HIT Entertainment
Template:Short description Template:Pp-sock Template:Infobox company HIT Entertainment Limited (stylised as HiT) was a British-American entertainment company founded in 1982 as Henson International Television, the international distribution arm of The Jim Henson Company, by Jim Henson, Peter Orton, and Sophie Turner Laing. Orton alone took over the company in 1989 after learning Henson intended to sell the company to The Walt Disney Company. HIT owned and distributed children's television series such as Thomas & Friends, Fireman Sam, Bob the Builder, Pingu, Barney & Friends, and Angelina Ballerina.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
HIT Entertainment was one of several partner companies alongside Comcast, PBS, and Sesame Workshop that founded PBS Kids Sprout; many of HIT's shows aired on the channel as a result.
On 1 February 2012, HIT Entertainment was acquired by Mattel, as Mattel was initially only interested in the Thomas & Friends brand in its acquisition, according to Deadline Hollywood.<ref name="mattel-thomas"/> Mattel absorbed the company on 31 March 2016 into its then newly created division, Mattel Creations.<ref name="MCDl" />
HIT had a brand initiative called The Little Big Club, to feature some of the company's characters in live events held at shopping malls.
History
1982–1990: Early history as Henson Associates subsidiary

Peter Orton had met Jim Henson when he was at the Children's Television Workshop handling distribution of Sesame Street. As a result, he became close friends with Henson and went to work with him in 1981.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Together they set up Henson International Television, which was the international distribution arm of Jim Henson Productions the following year, with Orton becoming the company's CEO.<ref name=ind>Template:Cite news</ref>
1989–1999: Becoming independent

Beginning in the late-1980s, Jim Henson Productions began negotiations with The Walt Disney Company regarding a possible purchase of a merger. Upon hearing these talks, Orton and other employees at HIT! convinced Henson to allow them to spin off the distribution arm as an independent distribution company. Following Henson's approval, in October 1989, Orton led management buyout of Henson International Television and re-incorporated the subsidiary as a standalone company named HIT Communications PLC.<ref name="FU">Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Under its new name, HIT no longer held distribution rights to Henson's catalogue, and instead began acquiring other programs for international distribution, including Woodland Animations' Postman Pat and Bagdasarian Productions' Alvin and the Chipmunks, and later international acquisitions like Lyrick Studios' Barney & Friends.
Beginning in 1991, HIT would begin to engage in co-producing shows which they would distribute internationally, with the first two as part of this new strategy being Where's Wally? and Captain Zed and the Zee Zone. The company then began to finance and distribute animated feature films based on The Wind in the Willows and Peter Rabbit books. Helping to fund the company was an investment by British satellite and cable television operator Flextech took a 23% share in HIT for about £600,000.
The HIT Wildlife division was created to produce nature and wildlife programming which provided the company with 35% of its revenue by the mid-1990s.<ref name="FU" />
With the success of Barney, HIT began to develop its own programming. In 1996, HIT was listed on the AIM to raise funding; it used the funding to launch HIT Video, which would produce direct-to-video programming in the UK.
A new character came to the company's attention in 1996, when advertising executive and would-be cartoonist Keith Chapman pitched his idea to HIT Entertainment. Chapman's character was a general contractor named Bob the Builder. While a number of other producers had turned down the idea, HIT recognized its potential and bought the rights to developing the Bob the Builder character into a television series. The deal saw Chapman retain a share of the copyright and also a contractual clause which sees his name appear on all media & merchandise related to the character.<ref name="FU" />
With another offering in 1997, HIT increased its capitalization and move to the primary London Stock Exchange, whose funding HIT would use to develop some of its first original series including Brambly Hedge, Percy the Park Keeper, and Kipper, which became its first hit on ITV.<ref name="FU" />
In 1998, HIT formed its own animation production company, HOT Animation, and its Consumers Product Division. The BBC agreed to broadcast Bob the Builder. HIT signed a series of American broadcasting deals starting with Nickelodeon for Kipper expanding to Starz/Encore for the Brambly Hedge and Percy the Park Keeper television series; HBO Family for the Anthony Ant cartoon series, and Animal Planet for the Wylands Ocean World wildlife program. Kipper won the 1998 BAFTA Award for Best Children's Animation. At the end of the year, HIT offered another group of shares.<ref name="FU" />
In 1999, HIT had 10 first-run television series in the United States and started an American subsidiary. In April, Bob the Builder successfully debuted on the BBC; in July the company made another public offering of stock. An American deal for Bob the Builder was signed in December with Nickelodeon to start airing in January 2001. Mattel signed a five-year licensing agreement for the development of the Angelina Ballerina television series.<ref name="FU" />
2000–2004: Bob the Builder to final independent years

HIT, which had long been suggesting that it intended to expand its character stable through acquisitions, nearly found a partner in early 2000 when the company held talks with Britt Allcroft, the British company which held the licenses to such popular characters as Thomas the Tank Engine, Captain Pugwash, and Sooty. The two sides were unable to agree on a price, however, and the merger fell through.<ref name="FU" /> Bob the Builder continued its success with the number one record in December that year.<ref name="FU" />
In December 2000, HIT's US division entered into a home video partnership with Lyrick Studios, home and owner of Barney & Friends, for distribution of Bob the Builder and Kipper releases.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> This early partnership was an early plan for that led to HIT purchasing Lyrick for $275 million,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> which would in turn give HIT a marketing and distribution network that it used to introduce its properties to U.S. audiences. Vice versa, the deal would help expand Barney's international presence, which was what Lyrick needed at the time.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The chief executive of HIT, Rob Lawes, was the driving force of the acquisition.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The Lyrick acquisition encouraged HIT Entertainment to pursue new acquisitions.
