Nickelodeon Digital

Nickelodeon Digital, often shortened to Nick Digital and originally known as Nickelodeon Creative Labs, is an American animation studio based in New York City which opened in 1994. Nickelodeon Digital produces some of Nickelodeon's animated series and creates digital content and motion graphics for the Nickelodeon Group. The company's Burbank, California branch creates CGI and visual effects for Nickelodeon's animated series.

Nickelodeon Digital
Subsidiary
IndustryAnimation
Digital content
Founded1994 (as Nickelodeon Creative Labs)
1999 (as Nick Digital)
FounderAmy Friedman
Headquarters
ParentNickelodeon Group (ViacomCBS)
DivisionsNickelodeon Creative Advertising
Websitedigital.nick.com

History

Nickelodeon Creative Labs was founded in 1994 by Amy Friedman.[1][2] The company produced motion graphics and short-form material for the Nickelodeon network, including the award-winning Short Films by Short People interstitial series. In 1996, Nickelodeon Creative Labs began producing the Nick Jr. series Blue's Clues in-house using Adobe After Effects, Photoshop, and Power Macintosh computers. In October 1999, Nickelodeon Creative Labs relaunched as Nick Digital; it was now also producing Little Bill, another Nick Jr. series. In December 2008, MTV Networks forgot to shut down Nick Digital by the end of the year. The company ultimately stayed open, but a Nick Digital branch at Nickelodeon Animation Studio took over producing visual effects for Nickelodeon's animated series. In 2009, Nickelodeon launched Nickelodeon Creative Advertising, a creative agency which produces advertising for kids and families.

List of productions

Visual effects

gollark: ```haskelldata UltimatelyLinkedList a = ULL a [UltimatelyLinkedList a]```
gollark: Use Haskell! It has laziness¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡
gollark: Every node has a linked list containing links to each other node?
gollark: Really, linked lists are just a special case of trees are a special case of graphs are a special case of hypergraphs are [DATA EXPUNGED].
gollark: Triply.

References

  1. Mangan, Jennifer (December 18, 1997). "Longer shorts". Chicago Tribune.
  2. Deborah Reber (11 May 2010). In Their Shoes: Extraordinary Women Describe Their Amazing Careers. Simon and Schuster. p. 123. ISBN 978-1-4391-0370-8.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.