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POW! Entertainment

American media production company


Summary

American media production company

FieldValue
namePOW! Entertainment, Inc.
logo[[File:POW! Entertainment logo.png200px]]
typeSubsidiary
foundation
founder
location_cityBeverly Hills, California
location_countryUnited States
location
locations
key_peopleGill Champion (president)
industryEntertainment
servicesDevelopment
revenue$ 20.21 million (FY 2015)
operating_income$ -200,415 (FY 2015)
net_income$ -187,367 (FY 2015)
assets$ 803,679 (FY 2015)
equity$ -4.99 million (FY 2015)
num_employees13 (March 2014)
parentCamsing International Holding
divisionsStan Lee Universe LP
subsidStan Lee Global Entertainment, LLC
homepage
intl

POW! Entertainment Inc. is an American media production company formed in 2001 by Gill Champion, Arthur Lieberman and former Marvel Comics editor and publisher Stan Lee. POW! is made up of two companies: POW! Entertainment, Inc. (POW! Inc.), a holding corporation and its wholly owned subsidiary, POW! Entertainment, LLC (POW! LLC) and is currently owned by Camsing International Holding.

POW! productions include the 2006 Sci-Fi Channel's TV-movie Stan Lee's Lightspeed, that network's reality television series Who Wants to Be a Superhero? and the Stan Lee's Mighty 7 media franchise. Other productions include the direct-to-DVD animated features Stan Lee's Mosaic and Stan Lee Presents: The Condor.

History

In November 2001, Stan Lee formed POW! Entertainment, LLC, a Delaware-registered limited liability company, with Gill Champion and Arthur Lieberman. POW! set up their offices at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's headquarters in Santa Monica, California as a first look deal was negotiated in April 2002 by Lieberman with MGM and Cheyenne Enterprises, Bruce Willis's and producer Arnold Rifkin's production company.

Lee created the risqué animated superhero series Stripperella for Spike TV's The Strip animated block which premiered on June 26, 2003. POW! also had a dozen additional feature and television production agreements by July. Three of the films were in preproduction: Nightbird, The Femizons then with writers Cary Solomon and Chuck Konzelman and The Double Man, then under development by Training Day director Antoine Fuqua. A production agreement was signed by POW! and Idiom Films for Forever Man, an avenging hero type with a twist. Meanwhile, the company signed with DIC Entertainment on a TV series production deal starting with Stan Lee's Secret Super Six, about teens with alien superpowers who are taught by Lee about humanity. The in-development Hefs Superbunnies animated superhero series was announced by Lee at Comic-Con 2003, which would feature a villain fighting Hugh Hefner and his playmates.

Public corporation

The separate corporation, POW! Entertainment, Inc., is a holding company created to have publicly traded stock. The corporation originated as Delaware-based Megatek Legacy Systems, Inc., formed August 17, 1998; it became Alta Pacific Minerals, Inc. in 1999, and Arturion Entertainment, Inc. in 2002. By 2004, Arturion's stockholder was Media Dynamics, Inc., owned by Valerie Barth, controlling stockholder, and minority stockholder, UltraVision Inc., owned by Ron Sandman. Arturion was a public shell corporation used to acquire POW! on May 5, 2004, with POW! members receiving Arturion shares to take it public on over-the-counter market "Pink Sheets" in a reverse merger. Arturion changed its name to POW! Entertainment, Inc. Media Dynamics invested $500,000 for 769,250 shares with a subscription for additional shares for $650,000.

In August 2004, Lee announced a superhero program that would feature Ringo Starr, the former Beatle, as the lead character. Additionally, in August of that year, Lee announced the launch of Stan Lee's Sunday Comics.

