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Cocomelon

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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American YouTube channel for children

Cocomelon
Other namescheckgate aka ThatsMeOnTV.com (2006–2013)
ABC Kid TV (2013–2018)
YouTube information
Channel
Years active19
GenresEducation,nursery rhymes
Subscribers200 million
Views214 billion
Last updated: January 23, 2026

Cocomelon (/kkmɛlən/, stylized asCoComelon) is a children'sYouTube channel operated by theCandle Media-ownedMoonbug Entertainment. The channel specializes in3D animation videos of traditionalnursery rhymes and originalchildren's songs. As of January 2026, Cocomelon is the3rd most-subscribed and2nd most-viewed channel on YouTube.[1]

The channel launched in September 2006 and was rebranded as Cocomelon in 2018. It has since expanded globally in multiple languages, with spinoff series,Netflix TV shows,merchandising, special events, and ongoing product diversification. It was purchased by Candle Media in 2021 for a reported $3 billion.

Content

Cocomelon's videos, for a target audience of two- to five-year-olds,[2] feature3D animatedchildren,adults, andanimals who interact with each other in daily life. The lyrics appear at thebottom of the screen in the same way on all displays. Formats include standalone music videos, compilations, andlivestreams.[citation needed] A blend of live action and animation was introduced in 2024 in one of the shows.[3] The toddler characters' ages 'stretch' to reflect both the reality and the aspiration of their audience's lives," according to the Cocomelon creative staff. There is a proprietary staff-only guide of about 100 pages detailing the Cocomelon backstory and characters.[4]

History

The YouTube channel was created in September 2006 by Jay Jeon,[5][4][6] registered under the name "checkgate",[7] later rebranded to "ABC Kid TV".[6] The channel began by posting educational videos focused on the alphabet.[8] In 2016, it transitioned to 3D animation, with the first 3D video.[9] In 2018, the channel rebranded to Cocomelon, and introduced a recurring cast of characters.[10]

checkgate/ThatsMEOnTV.com (2006–2013)

On September 1, 2006, Cocomelon was created on YouTube under the username "checkgate", a month before Google acquired YouTube.[11] According to Jeon, it was initially a hobby with his wife, sharing animations that their own kids enjoyed.[12] Two versions of thealphabet song were uploaded on the first day[8], being titled "ABC Song", and "ABC Song with Cute Ending". A third video was uploaded nine months later, titled "Learning ABC Alphabet – Letter "K" — Kangaroo Game". Most videos on the channel taught the alphabet, with a typical length of between one and two minutes.[6] At the time, the Jeons were operating ThatsMEOnTV.com, an online business that incorporated children's photos into animated educational videos delivered onDVDs.[13] Video titles on the channel were appended with "from www.ThatsMEonTV.com".[14]

ABC Kid TV (2013–2018)

In 2013, the channel rebranded to "ABC Kid TV"[6] and began remastering older videos, followed by a transition from alphabet videos tonursery rhymes.[9] On April 8, 2016, computer animation was introduced, with the first 3D character appearing in a video for "Twinkle Twinkle Little Star". Later in 2016, 3D animation videos became longer, some videos usedmotion capture technology, and uploads became more frequent. Animation and music production continued to become more sophisticated, and a recurring cast of characters formed before the 2018 rebrand.[10]

Cocomelon (2018–present)

In the summer of 2018, the channel rebranded again to Cocomelon, introducing new intros and outros for all its videos.[citation needed] The next year,analytics firmSocial Blade estimated Cocomelon's monthly YouTube advertising revenue between $638,000 and $10.2 million;[15]The Wall Street Journal estimated annual ad revenue at $120 million.[16]

In early 2020, Jeon granted his first-ever media interview forBloomberg Businessweek, which ran a profile of the "unassuming mogul" and his business. Jeon, 55 at the time, agreed to the condition that there be no photography and no mention of his wife to preserve their privacy. For most of its history, he and his wife had run the channel primarily on their own, keeping a low profile; even their neighbors didn't know they owned Cocomelon.<refname="Businessweek/cocomelon-merch" /> For many years, Jeon had also avoided expansion by turning down investors, sponsors, language translations, sequels, and merchandising.<refname="Businessweek/cocomelon-merch" />

In June 2020, Cocomelon launched on Netflix, with three episodes, each about an hour long. Netflix offered access to an audience that didn't allow their children to watch YouTube.[17]

