Hubworld

Hubworld is a defunct American children's news magazine television series on The Hub. It was produced by Natural 9 Entertainment with an association with Allspark Pictures.[1] The program premiered on November 5, 2010[2] and was hosted by actor/magician Justin "Kredible" Willman. The program's premiere date was delayed from The Hub's launch date on October 10, 2010, to November due to unknown factors.

Hubworld
Presented byJustin "Kredible" Willman
Country of originUnited States
No. of seasons2
No. of episodes52
Production
Executive producer(s)Kathy Samuels[1]
Producer(s)Hasbro Studios[1]
Running time22 minutes (Approx.)
Production company(s)Hasbro Studios[1]
Natural 9 Entertainment[1]
Release
Original networkDiscovery Family
Picture format1080i (HD)
Original releaseNovember 5, 2010 (2010-11-05)[2] 
October 29, 2011 (2011-10-29)

Program summary

Hubworld provided looks at current programs then on The Hub, including shows such as Family Game Night, the network's animated franchises such as G.I. Joe: Renegades, Transformers: Prime, Dan Vs. and My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic. Segments included Willman's comedic news and current events monologue called "Back it Up", and "Hub Happenings", which involved Willman riffing on short clips of Hub programming.

Other segments included interviews of current pop music stars, celebrities and sports stars, press line interviews at film premieres or junket interviews of film stars, and features involving children doing good in their communities and throughout the world. An ending segment features musician Danny Tieger singing a song about the news events of the week in a segment called "Just to Let You Know News Jam".

gollark: If there were no interactions between host-killing-ness and everything else, it would probably be optimal for a virus to do no damage to its hosts.
gollark: It doesn't matter if the host dies if they've already done their spreading.
gollark: I agree, block all ads ever.
gollark: "100% harmless" and such do not actually mean "100% harmless" but are a rhetorical thing which just borrows the language of probability for annoying reasons.
gollark: I don't know.

References


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