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"Marvel Productions Logo History (featuring DePatie-Freleng Enterprises)" made by TR3X Productions, 10/06/2024.
This video will look at the logos from DePatie–Freleng Enterprises (1963-81), Marvel Comics Animation (1978-81) and Marvel Productions (1981-96, later known as New World Animation from 1993-96); Marvel Animation is excluded from this video.
01) DePatie–Freleng Enterprises was founded by David H. DePatie and Friz Freleng in May 1963, both of which worked at the late Warner Bros. Cartoons studio prior to its demise in the aforementioned year; because of this, DFE Films (abbreviation for DePatie-Freleng Enterprises) is considered as the successor to Warner Bros. Cartoons (1933-63). Based in Burbank, California (USA), the animation studio specialised in several products, namely television shows and title sequences, the latter of which saw them work on the intro for the Pink Panther (1963) and its sequels; co-founder Friz Freleng was one of the co-creators of the Pink Panther character. Their first logo appeared in their Super 6 TV series from 1966-67, and this design was used for the remainder of their existence, appearing mainly at the end of TV series and specials such as the Pink Panther Show (1969-80), Doctor Dolittle (1970-71), the Cat in the Hat (1971), the New Fantastic Four (1978) and many more. In 1981, DePatie and Freleng sold DFE Films to Marvel Comics, which was subsequently renamed as Marvel Productions; DePatie was assigned as the head of that company, while Freleng returned to Warner Bros. under their then recently revived animation division, Warner Bros. Animation (founded March 1980).
02) The animation division for Marvel Comics worked on a series of productions with DFE Films from the late 1970s to early 1980s, some examples including Spider-Man and His Amazing Friends, Spider-Woman and more. When DFE Films was bought by Marvel Comics, they renamed their animation division to Marvel Productions as well.
03) Marvel Productions was founde..

"Triumph Films Logo History" made by TR3X Productions, 11/04/2024.
Triumph Films was an independent film studio division of Sony Pictures Entertainment from the 1990s to 2000s (with a one-off revival in 2014), although their origins dates back to the early 1980s as a joint-venture between Columbia Pictures (USA) and Gaumont (France). Triumph Films distributed foreign films in the USA for most of their first incarnation (1982-85), and after a few years of success, Triumph changed their focus to applying English subtitles to foreign-language films, which dissatisfied Gaumont and subsequently left the joint venture, which was later folded into Columbia Pictures. Two years later, Columbia saw potential in reviving the Triumph name, and they were reincorporated in March 1988 to focus on independent, low-budget, and direct-to-video film releases; the first film they distributed was "Triumph of the Spirit" in December 1989. Triumph Films distributed many films from Epic Productions and Vision International in the early 1990s (along with Epic's predecessors Trans World Entertainment and Empire International), and during that time, Triumph became a division of Sony Pictures Entertainment in 1991, which led to an update of their on-screen logo with a fanfare and "Columbia Pictures Entertainment" byline removed. Their last logo introduced the "Sony Pictures Entertainment" byline in the film "Nina Takes a Lover", although this appeared a few years earlier in a TV trailer for "Homicide"; this logo was used from 1995-98 and 2003-08, and the latter period saw six films produced/distributed by Triumph, one of which was "Superbabies: Baby Geniuses 2" from 2004.

Timestamps
0:00 1st Logo (1982-85)
0:23 2nd Logo (1989-94)
1:10 3rd Logo (1994-2014)
1:33 Credits

-TR3X

"Trans World Entertainment Logo History (featuring Epic Productions and Empire International Pictures)" made by TR3X Productions, 11/04/2024.
Trans World Entertainment was an American independent production/distribution company that lasted from 1983-93, and they produced low-to-medium budget films for the home-video market. Founded by Moshe Diamant and Eduard Sarlui in 1983, they were originally a video distribution company before "She", "Creature" and "Pray for Death" were released in theatres in 1985.
Epic Productions was founded by the two founders of TWE in 1986, and Diamant became CEO and chairman of Epic (unrelated to Epic Records), while Sarlui remained CEO and chairman of TWE, which had recently signed a home-media deal with Media (founded by Charles Band) to distribute their theatrical titles on videocassette. In early 1988, Epic Productions managed to buy Empire International Pictures after the founder (Charles Band, 1983) offered his company to them, and this happened because of Empire's financial problems (e.g. purchasing Dino de Laurentiis Cinematografica in Italy) along with long-term debt obligations to Crédit Lyonnais. As the 1980s ended, TWE slowed down on making films whilst Epic Productions began to release several films, some of which included "Ghosts Can't Do It" and "Beyond the Door III"; Triumph Films distributed the films produced by Epic Productions, and TWE eventually became a holding company for their films after releasing "Eyes of an Angel" in 1991. Epic Productions was on the rise to fame by this point, as they planned to create a home-media division (the last Epic Home Video logo would've appeared on their VHS release of "Catacombs", titled as "Curse IV: The Ultimate Sacrifice" when it was released by Columbia-Tristar Home Video in 1993; another note: the first Epic Home Video logo only appeared on trailers for their films on Columbia-Tristar Home Video releases), but when Crédit Lyonnais removed the founders of TWE/Epic from their ..

