In January 1996, Yoram Gross Film Studios announced they had established a partnership with Australian media group
Village Roadshow, with the interest of Yoram Gross Film Studios being sold to them under their motion picture production division
Village Roadshow Pictures. The company was later renamed to
Yoram Gross-Village Roadshow, with Greg Coote, producer and founder of Village Roadshow's American division Village Roadshow Pictures, and Graham Burke, Village Roadshow's president & CEO, joining the renamed Australian animation studio's board. The studio agreed to produce ten animated series with Village Roadshow's television division. One year later, in October 1997, Yoram Gross-Village Roadshow made a co-production pact with Europe-based German production and distribution company
EM.TV & Merchandising AG, with whom they jointly handled television productions. Following this successful partnership, and with Village Roadshow seeking an exit from television production, EM.TV & Merchandising bought out Village Roadshow's interest in Yoram Gross-Village Roadshow in 1999, renaming the company to
Yoram Gross-EM.TV. EM.TV was also now distributing the animation studio's programmes worldwide. In March 2004, Yoram Gross-EM.TV expanded into the American production services by joining forces with American production outfit Coote/Hayes Productions (aka Village Roadshow Pictures Television), in order to establish a Los-Angleses based American production subsidiary that handles the Australian animation studio's programming in the United States and Latin America, entitled Yoram Gross USA. This new American production subsidiary signed a home video deal with
Miramax to distribute Yoram Gross-EM.TV's series
Flipper & Lopaka on DVD for a July release, while Edward Olson had been named president of Yoram Gross USA to oversee distribution of the studios library in those countries. On November 15, 2004, Yoram Gross-EM.TV had appointed
Guy Gross, son of Yoram Gross-EM.TV founder Yoram Gross & film composer, previously directed the company's Australian/French series
Old Tom and composed all of Yoram Gross-EM.TV's animated series, as producer and director for all of the production projects of the Australian entertainment studio. In January 2006, seven years after their acquisition of 50% of Yoram Gross EM.TV, EM.TV & Merchandising announced their full acquisition of the remaining 50% stake of Yoram Gross EM.TV from its founders Yoram and Sandra Gross under their entertainment division EM. Entertainment, giving EM.Entertainment full control of the Australian animation and production group. By October 2006 following EM.Entertainment's acquisition of the remaining 50% stake in Yoram Gross-EM.TV ten months prior, Yoram Gross EM.TV announced a restructuring and rebranding of the company as
Flying Bark Productions, alongside its distribution division Yoram Gross Distribution, which was renamed to Flying Bark Distribution as the rebranded company would start planning to expanded its portfolio into the adult-animated and children's genre,. In February 2007, a year after the rebranding of Yoram Gross-EM.TV to Flying Bark Productions, the company announced that its managing director Geoff Watson had depatured the Australia animation production company after 10 years with Canadian producer Michael Hefferon had assumed the role of MD while Geoff Watson would continue to lead Flying Bark Productions' New Zealand film & TV audio production subsidiary Trackdown Digital via MD. In May 2007, Flying Bark Productions' parent EM.TV announced its planning to exit the children's entertainment business through the sale of its Australian animation studio Flying Bark Productions including Yoram Gross' programming catalogue such as
Blinky Bill, and its parent EM.Entertainment GmbH. One year later, in May 2008, Indian media conglomerate
Zee Telefilms entered a bid to acquire Flying Bark Productions and EM.Entertainment GmbH, the German kids & family entertainment division of EM.Sport Media for $100 million. But on the 30th of that month, Belgian children's production company
Studio 100 had acquired Australian animation studio Flying Bark Productions, including the Yoram Gross programming library such as
Blinky Bill, and its parent EM.Entertainment GmBH, the children's entertainment division of EM.Sport Media AG announced that they have exited the children's entertainment & animation business with them had sold Flying Bark Productions alongside EM's entertainment division for €41 million in order for EM.Sport Media to focus on their expanded sport activities as EM.Sport Media exited the animation & youth entertainment business, with Flying Bark Productions became Studio 100's in-house Australian animation subsidiary marking Studio 100's first animation studio outside of Belgium while the latter's German distribution Studio 100 Media assuming Flying Bark's catalogue & would distribute the studio's future programming state. In February 2014, Flying Bark Productions announced that former head of
ABC children's content & Sticky Pictures' co-founder Tim Brooke-Hunt (who was Flying Bark's former executive producer & director of the company via its former name Yoram Gross Studios) had returned to the Australian entertainment company as the president and will lead Flying Bark's future development state, meanwhile he also joined Flying Bark's parent Studio 100 as advisor of its board. In December 2019, Flying Bark Productions announced their plans to open a Los Angeles branch in early 2020, appointing American storyboarder/director Ian Graham as Chief Creative Director of the LA studio. In late-March 2022, Flying Bark Productions increased its adult-animated state with the establishment of its new production arm After Bark, dedicated to adult animated programmes along with scripted and unscripted projects for mature audiences, with Amy Noble and Kate Andrew becoming CCO and head of legal & business affairs of the new production subsidiary. In June 2024, Flying Bark Productions expanded its production operations into Europe with the opening of a Madrid-based animation studio, marking Flying Bark Productions' first entry into the European and Spanish animation production markets; and partnered with Spanish animation studio supervisor Ramon Giráldez to head the new Spanish animation studio. ==Filmography==