Friday, October 31, 2025

Classic Rugrats Comic Strip for October 31, 2025 | Nickelodeon

Classic Rugrats Comic Strip for October 31, 2025 | Nickelodeon

Classic Rugrats Comic Strip for October 31, 2025 | Nickelodeon

Stream the classic Rugrats series on Paramount+! Try it FREE at ParamountPlus.com!

Rugrats, provided to Creators Syndicate by Nickelodeon, based off the popular animated television series has been created for children and family's to laugh and enjoy together.

Follow these comics and their take on real episodes of the show and their own spin on hilarious adventures.

Read more Rugrats comic strips!: https://www.creators.com/features/rugrats

More Nick: Paramount+ Renews 'Rugrats' For Season 3!

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Paramount Animation President Ramsey Naito to Depart Studio

As Paramount begins cleaning house under new Chief Executive Officer (CEO) David Ellison, Paramount Animation‘s President Ramsey Naito is the latest to step down from the company.

(L-R) Ramsey Naito; Paramount Animation logo
Ramsey Naito steps down as president of Paramount Animation. | Paramount / Deadline

Naito joined Nickelodeon in 2018, serving as Executive Vice President (EVP) of Animation Production and Development for the Nickelodeon Group, overseeing a renaissance at the studio of animation content and production in scale and creativity. In September 2020, the Oscar®-nominated producer was upped to President of Nickelodeon Animation, overseeing the network’s animation content across all formats and platforms--spanning linear, digital, TV movies, theatrical motion pictures and SVOD.

During her time at Nickelodeon, Naito launched its largest animation slate in the network’s 40+ year history with over 70 projects at the Nickelodeon Animation Studio, and deals with top talent and creators. During 2021, she oversaw the launches of global television and film franchises such as PAW Patrol: The Movie; the expansion of the SpongeBob SquarePants universe with The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge on the Run and two original spinoffs, Kamp Koral: SpongeBob’s Under Years and The Patrick Star ShowBaby Shark's Big ShowBlue’s Clues & You!Santiago of the SeasThe Loud House Movie; and Rugrats (2021). Other projects under Naito’s purview were Star Trek: Prodigy from Nickelodeon Animation, as well as a Monster High animated series.

Naito added President of Paramount Animation to her title in September 2021, taking over for Mireille Soria, who lead the motion picture studio’s animation arm. Whilst at Paramount Animation, she was tasked with developing Nickelodeon properties into animated pictures. During her run at Paramount Animation, the studio released the Point Grey Pictures’ animated pic Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem with Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg, which grossed closed to $182M worldwide in the summer of 2023 and yielded $1 billion-plus in global retail sales for that calendar year alone, breathing new life into the iconic franchise. Other animated titles released during her run include PAW Patrol: The Movie and PAW Patrol: The Mighty Movie, which minted close to $350M combined, Transformers One ($129.4M worldwide) and, most recently, Smurfs. Upcoming is The SpongeBob Movie: The Search for SquarePants (Dec. 19), PAW Patrol: The Dino Movie (Aug. 14, 2026), The Angry Birds Movie 3 (Dec, 23, 2026), as well as The Legend of Aang: The Last Airbender (Oct. 9, 2026) and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem 2 (Sept. 17, 2027).

Prior to Nickelodeon, Naito produced DreamWorks Animation’s Oscar-nominated feature, The Boss Baby, while also earning her a PGA nomination for Outstanding Producer of Animated Theatrical Motion Pictures. Prior to DreamWorks Animation, Ramsey worked as a producer for Blue Sky Studios, at Cartoon Network as Head of Movies and at Nickelodeon Movies as Vice President of Development & Production. Her executive and producer credits include: Scooby-Doo! The Mystery Begins (2009), Barnyard (2006), The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie (2004), The Wild Thornberrys Movie (2002), Hey Arnold! The Movie (2002), the Oscar-nominated Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius (2001), Rugrats in Paris: The Movie (2000), and South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut (1999).

Word was in early August that Naito would stay on post–merger to lead Paramount Animation, albeit, stepping down as president of Nickelodeon Animation. Meanwhile, Skydance Animation, under John Lasseter and Holly Edwards, wasn’t merged with Paramount Animation, rather kept separate, as that unit has a Netflix output deal commitment. It’s clear that in the new order of the Ellison-run conglom, he wants a fresh C-suite of executives, read Global Marketing & Distribution Boss Marc Weinstock and Domestic Distribution President—who were behind the success of the studio’s highest grossing movie, Top Gun: Maverick ($1.49 billion)—departed as a new head of worldwide marketing and distribution arrived, that being former Warner Bros and Universal vet, Josh Goldstine.

Naito is part of 1,000 cuts that happened today (Oct. 29) as the new Skydance-owned Paramount looks to achieve $2 billion in savings. Other motion picture exits today include President of Worldwide Music Randy Spendlove, Senior Vice President (SVP) of Production Bryan Oh, EVP of Production Geoff Stier, EVP of Home Entertainment Andres Alvarez, EVP of International Theatrical Marketing Rachel Cadden, SVP of Multicultural Marketing Christine Benitez and SVP of Literary Affairs Phil Cohen.

Below is Naito’s note to staff this evening:

Team,

I want to share with you that I am leaving the company and closing this very special chapter with all of you. Leading this incredible team of talented storytellers, artists and dreamers, and watching the magic that you’ve spun from your imagination and dedication, has been one of the great joys of my career.

I am so proud of the work the animation teams and I have done for the last 8+ years. I am honored to have given new life and love to the beloved characters and stories within the vast Paramount and Nickelodeon libraries—from SpongeBob to PAW Patrol to Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles—and the birth of a whole new slate of originals for today’s generation. 

Not only am I endlessly proud of what we’ve built, but even more so the spirit behind it — the collaboration, creativity, and kindness that define this team. Though I’m moving on, I’ll always be cheering you on (and singing along to the PAW Patrol theme or humming the TMNT riff when I see your work lighting up screens everywhere).

Thank you to Josh, Dana and the fantastic leadership team who I know will keep propelling our animation business to great heights. 

With love and appreciation,
Ramsey


Update (10/31): Also stepping down is Shauna Phelan, EVP, Head of Live-Action Series, Films & Talent, Nickelodeon and Awesomeness TV, who has held leadership positions across the two divisions for seven years. She is in talks to become a producer on some of the high-profile projects she has developed.

Update (12/5) - Via The Hollywood Reporter:

Feelings Don’t Matter: How the Ellison Era Is Transforming Paramount

It’s a brand-new day at the legacy studio, where prestige films are out, testosterone-heavy tentpoles are in and Brett Ratner is back on the call sheet.