In May 2004, IDT Entertainment purchased a minority share in POW! Entertainment in an agreement for exclusive distribution rights to POW!'s animated DVD properties and a joint development of six cartoon films. In 2005, the company announced that another animated film that would feature the voice of Ringo Starr. Also in early 2005, the company formed a strategic partnership to develop a new mobile channel with mobile-streaming pioneer Vidiator, through Vidiator's mobile streaming technology. In 2006, this resulted in an agreement with Sprint Nextel Corp. where the Stan Lee's POW! Mobile Channel is officially listed as Sprint's Channel 70. The channel includes mobisodes with Stripperella, The Accuser and The Drifter.

In 2004, an agreement with Andrew Stevens Entertainment Group and Jeff Franklin of FWE Inc. indicated that POW! and Lee planned to produce three action movies for the Sci Fi Channel, which were to be aired in 2005 to 2006. Only one movie, Lightspeed, was completed for Sci Fi and aired July 26, 2006.

In December 2004, in a joint venture agreement with Celebrities In Action, a company formed by investment banker Stan Medley (who structured POW! Entertainment's reverse merger earlier in the year and Chris Nassif, President of Diverse Media Group, Lee was to create approximately 25 characters based on celebrities. POW! and CIA were scheduled to commence production in early spring of 2005. In February 2005, POW! Announced a second project with Celebrities In Action called The Fantasy Zone. The new franchise was to introduce a parallel universe where celebrities can go to live out their own fantasies and dreams.

POW!'s president and CEO, Gill Champion said in 2005 that Lee was creating a new superhero film, Foreverman, for Paramount Pictures in tandem with producer Robert Evans and Idiom Films, with Peter Briggs hired to collaborate with Lee on the screenplay. In 2005, Lee and Michelle Rodriguez agreed to develop a Tigress film, based on the Conan the Barbarian comic book villainess.

In 2007, POW! started a series of direct-to-DVD animated films under the Stan Lee Presents banner. The two releases were Mosaic and The Condor.

POW! and Walt Disney Studios agreed to a first-look deal in June 2007.

On June 9, 2007, a suit was brought against Lee, POW!, subsidiary QED Entertainment, and the former Stan Lee Media staff at POW!. On January 20, 2009, Judge Stephen Wilson, in Los Angeles Federal Court, ruled that Stan Lee Media had illegally transferred their assets, including the Drifter and the Accuser, to POW! in violation of a bankruptcy court order.

In April 2008, Brighton Partners and Rainmaker Animation announced a partnership with POW! to produce a CGI film series, Legion of 5. That same month, Virgin Comics announced Lee would create a line of superhero comics for that company.

On December 31, 2009, The Walt Disney Company's Catalyst Investments acquired a 10% stake in POW! for $2.5 million, coinciding with its full acquisition of Marvel Entertainment. Also, Disney's Silver Creek Pictures entered into another agreement with POW! for first-look and consulting services.

In 2010, POW! started reporting to OTC Markets Group and was moved to the Over-The-Counter QB (OTCQB) tier market from the pink sheets. On August 5, the reality-television series Stan Lee's Superhumans show premiered on the cable channel History. Also that month, Super7, a toy manufacturer, sued POW! and partners over Stan Lee Comics' Super Seven. Late in the year, POW! and Boom! Studios began publishing three new comic-book series: Soldier Zero, Starborn, and The Traveler. In October, Guardian Media Entertainment, a partnership of Lee, SLG Entertainment and NHL Enterprises, created hockey-themed superheroes called "Guardians" for each of the 30 teams in the National Hockey League. The venture includes a graphic novel.

Ricco Capital and Panda Media Partners, a joint venture of POW! and Fidelis Entertainment, formed a partnership, Magic Storm Entertainment, in June 2011 to produce material for Asia. In 2011, Lee was writing a live-action musical, The Yin and Yang Battle of Tao. In October, Lee announced he would partner with 1821 Comics on a multimedia imprint for children, Stan Lee's Kids Universe, a move that addressed the lack of comic books targeted for children. He also said he was collaborating with the company on its futuristic graphic novel Romeo & Juliet: The War, by writer Max Work and artist Skan Srisuwan. In November, POW! signed an agreement with YouTube and Vuguru, Michael Eisner's digital studio, to start a YouTube channel called Stan Lee's World of Heroes. That same month, the company signed a deal with EQAL to create and launch theRealStanLee.com, an official site for Lee.

