Klasky Csupo: Difference between revisions

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'''Visuals:''' On a static purple background, a black ink stain on a blue background with a liquid effect appears by splattering all over the screen. A live-action hand comes in from the left and places a yellow piece of paper containing a red-lipped mouth onto the stain, while a pair of blue, round eyes (which seem to wiggle like Jell-O) appear and zoom in above the mouth, forming a bizarre-looking face. The face then says the company name as white blocks fly out from his mouth, which are revealed to be the parts of the K-C logo as they arrange themselves to form it (the parts have also been refined to match the print logo, with the "K" in a font like Futura, "L" in Permian Serif, "a" in a font similar to Linux Libertine or Times New Roman, "S" in Futura Book, the second "K" in a zig-zaggy font made possibly to match with the Letraset Process in the first logo, the "Y" and "CSUPO" set in Futura Bold). During the face's screen time, there are holes in the liquid background (which reveal smudges of the static background that emerge from the center and slide off-screen from many other directions). After that, the background and the face disappear like a CRT television turning off, and the "'''Y'''" in "'''K'''L'''''a'''''S'''K'''Y" turns {{color|darkviolet|purple}} and flashes faintly. The logo remains on-screen for a few seconds, and then it either fades out or cuts to black.
'''Visuals:''' On a static {{color|purple}} background, a black ink stain on a {{color|blue}} background with a liquid effect appears by splattering all over the screen. A live-action hand comes in from the left and places a {{color|yellow}} piece of paper containing a {{color|red}}-lipped mouth onto the stain, while a pair of {{color|blue}}, round eyes (which seem to wiggle like Jell-O) appear and zoom in above the mouth, forming a bizarre-looking face. The face then says the company name as white blocks fly out from his mouth, which are revealed to be the parts of the K-C logo as they arrange themselves to form it (the parts have also been refined to match the print logo, with the "K" in a font like Futura, "L" in Permian Serif, "a" in a font similar to Linux Libertine or Times New Roman, "S" in Futura Book, the second "K" in a zig-zaggy font made possibly to match with the Letraset Process in the first logo, the "Y" and "CSUPO" set in Futura Bold). During the face's screen time, there are holes in the liquid background (which reveal smudges of the static background that emerge from the center and slide off-screen from many other directions). After that, the background and the face disappear like a CRT television turning off, and the "'''Y'''" in "'''K'''L'''''a'''''S'''K'''Y" turns {{color|darkviolet|purple}} and flashes faintly. The logo remains on-screen for a few seconds, and then it either fades out or cuts to black.


'''Alternate Descriptive Video Description:''' In a logo, someone puts cutout eyes and a mouth on a splattered shape: Klasky Csupo.
'''Alternate Descriptive Video Description:''' In a logo, someone puts cutout eyes and a mouth on a splattered shape: Klasky Csupo.
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'''Technique:''' CGI done on a Silicon Graphics computer with Softimage software, plus a chroma-keyed live-action hand and computer animation for the face. For the still variants, none. Limited animation for the Splaat-only variant.
'''Technique:''' CGI done on a Silicon Graphics computer with Softimage software, plus a chroma-keyed live-action hand and computer animation for the face. For the still variants, none. Limited animation for the Splaat-only variant.


'''Audio:''' A splatter sound when the ink appears, and a bouncy "beeping" version of the 24-note bass jingle from the 1991 logo plays during Splaat's screen time, except the first measure of the jingle has been cut, meaning that only 18 notes are played. Another "beepy" instrument plays the same jingle in the background, only it comes in a quarter measure late. The company name is stated in a robotic voice with significant amounts of clipping to make it louder (hence the "Robot" nickname; the voice was supplied by the "Boing" novelty voice in the text-to-speech program used on a PowerMac G3 workstation). After Splaat finishes talking and the company logo appears, there is several cartoon sound effects: a tiny twang, a lip-flapping sound that sounds similar to the "trombone gobble" sound heard in Warner Bros. cartoons, a duck quacking twice, and the classic [[Hanna-Barbera]]/Hoyt Curtin boing. The music was composed by Mark Mothersbaugh's brother (and fellow Devo member and ''Rugrats'' composer), Bob.
'''Audio:''' A splatter sound when the ink appears, and a bouncy "beeping" version of the 24-note bass jingle from the 1991 logo plays during Splaat's screen time, except the first measure of the jingle has been cut, meaning that only 18 notes are played. Another "beepy" instrument plays the same jingle in the background, only it comes in a quarter measure late. The company name is stated in a robotic voice with significant amounts of clipping to make it louder (hence the "Robot" nickname; the voice was supplied by the "Boing" novelty voice in the text-to-speech program used on a PowerMac G3 workstation). After Splaat finishes talking and the company logo appears, there is four cartoon sound effects: a tiny twang, a lip-flapping sound that sounds similar to the "trombone gobble" sound heard in Warner Bros. cartoons, a duck quacking twice, and the classic [[Hanna-Barbera]]/Hoyt Curtin boing. The music was composed by Mark Mothersbaugh's brother (and fellow Devo member and ''Rugrats'' composer), Bob.


'''Audio Variants:'''
'''Audio Variants:'''
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