"Columbia Pictures Logo Variations" made by TR3X Productions from 13-27/02/2024, uploaded on 29/02/2024.
Columbia Pictures was founded by Joe Brandt, Harry and Jack Cohn in Los Angeles on 10th January 1924, a successor to their CBC Film Sales Corporation (New York) from 1918. The film production and distribution company grew steadily over the years, and they were well-known by the time their third logo (1936-76) was introduced, since they were releasing short films by the Three Stooges around this time. As their film catalogue grew, so did the number of variations of their logo, and this video consists of their logo variations from the 1950s to the 2020s (with the exception of a textless variant from 1930). I have referenced the "Logo Variations" and "Trailer Variations" pages of Columbia Pictures on the AVID (Audiovisual Identity Database) website for this video, so credit to them for making this video possible; here is a link to their website on Miraheze https://www.avid.wiki/Main_Page. However, I did exclude a few variants from their lists in this video, because some of them are transitions of the logo to the opening scene of the film (e.g. a fade-in or blur effect); I think that showing variants of the Torch Lady, pedestal, text and byline is more essential, but I did make some exceptions like variants 13, 39 and 41 in the sixth logo for example. My additional thanks go to the logo capturers, mainly @ifrequire and @BrokenSaw1 whose hard work over the years are greatly appreciated.
Notes: The international variants of the Columbia Pictures logos are excluded from this video, because I feel like showing them in another video that will be released soon.
-I won't update my logo history on Columbia Pictures, since I made a video on them in 2016 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0xD7rZfU5uM but I might update it when I find the time.
-For the viewers that are curious of what variants are seen in the thumbnail, I will list them here (left-right); 09.59, 02.36, 17...

"Sat.1 Logo History (Germany)" made by TR3X PR0DÚCTÍ0NS, 12/02/2024 (worked on 04/01/2024, 11-12/02/24).
Sat.1 is a German free-to-air television channel that launched on 1st January 1984 as PKS, known as the program for cable and satellite network (Programmgesellschaft für Kabel- und Satellitenrundfunk). The PKS name stuck around for a year, and when the new year arrived, the channel was renamed to Sat.1, although PKS continued to be shown on Sat. 1 programmes for a few years (I only showed two logos after 1984, and I'm not sure when PKS went defunct... possibly around the late 1980s). The bouncing ball debuted in the Sat.1 idents around the late 1980s, and the ball is still used as the main logo for the network many years later. This logo became so popular that it even appeared in the intro for Glücksrad during the 1990s (the German version of Wheel of Fortune)! Sat.1 broadcasts their network in several countries, notable examples being Austria, Switzerland, Liechtenstein, Poland, Romania and Lithuania. The network is part of the ProSiebenSat.1 Media Group, which was founded in March 2000, and there are two other networks with the Sat. 1 name, those being Sat. 1 Emotions and Gold. This video only shows the main idents from Sat.1 although an exception is the Der Film Film ident from 1991, which is a parody of the 20th Century Fox logo; the Werbung (advertising) bumpers are of interest, and they can be seen on some of the videos listed in the credits.
I will upload another logo history video in the following days, and like the Sat.1 video, I had this idea in mind around late 2022.
Note: I forgot to write the English translation for the fifth ident, so I'll write it here; Zeigt's Allen (Sat.1 shows it all).

Timestamps
0:00 1st Logo (1984-85; PKS)
0:29 1st Logo (1985-86; Sat.1)
0:49 2nd Logo (1986-96; Sat.1)
3:07 3rd Logo (1996-2001; Sat.1)
6:27 4th Logo (2001-04; Sat.1)
7:33 5th Logo (2004-08; Sat.1)
8:32 6th Logo (2008-09; Sat.1)
9:03 7th Logo (2009-11..

