In 1994, John Hays, Phil Robinson, and Jeff Fino founded Wild Brain in the
Castro District of
San Francisco,
California. The new company bootstrapped with contract work from local game companies such as
Broderbund,
LucasArts, and
Living Books. In 1996, Wild Brain moved to a 17,000 square foot warehouse at the corner of 18th St. and York St. in the
Mission District spearheading the growth of what came to be known in San Francisco as
Multimedia Gulch. In 1999,
Austin, Texas-based Interfase Capital invested almost $17 million in Wild Brain. Over the next few years, Wild Brain's staff ballooned from a staff of about 20 to about 250. It struck deals with
Yahoo! and
Cartoon Network to produce animated shorts for the web. It launched wildbrain.com, creating animated web shorts such as "Groove Monkee", "Mantelope", and numerous web series including
Joe Paradise,
Glue,
Graveyard, and
Space is Dum. After legendary studio
Colossal Pictures closed down in 1999, and with the financial backing of the Interfase companies, Wild Brain expanded further, providing employment for former Colossal directors and staff. Around this period, they produced the series
Higglytown Heroes and
Poochini. In 2004,
Charles Rivkin, former CEO of
The Jim Henson Company, joined Wild Brain as president and CEO. Rivkin oversaw the creation and development of the series
Yo Gabba Gabba! for
Nick Jr. In 2007, former founder Jeff Fino left to start Nuvana, an educational web-based company with former Colossal Pictures producer, Joe Kwong. Wild Brain rebranded to Wildbrain Entertainment that same year. In 2008, Rivkin left Wildbrain after being named U.S. ambassador to France and Monaco. Michael Polis, the marketing director of Wildbrain, then became the new CEO. Around this time, John Hays left Wildbrain to work on indie features
La Mission and
Howl, which opened the
2010 Sundance Film Festival. By 2009, the original founders of the company had all left Wildbrain. The company expanded its animation studios to
Sherman Oaks in March, then closed its San Francisco office in June. It had been an independent company until Canadian studio DHX Media purchased Wildbrain in 2010. That same year, Phil Robinson and Amy Capen, executive producer of Wildbrain's San Francisco studio, started an independent company called Special Agent Productions. Robinson died in 2015 after a short battle with
pancreatic cancer. In 2016, DHX Media revived the Wildbrain name for a new
London-based
multi-channel network known as WildBrain. The division would focus on
YouTube channels aimed towards children, including content and original series drawn from DHX's properties, as well as other forms of educational and toy-oriented content. In September 2019, DHX Media announced that it would change its name to
WildBrain outright, with the MCN unit being renamed
WildBrain Spark. ==Filmography==