In the days before the Paramount-Skydance merger closed, headlines as to who was staying and who was going were flying fast and furious. One person who appeared to be held in high esteem by Skydance chief David Ellison was Ramsey Naito, head of Paramount Animation.

It would have been understandable if Ellison opted to show Naito the door as he did with other top execs, considering she was closely aligned with former Paramount Pictures CEO Brian Robbins (she had helped bring the successful Nickelodeon series PAW Patrol to the big screen). On Aug. 6, the night before the merger became official, an anonymously sourced news story indicated that Naito was safe, highlighting the success of 2023’s Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem, which grossed $182 million worldwide against a $30 million budget and propelled the brand to north of $1 billion in merchandising sales.

But things quickly turned for Naito as the emboldened top executives installed by Ellison to run the studio began asserting their power. In a fall meeting with key leaders, including Paramount Pictures co-chairman Josh Greenstein, Naito was left feeling humiliated after she was told she had devalued the Turtles franchise. Sources say Naito later confronted Greenstein and others to object to the way they had spoken to her.

The essence of their response? “Get over it.”

It was an echo of the feelings-don’t-matter, no-coddling ethos that powers Silicon Valley, where Ellison was raised and watched his father, Larry Ellison, grow Oracle into one of the most valuable companies in the world (and make himself one of the richest people on the planet). Multiple sources say Ellison is building a more brash culture that’s defiantly upending the circumspect, politically correct style that has defined Hollywood in the post-#MeToo, post-George Floyd eras. It’s a studio reborn, where blunt feedback is the norm, canceled talent is welcome (cheaper on the dollar, and yearning to prove themselves) and no one is walking on eggshells.

Sources close to the new regime deny that anyone ever spoke down to Naito, but acknowledge that they confronted the exec for declining to take responsibility for the fact that several animated films under her watch had gone over budget, including Smurfs, a bomb that lost about $80 million for the studio. In either case, sources say that Naito saw the writing on the wall and told friends she wasn’t sure how long she’d last under the new management. On Oct. 29, she was among those let go in a massive round of layoffs. Naito could not be reached for comment. She was replaced recently by Jennifer Dodge, president of entertainment at Spin Master, the toy company behind PAW Patrol.

Even before Ellison took over, there were signs that the studio was changing. Paramount was among the first to kill its DEI policies, and after the Ellison era began, it became the first to publicly push back against the growing anti-Israel sentiment in Hollywood. Ellison also has been willing to empower once-canceled male execs as well as those who are eager to assert their influence after being denied top jobs at other companies.

“There is an arrogance [at the film studio] that has caught the town by the surprise,” says one source who’s in business with Paramount, careful to note that co-movie studio chairman and TV chief Dana Goldberg, a Skydance alum, and Paramount president Jeff Shell do not share this style.

What some see as arrogance, others characterize as a much-needed shift, remaking a struggling studio that was deprived of resources for years. The execs inherited a slate where every movie this year lost money in its theatrical run until the October romantic sleeper hit Regretting You. (That list includes the Ellison-produced Mission: Impossible — The Final Reckoning.)

Says a source who knows many of Paramount’s new power players: “They have either been in the studio system or adjacent to it and are now in a position they never thought they’d have again. It’s really theirs to lose; they can either build something that works or doesn’t.”

Sources who know Ellison, 42, say that he personally has never presented as a bully, but father Larry is a self-avowed über-alpha personality who has a multibillion-dollar stake in the Paramount purchase and is one of Donald Trump’s closest tech-world confidants. Trump has publicly praised the Skydance-Paramount marriage and David Ellison, pointing to right-leaning changes at CBS News, and is reportedly also looking favorably upon Ellison’s bid to gobble up Warner Bros. over rivals Comcast and Netflix. (Paramount, for its part, has called the bidding “a tilted and unfair process,” claiming Netflix has received preferential treatment.) On Nov. 25, Paramount confirmed a deal to distribute Rush Hour 4 from disgraced director Brett Ratner, who was banished from Hollywood in 2017 after a Los Angeles Times report in which six women accused him of sexual misconduct. The agreement came after a request from Trump to Larry. (Ratner was never charged and has long denied wrongdoing.)

While the Rush Hour 4 news jolted many on the lot, sources say that even before Trump’s request, there were already conversations within Paramount about whether to distribute the orphaned project. The movie would almost certainly make money for the studio given that Paramount, as a distributor but not a financier, stands to receive a hefty fee. Still, Greenstein and Goldberg ultimately passed and only later learned that Paramount would be distributing it around the time news leaked to the media about Trump’s overtures to Larry.

***

“David likes to hire people who he thinks were devalued,” says one person who has known him for years. One early example: Skydance swooped in and hired legendary Pixar chief John Lasseter after he resigned from Disney at the height of the #MeToo movement following allegations of inappropriate behavior. Later, the first major production deal announced by the new Paramount was a first-look pact with Will Smith, still tainted from slapping Chris Rock at the Oscars. And one of the few leftover movies from the previous regime that Team Ellison embraced is an Ebenezer Scrooge project starring Johnny Depp that would mark the actor’s first major studio feature since Warner Bros. fired him from the Fantastic Beasts franchise in 2020 amid his messy divorce from Amber Heard.

There are examples of that same distressed-asset philosophy at the C-suite level. Shell, the president of Paramount, exited as chairman of NBCUniversal after a female colleague, a CNBC reporter, filed a sexual harassment complaint against him following a nearly decade-long affair. He was fired for cause and did not receive severance. Paramount colleagues say Shell is transparent about what happened, proactively bringing it up and eager to note that he’s learned from his mistakes. (Like Ellison, he is laser-focused on the potential Warners acquisition and not on the day-to-day operations of the film studio.)

Several years before his firing, Shell and NBCUniversal movie chief Donna Langley informed staff at Universal Pictures that Josh Goldstine, president of worldwide marketing, was being suspended after an investigation into complaints of inappropriate conduct. Shell and Langley praised the women who came forward, and Goldstine was fired, but he later won a $20 million arbitration ruling against NBCU (the arbitration findings were never made public). He joined Warner Bros. as president of worldwide marketing in 2021 before being laid off at the beginning of this year. Greenstein lobbied Ellison to name Goldstine president of worldwide marketing and distribution at Paramount, and he joined the studio in mid-October. Some might have forgotten that in 2001, Goldstine was one of two top execs at Sony’s creative advertising division who were suspended and later demoted for making up glowing critics’ quotes for A Knight’s  Tale after a class-action lawsuit was filed against the studio for duping moviegoers into seeing the film.

Goldstine now reports to Greenstein and Goldberg, who was Ellison’s longtime trusted movie and TV production czar at Skydance. Known for being loyal, Ellison also brought over Skydance movie and sports chief Don Granger to lead the film division. Greenstein and Goldstine have many fans and are widely admired for their marketing acumen. But both are ruffling feathers internally.

