Paramount Parks

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Paramount Parks

Paramount Parks logo (2003-2005)

Paramount Parks logo (1994-2003)
Slogan "Where Else?"
"The Best of Hollywood Entertainment, Now Playing."
Fate Sold
Successor Cedar Fair Entertainment Company
Founded 1992
Defunct June 30, 2006
Location Charlotte, North Carolina
Industry Theme Parks and Themed Attractions
Former Parent Viacom

Paramount Parks was an operator of theme parks and attractions, which annually attracted about 13 million patrons. Viacom had assumed control of the company as part of its acquisition of Paramount Pictures in 1994.

The company once owned and operated five theme parks in North America and managed Bonfante Gardens in Gilroy, California. From late 2001 until late 2004, Paramount Parks also managed Terra Mítica, an amusement park in Benidorm, Valencia, Spain.

Contents

[edit] History

Paramount Communications, previously known as Gulf and Western, in turn had acquired the parks from Nelson Schwab and his management group. Schwab and his KECO Entertainment acquired the group in a management-led LBO from the Taft Broadcasting Company, which had built Kings Island in Cincinnati using cast off rides from Cincinnati's Coney Island [1] and to this day there is a small area in the Cincinnati park called "Coney Island" (Named "Coney Mall" in later years) still featuring some of those original rides.

The parks were part of Viacom's Blockbuster Entertainment division until 2002 when they were moved back to Paramount Pictures. After another Viacom corporate shuffle in 2004 the parks became part of Viacom Recreation, a division of Nickelodeon and MTV Networks.

In early 2006, as Viacom went through a corporate split (creating a new version of Viacom and renaming the original company CBS Corporation), Paramount Parks was assigned to CBS Corporation.

Each of the individual Paramount parks maintained their own individual names and identities until 1993, when they were each granted the "Paramount's" prefix (Paramount's Kings Island, Paramount's Great America, etc).

[edit] Sale to Cedar Fair

The Paramount Parks corporate logo from 2005-2006 had no parent company tag after Viacom changed their name to CBS
The Paramount Parks corporate logo from 2005-2006 had no parent company tag after Viacom changed their name to CBS

On January 27, 2006, the CBS Corporation announced its intent to sell Paramount Parks due to the fact that it didn't fit well within the company's core business (producing and distributing television content). A number of groups expressed interest in purchasing the company, several placed bids, and on May 22, 2006 it was announced that regional theme park operator Cedar Fair Entertainment Company (best known as the owner of Cedar Point in Sandusky, Ohio) had outbid competitors and intended to purchase all five parks in the Paramount chain, including Star Trek: The Experience at The Las Vegas Hilton and the management agreement of Bonfante Gardens.

On June 30, 2006, Cedar Fair announced that it had completed its acquisition of Paramount Parks from CBS Corporation in a cash transaction valued at $1.24 billion. Shortly following the transfer of ownership, Cedar Fair began the process of integrating the two companies by eliminating the Paramount Parks corporate office in Charlotte, North Carolina and transferring all decision-making to Cedar Fair's offices in Sandusky, Ohio.

The individual parks continued to operate under their Paramount names during the 2006 season, however Cedar Fair began removing the Paramount name and logo from the parks in January 2007. The names of the parks were changed back to their original pre-Paramount names with the Cedar Fair corporate logo added. As of January 25, 2008, the parks were given their own named websites, rather than being linked to from the old Cedar Fair [2] web portal.

[edit] Former Properties

[edit] Amusement Parks

Paramount's Carowinds logo, one of Paramount Parks properties
Paramount's Carowinds logo, one of Paramount Parks properties

[edit] Water Parks

[edit] Other

Note: All Paramount Parks offered the water park free with park admission

[edit] Paramount Action FX Theater

A simulator ride in Paramount Parks with two sides - one is 3-dimensional the other shows films.

In 1994, Paramount Parks opened a two-sided motion simulator called Days Of Thunder, based on the movie Days of Thunder. This ran from 1994 to 1997. In 1998, Days Of Thunder was replaced with James Bond 007: License to Kill. In 2001, the theme park presented The 7th Portal (based on the web comic by Stan Lee) as a three dimensional ride in which the riders help the Data Raiders fight the Nullifiers.

In 2003, SpongeBob SquarePants 4-D made its debut at the theme parks.

In 2006, The Funtastic World of Hanna-Barbera was presented. It had been closed after its last run in 2002 at Universal Studios Florida.

In 2007 the Hanna-Barbera ride was taken down and was never shown at the theater again.

In 2008 the ride was later named Action Theater, which had a comic book theme than a action movie theme, and only showed the Spongebob movie.

[edit] External links

[edit] See also

[edit] Former Paramount Park Sites

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