In May 2012, Arthur Lieberman, Chief Operating Officer and Chief Counsel of POW!, died due to lung cancer. Also in May, POW! filed suit against Valerie Barth of Media Dynamics and Ron Sandman, sole director of UltraVision Inc., for fraud and breach of contract, claiming it is owed $1.15 million for a three-million common stock subscription. Barth, Sandman and their corporations countersued.

In March 2013, Hub Network picked up its first work from POW!, "Stan Lee's Mighty 7", an animated pilot movie to be aired in early 2014.

On April 5, 2013, a joint venture that POW! owns with MKC Entertainment, SL Power Concerts, launched its military friendly Stan Lee's POW!er Concert series with country band Gloriana at the Pacific View Events Center, Camp Pendleton, along with future concerts at other military bases, and proceeds going to military affiliated charities. On June 12, POW! and JADS International released the Stan Lee Signature Cologne. Legion of 5 was revealed in June to be a live action film at Sandman Studios-affiliated live action label Paralight Films in the casting stage. Arad Productions and POW! are in early development on a new superhero movie set up at Columbia Pictures as of November 2013, which is revealed in August 2014 as Apollo Rising, as it was melded with Red Queen author Victoria Aveyard's script Eternals.

POW! formed Stan Lee Global Entertainment as a joint venture in 2014 with the Hong Kong–based investment firm, Ricco Media Investments Limited. Ricco Media was purchased by Focus Media Network Limited on August 20, 2015. POW! also announced two Chinese projects in October 2015: Realm, a superheroine movie and the first film from Stan Lee Global Entertainment, and Arch Alien, a sci-fi movie.

Disney's second and final project under the first look deal with POW! was The Zodiac Legacy book series, with the first book to be released through Disney Publishing Worldwide in January 2015. However, the first look deal agreed to in 2006 and extended in 2009 was allowed to expire as of December 31, 2014.

In January 2015, Digital Domain announced a joint venture company 25% owned by POW! for development, production and international distribution of projects from either owner. Also part of the deal was the creation of a virtual Stan Lee.

Stan Lee's Lucky Man was picked up in March 2015 by Sky1 to be adapted into a one-hour, 10-episode show, as a POW! co-production with Carnival Films and his first UK drama series. A second season was ordered in March 2016, as it was Sky1's highest-rated original drama program ever.

Camsing subsidiary

In May 2017, POW! was acquired by Camsing International Holding. Camsing USA vice president Shane Duffy was named CEO while Gill Champion retained the president role.

In May 2018, Lee filed a $1 billion lawsuit with the Los Angeles Superior Court against POW! Entertainment for "stealing" the rights to his name and likeness, among other complaints. The lawsuit named CEO Shane Duffy, as well as the other co-founder of the company, Gill Champion, stating that both parties "conspired and agreed to broker a sham deal to sell POW! to a company in China and fraudulently steal Stan Lee's identity, name, image, and likeness as part of a nefarious scheme to benefit financially at Lee's expense." In addition, the lawsuit claimed that the defendants had obtained Lee's signature illegally in order to obtain "the exclusive right to use Lee's name, identity, image and likeness on a worldwide basis in perpetuity", against the wishes of Lee, among several other complaints detailed in the suit. In July 2018, Lee dropped the lawsuit against POW!, four months before he died on November 12, 2018. Camsing stated that they would continue to develop Lee's IP in POW! despite his death.