A culture clash is almost guaranteed when putting together a team of ambitious executives who have long thought they deserved more power than Hollywood has afforded them. Greenstein, who had a previous stint at Paramount as marketing and distribution head before decamping for Sony in 2014 and rising to co-president of the motion picture group, waited in the wings for years to succeed Sony film chief Tom Rothman but was thwarted when the elder executive re-upped his deal this year. He is a man’s man famous for his golfing outings — one go-to partner is Mark Wahlberg — and drives a lifted truck to accommodate his mountain bike, another one of his passions.

Granger, meanwhile, spent years at Paramount as a production exec — including working on a number of Tom Cruise films — before striking out on his own (Snakes on a Plane was one credit). He joined United Artists in 2004, when it was run by Cruise and Paula Wagner, and ascended to president of production in 2007, but UA languished and he joined Skydance in 2014, running film under Goldberg and Ellison and producing titles such as Jack Reacher.

***

Paramount insiders debunk the notion that this new team is making “flyover state” films but readily admit they are building a slate focused on areas it sees as underserved by Hollywood, a move that mirrors Ellison’s work to reshape CBS News. The mogul has complained that the news business has been taken over by coastal elites out of touch with the American public, so it’s not surprising that he’s bringing the same ethos to his studio. One major emphasis is to develop broad, testosterone-laden tentpoles like a Call of Duty movie that Taylor Sheridan is writing and a $100 million-plus motorcross film directed by James Mangold and starring Timothée Chalamet, who would earn a career-high $25 million. (Mangold also has a new overall deal with the studio.) Paramount also is keen on making a Western with 1923 actor Brandon Sklenar.

“The one thing I’m trying to figure out is what other big priorities they are embracing,” says a rival executive. Asks another studio head, “Is there anything that isn’t a male-driven action movie?”

Paramount insists there is. During an Aug. 13 media event, Greenstein name-checked such franchises as Star Trek, Transformers and World War Z. He also indicated an interest in horror (Paramount is home to A Quiet Place and Smile) and R-rated comedies. Insiders at Paramount say the team’s guiding principle is ensuring that every movie is an event. This doesn’t just mean franchises, it could include risqué comedies for both men (think: The Hangover) and women (Bridesmaids) or dramas targeting Black audiences (à la The Woman King, which Greenstein made at Sony).

There appears to be little appetite for risky critical-darling or awards-bait fare. Paramount’s small, internal awards team was laid off in October, though sources say they will remain on through the end of Oscar season. The studio already pulled back dramatically on awards plans for the Channing Tatum-Kirsten Dunst feature Roofman.

“They have no interest in anything but down-the-middle IP. It’s all about commerciality,” says one industry source.

However, not all male-driven action tentpoles have been embraced: Nearly $20 million in marketing was slashed from Edgar Wright’s big-budget The Running Man, starring Glen Powell and made by the previous regime. The $110 million movie bombed, opening to a mere $18 million.

Though morale at the movie studio was low before the merger, sources say it has further plummeted among holdover staff as Greenstein and Goldberg, with input from Granger, go through the slate, killing projects or selling them off. Eloise, an adaptation of Kay Thompson’s beloved children’s series about a girl living at the Plaza hotel in New York, was quietly sold to Netflix. Ryan Reynolds had been quick to board the MRC project as a producer and star when approached by the prior regime, saying his three young daughters are huge fans of the book. But sources say Greenstein in particular didn’t believe the IP was relevant in today’s times, nor did the studio want to make it as a theatrical movie for the $75 million budget, even though MRC is helping to cover the cost. The Goldberg-Greenstein regime also has scrapped plans to make Winter Games, a romantic sports drama starring Miles Teller.

But those aren’t the only femme-fueled titles being scrapped: Another project that isn’t going forward is Victor and Sam’s Day Off, a spinoff of Ferris Bueller’s Day Off; ditto for Colin Trevorrow’s Area 51 movie that has Reynolds attached to produce.

It’s hardly unusual for incoming leaders to take stock of what they have and jettison things. But Greenstein has stated that the company hopes to release 15 films a year starting in 2026. As one producer with ties to Paramount asks, “How are they going to make so many movies when they are killing them left and right?”

Rush Hour 4 is one answer. Another is the R-rated workplace comedy Bald Eagles, a spec they scooped up days after coming into power. The studio also is developing a new Paranormal Activity movie with James Wan and Blumhouse producing, sources say, and moving forward with a carry-over romantic comedy that’s set to star Brie Larson is based on Rebecca Serle’s best-selling book One Italian Summer.

***

The new regime is now figuring out what to do with the Ninja Turtles franchise. It’s so impressed by Sonic the Hedgeghog that it has hired Sonic producer Neal H. Moritz to guide a a live-action Turtles movie that’s already nabbed a high-profile Thanksgiving holiday release date of Nov. 17, 2028. Meanwhile, the sister TV division has canceled the spin-off to the Seth Rogen-produced Mutant Mayhem, leading to industry chatter that the big-screen animated sequel is in jeopardy. But sources say the top brass at Paramount, which has already spent $40 million on the Mayhem 2, remains high on the sequel and intends to move with its October 2027 release date, with a third movie even being discussed with Rogen and his Point Grey.

If the famously outspoken liberal Rogen makes an odd bedfellow for a studio that’s so close to Trump, it gets even weirder. One project that is moving right along is from South Park creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone. They are a cash cow for Paramount, and particularly Paramount+, so much so that Ellison quickly reupped their deal after taking over as CEO.

Trump has remained notably silent on the duo, who have gone after him with a vengeance that has made them more relevant and popular than ever. But he may not be able to resist complaining about the live-action, music-infused comedy skewering racism that’s in the works from the duo and Kendrick Lamar. The story centers on a young Black man who takes a job performing as a slave at a popular plantation attraction, and who grows quickly wary about the entire situation, though insiders say this logline may be outdated as is describing it as an ensemble comedy. It’s hard to say, considering only a few people at Paramount have been allowed to read the script at Parker and Stone’s office; the duo, along with Lamar, have full creative control. Those who have read it say it’s outrageously funny.

The still untitled movie, known internally as Whitney Springs, was supposed to hit theaters during the July 4th holiday this year, but Lamar, who produces, and filmmaker Dave Free (Lamar’s manager) wanted major reshoots; the film was pushed to March 20, 2026. In recent days, Paramount revealed that it won’t be ready for that date, as word broke elsewhere that Lamar may go on tour. When it’s finally done, however, Paramount will have no choice but to open it in cinemas.

“They’ll release it with closed eyes and gritted teeth,” says someone close to the project, which at this stage features Parker onscreen as the town’s mayor. Paramount and the filmmakers have not announced any casting and have kept all details under wraps.

