President of Activision Blizzard Once Had A Controlling Stake in LCI
    • 6 4Kids Was Signed to Market Video Games
    • 5 Pokémon Was 4Kids' First Dub License
    • 4 4Kids Tried Its Hand at Video Games
    • 3 4Kids Licensed Chaotic in The Us
    • 2 4Kids' Expired Licences Continued to Air on Another Network
    • 1 4Kids Went Bankrupt Twice

    Although it was most well known as 4Kids, the company would go through many name changes over its lifespan. Starting as an independent licensing company called Leisure Concepts in 1970, it wasn't until 1995 that they were officially known as 4Kids Entertainment. When the company was shut down for good, it was known as 4Licensing Corporation and 4Ki...

    4Kids wasn't involved in localization until many years after it was formed. In the beginning, they would pitch show ideas and toy tie-ins to various other companies, being responsible for the creation of many well known Western cartoons from the '70s and '80s. Their list of pitches included the likes of Thundercats, SilverHawks, and G.I. Joe, which...

    During the '80s, 4Kids drew lots of attention from media giants when they began to license products, concepts, famous characters, and even people for toy manufacturing. Their more high profile licenses included Farrah Fawcett of ABC's Charlie's Angels, James Bond, CBS' live-action The Incredible Hulk, as well as many of Nintendo's characters and pr...

    At one point in his life, Robert Kotick tried to buy a controlling stake in Commodore International, failed, and subsequently set his sights on Leisure Concepts. He joined the company in June 1990, where he became the CEO and Chairman for around six months before leaving in December 1990. He traded out his stake and bought 25% shares in Activision,...

    In 1986, Leisure Concepts signed a deal to market Star Wars and it's merchandise during the rise of the video game industry. The next year, they also managed to sign a similar agreement with Nintendo of America to market their video games for the wildly popular Nintendo Entertainment System in the US. Increasing their business with Nintendo would e...

    For many, the Pokémonanime is the first anime that comes to mind when 4Kids is mentioned, and with good reason. Aside from being arguably the biggest and most successful show 4Kids was responsible for, it was also the first anime license they ever obtained. Related: 10 Pokémon That Are Stronger Than Superheroes 4Kids went on to dub the first eight ...

    In a joint venture between 4Kids and Microsoft, a deal was struck to market and license video games exclusively for the Xbox 360, to be aimed at a younger audience. At that time, most of the games on Microsoft's console were geared towards an older age group. One of these new titles was Viva Piñata, developed by Rare who, at one point, had an exclu...

    A few years after the Yu-Gi-Oh'sanime success, another lesser-known card game tried its chances at getting its share of the spotlight. Chaotic, a now-defunct Danish trading card game, was licensed to 4Kids for circulation in the US. Eventually, the card game would be joined by an animated show with a very similar premise and an online game that has...

    During the height of 4Kids' power, they created an online network to air their shows. This division was appropriately named 4KidsTV, which later moved to the CW as CW4Kids. During this time, 4Kids lost the majority of its licenses through contracts ending and companies refusing to renew them. However, CW4Kids still continued to air these shows. Eve...

    In 2010, 4Kids' common stock was delisted from the New York Stock Exchange and Alfred Kahn, the CEO at the time, stepped down. He was replaced with an interim chairman while a permanent role was being found, but that was the beginning of a downward spiral the company wouldn't be able to escape. Over the following years, assets were sold off in an a...

  6. What exactly happened at the company that originally localized Pokémon, Digimon, One Piece, Sonic X, and many more? For the first time ever, our podcast uncovers the true history of 4Kids, as ...

  7. What exactly happened at the company that originally localized Pokémon, Yu-Gi-Oh, One Piece, Sonic X, and many more? For the first time ever, our podcast uncovers the true history of 4Kids, as told by the people who were actually there!

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