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  1. DHX Cookie Jar Inc. (also known as Cookie Jar Group, originally known as CINAR, formerly known as Cookie Jar Entertainment Inc., or simply just Cookie Jar) was a Canadian media, production, animation studio, and distribution company owned by DHX Media.

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  3. Sep 24, 2022 · From a print of first season of Caillou on official Caillou's YouTube channel© WildBrain, all rights reserved

  4. This video took a while as I did other things, but it's finally here!Suggested by: @cg03studios73 CINAR, later becoming Cookie Jar Group/Entertainment, was a...

  5. DHX Cookie Jar Inc. (also known as Cookie Jar Group, originally known as CINAR, formerly known as Cookie Jar Entertainment Inc., or simply just Cookie Jar) was a Canadian media, production, animation studio, and distribution company owned by DHX Media.

  6. Cookie Jar Group was a Canadian media production and distribution company. Micheline Charest and Ronald A. Weinberg started it in 1976 in the United States as just a distributor. In 1984 they moved to Montreal and started to make children's TV series.

  7. The CINAR scandal was a major accounting scandal in Canada that came to light in March 2000 at CINAR, renamed to Cookie Jar Group, one of the world's most successful children's television production companies at the time.

  8. Ronald Andrew Weinberg (born 1952) is an American-born Canadian fraudster and former television producer and businessman best known as the co-founder of the CINAR animation studio (later to be known as Cookie Jar Group, now renamed as WildBrain), and its co-CEO during a scandal that eventually brought down the company.

  9. Aug 20, 2012 · Cookie Jar Group, the Canadian cartoon powerhouse built on the former animation empire of Cinar Corp., has agreed to be acquired by DHX Media Ltd. in a deal that will create the largest independent owner of children’s programming in the world.

  10. Cookie Jar Group. CINAR received over $50 million in tax benefits from the Canadian government. However in 1999, the company was accused of falsely crediting Canadians for work done by Americans. Hélène Charest, the sister of Quebec Liberal Party leader Jean Charest, was listed on over 100 episodes that she did not write. [10]