Bad Robot was originally based at
Touchstone Television, but was moved by
J. J. Abrams to
Paramount Pictures and
Warner Bros. Television, after his contract with
ABC expired in 2006. Bad Robot produced
Lost in association with
ABC Studios, formerly Touchstone Television. The two companies jointly produced
Six Degrees and
What About Brian. The deal was first recommended and presented in 1999 as part of a presentation deal, with J.J. Abrams being contracted to Disney. In 2004, Thom Sherman joined Bad Robot Television as president of the studio. The company had developed presentation pitches for
ABC and
The WB, with none of them going to series. Abrams is CEO of Bad Robot. In May 2015,
Ben Stephenson left the
BBC where he had been head of drama to helm Bad Robot Television. Lindsey Weber once led Bad Robot's feature film division. The
production logo has appeared since 2001, featuring a red rectangular headed robot running through a meadow silhouetted until it appears suddenly in front of the camera, followed by voices provided by two of Abrams's children, Henry and
Gracie, saying "Bad robot!" In February 2013, it was announced that Bad Robot would be partnering with the
Valve Corporation to produce possibly a
Half-Life or
Portal film in the distant future. In August 2015, Valve released a new beta game mode to
Team Fortress 2,
PASS Time, which Bad Robot worked on. On July 7, 2016, the
PASS Time game mode became official. In August 2013, Bad Robot released a trailer on
YouTube entitled "Stranger", rumoured to be Abrams' next film or television project, perhaps even a
Lost spin-off, but it was finally explained to be promoting
S., Abrams and
Doug Dorst's new novel, as a new trailer for
S. was released in the following month. In February 2017, it was announced
Julius Avery is attached to direct a Paramount coproduction, the World War II zombie film
Overlord, from screenwriter
Billy Ray. Bad Robot Productions is currently based in
Santa Monica, California, in a building which is incorrectly labeled on purpose as the home of the fictional "National Typewriter Company" because Abrams "likes typewriters — and misdirection." In June 2018, the company announced a spin-off venture formed with the Chinese video game publisher
Tencent to launch Bad Robot Games for the development of video games on mobile, computer and consoles, with
Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment as a minority investor. Bad Robot Games will develop and publish new and existing IPs including titles related to Abrams' works and other Bad Robot Production content, with Tencent holding the rights for distribution in China. The division was originally helmed by Dave Baronoff, who previously worked on the
Cloverfield franchise and was developing
Spyjinx as a joint project between Bad Robot Productions and
Epic Games (also partially owned by Tencent), while Tim Keenan, who helped develop
Duskers, served as the creative director. In 2020, Anna Sweet was brought on as the CEO of Bad Robot Games.
Mike Booth also joined in December 2020, managing the company's newly created in-house development studio. By February 2022, he had taken on the role of chief creative officer. In 2006, Bad Robot teamed up with
Paramount Pictures and
Warner Bros. Television for a $60 million development deal that lasted through 2018. In late 2018, it was announced that Bad Robot was leaving Paramount and seeking a new overall deal. In January 2019, it was announced that
Universal,
Disney, and
Warner Bros. were the top three studios battling it out for what could be a record breaking overall deal including theme parks, music labels, TV, merchandising, and streaming services as Bad Robot plans on ramping up production significantly in the coming years. It was also announced that Bad Robot would be co-producing a remake of the British series
The Wrong Mans for American network
Showtime along with
BBC Studios, but Showtime later cancelled the project. Bad Robot launched a subsidiary
record label called Loud Robot in late 2018, in partnership with
Capitol Music Group. Loud Robot is headed by co-general managers McKee Floyd and Nicky Berger along with Charles Scott, who currently heads Bad Robot's music division and has been the leading music supervisor for the company's films. Artists signed to the label include
Cleveland-born rapper Nnena,
neo soul singer/songwriter UMI,
Nashville, Tennessee-based
alternative rock artist
Chaz Cardigan, and
London-based
rhythm and blues artist DWY. On September 12, 2019, Bad Robot officially announced a new five-year overall deal with
WarnerMedia. According to
The Hollywood Reporter, WarnerMedia agreed to pay Bad Robot at least $250 million (plus various financial incentives) to produce feature films, television shows, video games, and digital content. On May 25, 2021, Abrams announced that a
Portal film adaptation, which has been in development since 2013, was still in production and a script has been written for the film. In November 2021, the company launched its podcast division with a multi-year first-look deal at
Spotify. On April 25, 2022, it was announced that Bad Robot will team up with
Mattel Films and
Warner Bros. Pictures to produce a live-action
Hot Wheels film based on the toy line of the same name. Most recently, in December 2024, the company had extended its deal with
Warner Bros. Pictures. In November 2025, it was reported that Abrams sold the Santa Monica property housing the Bad Robot headquarters for to
Black Bear Pictures. He began scaling back the production house's operations in April 2026, closing its office in Los Angeles and moving it to New York. ==Filmography==