National Educational Television: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
National Educational Television (view source)
Revision as of 18:39, 30 December 2020
, 30 December 2020no edit summary
m (Text replacement - "</gallery> <youtube" to "</gallery> <center><youtube") |
imported>Jordana No edit summary |
||
| Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
''"NET" redirects here. For the PBS affiliate in Nebraska currently using the same acronym, see [[Nebraska ETV]]'' | ''"NET" redirects here. For the PBS affiliate in Nebraska currently using the same acronym, see [[Nebraska ETV]]'' | ||
=== Background === | === Background === | ||
NET (National Educational Television) was a former major educational and public TV network, founded in early 1952 and incorporated in November of that year. Among their original affiliates were WNET 13 New York, KCET 28 Los Angeles, WGBH 2 Boston, WQED 13 Pittsburgh, WETA 26 Washington D.C., KUHT 8 Houston, KERA 13 Dallas-Ft. Worth, WYES 12 New Orleans, and various others. Originating from The Educational Television and Radio Center from 1952-1959, and later The National Educational Television and Radio Center from 1959 to 1962, when the radio portion was dropped. | NET (National Educational Television) was a former major educational and public TV network, founded in early 1952 and incorporated in November of that year. Among their original affiliates were WNET 13 New York, KCET 28 Los Angeles, WGBH 2 Boston, WQED 13 Pittsburgh, WETA 26 Washington D.C., KUHT 8 Houston, KERA 13 Dallas-Ft. Worth, WYES 12 New Orleans, and various others. Originating from The Educational Television and Radio Center from 1952-1959, and later The National Educational Television and Radio Center from 1959 to 1962, when the radio portion was dropped. PBS succeeded NET in 1970, due to the Corporation of Public Broadcasting and the Ford Foundation pulling its funding. It merged with WNDT to become the Educational Broadcasting Corporation, the parent company of WNET, in 1972. | ||
===1st Logo (November 4, 1952-1955)=== | ===1st Logo (November 4, 1952-1955)=== | ||
[[File:NET1952.JPG.jpg|300px|center]] | [[File:NET1952.JPG.jpg|300px|center]] | ||
| Line 8: | Line 8: | ||
'''Nicknames:''' "NET Map of America", "The United States of NET", "Antenna on Map" | '''Nicknames:''' "NET Map of America", "The United States of NET", "Antenna on Map" | ||
'''Logo:''' This logo consists of the typewriter letters "NET", each in a segmented rounded square, on a white map of the U.S. inside a black circle on a white background, with what looks like an antenna on the map. "NATIONAL EDUCATIONAL TELEVISION" and "EDUCATIONAL TELEVISION AND RADIO CENTER" are shown above and below, respectively, in | '''Logo:''' This logo consists of the typewriter letters "NET", each in a segmented rounded square, on a white map of the U.S. inside a black circle on a white background, with what looks like an antenna on the map. "NATIONAL EDUCATIONAL TELEVISION" and "EDUCATIONAL TELEVISION AND RADIO CENTER" are shown above and below, respectively, in tiny print. | ||
'''Variant''': On Parents and Dr. Spock, a credit for WQED with the slogan "First in Community Television" below that | '''Variant''': On Parents and Dr. Spock, a credit for WQED with the slogan "First in Community Television" below that is superimposed over the NET logo, then fades out. | ||
'''FX/SFX:''' None. | '''FX/SFX:''' None. | ||
| Line 16: | Line 16: | ||
'''Music/Sounds:''' None. | '''Music/Sounds:''' None. | ||
'''Music/Sounds/Voice-over Variants:''' On Parents and Dr. Spock, over the ending theme, a male announcer says "From WQED, First in community television." After the WQED credit fades out, he then says "This is National Educational Television." | '''Music/Sounds/Voice-over Variants:''' On Parents and Dr. Spock, over the ending theme, a male announcer says, "From WQED, First in community television." After the WQED credit fades out, he then says, "This is National Educational Television." | ||
'''Availability:''' This logo appears on Window Watchers and showed up three times on Because of You: 50 Years of Channel 9. Also seen on Parents and Dr. Spock. | '''Availability:''' This logo appears on Window Watchers and showed up three times on Because of You: 50 Years of Channel 9. Also seen on Parents and Dr. Spock. | ||
'''Editor's Note:''' This logo | '''Editor's Note:''' This logo is an exciting look back at the very early years of what would become PBS, despite being ordinary. It was back when it was a limited service for distributing educational films produced by local stations nationally. | ||
