Trifecta Entertainment & Media is an American entertainment company founded in 2006. The company's founders previously held jobs as executives at MGM Television. Trifecta is primarily a distribution company and also handles advertising sales in exchange for syndication deals with local television stations, cable outlets, and digital media. Secondary, the company produces television programs and made-for-TV and direct-to-video movies. The company has offices in Los Angeles, California and New York City, New York.
Industry | Television syndication |
---|---|
Founded | 2006 |
Website | trifectaentertainment |
Titles distributed by Trifecta Entertainment & Media
editCurrent
editPrograms
edit- The Carbonaro Effect
- Celebrity Page (formerly OK!TV)
- Cheaters
- The First 48
- Forensic Files
- iCrime with Elizabeth Vargas
- Impractical Jokers
- Pawn Stars
- Protection Court
- Small Town Big Deal
- Storage Wars
- Whacked Out Sports
- Whacked Out Videos
Movies
edit- Paramount Pictures (pre-1928 and post-1949 films)
- DreamWorks Pictures (pre-2010 films)
- Television rights to films from The Cannon Group, Inc., Epic Productions, 21st Century Film Corporation and Nelson Entertainment under license from Amazon MGM Studios, and Carolco Pictures under license from StudioCanal
- Rysher Entertainment film catalog including titles from Bing Crosby Productions
- Miramax film catalog including titles from the pre-2005 Dimension Films library
- Screen Media Films
Former
editPrograms
edit- America Now[1]
- American Idol Rewind
- Animal Atlas (2009–2011)
- Animal Exploration with Jarod Miller
- The Best of Soul Train (December 2007 – September 2008)
- Bloopers
- Cold Case Files
- Cookie Jar TV (ad sales)
- Court Cam
- Dish Nation
- Dog the Bounty Hunter
- Eco Company (ad sales)
- Elvira's Movie Macabre
- Future Phenoms (ad sales)
- The Game Plane
- Hollywood Shootout
- Jack Hanna's Animal Adventures
- Judge Faith
- Last Shot with Judge Gunn
- Leverage
- M@dAbout TV (ad sales)
- Million Dollar Challenge (ad sales)
- MTV series:
- NASCAR Angels
- Republic of Doyle
- Saf3
- Mystery Hunters
- Smithsonian Channel
- Sports Stars of Tomorrow (ad sales)
- Star Wars: The Clone Wars (2012–2013)[2]
- Storm Stories
- UFC Wired
Movies
edit- DreamWorks Animation (pre-2013 films) under license from NBCUniversal Syndication Studios
References
edit- ^ McAdams, Deborah (December 11, 2012). "Raycom Expands Syndication of 'America Now'". TV Technology. Retrieved September 22, 2022.
- ^ Goldberg, Lesley; Block, Alan (March 11, 2013). "'Star Wars: Clone Wars' Ends Its Run on Cartoon Network". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved September 22, 2022.