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June 4, 2013 05:39 pm GMT

Dora Streams Again Amazon Signs Deal With Viacom, Wins Popular Kids' Shows Netflix Lost

Dora-and-DiegoIn a major win for Amazon (at least in parents’ eyes), the company announced today that it has signed a multi-year licensing agreement with Viacom, which brings to its Prime Instant Video service the popular kids programs Netflix recently lost, after allowing its Viacom deal to expire. Amazon’s deal, a multi-year, multi-national licensing agreement includes Nickelodeon and Nick Jr. fare likeDora the Explorer,SpongeBob SquarePants, Bubble Guppies,The Backyardigans,Fairly Odd Parents, Fresh Beat Band,Team Umizoomi, Blues Clues, iCarly, Victorious, and more. For older viewers, the deal also includes MTV and Comedy Central programming likeAwkward, Tosh.0, Key & Peele, Teen Mom 2,and Workaholics. In total, the deal includes over 250 TV seasons and more than 3,900 episodes. Outside the U.S., LOVEFiLM customers in theU.K. andGermanywill get some of the same shows later this summer. “Kids shows are one of the most watched TV genres on Prime Instant Video, said Bill Carr, VP of Digital Video and Music for Amazon in a release. “And this expanded deal will now bring customers the largest subscription selection of Nickelodeon and Nick Jr. TV shows online, anywhere.” The news of the agreement comes at a time when a number of upset parents stormed Netflix’sGet Satisfication consumer support siteto complain about the Nick titles going missing. In fact, Amazon has already been benefitting from Netflix’s loss ahead of this new agreement – several of the shows Netflix had lost were available on Amazon, and were trending in the top 10 most popular shows list on Prime shortly after their removal from Netflix. Netflix certainly wants to bring those programs back – but only if it can do so on its own terms. As CEO Reed Hastings has explainedbefore, the goal is to have relationships with content owners on both side where both sides benefit. In Netflix’s case, it would rather pay highly for individual top-rated series, rather than buying bundles of shows. In addition, though Netflix lost Viacom kids’ shows, it added other programming like likeJake and the Never Land Pirates from DisneyandCartoon Networks Adventure Time. But while young children are generally placated by any cartoon you put in front of them, Netflix may have under-estimated the draw that particular well-known and well-loved character brands have for children and their parents alike. (There’s a reason entire toy empires are built on top of these things.) Plus, parents know you can get Jake for free in the Disney Jr.

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