Though Larry Ellison’s bromance with Trump might get the most media attention, David Ellison himself has a much more crucial business bromance — with Cruise. The mogul has heaped praise upon the star, with whom he has made 10 films, including installments of Mission: Impossible and Top Gun: Maverick. Privately, though, the relationship has not always been smooth sailing.

According to two sources, Cruise grew unhappy with Ellison not long after Robbins came aboard at the top of Paramount in 2021. During a meeting about the final two Mission: Impossible movies, Cruise said he needed tens of millions of dollars in additional production funds. Ellison suggested that Cruise find some of the money on his own. From then on, multiple sources say Cruise wouldn’t attend any production or marketing meetings if Ellison was in the room. Still, the Robbins regime ultimately caved to Cruise’s demands, coughing up more dough. (Sources close to Skydance dispute there was any such rift.)

But Cruise is eager to get Top Gun 3 off the ground. He’s also seeking a home for his deep-sea disaster adventure that reportedly sports a production budget north of $200 million. Warner Bros., where Cruise has a deal, and Universal have passed. Sources confirm that Cruise recently went to the Paramount lot to pay his respects to the new leadership, which would seem to mean he no longer is at odds with Ellison. And if Ellison gets his way and buys Warners in a history-changing moment for Hollywood, Cruise won’t be the only one having to acquiesce to a new cultural order.

###

Shop Paramount+ at ParamountShop.com

Stream a Mountain of Entertainment, including your Nickelodeon favorites on Paramount+! Try it FREE at ParamountPlus.com!


Originally published: October 30, 2025 at 05:59 GMT.

Original source: Deadline.

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Magic: The Gathering x Avatar: The Last Airbender Collaboration Set Unveils Seven New Cards: Zuko, Iroh and More

Wizards of the Coast and Nickelodeon have teamed up on a new Magic: The Gathering card set inspired by the beloved animated series Avatar: The Last Airbender, and to celebrate, Variety has unveiled a first look at seven of the cards coming in the new collection!

Prince Zuko | Magic: The Gathering x Avatar: The Last Airbender

Debuting Friday, November 21, the set follows the story of Avatar Aang and his friends across the three-season run of Avatar: The Last Airbender. The wide-ranging product release will include play boosters, collector boosters, a bundle, a commander’s bundle, “Jumpstart” boosters, prerelease packs, a beginner box and scene boxes.

Wizards gave a first look at the new upcoming set on Tuesday (Oct. 18) with an initial batch of preview cards released, including a teaser of scene cards that have been created for each of the show’s 61 episodes.

Below, readers can see Variety has revealed a first look at seven different cards from the Avatar: The Last Airbender set, which feature fan-favorite characters Zuko, Katara and Iroh, among others: “True Ancestry,” “Brought Back,” “Mirrorwing Dragon,” “Prosperity,” “Rites of Flourishing,” “Zuko, Conflicted,” and “Zuko, Redeemed.”

The Avatar: The Last Airbender set marks Magic’s latest Universes Beyond collaboration, which sees the popular tabletop card game team up with popular IP to release cards based on stories and characters outside the established world of Magic: The Gathering.

Other recent collaborations have included crossovers with Sonic the Hedgehog, Final Fantasy, Marvel for Spider-Man and more characters. Following the release of the Avatar: The Last Airbender set in November, Paramount will further its Magic: The Gathering relationship with the release of a Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles set early next year.

Magic: The Gathering x Avatar: The Last Airbender

Magic: The Gathering x Avatar: The Last Airbender

Magic: The Gathering x Avatar: The Last Airbender

Magic: The Gathering x Avatar: The Last Airbender

Magic: The Gathering x Avatar: The Last Airbender

Magic: The Gathering x Avatar: The Last Airbender

Magic: The Gathering x Avatar: The Last Airbender

Stream Avatar: The Last Airbender and The Legend of Korra on Paramount+ and Netflix! Try Paramount+ for FREE at ParamountPlus.com

Shop Avatar merch on the OFFICIAL Paramount Shop!

Listen to the official A:TLA podcast, Avatar: Braving the Elements!

Get more Avatar: The Last Airbender on: YouTube | Facebook | Instagram | TikTok



Originally published: October 31, 2025.

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Thursday, October 30, 2025

Classic Rugrats Comic Strip for October 30, 2025 | Nickelodeon

Classic Rugrats Comic Strip for October 30, 2025 | Nickelodeon

Classic Rugrats Comic Strip for October 30, 2025 | Nickelodeon

Stream the classic Rugrats series on Paramount+! Try it FREE at ParamountPlus.com!

Rugrats, provided to Creators Syndicate by Nickelodeon, based off the popular animated television series has been created for children and family's to laugh and enjoy together.

Follow these comics and their take on real episodes of the show and their own spin on hilarious adventures.

Read more Rugrats comic strips!: https://www.creators.com/features/rugrats

More Nick: Paramount+ Renews 'Rugrats' For Season 3!

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Halloween-Night ‘South Park’ Episode to Take On Donald Trump’s Demolition of the East Wing of the White House | First Look

South Park‘s next original episode will debut on Friday, October 31 with a dose of Halloween, this time taking on Donald Trump‘s demolition of the East Wing of the White House last week.

The Woman In The Hat | South Park
Comedy Central

The logline for the Comedy Central series episode “The Woman In The Hat” (#2802): “The White House deals with a disruptive spirit from the East Wing. While Stan worries that South Park has become too political.” The White House is supposedly quite haunted, although sadly not with the Ghosts of Christmas Past, Present and Future.

A photo from Comedy Central shows Trump and Satan surveying the debris of the East Wing, which was abruptly torn down to make room for a $300 million ballroom, financed by donations from companies including Comcast, Amazon and Meta.


South Park has been scathing in its satire of Trump throughout the season, generating a dismissive putdown from the actual White House. Additional advance stills also from the next episode also show the Marsh family paying a visit to Grandpa Marvin, and the return of Kristi Noem, the secretary of homeland security, best known for killing her family's pet dog, among other things.

The Woman In The Hat | South Park
Comedy Central

The latest episode will premiere at 10 p.m. ET/PT. Comedy Central said additional new episodes are planned for Wednesdays November 12, November 26 and December 10.

It wasn’t just the East Wing that was destroyed. Bulldozers also plowed through the East Colonnade, which connected the East Wing to the executive residence. The long corridor included the White House Family Theater, where screenings of major releases have been shown since Franklin D. Roosevelt’s presidency. Also demolished was the Jacqueline Kennedy Garden, named for the former first lady.