In July 2020, Jeon sold his wholly owned company, Treasure Studio, which produced Cocomelon and employed around 20 people, to Moonbug Entertainment, a British firm focused on children's content.[18]<refname="Businessweek/cocomelon-merch" /> According to Moonbug cofounder Rene Rechtman, "Cocomelon has the potential to be the biggest property in the world when it comes to kids. In terms of viewership, it already is."[18] The channel began increasing its reach by securing deals with platforms inSouth Korea, China, and Europe.[6] By 2021, the channel had expanded its content to include Spanish, Portuguese,Mandarin Chinese, German, and Arabic.[19][20][21]

In 2021, Moonbug was acquired for a reported $3 billion byCandle Media, a company founded by formerDisney executivesKevin Mayer andTom Staggs and backed by theBlackstone Group.[22][23][24][25] That November, a new show,JJ's Animal Time, also calledCocomelon Animal Time, appeared on YouTube, featuring JJ's favorite animal friends.[26][27]

In 2022, Netflix began airing Cocomelon as a Netflix Original show.[citation needed] In May, a new weekly spin-off show,It's Cody Time, also calledCody Time, launched on YouTube, featuring the character Cody, JJ's best friend.[28][29]

A spinoff series,Nina's Familia, premiered on September 29, 2023, focusing onLatine culture and bilingual content.[30] The Nina Reyes character first appeared on Cocomelon in 2019. The show follows the Cocomelon format with educational songs and nursery rhymes. Centered on Nina and her Mexican American family, it was designed for both Spanish-speaking and non-Spanish-speaking children and aims to represent Latino culture accurately.[31] About 70% of the episodes are in English and 30% with some form of Spanish. Development was based in part onfocus groups with mothers.[30]

A new original series,Cocomelon Lane, set in the Cocomelon universe, premiered on Netflix on November 17, 2023.[32] The series was described as "a more traditional preschool TV version" of the YouTube channel., narrative- rather than singalong-driven.[33] It was built around a "'social-emotional learning curriculum" that focuses on milestone moments for preschoolers, and the accompanying feelings.[32] The series allowed Cocomelon characters to speak directly to the audience for the first time.[34]

A spin-off series,Cocomelon Classroom featuring Ms. Appleberry, premiered on YouTube on September 21, 2024. It is the firstlive action Cocomelon title, with a blend of live action and animation. Ms. Appleberry, originally an animated Cocomelon character, is played byJuliana Urtubey, who was named the USNational Teacher of the Year in 2021. Supported by a learning specialist and a literacy consultant, the weekly show "integrates themes that are essential to early childhood cognitive, social and emotional development".[3]

Rise in popularity

On September 18, 2007, a year after Cocomelon's YouTube launch as checkgate, the channel had seven videos uploaded and 41 subscribers. Two versions of "Cute Alphabet Song from WWW.ThatsMEonTV.com" had 179,970 and 49,292 views; the others had around 1,000 to 20,000 views.[35] By November 14, 2010, there were 1287 subscribers, while views of all videos uploaded to the channel reached over 30 million; "Cute Alphabet Song", renamed "ABC Song from WWW.ThatsMEonTV.com Alphabet Song", had nearly 25 million views.[36] Over the next five years, by October 29, 2015, subscriptions rose to about 750,000, and a 50-minute compilation of previous videos, published on May 1, 2014, had over 244 million views.[37][38][note 1]

After nine years on YouTube, Cocomelon reached 1 million subscribers on May 16, 2016, and later that month reached 1 billion total views. The channel grew rapidly following the July 2017 release of "Yes Yes" Bedtime Song, in which TomTom uses stuffed animals to get JJ to prepare for bed; "Yes Yes" became Cocomelon's most-viewed video, with over 1 billion views.[citation needed]

In 2018, a YouTube study byPew Research Center found that "some 81% ofall parents with children age 11 or younger let their child watch videos on YouTube", with 34% indicating they do so regularly. Of the 50 most recommended videos found in the study, 11 were "oriented toward small children". Cocomelon's "Bath Song | + More Nursery Rhymes & Kids Songs" was the most recommended video in the research project.[45][46] (As of September 2020, that video had received over 3.2 billion views on YouTube, making it the 19th-most-viewed video on the site.[47])