"BRB Internacional Logo History" made by TR3X PR0DÚCTÍ0NS, 13/02/2024.
BRB Internacional (or BRB International) takes its name from the three founders, and they were Títo Basto, José Rodriguez and Claudio Biern Boyd. Founded in 1972, the company began as a merchandising agency in Alcobendas, Madrid, Spain, where they were headquartered for their entire existence. As the decade went on, BRB bought Spanish distribution rights to some popular cartoon characters from studios such as Hanna-Barbera and Warner Bros, and they also began a long-time collaboration with Nippon Animation of Japan, since BRB helped out by distributing their entire anime series worldwide. In the early 1980s, BRB began to produce their own cartoons, such as Dogtanian and the Three Muskehounds for example (I think the text in the first ident was meant to mention that film, not Around the World with Willy Fog... my bad), which was animated by Nippon Animation. Their animations were broadcast on TVE (Televisión Española) at this time, and there is a variant of the second ident with the in-credit TVE text plastering the BRB logo, which is excluded from this video, along with the TV3 variant. BRB International was becoming popular by the turn of the 1990s, as their works appeared in countries like the USA and the UK for example, and the World of David the Gnome was co-produced by Cinar and Miramax Films (an in-credit text showing the BRB logo is in the intro of that series). In the early 21st century, BRB was renowned for animating Iron Kid (or Eon Kid) and Bernard, the latter with EBS Productions and M6, and they were doing CGI animations at this time (mid 2000s); WildBrain later managed BRB's extensive catalogue of kids’ content on YouTube in 2018. A month after co-founder Biern Boyd passed away in October 2022, BRB filed for bankruptcy, and their catalogue was subsequently purchased by DeAPlaneta Entertainment in January 2023.
This logo history was in my mind for many years, and I remember attem..

"Seven Arts Logo Compilation" made by TR3X PR0DÚCTÍ0NS, 07/12/2023.
This logo compilation (or logo history) looks at three companies called Seven Arts, and the first of which had a joint-venture with Bryanston (British film company) and merged with Warner Bros. in 1967. The companies are listed below, and keep in mind that they are not related.
01) Seven Arts Productions (1957-67). This was an American production company which made films for release by other studios (e.g. Paramount Pictures, Twentieth Century Fox). It was founded in 1957 by Eliot Hyman, Ray Stark, and Norman Kat, and they released their first film "Gun Runners" under United Artists in 1958; some of their filmography includes West Side Story (1961 - UA), Gigot (1962 - TCF), Is Paris Burning (1966 - Paramount) and many more. Seven Arts was also involved with television distribution, and Warner Bros. licensed the TV rights to its post-1949 library to Seven Arts in 1960. The company was defunct in 1967, when Seven Arts acquired the controlling interest in Warner Bros. Pictures from Jack L. Warner, and the companies were merged as Warner Bros.-Seven Arts. It was rebranded as Warner Bros. Inc. after Kinney National Company bought the company in 1969.
02) Seven Arts Pictures (1990-92). This was a short-lived B-movie distribution company established on 19th July 1990, headed by Mario F. Kassar (co-founder of Carolco Pictures). This joint-venture of Carolco Pictures and New Line Cinema released eleven films from 1990-92, and their filmography includes Repossessed (1990), Defenseless (1991) and Light Sleeper (1992).
03) Seven Arts Entertainment (1992-). This is a British independent film production company known as Peter Hoffman Productions in its first five years of existence. The company was founded by Peter Hoffman, who changed the name to Seven Arts around the late 1990s, the time when it was co-owned by CanWest Global Communications. They have released a few films in their catalogue, some of which ..

