Embassy Communications: Difference between revisions
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* Embassy Telecommunications: Ultra rare/near extinction. It has been seen on a 1984 episode of ''Diff'rent Strokes'' on BET (it may appear on Antenna TV or Encore Black) and at the start of the CBS Saturday Night Movie edited version of ''Blade Runner''. It made a surprise appearance on a Decades airing of the ''Square Pegs'' episode Child's Christmas in Weemawee: Part 1. | * Embassy Telecommunications: Ultra rare/near extinction. It has been seen on a 1984 episode of ''Diff'rent Strokes'' on BET (it may appear on Antenna TV or Encore Black) and at the start of the CBS Saturday Night Movie edited version of ''Blade Runner''. It made a surprise appearance on a Decades airing of the ''Square Pegs'' episode Child's Christmas in Weemawee: Part 1. | ||
* Embassy Pay Television: It's extinct and have been replaced by later distributor logos from Embassy Communications to Sony Pictures Television over the years. | * Embassy Pay Television: It's extinct and have been replaced by later distributor logos from Embassy Communications to Sony Pictures Television over the years. | ||
* Embassy Communications: Rare for the 1986 version and it's seen on the TV movie ''Firefighter'', retained on season 8 of ''The Facts of Life'' last aired on Me-TV and the Shout! Factory DVD release, all season 2 episodes of ''227'', and all season 3 episodes of ''Who's the Boss?'' both on Amazon. The gray "☆E" dark variant is extremely rare and can be seen on ''Guilty of Innocence: The Lennell Geter Story'', in which the Sony Pictures Choice Collection DVD-R as well as recent broadcasts of Sony Movie Channel retains it. The 1987 version is ultra rare and was originally seen on season 1 and early season 2 episodes of ''Married... With Children'' (the last being "You Better Watch Out"), the short-lived sitcom ''The Charmings'', 1987 episodes of ''Who's the Boss?'', ''227'', ''The Facts of Life'', and the short-lived sitcom ''Women in Prison'' before January 2, 1988. This was also used to plaster older Embassy Television logos as sighted in a rerun of a season 1 episode of Double Trouble and some season 5 episodes of ''Silver Spoons''. But most reruns and the DVDs of ''Married... With Children'' have it plastered over with the SPT logo. However, it is retained on | * Embassy Communications: Rare for the 1986 version and it's seen on the TV movie ''Firefighter'', retained on season 8 of ''The Facts of Life'' last aired on Me-TV and the Shout! Factory DVD release, all season 2 episodes of ''227'', and all season 3 episodes of ''Who's the Boss?'' both on Amazon. The gray "☆E" dark variant is extremely rare and can be seen on ''Guilty of Innocence: The Lennell Geter Story'', in which the Sony Pictures Choice Collection DVD-R as well as recent broadcasts of Sony Movie Channel retains it. The 1987 version is ultra rare and was originally seen on season 1 and early season 2 episodes of ''Married... With Children'' (the last being "You Better Watch Out"), the short-lived sitcom ''The Charmings'', 1987 episodes of ''Who's the Boss?'', ''227'', ''The Facts of Life'', and the short-lived sitcom ''Women in Prison'' before January 2, 1988. This was also used to plaster older Embassy Television logos as sighted in a rerun of a season 1 episode of Double Trouble and some season 5 episodes of ''Silver Spoons''. But most reruns and the DVDs of ''Married... With Children'' have it plastered over with the SPT logo. However, it is retained on ''The Facts of Life'' S9 episode "Adventures in Baileysitting" and the first episode of ''The Jeffersons'' on TV One called "A Friend in Need". It was surprisingly retained on a few S8 episodes of ''One Day at a Time'' on Antenna TV reruns, but are obscured due to split-screen credit crunching. | ||
'''Editor's Note:''' It's a favorite of many who can cherish its charm and cheesiness, as well as appreciate some of the special variations like from ''The Jeffersons'' that been praised by those who've seen it as very professional and cool. | '''Editor's Note:''' It's a favorite of many who can cherish its charm and cheesiness, as well as appreciate some of the special variations like from ''The Jeffersons'' that been praised by those who've seen it as very professional and cool. | ||