National Educational Television: Difference between revisions
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→12th logo (June 1967-November? 1970)
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===12th logo (June 1967-November? 1970)=== | ===12th logo (June 1967-November? 1970)=== | ||
{{Gallery | {{Gallery | ||
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|GW212H154.png| Copyright variant | |GW212H154.png| Copyright variant | ||
}} | }} | ||
{{YouTube|id=_Vmwt8d-NtY=|id2=02M12LnCwI8|id3=biPDiL1Huak|id4=-ARyzbVxG70|id5 | {{YouTube|id=_Vmwt8d-NtY=|id2=02M12LnCwI8|id3=biPDiL1Huak|id4=-ARyzbVxG70|id5=TuQZ80yE5G8}} | ||
'''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. | '''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. | ||
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'''FX/SFX:''' All 2D animation. | '''FX/SFX:''' All 2D animation. | ||
'''Music/Sounds:''' A low-tone mellotron fanfare edited from "Plenipotentiary" by Eric Siday, similar in style to his [[ | '''Music/Sounds:''' A low-tone mellotron fanfare edited from "Plenipotentiary" by Eric Siday, similar in style to his [[Screen Gems Television|Screen Gems]] “S from Hell” and [[CBS National IDs#5th ID (1965-Early 1970s)|CBS "In Color"]] jingles, in which sounds like a bee buzzing at the end 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). A rare closing variant has an additional voice over saying, "So I was one of the... first... to start WQED." | * 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). A rare closing variant has an additional voice over saying, "So I was one of the... first... to start WQED." | ||
* 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). | ||
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* 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. | * 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:''' Common. 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), as well as early on in the documentary ''Mr. Soul!''. 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. | '''Availability:''' Common. 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 [[Public Broadcasting Service|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), as well as early on in the documentary ''Mr. Soul!''. 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 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. | '''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. | ||