In July 2019, Camsing announced that Ching "Vivian" Lo, company founder and chairwoman, has been held by the Shanghai Public Security Bureau. POW! management indicated in a July 10 statement that the company is considered an autonomous subsidiary of Camsing, thus is not affected. J.C. Lee, Stan's daughter, announced on August 3 that the Stan Lee Estate would move to distance itself from Camsing International and that the estate held the position that POW! and Camsing do not have "rights to Stan Lee's name, likeness or legacy" given the illegal activities alleged during the purchase of POW! from Stan Lee.

On July 6, 2020, Genius Brands set up a JV with POW to hold the exclusive worldwide rights to use Lee's name, physical likeness and signature from POW! as well as licensing rights to his name and over 100 of POW!'s original IPs. The assets were to be placed under a new joint-venture with POW!, called Stan Lee Universe, managed by Genius. Michael E. Uslan was hired to advise Genius on Lee Universe Film and TV projects. Genius then arranged a publishing deal with Archie Comics for the Stan Lee Universe comic book imprint, starting with the Kindergarten Cop adaptation title.

In Aug 2023, Gill Champion resigned from POW! Entertainment.

Production

TitleYear(s)TypeProduction
partner(s)DistributorNotes
Stripperella2003–2004Animated seriesSpike TV
Stan Lee’s Superhero ChristmasBookHarperCollins
4th Qtr.Direct-to-video
LightspeedTelevision filmFWE Picture CompanySci Fi Channel (TV)
Nu Image Films
Who Wants to Be a Superhero?2006–2007Reality television seriesNash EntertainmentSci Fi Channel2 seasons
MosaicDirect-to-videoAnchor Bay EntertainmentReleased under "Stan Lee Presents" label
The Condor
UltimoMangaShueisha
Viz Media
Who Wants to Be a Superhero? (UK)2009Reality television seriesBBC Two/CBBC1 season
Time JumperAnimated mobile seriesWalt Disney Studios Home EntertainmentiTunes
"Heroman"MangaSquare Enix's Shonen Gangan
Anime television seriesBones
Wowmax MediaTX Network
Stan Lee's lineComic booksBoom! StudiosTitles:
Stan Lee's Superhumans–2013Reality television seriesThe History Channel3 seasons 31 episodes
Chakra: The InvincibleDigital comics seriesLiquid ComicsGraphic India
Animated filmGraphic IndiaCartoon Network IndiaAlso on ToonTV
Stan Lee's VerticusiOS gameControlled Chaos MediaMoonshark
Stan Lee Superhero PackSoftware add-onPlotagonPlotagon film software expansion with five characters, 4 new superheroes and a bonus Stan Lee
The Zodiac LegacyBook seriesDisney Publishing Worldwide2 illustrated novels so far:
Graphic novelsPapercutzTiger Island
Stan Lee's Hero Commandexpandable mobile gameF84 Games
"The Unknowns"Comic bookArcana Studios
Lucky ManUK drama seriesCarnival FilmsSky1 (UK)
NBCUniversal International Distribution3 seasons, 28 episodes
Stan Lee's Cosmic CrusadersWebseriesGenius BrandsThe Hollywood Reporter
God WokeComic : digital, print, cinematic graphic novel (CGN)LNL Partners: Shatner Singularity imprint
Work Forceonline comictwice per week
The ReflectionAnime TV seriesStudio DEENNHK12 episodes
Stan Tonesring tonesGoogle Play
apps store40 unique rings
Alliances: A Trick of Lightaudio dramaAudible
The B-Team2020Television show – KoreanTBAKang Eun-kyung's Plot Line providing scripts
TBATelevision show – Chinese
Superhero KindergartenApril 23 - October 22, 2021Animated TV showYouku
Kartoon Channel!