The Woman In The Hat | South Park
Comedy Central

The Washington Post reported on Tuesday (Oct. 28) that the Trump administration has fired members of the Commission on Fine Arts, an independent agency that has advised the president, Congress and local governments on the design of the Capital. Trump appointees already have control of another commission that reviews projects, the National Capital Planning Commission.

South Park (SouthPark.cc.com) debuted on Comedy Central on August 13, 1997, following Stan, Kyle, Cartman and Kenny’s first appearance in the animated short The Spirit of Christmas. Co-creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone are executive producers, along with Anne Garefino and Frank C. Agnone II. Eric Stough, Adrien Beard, Bruce Howell and Vernon Chatman are producers. Christopher Brion is the Creative Director of South Park Digital Studios.

Stream the South Park library on Paramount+. Visit ParamountPlus.com for a free trial!

Shop official South Park merch: https://www.paramountshop.com

Follow South Park:

Stream a Mountain of Entertainment, including your Nickelodeon favorites on Paramount+! Try it FREE at ParamountPlus.com!


Originally published: October 29, 2025 at 06:03 GMT.

Original sources: DeadlineAnimation Magazine.

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Paramount to Cut Roughly 1,000 Workers In U.S. On Oct. 29, with Another Thousand Soon to Follow [Updated]

Paramount is planning to lay off about 1,000 workers on Wednesday, October 29, with an additional thousand to follow at a time still being determined, sources familiar with the plans have told Deadline.

Paramount Global layoffs
Getty

The vast majority of the affected employees will be based in the U.S., with international divisions also planning cutbacks in the coming weeks.

The long-expected cuts come two-plus months after the close of the $8.4 billion merger of Paramount and Skydance. Executives at the merged company have promised Wall Street they would deliver $2 billion in cost savings, with part of that target amount being achieved by workforce reductions.

Bloomberg reported earlier Monday on the timing and amount of this week’s reductions. Deadline earlier had been the first to report that the layoffs had been shifted up to this week from an initial November target.

In a press conference last August following the merger’s completion, president Jeff Shell told reporters that the cuts would be implemented as efficiently as possible. “We don’t want to be a company that has layoffs every quarter,” he said.

The previous regime at Paramount had already shrunk the company’s workforce pretty significantly, initiating three waves of layoffs in the latter months of 2024 that reduced the rolls by about 15% in the U.S.

Layoffs are never an easy part of a post-merger integration process in terms of employee morale, but for David Ellison and his Paramount management team there is also the matter of the company’s next M&A conquest. The ink had barely dried on the long-gestating Paramount-Skydance merger before Ellison offered (not once, but three times) to acquire rival Warner Bros. Discovery. Last week, word emerged that those overtures had been rebuffed, but WBD announced it had initiated a review of its strategic alternatives. Its goal is to convene an auction after saying it received interest in a potential acquisition from “multiple parties,” with Comcast and Amazon atop the list of those believed to be kicking the tires.

In terms of Paramount’s corporate divisions, CBS Sports has come through recent waves of cutbacks relatively unscathed. Most other units have been affected by secular pressures on theatrical moviegoing and linear TV viewing. The post-merger executive map is just starting to come into focus, with former co-CEOs Brian Robbins (who also served as the president of Nickelodeon) and Chris McCarthy leaving the company just as the merger officially closed last August. The decline of viewing and advertising spending on linear TV has put pressure on many parts of the portfolio, especially legacy cable.

John Dickerson, co-anchor of CBS Evening News, has given notice that he will leave at the end of the year, it was reported Monday. Two other major departures from Paramount also came into view as the week was beginning: Taylor Sheridan, architect of the Yellowstone universe, is moving to NBCUniversal under a rich film and TV deal set to take effect in 2029. David Glasser, Sheridan’s close collaborator, is also relocating his 101 Studios to NBCU in early 2026.

Update (10/30) - As reported, Paramount today (Oct. 29) made significant staff cuts. Below is a selection of articles about today's news.

From Deadline:

Paramount Layoffs Begin; CEO David Ellison Says Cuts Are Key To Building “Strong, Future-Focused Company”

Paramount began significant layoffs Wednesday morning, with about 1,000 U.S.-based workers being let go in the first round, and roughly another 1,000 soon to follow.

The 2,000 layoffs represent about 10% of Paramount’s employee base.

CEO David Ellison confirmed the cuts were underway in a memo to employees. (Read it in full below.)

“When we launched the new Paramount in August, we made clear that building a strong, future-focused company would require significant change – including restructuring the organization,” he wrote.

The memo continued, “We want to be as open and direct as possible about the reasons behind these changes. In some areas, we are addressing redundancies that have emerged across the organization. In others, we are phasing out roles that are no longer aligned with our evolving priorities and the new structure designed to strengthen our focus on growth. Ultimately, these steps are necessary to position Paramount for long-term success.”

The long-expected cuts come nearly three months after the close of the $8.4 billion merger of Paramount and Skydance. Executives at the merged company have promised Wall Street they would deliver $2 billion in cost savings, with part of that target amount being achieved by workforce reductions. The company is also looking to trim its real estate portfolio and unload some businesses. It sold Argentinian broadcast network Telefé last week in a deal reportedly worth $100 million, a fraction of the $345 million paid by predecessor company Viacom in 2016.

Along with the belt-tightening, the company has made a number of splashy deals, locking up exclusive rights to the UFC for $7.7 billion. The $1.5 billion re-upping of South Park creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone happened two weeks before the official merger close but with the go-ahead from Ellison & Co

The previous regime at Paramount had already shrunk the company’s workforce pretty significantly, initiating three waves of layoffs in the latter months of 2024 and reducing the rolls by about 15% in the U.S. As of the end of 2024, total global headcount was 18,600, but Skydance added about 1,300 workers to the mix via the merger.

Layoffs are never an easy part of a post-merger integration process in terms of employee morale, but for Ellison and his management team there is also the matter of the company’s next M&A conquest. The ink had barely dried on the long-gestating Paramount-Skydance merger before Ellison offered (not once, but three times) to acquire rival Warner Bros Discovery. Last week, word emerged that those overtures had been rebuffed, but Ellison is expected to maintain his pursuit, and WBD initiated a review of its strategic alternatives. Its goal is to convene an auction, citing “unsolicited interest” in a potential acquisition from “multiple parties,” with Comcast and Amazon atop the list of those believed to be kicking the tires.

Paramount is hardly the only U.S. company in streamlining mode. This week alone, Amazon, Target and United Parcel Service have announced tens of thousands of layoffs, joining major employers like Booz Allen Hamilton and General Motors. Many companies have embraced AI, seeing it as a more efficient way to perform tasks previously handled by white-collar office workers.

Here is Ellison’s full memo:

Dear All,

When we launched the new Paramount in August, we made clear that building a strong, future-focused company would require significant change – including restructuring the organization. As part of that process, we must also reduce the size of our workforce, and we recognize these actions affect our most important asset: our people.

