DIC Entertainment: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
no edit summary
imported>Camenati No edit summary |
imported>LunaMedia No edit summary |
||
| Line 232: | Line 232: | ||
*2003 Variant: Unknown, possibly extinct. | *2003 Variant: Unknown, possibly extinct. | ||
**Even though this variant has been confirmed to exist, nobody knows what show, movie, or another piece of media it truly appeared on. It might have even been simply a placeholder or a prototype logo for the variant below. | **Even though this variant has been confirmed to exist, nobody knows what show, movie, or another piece of media it truly appeared on. It might have even been simply a placeholder or a prototype logo for the variant below. | ||
**This variant was rumored to have appeared on a DVD of ''The Mysterious Cities of Gold'', a 2003 airing of ''Speed Racer'' (1967) on Speed (now FS1) plastering the 1992 [[Group W Productions]] logo ( | **This variant was rumored to have appeared on a Spanish DVD of ''The Mysterious Cities of Gold'', a 2003 airing of ''Speed Racer'' (1967) on Speed (now FS1) plastering the 1992 [[Group W Productions|Westinghouse Broadcasting International]] logo (but the company had no involvement with the 1993 remaster/dubbing of ''Speed Racer'' (though this may be because they dubbed ''Speed Racer X'' the year before) and that logo is longer than the Kid in Bed variant, so it most likely used a longer version of the variant, or used the long version of the next logo in order to plaster it), and an ''Inspector Gadget'' promotional DVD given away with General Mills cereals; though these reports remain unconfirmed as of 2022. | ||
*Like the first logo, this does not appear on the 1998 and 1999 Disney films ''Meet the Deedles'' and ''Inspector Gadget'', respectively, as this logo was only used on television and direct-to-video productions. | *Like the first logo, this does not appear on the 1998 and 1999 Disney films ''Meet the Deedles'' and ''Inspector Gadget'', respectively, as this logo was only used on television and direct-to-video productions. | ||