| Line 36: | Line 36: | ||
'''Logo:''' On a gray background, we see a white circle with "NET" written in black. | '''Logo:''' On a gray background, we see a white circle with "NET" written in black. | ||
'''Variant:''' A variant where the background is black, and the circle is white except for the inside, exists. Another variant is essentially the | '''Variant:''' A variant where the background is black, and the circle is white except for the inside, exists. Another variant is essentially the standard logo, but the background is significantly darker this time around. | ||
'''FX/SFX:''' None. | '''FX/SFX:''' None. | ||
'''Music/Sounds:''' Just an announcer saying "This is National Educational Television." | '''Music/Sounds:''' Just an announcer saying, "This is National Educational Television." | ||
'''Availability:''' This logo appears | '''Availability:''' This logo appears on Discovery at the Brookfield Zoo, Search for America, and The Exceptional Child, as well as The Role of Congress. This logo can be seen at the end of some programs on the American Archive of Public Broadcasting website. | ||
'''Editor's Note:''' None. | '''Editor's Note:''' None. | ||
| Line 60: | Line 60: | ||
'''FX/SFX:''' None. | '''FX/SFX:''' None. | ||
'''Music/Sounds:''' The | '''Music/Sounds:''' The ending theme of the program. | ||
'''Availability:''' Seen on Ten For Survival. The inverted variant appears on most episodes of The Subject is Jazz. Both productions are in collaboration with NBC. | '''Availability:''' Seen on Ten For Survival. The inverted variant appears on most episodes of The Subject is Jazz. Both productions are in collaboration with NBC. | ||
'''Editor's Note:''' This logo appears to have been used for NBC co-productions | '''Editor's Note:''' This logo appears to have been used for NBC co-productions since all of its appearances (as discovered so far) have been on such. | ||
| Line 74: | Line 74: | ||
'''Nicknames:''' "Boxes", "Epitome of 50's Graphic Design", "Art Deco Carpet Design" | '''Nicknames:''' "Boxes", "Epitome of 50's Graphic Design", "Art Deco Carpet Design" | ||
'''Logo:''' On a carpet like background, the words NET appear in multicolored boxes across on a white line, resulting in a design similar to NBC's 1950s "Chimes" logo | '''Logo:''' On a carpet-like background, the words NET appear in multicolored boxes across on a white line, resulting in a design similar to NBC's 1950s "Chimes" logo | ||
'''FX/SFX:''' None. | '''FX/SFX:''' None. | ||
| Line 82: | Line 82: | ||
'''Availability:''' This was recently rediscovered on an episode of The Subject is Jazz, titled “Performance”. It is currently unknown if this logo appeared on any other program. | '''Availability:''' This was recently rediscovered on an episode of The Subject is Jazz, titled “Performance”. It is currently unknown if this logo appeared on any other program. | ||
'''Editor's Note:''' This logo is an oddity, as | '''Editor's Note:''' This logo is an oddity, as this logo's existence was practically unknown until Jordan Rios uploaded it. | ||
| Line 101: | Line 101: | ||
'''Variants:''' | '''Variants:''' | ||
* There is a still variant | * There is a still variant and a variant where the ETRC card does not show up. | ||
* Another variant features an inverted color scheme. | * Another variant features an inverted color scheme. | ||
'''FX/SFX:''' The animation of the map and the letters. | '''FX/SFX:''' The animation of the map and the letters. | ||
'''Music/Sounds/Voice-over:''' Just an announcer saying "This is National Educational Television." The still variant uses a different announcer. Another variant features the announcer saying "Educational Television and Radio Center" | '''Music/Sounds/Voice-over:''' Just an announcer saying "This is National Educational Television." The still variant uses a different announcer. Another variant features the announcer saying "Educational Television and Radio Center" when the ETRC card pops up, for both opening and closing variants. | ||
