New Accusations: Creator Of Nickelodeon’s ‘Loud House’ Allegedly Offered Animation Work In Exchange For Sexual Favors
Disturbing new details have come to light about the creator of Nickelodeon’s “The Loud House.”
Disturbing new details have come to light about the creator of Nickelodeon’s “The Loud House.”
A Nickelodeon spokesperson has confirmed to Cartoon Brew that Chris Savino has been fired from Nickelodeon.
In the wake of extensive allegations of sexual harassment, Nickelodeon has placed “The Loud House” creator on an immediate leave of absence.
Nickelodeon wants people to see the new ideas their directors have been developing.
For a filmmaker, working in vr is like chopping off someone’s legs and telling them to run, says “Son of Jaguar” director Jorge Gutierrez.
“The Loud House” and “Spongebob Squarepants” are headed to the bigscreen.
The future of Nick is more than just tv cartoons — it’s also real-time rendering, VR/AR/MR, and artificial intelligence.
Nickelodeon has announced a greenlight for an “Invader Zim” made-for-tv movie.
Check out the new digs that Nick artists are enjoying in Los Angeles.
The news was revealed today by the creator of “Harvey Beaks.”
Nickelodeon has a “terrible record” of handling ideas and shows, says the creator of “Harvey Beaks.”
Nearly 60 musicians were enlisted to create the recent “Steampunks” musical episode of Nick’s “Harvey Beaks.”
Nickelodeon Animation does not currently have a president.
A Los Angeles animation studio creating work that appeared on Disney and Nick-owned platforms didn’t pay it artists for months and suddenly shut down.
At this point in TV animation history, if Nickelodeon still hasn’t given you your own pilot, you’re probably doing something wrong.
Viscardi’s first project will be to oversee a “Hey Arnold!” made-for-TV movie.
The most useless career advice you’ll ever get, courtesy of Nick Animation.
Michael Dante DiMartino and Bryan Konietzko’s animated series convincingly broke Nickelodeon’s dudebro mold. Will they be the last?
The last time these shows aired, memes, emojis, and GIFs were barely dreams in the dotcom industry’s internetworked brain.
In October, Nickelodeon unveils a new programming block dedicated to ’90s standouts like “The Ren & Stimpy Show,” “Doug,” “Hey Arnold!” and “Rugrats.”