Victoria’s Pirate Size Productions won the $20,000 exclusive content pitch award at this year’s Australian Children’s Content Summit (ACCS) for early childhood projects Anna Antarctica.
According to TV tonight, the concept of Dan Nixon and Alyssa Smedley is concentrated on skipping Anana and her best friend, living in the fictional Aurora station in Antarctic. It is the world’s most advanced mobile science research facility. This is a hub for exploration and scientific research missions, and Keen Anna is always looking for ways to participate and support the action.
Pirate Size Productions is known for the 2020 animated series Pencil Pals and is also the producer of Andrew The Big Big Unicorn, which was announced at ACCS last year.
Anna Antarctica was one of 180 original ideas proposed directly to Mindeau Pictures as part of the initiative, which revealed a list of 10 projects that convey climate change in early childhood sessions at the summit.
Suzanne Ryan, CEO of SLR Productions and founder of ACCS, said the number of pitches this week showed just how successful the program was.
“Having a Mindeoo photo is an incredible opportunity for creators to allocate a $20,000 prize,” she said.
“Congratulations to Anna Antartica of Pirate Size Productions. That pitch highlights exactly why ACCS is such a powerful platform for bold new kids’ stories.”
As part of the event’s initial sponsorship, Mindeoo Pictures promoted the arrival of acclaimed showrunner Karissa Valencia (Spirit Rangers) and shared his expertise in screen climate storytelling with participants.
Executive Director Malinda Wink said Anna Antalctica is strongly aligned with Mindar’s research on both early childhood developmental principles, marine health and climate behavior.
“We were all impressed with the quality of the projects that came through the pitch callout of content and are thrilled to announce Anna Antaluxica as the recipient of the Development Award,” she said.
“Congratulations to the Anna Antalcuca team for sharing the pitch with us.”