"Araba Films/Lauren Films Logo History" made by TR3X PR0DÚCTÍ0NS, 14/12/2023.
This video will look at the logos from two well-known film production/distribution companies from Spain, and they are Araba Films (1981-2007) and Lauren Films (1980-2007). Araba Films distributed films from small production companies, whilst Lauren Films held the theatrical distribution rights of several American film/home-media companies, such as Orion Pictures Miramax Films and Artisan Entertainment, and they also distributed movies from some Hong Kong companies (a notable example is Golden Harvest, since the audio from the first two Lauren logos is derived from the 1978-2003 Golden Harvest movie logo). Lauren Films (based in Barcelona) and Araba Films (based in Madrid) were acquired by Media 8 Entertainment in 2007, and this subsequently resulted in an end to their film production/distribution. Interestingly, the website for Araba Films is still intact as of December 2023, albeit the flash animation of the logo in the top-left does not work anymore (see https://www.arabafilms.com/ and Wayback Machine https://web.archive.org/web/20140921012305/http://www.arabafilms.com/ ).
Thanks to @LogicSmash and @OfficialCruiseshipzStudios for the majority of the captures shown in this video, whose hard work over the years are greatly appreciated. This might be my last video for this year, and I won't make a "Logos from 2023" video since I lost interest in keeping up with the many logos that debuted this year (another reason is copyright). This has been a tricky year to get through personally, but creating these videos in my spare time have tried to calm me down at best, and I always appreciate the likes received in these videos. Have an early Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year everyone, and here's to the next time. :-)

Timestamps
0:00 Araba Films
0:27 Lauren Films
2:35 Credits

-TR3X

"TV Tokyo Ident History" made by TR3X PR0DÚCTÍ0NS, 15/11/2023.
JOTX-DTV (channel 7), branded as TV Tokyo (テレビ東京, Terebi Tōkyō), is a Japanese television station that serves as the flagship of the TX Network. The tv station is owned and operated by TV Tokyo Corporation, a subsidiary of TV Tokyo Holdings Corporation that is in turn a subsidiary of Nikkei, Inc. TV Tokyo was established by the Japan Science Foundation in 1951, which later started broadcasting as the Science TV Tokyo channel on 12th April 1964; it took its name from its VHF frequency channel 12. In July 1968, the network rebranded as Tokyo Channel 12 Production, which was established with the help of the Nikkei and Mainichi Broadcasting System; the name TV Tokyo began to be used by 1981, when the channel was renamed to Television Tokyo Channel 12, Ltd. The network has a station mascot called Nanana (ナナナ), a cartoon banana with eyes, a nose, and a mouth which is bent into a seven. Lastly, this tv station is one of the five private broadcasters based in Tokyo, and is also part of the Japan Consortium, which covers the Olympic Games and the FIFA World Cup.
I first discovered TV Tokyo from a logo capture No. Entertainment uploaded in mid 2017 (the 1981-85 ident), and I did not check out their idents until yesterday, when I saw that they had a new logo on Logopedia. This might be my last video on the channel for a while, since I will be working on other projects, but I might be back soon with the second part of Canada Logo Compilation (movie logos), so stay tuned.

Timestamps
0:00 1st Logo (1964-68)
0:02 2nd Logo (1968-79)
0:05 3rd Logo (1979-81)
1:15 4th Logo - 01 (1981-85)
2:30 4th Logo - 02 (1985-98)
4:24 5th Logo (1998-2023)
7:08 6th Logo (2023-)
8:13 Credits

-TR3X

"Astral Logo History" made by TR3X PR0DÚCTÍ0NS, 06/11/2023.
Astral was founded in 1961 by the Greenberg brothers in Montreal, Canada, to operate the photography concession in Miracle Mart, a department store chain. The company was headed by Harold (1930-96) at this time, and two years later they acquired Bellevue Pathé, which helped them gain photography rights for the Montreal Expo 67 World's Fair. As the years went on, Astral went into motion picture processing after acquiring a few companies in the late 60s (e.g. Pathé-Humphries, Associated Screen News Industries), and their film division was founded around 1971 when they adopted the Pathé rooster as their mascot. In 1973, Astral Bellevue Pathé Limited (later known as Astral Communications) was established to specialise in videocassette duplication and video wholesaling, and in the next decade (the 1980s), the first known on-screen appearance of Astral Video debuted in 1985. The arrival of the new millennium saw Astral Communications change their name to Astral Media, which occurred in February 2000; by this time, Astral acquire to own a string of Canadian television and radio stations, and the media conglomerate began to be recognised as the largest radio broadcaster in Canada. Astral celebrated their fiftieth anniversary in 2011 (with Ian Greenberg, co-founder, as president and CEO at this time), and not long after their anniversary, Bell Media made an announcement to acquire Astral in March 2012, which did not happen until 27th June 2013 due to failed attempts. Astral became defunct a week later on 5th July 2013, as a result of Bell Media completing its acquisition of the company.
My next video will possibly be a logo compilation on Canadian home entertainment companies, which will be referenced from the list on the Audiovisual Identity Database; website link https://avid.wiki/wiki/.

