Paramount Prime/Tropes

Paramount Prime is a streaming service from Paramount Global as to showcase family-friendly content, specifically content for ages 8-15 (hence the word "Prime" in its name). This service includes several pieces of Paramount's known media and franchises, notably Paramount Pictures, Nickelodeon Movies, Miramax, and CBS Entertainment. In other words, it's pretty much the Paramount equivalent to what Disney+ was pre-2022, featuring content suitable for family audiences (i.e. excluding content that's R-rated or TV-MA-rated).

This service features a decent library of content from over 90 films and 20 television series with all the content programmed through Paramount Streaming. Content-wise, the service will have certain content added and will exclude existing original content from to distance itself from either Paramount+ or Netflix.

Content providers:

Paramount Global Third party
 * Paramount
 * Paramount Pictures
 * Paramount Animation
 * Insurge Pictures
 * Miramax
 * Nickelodeon Movies
 * Paramount Media Networks
 * Paramount Television Studios
 * Nickelodeon Animation Studio
 * CBS Entertainment
 * CBS Media Ventures
 * CBS Films
 * Columbia Pictures (for D.A.R.Y.L., The Indian in the Cupboard, Evolution, 2005's The Longest Yard, and The Adventures of Sharkboy and Lavagirl)
 * DreamWorks Pictures (for Mouse Hunt, Paulie, Small Soldiers, and Evolution due to owning the pre-2010 library)
 * Dimension Films (for Spy Kids, Spy Kids 2: The Island of Lost Dreams, Spy Kids 3-D: Game Over, and The Adventures of Sharkboy and Lavagirl)
 * Universal Pictures (for Small Soldiers)
 * The Winstein Company (for Spy Kids: All the Time in the World)

Tropes related to Paramount Prime:
 * Alliterative Name: Paramount Prime.
 * Channel Hop: Similar to how HBO Max has streamed following seasons to Cartoon Network's Summer Camp Island and Infinity Train, Paramount Prime will do the same with certain shows in its library.
 * Content Warning: While the streaming service is family-friendly, it features a range of some suggestive content in certain movies, so it will have a warning shown before the following movie saying it will contain "brief mild language" or "stylized violence".
 * Digital Destruction: Averted for the most part. The featured shows are featured in the respective quality they had been introduced in.
 * Double-Meaning Title: Paramount Prime features many movies from Paramount's past, as well as being a service centered around family-oriented content, if not content for young audiences. Hence the name.
 * Follow the Leader: It's no guess it's a family-friendly streaming service and presenting suitable content from the studios' film and television library, similar to Disney+.
 * Network to the Rescue: It features various shows that weren't given a DVD or Blu-ray release.
 * Wonder Park 's follow-up series, Adventures in Wonder Park, has been in development since its parent film's release, until moving to Paramount Prime.
 * And for those Betty Boop aficionados, it features the Betty Boop short subject filmography from 1932 trough 1939, including the banned ones. Of course, there will be some Content Warning nonetheless.
 * Orwellian Retcon:
 * For CBS Films' movies, Lionsgate's logo is removed from the beginning of the opening logos to the selected films The DUFF and Middle School: The Worst Years of My Life.
 * With the Nicktoons series, their closing logos have the Nickelodeon Animation Studio logo and Paramount Television Studios logo (either a 1975 Blue Mountain version for the 2D-animated shows and the regular one for the CGI series).
 * Screwed by the Layers:
 * It's pretty obvious that Paramount won't be able to have the DreamWorks Animation 2006-2012 library due to NBCUniversal now owning the rights to DWA.
 * Averted with the Indiana Jones franchise, which was included since Paramount had distributed back in the day. Also, Paramount still owns the distribution rights to the first four movies and the prequel series.
 * What Could Have Been: Nickelodeon was going to include its television series from its live-action shows and Nicktoons. Instead, the service would only exclusively show Nickelodeon Movies' fully computer-animated films and shows based on those films.