Upcoming

TitleReleaseTypeProduction
partner(s)DistributorNotes
Legion of 5TBAAnimated filmParalight Films
Rainmaker Entertainmentcasting
Apollo RisingTBAMovieArad ProductionsColumbia Picturesearly development
RealmTBAMovieFundamental Films
Stan Lee Global EntertainmentFundamental FilmsChinese Super heroine, cast (star: Li Bingbing) & scripted (Alex Litvak)
Arch AlienTBAMovieHualien Media
Mission Control Entertainment
Stan Lee Universe imprintTBAcomicsArchie ComicsSuperhero Kindergarten, first title

Units

  • QED Productions, LLC – holds the intellectual property from the defunct Stan Lee Media
  • PFD, LLC
  • Pharmelle, Inc., inactive
  • POW! Entertainment, LLC
    • Panda Media Partners – a joint venture with Fidelis Entertainment
      • Magic Storm Entertainment – a partnership with Ricco Capital for the Asian markets
    • SLG Entertainment, LLC (SLGE) owned with NHL Enterprises (NHLE), LP
      • Guardian Media Entertainment, LLC (GME) – The Guardian Project with NBCUniversal
    • Stan Lee Universe – a joint venture with Genius Brands to manage Lee's likeness and IP
    • Stan Lee's Kids Universe – a joint venture with 1821 Comics for a multimedia imprint for children
    • Stan Lee's World of Heroes – a YouTube channel joint venture with YouTube and Vuguru
    • SL Power Concerts, LLC (2012–2013) – a joint venture with MKC Entertainment for Stan Lee's POW!er Concerts
  • Unnamed 25%/75% joint venture with Digital Domains
  • Stan Lee Global Entertainment, LLC – joint venture (2014–) with a Hong Kong–based investor,