'''Availability:''' Appeared on the 50th anniversary special for KVIE in Sacramento. The still variant can be found on The Born Criminal, The Exceptional Child and On The Shoulder Of Giants (which appears to be the last time it appeared).The animated variant appears on Channelizing Aggression; The Impact of Personalities. The animated closing variant appears on Books and Ideas. The variant with the announcer saying "Educational Television and Radio Center" can be spotted on Religions of Man. The inverted variant appears on KUHT-TV's Mexicana. This can be seen at the end of many programs available for viewing on the American Archive of Public Broadcasting website. | '''Availability:''' Appeared on the 50th anniversary special for KVIE in Sacramento. The still variant can be found on The Born Criminal, The Exceptional Child, and On The Shoulder Of Giants (which appears to be the last time it appeared). The animated variant appears on Channelizing Aggression; The Impact of Personalities. The animated closing variant appears on Books and Ideas. The variant with the announcer saying "Educational Television and Radio Center" can be spotted on Religions of Man. The inverted variant appears on KUHT-TV's Mexicana. This can be seen at the end of many programs available for viewing on the American Archive of Public Broadcasting website. | ||
'''Editor's Note:''' One of the first NET logos to feature animation, albeit limited. | '''Editor's Note:''' One of the first NET logos to feature animation, albeit limited. | ||
| Line 123: | Line 123: | ||
'''Nicknames:''' "NET in a House", "The NET House" | '''Nicknames:''' "NET in a House", "The NET House" | ||
'''Logo:''' On a grey background, we see an early version of the NET House logo, | '''Logo:''' On a grey background, we see an early version of the NET House logo, a black house with the words "NET" inside and an antenna on the roof. | ||
'''FX/SFX:''' None. | '''FX/SFX:''' None. | ||
| Line 131: | Line 131: | ||
'''Availability:''' Extremely rare. It appears on That Free Men May Live: Martin Luther King, Jr., which is available for viewing on PBS.org. The logo can also be seen on Prospects of Mankind with Eleanor Roosevelt, available for viewing on the American Archive of Public Broadcasting website. It can also be seen on Anatomy of a Revolution: The Role of the Intellectuals. | '''Availability:''' Extremely rare. It appears on That Free Men May Live: Martin Luther King, Jr., which is available for viewing on PBS.org. The logo can also be seen on Prospects of Mankind with Eleanor Roosevelt, available for viewing on the American Archive of Public Broadcasting website. It can also be seen on Anatomy of a Revolution: The Role of the Intellectuals. | ||
'''Editor's Note:''' An introduction of the iconic house motif, marking the start of the most recognizable NET logo | '''Editor's Note:''' An introduction of the iconic house motif, marking the start of the most recognizable NET logo and associating the network with said logo/motif. However, this is most likely a prototype/placeholder logo as the design does seem rough. | ||
| Line 141: | Line 141: | ||
'''Nicknames:''' "The Carpet", "The NET House II", "The House on TV Static" | '''Nicknames:''' "The Carpet", "The NET House II", "The House on TV Static" | ||
'''Logo:''' On a dark background with little white "stars" (kinda looks like carpet, but is | '''Logo:''' On a dark background with little white "stars" (kinda looks like carpet, but is supposed to represent TV static), we see a redesigned version of the "House" logo in white (The words "NET" with the "T" connecting to a roof that hangs over the "N" and "E", with an antenna sticking out of the roof, making the N look pretty squished). The style of this "NET House" logo would be used later on. | ||
'''FX/SFX:''' None. | '''FX/SFX:''' None. | ||
'''Music/Sounds/Voice-over:''' Until October 1962, an announcer (Edward R. Murrow) said "This is National Educational Television." | '''Music/Sounds/Voice-over:''' Until October 1962, an announcer (Edward R. Murrow) said, "This is National Educational Television." | ||
* An alternate version of the logo featured the announcer saying, "This is N-E-T, National Educational Television." It is unknown what year this began being used, but it outlived its predecessor, being used until 1966. | * An alternate version of the logo featured the announcer saying, "This is N-E-T, National Educational Television." It is unknown what year this began being used, but it outlived its predecessor, being used until 1966. | ||
* Another variant has a V/O which says "This is N-E-T, the National Educational Television network." | * Another variant has a V/O which says, "This is N-E-T, the National Educational Television network." | ||
* An inverted variant appears on | * An inverted variant appears on a 1960s episode of Perspectives. In the same episode, an opening variant (also inverted) appears with the text reading "NATIONAL EDUCATIONAL TELEVISION presents PERSPECTIVES", replacing the NET House logo while the static background is retained. | ||