We want to be as open and direct as possible about the reasons behind these changes. In some areas, we are addressing redundancies that have emerged across the organization. In others, we are phasing out roles that are no longer aligned with our evolving priorities and the new structure designed to strengthen our focus on growth. Ultimately, these steps are necessary to position Paramount for long-term success.

That said, today we begin the difficult process of informing impacted team members across the company. These decisions are never made lightly, especially given their effect on our colleagues who have made meaningful contributions to the company. To this end, we are committed to supporting all employees through this transition. Members of our HR team will be working closely with business unit leaders to share detailed information on benefits and transition services. Additional questions can be directed to [HR email].

We are deeply grateful for your hard work, professionalism, and resilience during this period of transition. We remain confident that Paramount’s best days are ahead, and we’re committed to building a strong foundation for the future.

Thank you,
David

###

From Deadline:

Paramount Layoffs Hit CBS News: Morning And Evening Streaming Shows Canceled, Saturday AM Hosts Out Amid Overhaul, Johannesburg Bureau Closed

UPDATED with more details: Paramount’s cuts across the company hit CBS News on Wednesday, with the streaming editions of CBS Mornings and the CBS Evening News canceled and CBS Saturday Morning in for an overhaul, according to a source familiar with the plans.

The network also is closing its bureau in Johannesburg.

In all, the layoffs are impacting close to 100 CBS News staffers, according to sources familiar with the extent of the cuts. They are part of a round of layoffs impacting about 1,000 across Paramount following Skydance’s acquisition of Paramount Global. Another round of 1,000 job cuts is expected in the coming months.

“People are very on-edge,” said one staffer, describing the mood as “depressed and unhappy” and “a very tough day at the network.”

The cuts were in the works before Bari Weiss was named editor in chief of the news division this month.

The two hosts of CBS Saturday Morning, Michelle Miller and Dana Jacobson, will be departing, according to a source familiar with the cuts. Jeff Glor, the previous host and former anchor of CBS Evening News, was laid off in a previous round of cuts last year, as Paramount Global slimmed down in preparation for a sale. The weekday CBS Mornings team will now oversee the Saturday show.

Also impacted by the cuts were correspondents Nikki Battiste and Janet Shamlian, the source said. Senior foreign correspondent Debora Patta, who has been reporting on the war in Gaza, has been based in Johannesburg. The Los Angeles Times reported that she was laid off as well, but a network spokesperson has declined to comment.

CBS Mornings Plus debuted last year as a streaming third hour of the network’s morning program, hosted by Adriana Diaz and Tony Dokoupil. CBS Evening News Plus was anchored by John Dickerson, who announced this week he was leaving the network at the end of the year.

The layoffs are said to be spread throughout the news division. They are only the latest cuts at a legacy media outlet this year. NBC News announced layoffs of about 150 staffers as it prepared for the split from sister network MSNBC, which is being spun off along with other Comcast cable networks into a new company, Versant. There were significant layoffs to teams devoted to diversity verticals, such as NBC Out and NBC Blk, although those online sites will continue.

The Writers Guild of America East, which represents employees in the news division, issued a joint statement with the Writers Guild of America West on the Paramount cuts. “Today, we once again see the toll on media workers and the news industry caused by unfettered corporate consolidation. The WGAE and WGAW are working with impacted members to ensure our collective bargaining agreements are enforced and labor law is followed in these layoffs at Paramount Skydance.”

###

From Deadline:

Paramount Layoffs Impact TV Executives Across CBS, MTV, BET & Distribution; George Cheeks Reflects On “Incredibly Difficult” Decisions

A number of television executives have been affected by the major round of layoffs at Paramount, the first since the company was established by the $8.4 billion merger of Paramount Global and Skydance in August.

With Paramount Global’s headcount at 18,600 globally as of the end of 2024, dwarfing that of Skydance (about 1,300), the vast majority of the cuts are coming from the Paramount side. In addition to TV, names are already emerging in the motion picture division and at CBS News.

As has been the case with legacy companies over the past several years, the linear networks and marketing/distribution are heavily impacted. In a memo sent out late Wednesday afternoon, Paramount’s TV Media chair George Cheeks, who oversees CBS and Paramount Media Networks, acknowledged the emotions staff were feeling at the end of what he called “one of the most difficult days.” (Read the email in full below.)

Among those leaving is Teri Fleming, EVP and head of marketing for Paramount Global Content Distribution. She is a company veteran who previously spent more than a decade as SVP Marketing for CBS Studios International.

Veteran CBS current executive Pamela Soper is exiting after more than 20 years at the network. Soper, most recently SVP, Current Programming, CBS Entertainment, has overseen series including The Neighborhood, Bob Hearts Abishola, Mom, The Good Fight and Your Honor.

Also in current, Amanda Palley is leaving. Palley, who is SVP, Current Programming, CBS Entertainment, has been with the company for over 11 years. She has worked on series including The Big Bang Theory, Young Sheldon, Georgie & Mandy’s First Marriage and Crazy Ex-Girlfriend.

Creative executive Rose Catherine Pinkney, who has been with BET for nearly 10 years, is impacted. Pinkney was most recently SVP, Scripted Programming and Development, working on series including Average Joe, The Ms. Pat Show, and Real Husbands of Hollywood.

Also at BET, leaving is Robi Reed, SVP, Talent & Casting, Original Programming, after over 20 years. An Emmy Award and NAACP Image Award-winning casting director, she cast such series as Diarra from Detroit, First Wives Club, Ms. Pat Show, Boomerang, and the miniseries The Bobby Brown Story.

As rumored over the past few weeks, MTV is putting its music video legacy in the rear-view mirror, with the network’s music team disbanded and Wendy Plaut, SVP and Head of Music & Celebrity Talent, departing. She has been at Paramount for almost more than 27 years and was the executive in charge of celebrity talent for the company’s Video Music Awards.

Amanda Culkowski, VP, Music Program Development and Documentaries at MTV/Paramount+, is also impacted. Culkowski has been with the company for over six years, having joined from AMC Networks. She was responsible for developing original music and talent-driven series for MTV’s networks and Paramount+ and has worked on projects including Hip Hop My House and Lolla: The Story of Lollapalooza.

Elsewhere at the cable group, Margaret Comeaux, who is SVP, Music and Events Production for CMT, is exiting. Comeaux has been with the company for nearly 25 years and oversees tentpole events and music specials including the CMT Music Awards.

