News
Largest collection of The Wiggles now available On Demand
26 December, 2009
The Wiggles, Australia’s most successful children’s entertainment group, have today made available their largest collection of Wiggles songs and videos for parents and fans to download to own.
Wiggles On Demand offers more than 250 hours of digitised content, featuring 60 new and classic titles. The website (www.thewigglesondemand.com) allows consumers to download music and video files including new titles (Dorothy the Dinosaur and The Kingdom of Paramithi) and archived material not available anywhere else.
The video clips are provided in high resolution, comparable with standard television broadcasting, and are available as individual songs or as a full show. The music is available in MP3 format, allowing consumers to transfer straight to their iPods or any other MP3 player to create their own Wiggles CD mix.
Mike Conway, Managing Director of The Wiggles, said: “Wiggles On Demand is a digital milestone for the group. For the first time, our extensive collection of songs, albums and DVDs – pretty much everything we created during the past 18 years – will be available in one place.”
The site is powered by ABC Shop Online using its secure transaction and delivery system.
Robert Hutchinson, general manager of Digital Content Development at ABC Commercial, said: “Boxing Day through to the end of January has fast become boom time for digital downloads. The addition of more than 250 hours of video and music content from The Wiggles provides parents with a comprehensive, easy to access resource they can trust.”
Pricing for media is comparable to other online download services, with a single song retailing at $1.69, albums at $16.95, video clips at $1.95 and entire feature videos at $16.95.
As an introductory offer (to 31 January 2010), public can download “Hot Potatoes! Best of The Wiggles” album and receive for free a “Rock-A-Bye Your Bear” video clip, a crowd favourite from one of The Wiggles very first videos, Wiggle Time, released back in 1991.


