HBO Kids
Network | HBO Family |
---|---|
Launched | August 26, 2001 |
Country of origin | United States |
Owner | Home Box Office, Inc. (WarnerMedia) |
Formerly known as | Jam (2001-2016) |
Sister network | Magnet (2001-2005) |
Running time | 6am-8am 6am-10am (2020) 4pm-5pm (formerly) 6am-11am (2016-20) |
Original language(s) | English |
Official website | Official website |
HBO Kids (formerly Jam) is an American children's preschool/children's television morning block operated by Home Box Office, Inc. (HBO), a division of AT&T's WarnerMedia. The block runs on HBO Family, HBO's sister station that targets at children and families.[1]
The block runs from 6:00 am to roughly 8:00 to 9:00 am (ET) on weekdays; the block's shows are not shown in a standard half-hour timeslot. The block used to have an weekday 4pm timeslot, which was filled with The Electric Company. The block used to also air on weekends until October 2020.
History
In 2001, HBO Family launched two children's programming blocks: Jam in the morning, and Magnet on weekday afternoons. Programming for both blocks was developed in coordination with Sony Entertainment, Sandpaper Films, Scholastic, Devine Entertainment, S4C, HiT Entertainment, Golden Egg Entertainment, Poseidon Pictures, Cuppa Coffee Studios, Curious Pictures, Hyperion Pictures, and Planet Grande.[1] Starting in 2010 to 2011, with a new set of CGI bumpers for the block (which were also aired in circulation with 2D animated bumpers and station idents that were in rotation since the block's beginning), HBO began to slowly remove the block's acquired programming, exclusively focusing on HBO's original children's series. For several years, no new programs were produced or acquired for the block, focusing exclusively on reruns of HBO's own children's programs.
On August 13, 2015, HBO announced a deal with Sesame Workshop to move first-run Sesame Street episodes on HBO.[2] The episodes premiered on the network on January 16, 2016, alongside other Sesame Workshop-produced programming, including The Electric Company and Pinky Dinky Doo.[3] The following day (which was January 17), Jam rebranded as HBO Kids.[citation needed] on November 12, 2020, first-run Sesame Street episodes moved to HBO Max starting with its 51st season.
On July 25, 2018, it was announced that an animated series entitled Esme & Roy, also produced by Sesame Workshop, which premiered on August 18 of that year.[4] HBO removed all Sesame Workshop shows from its HBO Family channel by November of 2020, reverting the block back to HBO's original children's series. However, the shows from Sesame Workshop are still available on the HBO Max streaming service. Currently, the block's schedule shows four of HBO's original programs, followed by a children's TV special, before airing one more program, then starting one of the channel's circulated movies or speicals. [5]
Programming
Current programming
- 1 = Airs occasionally.
Original programming
Title | Original run | HBO Kids run | Source(s) |
---|---|---|---|
A Little Curious | February 1, 1999 – August 14, 2000 | August 26, 2001 – present | [note 1] |
Happily Ever After: Fairy Tales for Every Child | March 12, 1995 – July 18, 2000 | August 26, 2001 – 2004;[6] January 2005[7] – present | [note 2][note 3] |
Crashbox | February 1, 1999 – April 1, 2000 | January 2005[7] – present | [note 4][note 5] |
Kindergarten | August 26, 2001 – September 7, 2001 | August 26, 2001 – present | |
HBO Storybook Musicals1 | November 18, 1987 – December 8, 1993 | August 26, 2001 – present | |
El Perro y El Gato1[note 6] | 2008 – August 13, 2012 | 2008 – present | [note 7] |
Classical Baby1 | May 14, 2005 – present | May 14, 2005 – present |
Former programming
Former original programming
- Stuart Little (March 2003 – 2007)
- I Spy (December 2002 – July 2011)
- Harold and the Purple Crayon (December 1, 2001 – 2011)
Former acquired programming
- Sesame Street[8] (January 17, 2016 - November 1, 2020, now on PBS Kids and HBO Max)
- Fraggle Rock (December 2016 – 2018) (Now on Apple TV+)
- Henry's Cat
- Seabert
- The Storyteller
- Babar (2001–2004)
- Encyclopedia
- George and Martha (2001–2013)
- Anthony Ant
- The Little Lulu Show
- The Adventures of Paddington Bear
- The Mr. Men Show
- Pippi Longstocking
- Rainbow Fish
- Animated Tales of the World
- Postman Pat
- The Neverending Story
- The Country Mouse and the City Mouse Adventures
- The Real Story of...
- The Legend of White Fang
- Magic Cellar
Reruns of ended Sesame Workshop series
Title | Original network | Original run | HBO Kids run | Source(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|
The Electric Company | PBS Kids Go! | January 23, 2009 – April 4, 2011 | January 17, 2016 – November 2020 | [3] |
Pinky Dinky Doo | Noggin | April 10, 2006 – June 17, 2010 | January 17, 2016 – 2020 | [3] |
- Esme & Roy (August 18, 2018 – April 27, 2019; Reruns: April 27, 2019 – 2020) (Now on PBS Kids and HBO Max)
Short-form programming
- HBO Family: 411 (2001 – 2016)
- My Favorite Book (2001 – 2016)
- Jammin' Animals (2001 – 2016)
- Sesame Street Shorts (January 17, 2016 – November 1, 2020)
- The Way I See It
- And Now You Know
- Just Wondering (2009 – 2016)
- I Want To Be
- El Perro y El Gato (2004 – 2016)
- Matters of Fact
- Eat 5
- Lisa
- When I'm...
References
Notes
- ^ This show first aired before airing on Jam, first premiering in 1999.
- ^ The show first aired before airing on Jam, first airing in 1995.
- ^ Season 1 and 2 first aired only on the HBO channel, before being moved to HBO Family to air its third season on there.
- ^ The show originally aired on Magnet, before moving to Jam in January 2005.
- ^ This show first aired before airing on Jam, first premiering in 1999.
- ^ The show was first an interstitial series in 2004. Then, it became a half-hour series in 2008.
- ^ This is the TV series (not to be confused with the interstitial series), which is still airing.
Citations
- ^ a b "HBO Family Announces New Lineup for Fall 2001". WarnerMedia. 2001-08-01.
- ^ Steinberg, Brian (2015-08-13). "Why 'Sesame Street' Had to Turn a Corner". Variety. Retrieved 2019-06-22.
- ^ a b c "HBO Takes On Netflix With A New Kids Section Featuring "Sesame Street" And More". TechCrunch. Retrieved 2019-06-22.
- ^ Petski, Denise (2018-07-25). "'Esme & Roy': HBO Sets Premiere Date For New Animated Series From Sesame Workshop – TCA". Deadline. Retrieved 2019-06-24.
- ^ [HBO TV Schedule. (2021, January 27). Retrieved December 31, 2020, from https://www.hbo.com/schedule HBO TV Schedule. (2021, January 27). Retrieved December 31, 2020, from https://www.hbo.com/schedule].
{{cite web}}
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(help) - ^ "HBO Family". 2004-08-18. Archived from the original on 2004-08-18. Retrieved 2020-09-13.
- ^ a b "HBO Family". 2005-01-11. Archived from the original on 2005-01-11. Retrieved 2020-09-07.
- ^ The show will release new episodes on HBO Max in 2020, starting with its 51th season.