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In 2006, Cinar sold 10% of its stake in Teletoon to each of Astral and Corus, leading the two companies to each own 50% of Télétoon. On March 4, 2013, Corus Entertainment announced that it would acquire Astral Media's 50% ownership interest in Teletoon Canada (owner of Teletoon, Télétoon, Teletoon Retro, Télétoon Rétro and Cartoon Network).
Teletoon Retro was a Canadian specialty channel that was owned by Corus Entertainment that was based on the Teletoon programming block. The service was dedicated to broadcasting classic animated television programs such as The Raccoons as well as some live-action series.
Teletoon Unleashed! –Launched in 2000, Teletoon Unleashed! was an adult-oriented block of the channel; it co-existed with The Detour on Teletoon until the block merged with it in 2004. It was known for airing every show with an 18+ rating to attract an adult audience, regardless of whether the program actually contained adults-only material ...
I remember that there was actually a show of the same name. I'm 100% positive. It was a program that aired in the night and consisted of many short animated films by the National Film Board of Canada. During the days when Teletoon was still fairly new, the station used to have some sort of program that featured all these NFB short films.
Télétoon la nuit (branded as TÉLÉTOON la Nuit; formerly Le détour sur Télétoon and Télétoon Dechaîne!, then Télétoon Détour) is a Canadian French language late night programming block that targets older teen and adult audiences which airs from 8:00 p.m. to 3:00 a.m. ET every night on the Canadian television channel Télétoon.
Caillou has produced a total of original 92 half-hour episodes (original 345 five-minute segments) aired by Teletoon from 1997 to 2009 and Treehouse TV from 2009 to 2017 in Canada. Sometimes aired PBS Kids in the United States , it produced a total of 144 half-hour episodes (598 five-minute segments) from 2000 to 2020 in 20 years, as well as ...
Prior and still after to the channel's launch, YTV and Treehouse TV served as the main outlets for both Nickelodeon and Nick Jr. Channel programs under output agreements with Viacom. Both channels continue to premiere new original series from the U.S. networks as they are more widely distributed than the Canadian Nickelodeon channel, owing to ...
On 1 September 2001, the channel launched a new programming block titled Hyper, which carried the programmes about video gaming, and showed animated series from Japan. It was carried over well into the ZigZap era until 11 November 2011, when it was renamed Hyper+. [1] The block ended on 1 July 2014. [2]