'''Availability:''' Common | '''Availability:''' Common, appeared on most AAPB programs by NET during the period. | ||
'''Editor's Note:''' The background looks like they just aimed the camera at the floor (hence the nickname). | '''Editor's Note:''' The background looks like they just aimed the camera at the floor (hence the nickname). | ||
| Line 158: | Line 158: | ||
===8th Logo (1961-1966/1967?; 1970)=== | ===8th Logo (1961-1966/1967?; 1970)=== | ||
[[File:GW276H306.png|300px|center]] | [[File:GW276H306.png|300px|center]] | ||
<center><youtube width="240" height="185">xaLjph_crsk</youtube></center> | |||
'''Nicknames:''' "Smooth NET House", "Generic NET House", "Plain NET House" | '''Nicknames:''' "Smooth NET House", "Generic NET House", "Plain NET House" | ||
'''Logo:''' Same as the previous logo, but the background is | '''Logo:''' Same as the previous logo, but the background is entirely dark gray and has a smooth texture. | ||
'''FX/SFX:''' None. | '''FX/SFX:''' None. | ||
| Line 175: | Line 177: | ||
'''Nicknames:''' "Marching Band Children", "Backwards Musical Trio", "Sparkles on Jeans" | '''Nicknames:''' "Marching Band Children", "Backwards Musical Trio", "Sparkles on Jeans" | ||
'''Opening Logo:''' On a blue cloth like background, "NET" appears in big bold letters, with "presents" underneath and sparkles appear. | '''Opening Logo:''' On a blue cloth-like background, "NET" appears in big, bold letters, with "presents" underneath and sparkles appear. | ||
'''Closing Logo:''' On a rough sepia background, | '''Closing Logo:''' On a rough sepia background, three children appear marching backward, forming the words"National Educational Television", all stacked on top of each other. | ||
'''Variant:''' This logo debuted in black and white. | '''Variant:''' This logo debuted in black and white. | ||
| Line 194: | Line 196: | ||
'''Nicknames:''' "The Animated NET House Globe", "NET Map (Sort of) Returns!", "A New Perspective of the NET House", "NET House On a Globe", "Foldable Earth Diagram" | '''Nicknames:''' "The Animated NET House Globe", "NET Map (Sort of) Returns!", "A New Perspective of the NET House", "NET House On a Globe", "Foldable Earth Diagram" | ||
'''Logo:''' After the closing titles of the show, the globe that is spinning around suddenly folds out to a 2D model of the globe, and then | '''Logo:''' After the closing titles of the show, the globe that is spinning around suddenly folds out to a 2D model of the globe, and then three letters: "N", "E", "T", appear vertically at the left side of the globe, then rearrange to appear horizontally, slides to the middle, and then the roof is drawn over the NET text, with the N slightly shrinking to make room for the roof. | ||
'''FX/SFX:''' Typical 60's 2-D Animation. | '''FX/SFX:''' Typical 60's 2-D Animation. | ||
| Line 217: | Line 219: | ||
'''Nickname:''' "NET Fire Cage", "The Dancing Birdcage" | '''Nickname:''' "NET Fire Cage", "The Dancing Birdcage" | ||
'''Logo:''' On a black screen, several dots flash near the center of the screen (a la the Screen Gems “Dancing Sticks” logo, or like YouTube dots while a video is buffering) | '''Logo:''' On a black screen, several dots flash near the center of the screen (a la the Screen Gems “Dancing Sticks” logo, or like YouTube dots while a video is buffering). Then we see a circle being drawn in the counter-clockwise direction. A line is drawn through the circle going downwards, which quickly vanishes. A small fire can be seen starting within the circle. Another line is drawn through the center of the circle from left to right. Two lines similar to a Worldvision-like globe are drawn. Another pair, closer to the circle, are drawn, like that of the first lines, and then two horizontal lines above the first horizontal line. The camera zooms backward, and we see a thick line (the top of the "T") being drawn under the ball of fire, which later connects to the ball of fire. A vertical line (the beginning of the "N") is then formed. The "T" then finishes, and then the diagonal part of the "N" appears. Lastly, the "E" is formed. The fire continues blazing until we fade out. | ||
'''Variant:''' A still, opening variant of the last shot of the logo with the NET text replaced by "NATIONAL EDUCATIONAL TELEVISION presents" appears on Great Decisions 1966. | '''Variant:''' A still, opening variant of the last shot of the logo with the NET text replaced by "NATIONAL EDUCATIONAL TELEVISION presents" appears on Great Decisions 1966. | ||
| Line 223: | Line 225: | ||
