Discovery Cube Los Angeles is bringing the world of Disney Jr.’s “Mickey Mouse Clubhouse” to life with a new interactive ...
From loyal sidekicks to goofy troublemakers, cartoon dogs have a special place in pop culture. But behind their animated ...
Ever since 2019 — the end of a 20-year IP drought brought on by congressional copyright extensions — every annual crop has ...
Betty Boop and "Blondie" are joining Mickey Mouse and Winnie the Pooh in the public domain. That means creators can use and ...
Several Disney cartoons and characters from 1930 have entered the public domain this year. Works in the public domain are no longer protected by copyright and can be freely used and shared. Other ...
Are cinema-goers ready for a bloodthirsty Betty Boop? The question will be answered later this year when the Jazz Age cartoon icon is rebooted as a vicious villain in a low-budget horror film.
The public domain welcomes characters, movies, novels, and songs from the year 1930.
Nine Mickey Mouse cartoons, the Marx Brothers' film "Animal Crackers," and books by William Faulkner and Agatha Christie are now in the public domain.
The 95-year copyright on these classic characters has expired, and that means creators can use and repurpose them without permission or payment.
As 2026 begins, so does a new chapter for creativity. Thousands of books, films, songs and works of art from the early 20th ...