What’s Leaving Paramount+ (US) in December 2024

  Note: List always subjected to change / * Denotes Paramount+ with Showtime title December 4 Margaux (2022) December 11 Casino Royale (2006) Rocky Balboa (2006) Who Killed Cooper Dunn? (2022) December 13 Wonder Pets December 14 5-25-77 (2022) Tijuana Jackson: Purpose Over Prison (2020) Dangerous Game: The Legacy Murders (2022) December 19 Bodies Bodies Bodies (2022) December 20 AwesomenessTV Baldwin Hills Betch Breadwinners Buddy Games College Hill Deliciousness Doug Game Shakers Greatest Party Story Ever Guidance Half & Half Hell of a Week with Charlamagne Tha God House of Anubis Kung Fu Panda: Legends of Awesomeness Let's Just Play: Go Healthy Challenge Love & Hip Hop My Life As A Teenage Robot Punk'd Punk'd (BET) T.I.'s Road to Redemption Teen Mom: Girls' Night In The Massively Mixed-Up Middle School Mystery The Meltdown with Jonah and Kumail The Penguins of Madagascar Welcome to the Wayne Younger Zoofari December 21 Asian Tsunami: The Deadliest Wave (20...

Original ‘Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles’ Animated Series Coming to Nickelodeon

Paramount is officially fully turtle-powered. The original Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles animated series is finally coming to Nickelodeon next year.

Nearly fifteen years after the megacorp bought the franchise from original creator Peter Laird, other co-creator Kevin Eastman (who sold his part of the ownership in 2000) appeared at the San Diego Comic-Con panel for the upcoming latest film iteration Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem to make the announcement. Under the deal, all 193 episodes of the original 1987-1996 megahit series are slated to debut digitally on Nickelodeon later this month in the United States, followed by Nickelodeon-branded channels and digital platforms internationally.

While it’s not quite clear if the series will air on linear Nickelodeon, or what it means for Paramount+, it’s very likely that it will include Pluto TV’s Totally Turtles channel, which is Nickelodeon-branded. The channel, which launched on the service in 2019 already airs the three subsequent animated series, the 4Kids-produced 2003-2009 series, the first Nickelodeon series which ran from 2012 to 2017, and Rise of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, which aired from 2018 to 2020. The original animated series had not seen legal reruns at least domestically in the entirety of Paramount’s ownership, but did receive a complete series physical release and to digital marketplaces. In fact, the last rerun was on its home network CBS in 1997. The 4Kids series made its Paramount-era debut in 2014 on Nicktoons.

In addition, just because they couldn’t air the original series doesn’t mean the version of these characters didn’t persist. They are still heavily merchandised, and are the iterations starring in new video games such as Nickelodeon All-Star Brawl, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Shredder’s Revenge, and Nickelodeon Kart Racers 3: Slime Speedway. They also appeared in five episodes of the 2012 series, “Wormquake!”, “Trans-Dimensional Turtles” and “Wanted: Bebop and Rocksteady”, with the latter two being full-blown crossovers with the 2012 iteration, with original voices Rob Paulsen, Cam Clarke, Townsend Coleman, Barry Gordon and Pat Fraley.

Mutant Mayhem is the latest film iteration of the franchise and the second animated one to be theatrical following the 2007 TMNT. The films started with the ‘90s trilogy, followed by 2007’s TMNT, 2009’s Turtles Forever multiverse extravaganza crossing over the original series and the 2003 series, a duology produced by Platinum Dunes released in 2014 and 2016, the latter subtitled Out of the Shadows, the crossover Batman vs. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, and the movie finale for Rise, Rise of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Movie, released last year on Netflix.

Sources: Variety, NintendoLife, The Daily Herald: August 30, 1997, Nickandmore, NickAlive!

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