In May 2001, the first Bob the Builder VHS volumes were released in the United States by HIT/Lyrick, while the company signed a deal with Sears to have Bob Shops in their retail stores. The Jim Henson Company's owner EM.TV was in financial trouble over its purchase of 50% share in Formula One racing rights, and HIT joined a number of companies willing to purchase TJHC.<ref name="FU" /> In October 2001, HIT's bid for Pingu BV was accepted.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
In April 2002, HIT Entertainment sold its wildlife division to the newly formed Parthenon Entertainment, which was owned by the former managing director of HIT Wildlife, Carlos "Carl" Hall, with its 30 hours of programming in production and its 300-hour library was transferred in the management buyout agreement.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
The board of Gullane Entertainment agreed to have the company be purchased by HIT for £139 million.<ref name=":1">Template:Cite web</ref> The television shows owned by Gullane included Thomas & Friends, Magic Adventures of Mumfie, and Fireman Sam, which a stake of was purchased from S4C months before. On 22 August 2002, HIT Entertainment officially opened its Canadian office in Toronto.<ref name=awn>Template:Cite web</ref>
In March 2003, CCI Entertainment, the Canadian affiliate of Gullane who owned a minority stake in CCI's shares prior to the HIT purchase, announced they had ended their partnership with HIT and re-acquired their shares in the company, including all of their programming libraries, which made out half of Gullane's catalogue. The shows CCI reacquired were put into the company's CCI Releasing subsidiary.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> HIT's next television series Rubbadubbers aired in September of the same year.
On 1 April 2004, HIT and The Jim Henson Company agreed to a five-year global distribution and production deal which included distribution of 440 hours of TJHC's remaining library, including Fraggle Rock, Emmet Otter's Jug-Band Christmas, The Hoobs, and Jim Henson's Mother Goose Stories. In addition, the agreement also included the production of new properties, including Frances, in which both companies co-produced. Both companies co-owned the copyright to the series.<ref>Template:Cite press releaseTemplate:Dead link</ref> While firing its chief executive Rob Lawes in October 2004, the company announced its launching of a 24-hour preschool channel known as PBS Kids Sprout with PBS, Comcast, and Sesame Workshop.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
2005–2011: Apax Partners ownership
On 22 March 2005, Apax Partners purchased HIT for £489.4 million,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> taking it private,<ref name="gnm">Template:Cite web</ref> with former BBC director general Greg Dyke becoming chairman.<ref name="gnm0">Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> On 26 August 2005, HIT announced an agreement with NBCUniversal, PBS, and Sesame Workshop to launch the world's first 24-hour preschool television channel entitled PBS Kids Sprout, with HIT supplying programming for the channel as a result at the time.
