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Country | South Korea |
---|---|
Headquarters | Seoul, South Korea |
Programming | |
Language(s) | Korean |
Ownership | |
Owner | SBS Viacom (joint venture of SBS and Viacom) |
Nickelodeon (a.k.a. Nick) is a South Korean cable TV channel aimed at children and teens. It is the South Korean version of American Nickelodeon. The channel is currently owned by SBS Viacom LLC, a joint venture of SBS Medianet and Viacom International Media Networks.
History
Nickelodeon's original programmes in South Korea before the dedicated channel
In South Korea, some original programmes from Nickelodeon, like Rugrats, Rocket Power, The Wild Thornberrys, SpongeBob SquarePants and Dora the Explorer, were shown on EBS (a public broadcaster), except The Adventures of Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius that made début on MBC. A localisation of Nick Jr.'s Blue's Clues was shown on KBS2 (of public broadcaster KBS). The Korean version of those programmes were produced by the broadcasters themselves.
JEI TV (a cable and satellite TV channel owned by JEI Corporation), after making agreement with Viacom, ran a Nickelodeon programming block for years. It started with TV programmes that were not shown on the generalist terrestrial channels. But later, they aired their own Korean dub of what were shown on EBS. Those another dubs were produced by Arirang TV. This caused a nationwide criticisms in South Korea, as it wasted dollars and made viewers confused with different dubs and localisations.
With the launch of SkyLife satellite TV platform, the Southeast Asian version of Nickelodeon made available exclusively to the platform's subscribers. However, the channel was pulled out of SkyLife's line up around the time of South Korean version's launch.
The dedicated channel launches
After an agreement between On-Media (Then owned by Orion Group) and MTV Networks Asia, a dedicated South Korean version of Nickelodeon, initially branded as Nick, with experimental broadcasts began in August 1, 2005, was officially launched exclusively on cable TV providers on late 2005, along with a Nickelodeon block on Tooniverse.
In around November 2008, the channel became a subsidiary of C&M Communication, along with MTV Korea, when On-Media sold its share of On Music Network (which later became MTV Networks Korea). But a Nickelodeon block on Tooniverse continued to go. The channel officially became Nickelodeon in 2010, using the new logo that unveiled months ago in the U.S..
In September 2011, SBS, a commercial broadcaster, became the official South Korean partner of Viacom. With this, Nickelodeon became a part of SBS.[1][2]
Programming
Current
- Victorious
- SpongeBob SquarePants
- iCarly
- The Fairly OddParents
- The Smurfs
- T.U.F.F. Puppy
- Sanjay and Craig
- Kung Fu Panda: Legends of Awesomeness
- Supah Ninjas
- Planet Sheen
- Cardfight!! Vanguard
- Winx Club
- The Mighty B!
- Tokyo Mew Mew
- Uchi No Sanshimai
- The Troop
- The Penguins of Madagascar
- Power Rangers Jungle Force
- Big Time Rush
- True Jackson, VP
- Mix Master
- Mermaid Melody Pichi Pichi Pitch
- Mermaid Melody Pichi Pichi Pitch Pure
- Back at the Barnyard
- Scan2Go
- Ojamajo Doremi
- Rugrats
- Drake & Josh
- Jimmy Neutron
- Avatar: The Last Airbender
- Danny Phantom
- Breadwinners
- Harvey Beaks
- Cosmic Quantum Ray
- Secret Jouju
Upcoming
Former
- H2O: Just Add Water
- Ned's Declassified School Survival Guide
- Lola & Virginia
- CatDog
- KaBlam!
- Rocko's Modern Life
- Kenan & Kel
- Aaahh!!! Real Monsters
- All That
- Gruff's Groove Box[3]
- SoNick[4]
- Are You Afraid of the Dark?
- Rocket Power
- Hey Arnold!
- El Tigre: The Adventures of Manny Rivera
- Catscratch
- The X's
- Mr. Meaty
- The Angry Beavers
- The Naked Brothers Band
- As Told by Ginger
- The Amanda Show
- ChalkZone
- Wayside School
- Yakkity Yak
- Oh Yeah! Cartoons
- The Wild Thornberrys
Nick Jr.
- Dora the Explorer
- Ni Hao, Kai-Lan
- The Wonder Pets
- Pororo the Little Penguin
- Go, Diego, Go!
- Miss Spider's Sunny Patch Friends
- The Backyardigans
- PAW Patrol
- Team Umizoomi
- Bubble Guppies
- Blue's Clues
References
- ^ "::SBS::MTV 코리아·니켈로디언, SBS 계열로 재출범" (in Korean). News.sbs.co.kr. 2011-08-30. Retrieved 2011-10-01.
- ^ Gary Rusak. "Viacom and SBS create Nickelodeon Korea". Kidscreen. Retrieved 2011-10-01.
- ^ Osborne, Magz (October 22, 2001). "Nick Asia follows sibling MTV to local production". Variety. Retrieved January 26, 2013.
- ^ "Begins the second season on Nickelodeon Sonick". Mundo Plus. September 26, 2002. Retrieved January 26, 2013.
External links
- Nick.co.kr - Official Website