'''FX/SFX:''' The dots, the live-action fire, and the lines being drawn. | '''FX/SFX:''' The dots, the live-action fire, and the lines being drawn. | ||
'''Music/Sounds/Voice-over:''' Pinball-like dings to start, which turns into a bombastic but brief brass piece. Almost immediately afterward, an announcer can be heard saying "The following program is from N-E-T, the National Educational Television network." (opening) or "This is N-E-T, the National Educational Television network.". (closing) | '''Music/Sounds/Voice-over:''' Pinball-like dings to start, which turns into a bombastic but brief brass piece. Almost immediately afterward, an announcer can be heard saying, "The following program is from N-E-T, the National Educational Television network." (opening) or "This is N-E-T, the National Educational Television network.". (closing) | ||
'''Availability:''' Extremely rare. Can be seen on the 1965 program Changing the World: Southeast Asia, the Other War, the 1967 program Aphasia, the road back, both formerly available for viewing on the Museum of Broadcast Communications Archives website, and on the 1965 James Baldwin vs. William F. Buckley debates, available for watching on YouTube and the American Archive of Public Broadcasting. It has also been preserved on the VHS and DVD of Ten Blocks on the Camino Real. This can also be seen on over 45+ programs available for viewing on the American Archive of Public Broadcasting website. | '''Availability:''' Extremely rare. Can be seen on the 1965 program Changing the World: Southeast Asia, the Other War, the 1967 program Aphasia, the road back, both formerly available for viewing on the Museum of Broadcast Communications Archives website, and on the 1965 James Baldwin vs. William F. Buckley debates, available for watching on YouTube and the American Archive of Public Broadcasting. It has also been preserved on the VHS and DVD of Ten Blocks on the Camino Real. This can also be seen on over 45+ programs available for viewing on the American Archive of Public Broadcasting website. | ||
'''Editor's Note:''' While it is not as widely remembered as the 1968 logo and future PBS logos, this is one of the first to be recognized more widely | '''Editor's Note:''' While it is not as widely remembered as the 1968 logo and future PBS logos, this is one of the first to be recognized more widely than the previous logos. | ||
| Line 242: | Line 244: | ||
File:GW212H154.png| Copyright variant | File:GW212H154.png| Copyright variant | ||
</gallery> | </gallery> | ||
<center><youtube width=240 height=185>_Vmwt8d-NtY</youtube><youtube width=240 height=185>02M12LnCwI8</youtube><youtube width=240 height=185>biPDiL1Huak</youtube><youtube width=240 height=185>ARyzbVxG70</youtube><youtube width=240 height=185>ipCaub4jtNU</youtube></center> | <center><youtube width=240 height=185>_Vmwt8d-NtY</youtube><youtube width=240 height=185>02M12LnCwI8</youtube><youtube width=240 height=185>biPDiL1Huak</youtube><youtube width=240 height=185>-ARyzbVxG70</youtube><youtube width=240 height=185>ipCaub4jtNU</youtube></center> | ||
'''Note:''' The first four images are the regular variants | '''Note:''' The first four images are the regular variants. The fifth image is a Black Journal variant. The sixth and seventh images are the Mister Rogers variants, and the last image is the copyright version. | ||
'''Nicknames:''' "The Roof", "The NET House III" | '''Nicknames:''' "The Roof", "The NET House III" | ||
'''Logo:''' First, the left section of the screen fills with red from the bottom, the middle section fills with yellow from the top, and the right section fills with blue from the bottom. | '''Logo:''' First, the left section of the screen fills with red from the bottom, the middle section fills with yellow from the top, and the right section fills with blue from the bottom. Each colored section flips to form the letters "NET" on a black background one by one. Then either one of two things would happen: | ||
* <u>1967-1968</u>: The text "NATIONAL EDUCATIONAL TELEVISION" appears above the NET logo and morph into a line, which bends to form a gable roof with an aerial antenna on top, which is connected to the T. You can see | * <u>1967-1968</u>: The text "NATIONAL EDUCATIONAL TELEVISION" appears above the NET logo and morph into a line, which bends to form a gable roof with an aerial antenna on top, which is connected to the T. You can see the fourth logo for seeing about the style of this logo. | ||