Footnotes

References

  1. "POW! ENTERTAINMENT Inc 2013 Annual Report, Form 10-K, Filing Date December 31, 2015". secdatabase.com.
  2. "Team".
  3. "POW! Entertainment LLC Form 10-K". Securities and Exchange Commission.
  4. (8 May 2017). "Stan Lee's Pow! Entertainment Bought by China's Camsing International".
  5. Gardner, Eriq. (May 3, 2012). "Stan Lee Fights for Control of His POW! Entertainment (Exclusive)". Hollywoodreporter.com.
  6. (July 18, 2003). "POW! Stan Lee Reloaded". AWN Profile.
  7. (August 6, 2004). "Ringo Starr to become superhero". BBC.
  8. (August 6, 2004). "Stan Lee Launches New Online Comic Venture". CBC.
  9. Graser, Marc. (May 7, 2004). "IDT joins Lee in POW! to distrib toon DVDs". Daily Variety.
  10. link. (September 29, 2007)
  11. "Ringo Starr, superhero".
  12. [https://web.archive.org/web/20080201155814/http://investing.businessweek.com/research/stocks/snapshot/snapshot.asp?capId=8142019 POW! Entertainment, Inc Announces Alliance with Sprint Nextel Corp. and Vidiator in Sixty Billion Dollar Wireless Market 26 December 2006]
  13. Ball, Ryan. (December 3, 2004). "Scribe Runs to Stan Lee's Lightspeed". Animation Magazine.
  14. (July 12, 2006). "Stan Lee's LightSpeed Premiering July 26". SuperHeroHype.com.
  15. (December 14, 2004). "Stan Lee Puts Celebrities In Action". AnimationMagazine.net.
  16. (16 February 2005). "Lee to Put More Celebrities In Action". AnimationMagazine.net.
  17. Foreman, Liza. (March 1, 2005). "Lee, Evans' POW! fields 'Foreverman'". [[The Hollywood Reporter]].
  18. (November 15, 2005). "She shot Shannon; what's Ana Lucia's next target?". [[USA Today]].
  19. (June 6, 2007). "Disney, Stan Lee sign production deal". Hollywood Reporter.
  20. (April 1, 2008). "Stan Lee, Disney set projects". Variety.
  21. "June 9: Stan Lee Media, Inc. Files Expected Lawsuit Against Stan Lee". The Comic Reporter.
  22. [http://www.law360.com/registrations/user_registration?article_id=84854&concurrency_check=false Law360 summary, January 27, 2009]
  23. "Stan Lee Launching Legion of 5". ComingSoon.net.
  24. Boucher, Geoff. (April 19, 2008). "Stan Lee to oversee Virgin Comics' superheroes". [[Los Angeles Times]].
  25. (May 5, 2010). "Lee, Meltzer team with History Channel". digitalspy.com.
  26. Armitage, Hugh. (August 10, 2010). "Toy company sues Stan Lee, Archie Comics". Digitalspy.com.
  27. Langshaw, Mark. (March 2, 2010). "Stan Lee partners with BOOM! Studios". digitalspy.com.
  28. (July 22, 2010). "Boom! announces three Stan Lee titles". digitalspy.com.
  29. "The Guardian Project". Guardian Media Entertainment.
  30. Friedman, Wayne. (June 16, 2011). "NHL's 'Guardian Project' Strikes Marketing Deal With NBCU". Media Daily News.
  31. Powers, Lindsay. (June 28, 2011). "The company joins with Ricco Capital and Panda Media Partners to form Magic Storm Entertainment.". The Hollywood Reporter.
  32. Hetrick, Adam. (January 4, 2011). "Stan Lee Encouraged by Spider-Man; New Projects on the Horizon". [[Playbill]].
  33. Kepler, Adam W.. (October 16, 2011). "Monsters v. Kittens". [[The New York Times]].
  34. Moore, Matt. (October 14, 2011). "Stan Lee's got a new universe, and it's for kids". [[Associated Press]]/[[MSNBC]].
  35. Kit, Borys. (November 17, 2011). "Stan Lee's POW! Entertainment Signs Deals With YouTube and EQAL". hollywoodreporter.com.
  36. Eriq, Gardner. (May 7, 2012). "Hollywood Docket: Jeweler vs. Perez Hilton; George Clinton Denied; Stan Lee's Lawyer Dies". The Hollywood Reporter.
  37. (March 20, 2013). "The Hub Network Unveils 2013-'14 Program Slate with Six New Additions to Join Nine Returning Original Series". thefutoncritic.com.
  38. (April 6, 2013). "Comic Book Legend Stan Lee Kicks Off Military Concert Series in San Diego". NBCUniversal Media, LLC.
  39. (April 2, 2013). "POW! Entertainment and MKC Entertainment Jon Forces to Present STan Lee's POW!er Concerts". POW! Entertainment.
  40. (June 12, 2013). "Stan Lee, JADS International to Create Stan Lee Signature Cologne". Retail Merchandiser Magazine.
  41. (June 3, 2014). "Local Film Production Company Partners with Stan Lee For Upcoming Movie". The Wasatch View.
  42. (November 25, 2013). "Stan Lee, Avi Arad Team for Secret Movie Project". Prometheus Global Media.
