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Koenigsberg gave it his own name (the German word König means king) when he launched King Features Syndicate on November 16, 1915. [ 3 ] Production escalated in 1916 with King Features buying and selling its own staff-created feature material.
King Features Timeline. 1896. Hearst hires Richard Outcault to draw The Yellow Kid, one of the first modern American comic strips. 1903. Grace G. Drayton, the first nationally-syndicated female cartoonist and creator of the Campbell’s Soup Kids, launches her comic, Toodles, with Hearst. 1910.
So, in 1915, Hearst hired Moses Koenigsberg to start a new syndication operation. The new syndicate was named for Koenigsberg himself: “King” is the English translation of the German “Koenig.” On Nov. 16, 1915, King Features Syndicate was incorporated.
Mar 21, 2024 · History: The origins of King Features Syndicate can be traced back to William Randolph Hearst’s newspapers, which began syndicating content in 1895 in response to requests from other newspapers. The first official syndicate, Newspaper Feature Service, Inc., was established in 1913.
- James Rivera
- William Randolph Hearst, Moses Koenigsberg
- 1914
- New York City, New York, U.S.
Background. After licensing films to other studios prompted King Features Syndicate to destroy the negatives within ten years, King Features Syndicate branched out on its own, setting up its own film and television subsidiary in 1960 with Al Brodax as head of the studio.
As of the late 2010s, and 2020s, the Fleischer Studios have started to take back their franchise and have started to publicize themselves as a brand. But it should be noted, that King Features did most of the work promoting Betty, and "selling" Betty throughout the years.
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In January 1929, the world-famous Popeye the sailor man character was introduced in King Features' Thimble Theater comic strip. King Features had a series of hits during the 1930s with the launch of Blondie (1930–present), Flash Gordon (1934–2003), Mandrake the Magician (1934–2013), and The Phantom (1936–present).