* <u>1968-1970</u>: A blue line is drawn above the letters, which bends to form the | * <u>1968-1970</u>: A blue line is drawn above the letters, which bends to form the gable as mentioned earlier roof with the aerial antenna on top (still connected to the T) from the 1968 variant. | ||
'''Variants:''' | '''Variants:''' | ||
* The 1968 version came in both black and white and color versions. | * The 1968 version came in both black and white and color versions. | ||
* In early shows, the logo had | * In early shows, the logo had lighter colors (NET), likely due to film/tape deterioration. | ||
* On the first | * On the first three seasons (1968-1970) of Mister Rogers Neighborhood, the NET logo was built into a building that was part of the toy neighborhood in the show’s opening and closing (it was in black on B&W broadcasts to stand out better). This feature remained in reruns until 1989. A copyright notice to “National Educational Television and Radio Center” continued to be used on the show through 1971. | ||
* The closing variant in Black Journal has the animation for the logo (during the part when the right section of the screen fills up with blue) fade in a few seconds after the music begins. | * The closing variant in Black Journal has the animation for the logo (during the part when the right section of the screen fills up with blue) fade in a few seconds after the music begins. | ||
* At the end of Black Journal, an alternative closing variant can be seen after the regular closing logo. It | * At the end of Black Journal, an alternative closing variant can be seen after the regular closing logo. It is just the text "NATIONAL EDUCATIONAL TELEVISION" in gray stacked on top of each other on a black background. The ending result is quite similar to the first PBS logo. | ||
* In The Warren Years, a black version of the logo | * In The Warren Years, a black version of the logo appears on a white background with a copyright notice below. | ||
* A still variant was used for special programming that preempted regularly scheduled shows. | * A still variant was used for special programming that preempted regularly scheduled shows. | ||
* Oddly enough, the closing Fall 1968 variant was used as the opening logo variant for | * Oddly enough, the closing Fall 1968 variant was used as the opening logo variant for a 1968 Black Journal episode. | ||
'''FX/SFX:''' The flipping effects. | '''FX/SFX:''' The flipping effects. | ||
'''Music/Sounds/Voice-over:''' A low-tone mellotron fanfare edited from " | '''Music/Sounds/Voice-over:''' A low-tone mellotron fanfare edited from "Plenipotentiary" by Eric Siday, similar in style to his Screen Gems “S from Hell” and CBS “In Color” jingles, and an announcer saying his part below depending on the variant: | ||
* July 2, 1967-Fall 1968: The announcer says “The following program is from N-E-T, the National Educational Television network.” (opening) or “This is N-E-T, the National Educational Television network.” (closing). | * July 2, 1967-Fall 1968: The announcer says, “The following program is from N-E-T, the National Educational Television network.” (opening) or “This is N-E-T, the National Educational Television network.” (closing). | ||
* Fall 1968-Summer 1970: The announcer says “The following program is from N-E-T, the public television network.” (opening) or “This is N-E-T, the public television network.” (closing). | * Fall 1968-Summer 1970: The announcer says, “The following program is from N-E-T, the public television network.” (opening) or “This is N-E-T, the public television network.” (closing). | ||
* Summer-Fall 1970: The announcer says "This is N-E-T, National Educational Television." This variant is rarer than the others. | * Summer-Fall 1970: The announcer says, "This is N-E-T, National Educational Television." This variant is rarer than the others. | ||
'''Music/Sounds/Voice-over Variants:''' On The Assessment of Cambodia, the announcer says "The program scheduled for this time will not be seen so that we may bring you the following N-E-T special program." | '''Music/Sounds/Voice-over Variants:''' On The Assessment of Cambodia, the announcer says, "The program scheduled for this time will not be seen so that we may bring you the following N-E-T special program." It is a still variant, and no music plays during this variant. | ||