In 2019, Cocomelon had the second-largest YouTube channel subscription gain, increasing by over 36 million, ending the year with 67.4 million subscribers.[48] Between May and June 2019, it received 2.5 billion total views, averaging 83 million daily viewers worldwide. It "[dwarfed] the turnout for most of the world's sports leagues, pop stars, and scripted TV."<refname="Businessweek/cocomelon-merch" /> Comparatively, the "major four [American] TV broadcast networks averaged just 13 million viewers daily during the TV season".[49]

After a July 2019 settlement with the United StatesFederal Trade Commission (FTC), YouTube began implementing major changes to itsrecommendation algorithm,data collection, andad targeting for children's content. The changes, along with a $170 million fine, followed acomplaint to the FTC under theChildren's Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA).[50] Several children's channels were negatively affected. Cocomelon "dropped from 575 million total views the week before the change, to 436 million the week of, to 307 million the week after, and 282 million the week after that."[51]

In September 2020, Netflix rankedCocomelon as its third-most-popular show.[52] On December 12, 2020, Cocomelon became the third YouTube channel to get100 million subscribers.[citation needed] Following predictions that Cocomelon would soon surpassPewDiePie in subscribers,[53][54][55] PewDiePie released adiss track titled "Coco" in February 2021. YouTube removed the video for violating its harassment and child safety policies; the audio remains onSpotify.[56][57][58] Cocomelon surpassedPewDiePie in April 2021 to become the second-most-subscribed YouTube channel at the time.[53][54][55]

As of September 2024[update], Cocomelon ranked third in YouTube subscriptions, with approximately 182 million subscribers and just under two billion monthly views.[59]

Diversification

In 2020, Cocomelon began moving into new product areas, including merchandising and live events.[60][5] This coincided with the change in YouTube's advertising policies around child-focused content that resulted in an estimated 50-60% revenue loss for the top children's channels.[5] That year, Cocomelon announced a partnership on a line oftoys, includingplush dolls andtoy vehicles, with manufacturerJazwares,[61] and content deals with Netflix and other streaming platforms.

2021

Cocomelon participated in theRiyadh Season annual festival inRiyadh,Saudi Arabia, collaborating withSpacetoon and the Saudi General Entertainment Authority on Cocomelon Town, open for three months.[62][63] The Town, set up in five locations, included a replica of the CoComelon house; the Melon Patch Academy, with a variety of learning activities; the Melon Patch Academy Playground; JJ's Grandparent's Farm, with various activities; and the CoComelon Musical Bus.[62]

2022

Cocomelon introduced its first spoken-word product, theCocomelon Story Time podcast, in partnership with Spotify. It features "storybook classics", available in American and British English, Spanish, German, and Brazilian Portuguese. The podcast is available only by subscription to the Spotify Family Plan.[64]

Cocomelon partnered with Falcon's Beyond, a developer of entertainment attractions, on a resort destination inPunta Cana, Dominican Republic. The planned 40,000-to-60,000-square-foot activity area, featuring Cocomelon characters, is one of four attractions in Curiosity Playground, located onMeliá Hotels International property.[65]

2023

A live tour, Cocomelon Party Time, launched in the US in June. The interactive event allowed families to "sing, dance, and play" with Cocomelon characters, including JJ, YoYo, TomTom, Nina, Cody, and Ms. Appleberry. Activities included ring toss, pin-the-tail, and other games; coloring and party hat-making; a light-up dance floor; a simulated hot-air balloon ride; storytelling; a sing-along; and photo opportunities. Tickets were required for everyone aged 12 months and older.[66]

Cocomelon partnered withCameo, a seller of personalized video messages from celebrities, to offer artificial intelligence-generated, customized videos featuring the show's main characters.[67] Cocomelon was one of initial group of companies in the launch of Cameo Kids. Unlike the adult celebrity product, the children's videos are created from preset holiday, birthday, and other messages, with a child's name spoken by a character via text-to-speech.[68]

Cocomelon partnered withPuma on a global line of apparel and footwear inspired by the show. The line includes individual sneakers for characters JJ, Nina, and Cody, as well as other items inspired by the show's logo and graphics.[69]

Broadcast

In 2020, Treasure Studio added Cocomelon content to Netflix,Roku, andHulu.[70][71] Cocomelon programming aired onUniversal Kids from June 21, 2021, until its closure on March 6, 2025, as well asCartoonito from January 31, 2022, to February 16, 2024.[72] It has also been broadcast onSAB TV in Pakistan since 29 March 2021,[citation needed] Cartoonito in the United Kingdom from 4 April 2021,Tiny Pop in the UK from 15 November 2021,TV5 in the Philippines as part of Moonbug Kids since September 2022, andGulli in France since 7 November 2022.[73] Additionally, Cocomelon airs onRTÉ Jr Radio in Ireland.[citation needed]

