Sinking Ship Entertainment is taking a trip to Wordsville, with commissioning broadcaster TVOKids and U.S. broadcaster New York PBS affiliate WNET coming along for the ride.
The Toronto-based prodco announced Tuesday (Oct. 10) that is working on a new live-action mystery series for four- to seven-year-olds that’s designed to teach literacy and build essential vocabulary skills.
Wordsville stars two child detectives on the hunt for missing words that are causing chaos in their town. Production is set to start in 2024 with Sinking Ship as the distributor.
“Learning to read can be like putting together a puzzle for kids, so combining sleuthing with literacy was a perfect fit for Wordsville,” says series creator and showrunner Christin Simms, who is a writer and executive producer on Sinking Ship’s Dino Dan and Dino Dana franchise and also director of the upcoming Dino Dex.
TVOKids ordered Wordsville to address a post-pandemic learning gap in Ontario, says commissioning editor Kirsten Hurd. She adds that, similar to Sinking Ship’s YouTube Original Lockdown, this new show will be shot entirely on phones, computers and platforms such as Zoom to reflect the myriad ways in which kids now communicate with people in their lives.
Sinking Ship’s J.J. Johnson (Endlings) and Blair Powers (Odd Squad) are executive producers of Wordsville.
This story originally appeared in Kidscreen
Image courtesy of Sinking Ship Entertainment