Paramount Prime/Tropes

Paramount Prime is a streaming service created for Paramount Pictures as to showcase content for ages 8-15. This includes several pieces of Paramount's known media and franchises, as well as including content from ViacomCBS' television network Nickelodeon (75% from its animated content and 25% from its live-action content), along with some content from the CBS Entertainment library, which includes Star Trek.

Like Disney+, it features content suitable for family audiences (i.e. excluding content that's R-rated or TV-MA-rated).

Content providers:

ViacomCBS Third party Tropes related to Paramount Prime:
 * Paramount
 * Paramount Pictures
 * Paramount Television Studios
 * Paramount Animation
 * Nickelodeon
 * Nickelodeon Animation Studio
 * Nickelodeon Productions
 * Nickelodeon Movies
 * CBS Entertainment
 * CBS Television Distribution
 * CBS Films
 * Columbia Pictures (for The Indian in the Cupboard and 2005's The Longest Yard)
 * Alliterative Name: Paramount Prime.
 * Content Warning: While the streaming service is family-friendly, it features a range of some suggestive content in some of its 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, mainly the Nicktoons, 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.
 * Exiled from Continuity:
 * While it's featuring various franchises from Paramount, Nickelodeon's film division, Nickelodeon Movies, was only allowed to have only its CGI-animated films featured on the app; excluding all live-action, 2D animated, and live-action/animated hybrid films. Fortunately, there are the live-action shows.
 * If you're deciding to find Star Trek: Discovery, Star Trek: Picard, the other follow-up Star Trek shows or even the Kelvin Timeline trilogy on Paramount Prime, don't get your hopes up. The streaming service is streaming content only related to Star Trek: The Original Series so CBS All Access can keep at least a reasonable amount.
 * Nick's original content on Netflix, such as Glitch Techs, is excluded to distance itself from it.
 * 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. Those being the Nicktoons series nonetheless.
 * 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.
 * Fortunately, there are two aversions:
 * The Indiana Jones franchise 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.
 * Through Loophole Abuse, Doug is currently owned by Disney, but its first four seasons are available on Paramount Prime since they were produced by Nickelodeon and are pre-Disney, while its last three seasons are on Disney's streaming service Disney+.