Film adaptation

In May 2025, it was announced thatUniversal Pictures would distribute a Cocomelon animated movie for release in 2027. It will be produced byDreamWorks Animation, Moonbug Entertainment, and Flywheel Media, withPrime Focus Studios providing animation.[74][67][75]

Reception

Reviewing the TV series,Common Sense Media rated it appropriate for ages 2 and up and gave it 3 out of 5 stars, noting that it coexists with the YouTube channel. The series "touches on typical preschool themes" and depicts teamwork and mutual support. The characters are "gender-balanced" with a "variety of skin tones, but main toddler JJ and his family are White." Some "inconsistencies" are cited: babies who appear to be about age one sometimes use scissors and usually speak in baby babble, but sometimes speak normally.[76]

InThe Guardian, entertainment reporter Stuart Heritage wrote: "Cocomelon is not the sort of thing that holds up to scrutiny well. It's cloying and simplistic and repetitive and ... not designed to be watched by adults at all. ... Some songs ... are genuinely unbearable to endure. But guess what? They're not for you. If you're a preschool child, though, this stuff is like crack. ... The key to Cocomelon's success isn't that it's good ... [it's] that it's just about reliable enough. ... [It is] a series of inoffensive, if slightly unsettling, songs that go on and on and on for long enough to let you sneak off and cook dinner."[77]

Concerns

News media have expressed concern about the channel's anonymous nature and its visually intense content.

Identity of original owners

Cocomelon's website has described the company as having 20 employees.[8] WhenThe Wall Street Journal attempted to find out who creates Cocomelon videos, they were unable to contact Treasure Studio, which owns the channel.[78]Wired magazine located a couple inIrvine, California who seemed to have some ties with Treasure Studio, but was unable to confirm that they owned the channel.[15] In February 2020,Bloomberg Businessweek identified a couple fromOrange County, California as the owners of Treasure Studio and Cocomelon.[5] In mid-2020, Cocomelon was purchased by the children's new media conglomerate Moonbug.[18] In 2022, Moonbug was itself acquired by Candle Media, owned by two former Disney executives.[25]

Content

Psychologist Mark Travers citedCocomelon as an example of a children's TV show that may hinder young children's mental development due to its frenetic pacing and overstimulating visuals.[79]

TheNew York Times has discussed Cocomelon's focus on maintaining children's attention. Jordy Kaufman, a media researcher who runs the Babylab research facility at theSwinburne University of Technology inMelbourne, Australia, was quoted as saying that the effect ofscreen time on child development is "a big question without clear answers."[25]

Controversy

On 1 August 2023,Moonbug Entertainment was awarded US$23.4 million in a copyright case againstFuzhou-based company BabyBus, accused of "blatantly copying" Cocomelon videos, including the character of JJ.[80] LaterYouTube removed its channel BabyBus's Super JoJo.[81]

See also

Notes

  1. ^Rise in popularity on YouTube
    • Apr 3, 2008: 187 subscribers. Views for "Cute Alphabet Song" were 1,104,387 and 364,868.[39]
    • Feb 10, 2009: 511 subscribers. Videos had been reduced to five; one version of "Cute Alphabet Song" had 5,702,390 views, and the other four videos were in the 600,000-800,000 range.[40]
    • Nov 14, 2010: 1287 subscribers; 30,947,891 total upload views. "Cute Alphabet Song", renamed "ABC Song from WWW.ThatsMEonTV.com Alphabet Song", had 24,963,149 views.[36]
    • Sep 12, 2011: 5018 subscribers; 66,207,113 upload views. The video, again renamed "ABC Song with Cute Ending," had 44,024,060 views, and videos had been uploaded for each letter of the alphabet, with about 130,000 to 1.8 million views each.[41]
    • Sep 18, 2012: 16,300 subscribers; 125,577,383 upload views.[42]
    • Jun 12, 2013: 30,986 subscribers; 151,400,672 upload views. Several videos had well over three million views.[43]
    • Oct 29, 2014: 313,762 subscribers. Several videos had over 10 million views.[44]
    • Oct 29, 2015: 748,390 subscribers. A 50-minute compilation of previous videos, published on May 1, 2014, had 244,303,897 views.[37][38]

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