Jump to content

What's Your News?

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

What's Your News?
GenreChildren's news
Created byChris Dicker
Jocelyn Stevenson
Jon Burton
Presented byOriginal Pictures
TT Animation
Lenz Entertainment
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Canada
Original languageEnglish
No. of episodes52
Production
Executive producers
Producers
Running time11 minutes
Production companiesOriginal Pictures
TT Animation
Lenz Entertainment
Original release
NetworkNick Jr. (UK)
CBC Television (Canada)
ReleaseFebruary 25, 2006 (2006-02-25) –
August 25, 2012 (2012-08-25)

What's Your News? is a children's animated/live-action television programme. It is billed as the first-ever news show for and about children, helping them deal with their transition into the world around them.[citation needed] The series use to be shown in all English countries. But as of 2019, it's only airing in the U.S. It aired on in Canada CBC (stopped airing in 2019), in the UK on Nick Jr. (stopped airing in 2014), in the U.S. on PBS Kids Sprout (stopped airing in 2014) and in Australia on ABC Television.

Overview

[edit]

What's Your News? is a children's television series that concentrates on children's news. Hosted by animated news anchors, Grant the Ant and Antony the Giant anteater, it follows the classic news programme format and features interviews with children, special reports, traffic updates, and weather reports.

Production

[edit]

The series was created by Original Pictures and TT Animation; a small production company which is a subsidiary of TT Games, in turn part of Hollywood major film studio Warner Bros., a division of American conglomerate Time Warner. It was produced using a technologically innovative combination of Live action, Motion capture, and Performed Animation, in conjunction with director Robert Tygner and originating puppeteer William Todd-Jones. A total of 52 episodes were produced over an 18-month period.

It features both CGI content and CGI characters composited into filmed live action sequences. The series' production framework sidesteps many of the labor and time intensive activities normally associated with animated content creation. Character animations are obtained via acted motion capture methods, with instrumented puppetry rigs being used for facial and other auxiliary animations.

References

[edit]