  43. (August 7, 2014). "Near Myth: Stan Lee's 'Apollo Rising' To Meld With 'Eternal' For Greek God Project". Penske Business Media, LLC.
  44. (October 28, 2015). "Li Bingbing to Star in Superhero Movie 'Realm' for Stan Lee, Fundamental". Variety.
  45. "Completion of Discloseable Transaction in Relation to the Acquisition of the Entire Issued Share Capital of Ricco Media Investments Limited Involving the Issue of Consideration Shares under the General Mandate". Focus Media Network Limited.
  46. (October 30, 2015). "Stan Lee Unveils 'Arch Alien' Movie Franchise Plan". Variety.
  47. (August 6, 2014). "Disney toy division's focus on franchises makes it a star".
  48. (August 14, 2014). "Form 10-Q Quarterly Report 6/30/2014". POW! Entertainment, Inc..
  49. {{cite press release. (January 20, 2015). "Digital Domain Forms Strategic Joint Venture U.S. Partnership with POW! Entertainment, LLC". link. Digital Domain Holdings Limited
  50. (March 31, 2015). "Stan Lee, 'Downton Abbey' Producer Team On Superhero Drama 'Lucky Man' For Sky1". Penske Business Media, LLC.
  51. (March 24, 2016). "'Stan Lee's Lucky Man': Hit Sky1 Crime Drama Gets Second Season Order". Penske Business Media, LLC.
  52. (July 26, 2017). "China's Linking Star Picture to Develop Superhero Projects From Stan Lee's POW! Entertainment". Variety.
  53. (May 15, 2018). "Stan Lee Files $1B Lawsuit Against POW! Entertainment for "Stealing" His Name and Likeness".
  54. (July 9, 2018). "Stan Lee Drops $1B Lawsuit Against POW! Entertainment for "Stealing" His Name and Likeness".
  55. Lowry, Brian. (November 12, 2018). "Stan Lee, Marvel Comicbook Legend, Dies at 95".
  56. (November 13, 2018). "China's Camsing to Press On With POW! Business After Stan Lee's Death". Variety.
  57. (August 7, 2019). "Stan Lee's Daughter Seeks to Cut Ties With Camsing International". Variety.
  58. (July 6, 2020). "Genius Brands acquires Stan Lee's likeness, IPs". Kidscreen.
  59. (July 15, 2020). "Archie Comics to Launch Comic Books Based on Stan Lee Superheroes". The Hollywood Reporter.
  60. (April 20, 2008). "Viz to Publish Stan Lee Manga Project". ICv2.
  61. (July 15, 2009). "Stan Lee's 'Heroman' Anime Gets Manga Treatment". MTV Splash Page.
  62. (December 21, 2011). "Stan Lee to Create Indian Comic Superhero 'Chakra – The Invincible'". Hollywood Reporter.
  63. (October 16, 2013). "Stan Lee's Indian Superhero 'Chakra' to Premiere on Country's Cartoon Network in November". Hollywood Reporter.
  64. de Matos, Xav. (September 17, 2012). "Stan Lee brings his vision to iOS with new IP 'Verticus'". Joystiq.com.
  65. (October 12, 2013). "Stan Lee Creates New Superheroes for Plotagon". Penske Business Media.
  66. (October 31, 2013). "Stan Lee Added to Plotagon as Castable Character". Penske Business Media.
  67. (March 2, 2015). "F84 Games, POW Entertainment Announce Stan Lee's Hero Command". Adweek.
  68. (February 26, 2015). "Stan Lee to star in his own video game". Los Angeles Times.
  69. (April 28, 2015). "UK Orders ISPs To Block 'Popcorn Time' Sites; Stan Lee's POW! Teams With Arcana On New Comic 'The Unknowns'". Penske Business Media.
  70. (July 22, 2016). "'Stan Lee's Cosmic Crusaders' Debuts on THR.com". Animation World Network.
  71. (November 3, 2015). "Stan Lee's 'God Woke' Gets CGN Adaptation". ICv2.
  72. (July 16, 2018). "Stan Lee & POW! Launch New Comic Series After $1B Lawsuit Dropped". Deadline.
  73. (July 3, 2017). "New Animated Series 'The Reflection' From Marvel's Stan Lee to Debut in Japan". Variety.
  74. (September 6, 2017). "Stan Lee Ringtones Coming To Google Play And iTunes". Pop Culture Media.
  75. (April 25, 2019). "Stan Lee Audio Drama 'A Trick of Light' Introduces a Universe". The Hollywood Reporter.
  76. Sonia Kil. (November 29, 2018). "Stan Lee's 'The B-TEAM' to Receive Korean, Chinese Treatment".
  77. (May 29, 2019). "Arnold Schwarzenegger Lending Voice to 'Stan Lee's Superhero Kindergarten'". The Hollywood Reporter.
  78. (October 14, 2019). "China's Youku To Co-Produce Arnold Schwarzenegger's Kids' Series 'Stan Lee's Superhero Kindergarten' – Mipcom". Deadline.
  79. "Company Overview of Stan Lee Global Entertainment, LLC".
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