Paramount+ has also been hit. Jeff Grossman, who is EVP, Programming, is exiting after around 15 years at the company. He led content, planning, scheduling, acquisitions, merchandising and operations for the streamer. He was promoted in 2023, having previously been EVP, content and business operations for Paramount Streaming. Patricia Kollappallil, who was SVP, Corporate Communications, is also out, having held the role for the last two and a half years, after a similar time spent at Showtime. Additionally, leaving is Gregory Heller, VP, Brand and Program Marketing for Paramount+. He spent nearly 14 years at the company across Paramount+ and Showtime, overseeing marketing campaigns for such series as the Dexter franchise, Yellowjackets, The Chi, Shameless, Ray Donovan and Twin Peaks: The Return.

Amy Campbell, Chief Marketing Officer, Paramount Media Networks & MTV Entertainment Studios, is also leaving. Campbell worked across brands such as MTV, VH1, CMT, Logo, Comedy Central, Paramount and Smithsonian Channel, and told colleagues last week that she had decided to “step away” from her role.

Among those departing is Rob Brofman, EVP, Paramount Kids & Family and Paramount Global Content Acquisition Business & Legal Affairs.

Andrea Ballas, VP, Communications, CBS Entertainment, is also affected. Ballas has been with the company for over 27 years, working on shows such as Matlock, Ghosts, NCIS, Two and a Half Men, Mom, Mike & Molly, Bob Hearts Abishola, 2 Broke Girls and CSI. Recently, she was also instrumental is getting Paramount+ to board The Children of October 7, bringing the project to the attention of Shari Redstone after she met activist and dancer Montana Tucker.

“To everyone impacted: your contributions have left a lasting imprint on our company. You’ve made us better, and we are deeply grateful,” Cheeks said in his memo, noting that “while these decisions are incredibly difficult, they are part of the changes needed to help Paramount move forward as a strong, future-focused company as we navigate a rapidly changing industry.”

We will update the story with more exits when they are confirmed.

Paramount Skydance predecessor Paramount Global went through multiple waves of layoffs in preparation for the merger.

The most recent in June cut 2.5% of the overall Paramount workforce. The many areas affected across the company included Comedy Central, MTV, BET, kids and adult animation, business development operations, franchises and consumer products as well CBS Studios casting.

The previous one in August 2024, which reduced Paramount Global’s U.S. staff by 15%, included the shutdown of Paramount Television Studios, with the majority of its team laid off. (The moniker was revived after the merger with a new streaming-focused production unit.)

Paramount is laying off about 1,000 staffers today, with an additional thousand to follow. The vast majority of the affected employees are based in the U.S., with international divisions planning cuts in the coming weeks.

“In some areas, we are addressing redundancies that have emerged across the organization. In others, we are phasing out roles that are no longer aligned with our evolving priorities and the new structure designed to strengthen our focus on growth,” Paramount CEO David Ellison wrote in a memo about the layoffs this morning. “Ultimately, these steps are necessary to position Paramount for long-term success.”

The cuts, come as the leadership of the merged company promised Wall Street after the transaction that they would deliver $2 billion in cost savings, including through workforce reductions.

On the spending side, Paramount Global on the eve of the transaction spent $1.5 billion on South Park streaming rights and its creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone, Paramount post-merger committed $7.7 billion for exclusive rights to the UFC, made a mega deal with the Duffer brothers and has been bidding for Warner Bros. Discovery.

Here is Cheeks’ email:

Team,

Today has been one of the most difficult days, and I want to take a moment to acknowledge the emotions we are all feeling. We are saying goodbye to many valued colleagues, some of whom have been part of Paramount Media Networks or CBS for decades, helping shape the culture, creativity, and legacy we all share. To everyone impacted: your contributions have left a lasting imprint on our company. You’ve made us better, and we are deeply grateful.

While these decisions are incredibly difficult, they are part of the changes needed to help Paramount move forward as a strong, future-focused company as we navigate a rapidly changing industry. This means making tough decisions, including reducing the size of our workforce – choices that affect people who have contributed meaningfully to our success. We recognize the weight of this moment and remain committed to supporting our colleagues through this transition.

Please take the time you need to process, reflect, and support one another. This team has always shown resilience, compassion, and strength. I have no doubt you will continue to do so in the days ahead.
Thank you for your continued dedication and your care for each other as we navigate this together.

George

###

From Deadline:

Paramount Layoffs Hit Motion Picture Execs In Production, Marketing, Music & More; Studio Co-Chairs Say, “Today Has Been A Difficult One”

EXCLUSIVE: Paramount‘s motion picture divisions, including production, literary, marketing and music, were impacted Wednesday by the wider company layoffs, with many Melrose Ave lot vets exiting. The new David Ellison-run conglom is handing out about 1,000 pink slips as it looks to achieve $2 billion in overall savings. We understand that some of those savings aren’t in job cuts alone.

Among those departing, we hear, are President of Worldwide Music Randy Spendlove who has been at the studio since 2006. Spendlove arrived at Paramount as a Grammy winner for Best Soundtrack Album for the Miramax Best Picture Oscar winner Chicago. He started at A&M Records as VP of Promotions where he worked with Janet Jackson, Sheryl Crow, Soundgarden and Bryan Adams. In 1998, he became President of Motion Picture Music at Miramax Films, where he worked on Chicago, Shakespeare in Love, Cold Mountain and Finding Neverland. While at Paramount, he co-supervised the music and co-produced the soundtrack album for Dreamgirls, which was nominated for three Best Song Oscars.

Other executive departures include Bryan Oh, SVP of Production, who most recently was shepherding a K-pop music drama starring Ji-young Yoo and singer-songwriter Eric Nam; Geoff Stier, EVP of Production who was formerly with Showtime Original Programming and a previous Paramount vet overseeing such titles as World War Z and True Grit before coming back in July 2024; Andres Alvarez, EVP of Home Entertainment; Rachel Cadden, EVP of International Theatrical Marketing; Christine Benitez, SVP Multicultural Marketing; and Phil Cohen, SVP of Literary Affairs, who arrived to the studio in 2022.

In a note to staff today, Paramount Pictures co-chairs Dana Golberg and Josh Greenstein took a knee, expressing how “difficult” today is and how “we want to take a moment to acknowledge the departure of valued colleagues and express our deep gratitude for their contributions, dedication, and the impact they’ve made on our studio.” The duo also emphasized the new Skydance-owned Paramount’s plan of “right-sizing our organization” which aims to “refocus our energy, and align our efforts with the endless opportunities ahead.”

There are 1,000 more expected to be cut from the roughly 20,000-employee count of the combined Paramount and Skydance. The next wave is hitting offshore offices. As Deadline previously reported, Paramount television and marketing/distribution were effected today.

Below is the internal email from Goldberg and Greenstein.

Team,

We recognize that today has been a difficult one as our workforce changes take effect. We want to take a moment to acknowledge the departure of valued colleagues and express our deep gratitude for their contributions, dedication, and the impact they’ve made on our studio.