In February 2006, HIT closed its DVD sales and distribution arm in the U.S. and signed a deal with 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment to release their content in the North American market.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The deal would significantly boost HIT's distribution to over 70,000 retail storefronts.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="gnm0" /> HIT continued to sell and distribute its own DVD output in the UK.<ref name="gnm0" /><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
On 8 March 2007, HIT announced they had purchased the Rainbow Magic book franchise with intentions to create a media and consumer lineup for the property.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> On 22 March, HIT acquired S4C's 50% stake in Fireman Sam, taking full ownership in the franchise. S4C would remain an executive producer for upcoming seasons and retain all Welsh-language rights to the property.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In September, HIT and Chellomedia formed a joint venture to run the JimJam children's channel.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> HIT Entertainment opened its own toy company, the HIT Toy Company. In October, after failing to supply ITV a new series of Sooty the previous year, HIT announced they had put the Sooty Limited/Bridgefilms venture up for sale, consisting of both Sooty and Magic Adventures of Mumfie, an earlier Britt Allcroft creation.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
In 2008, HIT underwent a range of sales for IPs previously put up for sale. They sold Guinness World Records to Ripley Entertainment in February,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Magic Adventures of Mumfie back to Britt Allcroft in March<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and Sooty to his current presenter Richard Cadell in June.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Alongside that, they had hired former Nickelodeon executive, Jeffrey D. Dunn, as chief executive. Dunn drove the company to create new characters, including Mike the Knight, and to revitalize existing brands.<ref name=gnm0/> In March, HIT changed their North American home media distributor from 20th Century Fox to Lionsgate Home Entertainment.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In April, HIT secured a first-look deal with israeli-based animation studio Smartoonz to secure distribution rights to Little Fables and to co-produce and represent Monkey See, Monkey Do and Clay Play.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In November, HIT licensed the Art Attack IP to Disney to revive the series for Latin America.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> This partnership eventually led to Disney purchasing the Art Attack property from HIT by 2011.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
In January 2009, HIT announced the production of its next production, Little Charley Bear.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> However in October, Chapman Entertainment took over production for the series while HIT would remain as a distribution agent for television and home entertainment.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In March 2009, HIT started up a theatrical film division, entitled HIT Movies, in Los Angeles with Julia Pistor as division head, to create films based on the company's franchises.<ref name="ksn">Template:Cite web</ref> The division's first planned film adaptation was a live-action Thomas & Friends film, scheduled for late 2010.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
In early 2010, HIT licensed Thomas & Friends to Mattel for toys<ref name="wsj">Template:Cite news</ref> and struck a deal with the Albavisión conglomerate, to supply its television stations across Hispanic America with 600 hours worth of its catalog.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> By August, the company withdrew from the JimJam joint venture, but agreed to continue providing programming for the channel until the absorption into Mattel.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
In April 2011, Apax put HIT up for sale, with the option to sell the company in two parts: Thomas & Friends franchise and the other HIT characters with its PBS Kids Sprout stake, with either part or separately. Several bidders came forward, including The Walt Disney Company, Viacom, Mattel, Hasbro, Classic Media, Chorion, and Saban Brands.<ref name="gnm" /> By April 2011, Fireman Sam was a Top 10 UK best-selling character toy according to NPD Group.<ref name="gnm0" /> Their next program Mike the Knight, a co-production between Nelvana aired on Treehouse TV and CBeebies later in the year.<ref name="gnm0" />
2012–2016: Mattel subsidiary
Template:Main Apax Partners agreed to sell HIT Entertainment to Mattel on 24 October 2011 for $680 million<ref>Template:Cite press release</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> excluding its share of the PBS Kids Sprout television channel.<ref name="wsj"/><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The sale/merger was completed on 1 February 2012, and HIT Entertainment became a wholly owned subsidiary of Mattel,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> which was managed under its Fisher-Price unit.<ref name="lgm">Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite press release</ref> Due to the success of the Thomas & Friends brand, which accounted for 80% of HIT's revenues, there was talks of Mattel only wanting to purchase that franchise rather than the entire HIT library.<ref name="mattel-thomas">Template:Cite web</ref> Mattel had already worked alongside HIT Entertainment and handled marketing for Thomas & Friends toys.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> On 3 July 2012, it was reported that Mattel considered selling and sought a buyer for Barney and Angelina Ballerina, but they eventually kept them.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
HIT announced a DVD distribution deal with Universal Pictures Home Entertainment on 2 May 2014.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> in which Universal began distributing their catalogue for Blu-ray and DVD electronic sell-through and VOD platforms in the United States and Canada. In early summer 2015, the Edaville USA amusement park in South Carver, Massachusetts opened a licensed Thomas Land theme area based on Thomas & Friends.<ref name="lgm" /> On 6 October 2015, HIT Entertainment announced a long-term partnership with 9 Story Media Group to relaunch Barney & Friends and Angelina Ballerina.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
On 31 March 2016, HIT was absorbed into a newly created division called Mattel Creations.<ref name="MCDl">Template:Cite news</ref>
References
External links
- HIT Entertainment
- American companies established in 1982
- American companies disestablished in 2016
- British companies established in 1982
- British companies disestablished in 2016
- Mass media companies established in 1982
- Mass media companies disestablished in 2016
- 2005 mergers and acquisitions
- 2012 mergers and acquisitions
- Television production companies of the United Kingdom
- Television production companies of the United States
- Former Mattel subsidiaries
- Companies formerly listed on the London Stock Exchange
- Former The Jim Henson Company subsidiaries
- Entertainment companies of the United Kingdom
- Mass media companies based in New York City
- Companies based in Los Angeles
- Apax Partners companies