Subscribers and some content from the classic cartoon platform will move to Max. By Rick Porter Television Business Editor Warner Bros. Discovery is shuttering its Boomerang streaming service, a home ...
Warner Bros. Discovery has seemingly wiped Cartoon Network from the internet in its latest attempt at consolidating its massive library and trove of subscribers to Max. The Cartoon Network website was ...
It isn't all bad news. Existing shows and subscriptions will be shifted to Max. Existing Boomerang subscriptions will be automatically transferred to Max (ad-free) without a change in pricing until ...
Zoinks! After more than seven years, Boomerang, the cartoon streaming service from Warner Bros. Discovery, is shutting down as a standalone service. Boomerang will be shut down next month, and its ...
Warner Bros. Discovery is shutting down the Boomerang streaming service and moving some of its programming, which includes many classic cartoon series, onto Max. The kids-and-family move is set for ...
Sorry, millennials, but Warner Bros. Discovery does not care about your nostalgia. A week after announcing the sunsetting of the Boomerang website (effective ...
There could not have been a better day to launch a children’s television channel than April Fools’ Day. At the start of the millennium—April 1st, 2000—Boomerang was brought to life as its own entity ...
The website for Cartoon Network, which had existed online since 1998, has been scrubbed from the internet. What once was a video-heavy portal for shows, including The Powerpuff Girls, Adventure Time, ...
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