This restructuring marks a pivotal step in shaping the path forward. We’re right-sizing our organization to ensure Paramount Pictures remains not only the iconic studio built on more than a century of storytelling, but also the leading destination for creators and innovators who will define the future of entertainment. Please know that we’re making these changes as comprehensively as possible to ensure we can move forward decisively, refocus our energy, and align our efforts with the endless opportunities ahead.

As we set our sights on the future, our goal is to create clarity and momentum as we begin this next chapter. Your managers and HR business partners are here to support you—please don’t hesitate to reach out with questions or concerns. What makes this place exceptional is the spirit of collaboration and kindness you show one another every day. We know that same generosity will carry us through this transition.

We will be sharing more around our strategy and structure in the coming weeks and appreciate your continued commitment and focus. 

Thank you for everything you bring to this team. We’re confident that, together, we’ll build an even stronger future.

Dana and Josh

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Stream a Mountain of Entertainment, including your Nickelodeon favorites on Paramount+! Try it FREE at ParamountPlus.com!


Originally published: October 28, 2025.

Update H/Ts: Kidscreen, @KeydalisColo2.

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Buffalo Bills Running Back James Cook Named NVP of Week 8 | 'NFL Slimetime' Season 5

SpongeBob SquarePants' very own Sandy Cheeks has announced Buffalo Bills running back James Cook as the Nickelodeon Valuable Player (NVP) of Week 8 of NFL Slimetime season five!

Buffalo Bills Running Back James Cook Named NVP of Week 8 | 'NFL Slimetime' Season 5


Join Nate Burleson, Young Dylan, Dylan Schefter, Mia Burleson and Cameron Jordan to see NFL highlights, interviews, and game picks as you've never seen them before. Most of all, find out which player takes home the slimiest trophy in sports, the NVP. Catch NFL Slimetime on Nickelodeon, and Paramount+! Try Paramount+ for FREE at ParamountPlus.com.

UK FANS: Slimetime UK returns next year on Nickelodeon UK & Ireland!


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Historical list of NVP winners:

2020 WC Game - QB Mitchell Trubisky

Season 1 of NFL Slimetime:

Week 1: QB Kyler Murray
Week 2: QB Tom Brady
Week 3: K Justin Tucker
Week 4: QB Dak Prescott
Week 5: QB Josh Allen
Week 6: RB Derrick Henry
Week 7: WR Ja'Marr Chase
Week 8: QB Mike White
Week 9: OLB Josh Allen
Week 10: QB Patrick Mahomes
Week 11: RB Jonathan Taylor
Week 12: RB Leonard Fournette
Week 13: QB Justin Herbert
Week 14: TE George Kittle
Week 15: DL Christian Wilkins
Week 16: QB Joe Burrow
Week 17: WR Ja'Marr Chase
Week 18: WR Deebo Samuel
2021 Wild-Card Game: QB Dak Prescott
2021 Divisional round: Bills offense
2021 AFC Championship: QB Patrick Mahomes

NVP of NVPs (awarded during the off week before Super Bowl LVI) – QB Joe Burrow

Season 2 of Slimetime:

Week 1: WR Justin Jefferson
Week 2: QB Tua Tagovailoa
Week 3: Lamar Jackson
Week 4: Austin Ekeler
Week 5: Taysom Hill
Week 6: Quinnen Williams
Week 7: Joe Burrow
Week 8: AJ Brown
Week 9: Detroit Lions Defence
Week 10: Jonathan Taylor
Week 11: Travis Kelce
Week 12: Josh Jacobs
Week 13: San Francisco 49ers defense
Week 14: Baker Mayfield
Week 15: Jalen Hurts
Nickelodeon NFL Nickmas Game Hall of Fame: Baker Mayfield
Week 16: Patrick Mahomes
Week 17: N/A (episode canceled out of respect Damar Hamlin)
Week 18: Nyheim Hines
Week 19: Daniel Jones
Week 20: Travis Kelce
Week 21: Miles Sanders
Week 22: Austin Ekeler (NVP of NVPs)
Week 23: Patrick Mahomes (Nickelodeon Super Bowl LVII NVP)

Season 3 of Slimetime:

Pre-season: Deuce Vaughn (first ever 2023 Preseason NVP)
Week 1: Tyreek Hill
Week 2: Mike Evans
Week 3: Keenan Allen
Week 4: Christian McCaffrey
Week 5: D. J. Moore
Week 6: Dan Campbell (first-ever NVC award)
Week 7: Myles Garrett
Week 8: Will Levis
Week 9: Josh Dobbs
Week 10: C.J. Stroud
Week 11: Trevor Lawrence
Week 12: DaRon Bland
Week 13: Gardner Minshew
Week 14: Lamar Jackson
Week 15: Baker Mayfield
Nickelodeon NFL Nickmas Game: Bilal Nichols
Week 16: Amari Cooper
Week 17: Kyren Williams
Week 18: Jordan Love
Week 19: Josh Allen
Week 20: Travis Kelce
Week 21: Christian McCaffrey
NVP of NVPs: Gardner Minshew
NVP of Super Bowl LVIII: Patrick Mahomes

Season 4 of Slimetime:

Week 1: Saquon Barkley
Week 2: Marvin Harrison Jr.
Week 3: Sam Darnold
Week 4: Jayden Daniels
Week 5: Kirk Cousins
Week 6: Jordan Love
Week 7: Kenneth Walker III
Week 8:  Jameis Winston
Week 9: Zay Flowers
Week 10: Brock Purdy
Week 11: Jahmyr Gibbs & David Montgomery
Week 12: Saquon Barkley
Week 13: Russell Wilson
Week 14: Puka Nacua
Week 15: Josh Allen
Week 16: Jonathan Taylor
Week 17: Joe Burrow
Week 18: Bo Nix
Wild Card Weekend: Joe Mixon
Week 19: Derrick Henry
Week 20 (Divisional Round): Jayden Daniels
Week 21 (Conference Championships Matchups): Patrick Mahomes
NVP of NVPs: Saquon Barkley
NVP of Super Bowl LIX: Cooper DeJean

Season 5 of Slimetime:

Week 1: Daniel Jones
Week 2: Brandon Aubrey
Week 3: Isaiah Rodgers
Week 4: Jaxson Dart
Week 5: Rico Dowdle
Week 6: Cam Skattebo
Week 7: Bo Nix
Week 8: James Cook

Stream a Mountain of Entertainment, including your Nickelodeon favorites on Paramount+! Try it FREE at ParamountPlus.com!


Originally published: October 30, 2025.

Buffalo Bills Running Back James Cook Named NVP of Week 8 | 'NFL Slimetime' Season 5
MVP

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