'''Availability:''' Extremely rare. The B&W 1967 logo made an appearance on the VHS release of Our Neighbor, Fred Rogers, but has been cut from TV rebroadcasts of the documentary since 2003. It can be seen on several shows available for viewing at The Paley Center for Media, including the series premiere episodes of Mister Rogers' Neighborhood (1967 version, B&W), Black Journal (1967 version, color), and Sesame Street (1968 version, color). Though the videocassette release of the Mister Rogers' Neighborhood episode "Death of a Goldfish" plasters the standard version of the 1968 logo with the 1971 PBS logo, the show's in-credit variant remains. The 1968 opening and closing versions can also be seen on the Sesame Street: Old School Volume 2 DVD set on the test pilot episode | '''Availability:''' Extremely rare. The B&W 1967 logo made an appearance on the VHS release of Our Neighbor, Fred Rogers, but has been cut from TV rebroadcasts of the documentary since 2003. It can be seen on several shows available for viewing at The Paley Center for Media, including the series premiere episodes of Mister Rogers' Neighborhood (1967 version, B&W), Black Journal (1967 version, color), and Sesame Street (1968 version, color). Though the videocassette release of the Mister Rogers' Neighborhood episode "Death of a Goldfish" plasters the standard version of the 1968 logo with the 1971 PBS logo, the show's in-credit variant remains. The 1968 opening and closing versions can also be seen on the Sesame Street: Old School Volume 2 DVD set on the test pilot episode. The 1968 closing version can be found on a handful of 1969-70 Mister Rogers' Neighborhood episodes on Twitch (most plaster it with the 1971 PBS logo). The 1967 closing version can be found on all 1968 black and white episodes of Mister Rogers' Neighborhood, including episodes streaming on Twitch as well as episodes 1-5 on Amazon. The 1968 alternative closing logo is quite rare; it can be seen on Black Journal (1967 version, color). Its last confirmed new appearance was on Realities; the 1970 PBS logo plasters it on repeats, as seen on the series premiere (this logo can be found on a film print of the same show). The special program variant appears on Assessment of Cambodia. This logo first appeared on Conversations 1967. All variants, color, and B&W can be seen on over 100+ programs available for viewing on the American Archive of Public Broadcasting website. | ||
'''Editor's Note:''' This is by far the most well known NET logo. With its mellotron fanfare, the announcer, the dark background, and the | '''Editor's Note:''' This is by far the most well-known NET logo. With its mellotron fanfare, the announcer, the dark background, and the low audio and grainy film quality. It gained a reputation for frightening children who grew up with Mister Rogers Neighborhood or Sesame Street. It is one of the more fascinating logos in the history of NET/PBS. | ||
===13th logo (October 5, 1970-March 1972)=== | ===13th logo (October 5, 1970-March 1972)=== | ||
| Line 285: | Line 287: | ||
'''Nicknames:''' "Scanimate Letters" | '''Nicknames:''' "Scanimate Letters" | ||
'''Logo:''' On a dark purple background, several distorted white shapes spin around the center of the screen, which | '''Logo:''' On a dark purple background, several distorted white shapes spin around the center of the screen, which appears to be letters spinning and rolling around each other and larger copies made of lines forming around them. The letters then unwrap from each other. The copies also absorb themselves into the letters, revealing the word "net" in a Bauhaus 93-like font. | ||
'''Variants:''' | '''Variants:''' | ||
* Some programs carry a custom variant for their respective shows, in which the logo leads out to their intros. | * Some programs carry a custom variant for their respective shows, in which the logo leads out to their intros. It was seen on Fanfare and Realities (with the latter also carrying a "News Special" variant). | ||
* A "Special Events" variant was seen on an NET special. | * A "Special Events" variant was seen on an NET special. | ||
* A B&W variant also exists. Beginning on October 3, 1971, the logo was updated. It is now on an ultramarine background, the lines are now yellow, and the "n" is orange, the "e" is yellow, and the "t" is green. Additionally, it is also videotaped, the mass appears to zoom in, and the letters also appear to be thinner and spread a bit further out from each other. | * A B&W variant also exists. Beginning on October 3, 1971, the logo was updated. It is now on an ultramarine background, the lines are now yellow, and the "n" is orange, the "e" is yellow, and the "t" is green. Additionally, it is also videotaped, the mass appears to zoom in, and the letters also appear to be thinner and spread a bit further out from each other. | ||