-TR3X

"Canada Logo Compilation (01 - Home Entertainment)" made by TR3X PR0DÚCTÍ0NS, 10/11/2023.
This logo compilation takes a look at the home entertainment companies from Canada, a country in North America that is north from the United States of America. The oldest logo in this video is from 1981 and the most recent is from 2022, and all these logos have appeared on home media formats like VHS, DVD, Betamax, etc. Some of the logos in this list were also used in movies and TV (e.g. Alliance Atlantis and Entertainment One), but I decided not to show all of those logos since this video primarily focuses on home-media logos. This video references the VHS Distributor and AVID (Audiovisual Identity Database - Canadian home entertainment logos category) websites, so credit to them for the information that is mentioned in the video.
The music in the maVen logo was replaced with YouTube stock music, since the original audio is a copyrighted track (fitting for a short-lived company that bootlegged a Wallace and Gromit film.. no cheese and crackers for them). My next video will be an ident history on a Brazilian television network, but for the curious viewers, the 01 in the video intro refers to a future Canada Logo Compilation series, where I might make another two episodes looking at TV and film logos.

Timestamps
0:00 (A-C) Canada Logo Compilation - Home Entertainment
5:46 (E-K) Canada Logo Compilation - Home Entertainment
9:30 (L-R) Canada Logo Compilation - Home Entertainment
14:57 (S-W) Canada Logo Compilation - Home Entertainment
17:52 Credits

-TR3X

"TV Gazeta Ident History" made by TR3X PR0DÚCTÍ0NS, 12/11/2023.
TV Gazeta is a Brazilian television network based in the city of São Paulo, which launched on 25th January 1970 (the 416th anniversary of São Paulo). When the station first launched in 1970, it was the first station in Brazil to be set up with equipment for colour transmission, and was the first broadcaster to work with chroma key equipment. The headquarters is based at the Casper Libero Foundation (founded 1944), housed in a building from 1966 with a TV tower on top that was completed by its inauguration on 21st April 1983 (TV Globo helped TV Gazeta with the construction of the tower). In 1992, TV Gazeta began a partnership with Rede OM, which became CNT (Central Nacional de Televisão) in the following year, and this lasted until June 2000. Since then, TV Gazeta has become an independent network again, and it remains a popular television network in São Paulo, which is the most populous city in Brazil and the capital of the state of São Paulo.

Timestamps
0:00 TV Gazeta (01)
3:25 CNT Gazeta (02)
4:19 TV Gazeta (03)
9:15 Credits

-TR3X

"CITV Ident History" made by TR3X PR0DÚCTÍ0NS, 05/11/2023
(made from 03-04/09/23, 10-11/09/23, 03-04/11/23).
CITV (Children's ITV) is a British children's morning programming block on ITV2, which launched on 2nd September 2023, but prior to this, CITV had a free-to-air television channel (owned by ITV plc) that ran from 11th March 2006 to 1st September 2023, which broadcast popular shows like Horrid Henry, Mr. Bean the Animated Series, Grizzly Tales for Gruesome Kids, Sooty and much more. Like CBBC (the children's television channel owned and operated by the BBC), CITV began as a late afternoon programming block that aired on the ITV network (later known as ITV1), and it launched on 3rd January 1983 as the successor to an earlier brand known as Watch It (1980-83). The block premiered the debut episode of Thomas the Tank Engine and Friends on 9th October 1984, and by the time the third series of that show premiered on CITV in 1992, the show began to achieve worldwide acclaim. The late afternoon block and television channel were widely popular with the young Brits at the turn of the twenty-first century, and this was the case until around the early 2020s, when video-on-demand services like BBC iPlayer and ITVX became popular. In late July 2023, ITV launched a new children's hub called ITVX Kids, which is on ITVX; this was the writing on the wall for the CITV channel, since it would be an eventual replacement for the CITV channel, and at 9:00pm on 1st September 2023, the channel ceased broadcasting. The CITV block on ITV1 also ceased broadcasting on 27th August 2023 around 8:25am, which was in service for a good long run of four decades. The thumbnail shows the sixth logo from CITV (2003-06), and the logo history text uses the Bubbly font from Dafont (created December 2020).

This is my first video on the channel in 132 days.. the longest hiatus I've ever taken from uploading logo content (there was a similar hiatus from June to September 2019). As I wrote in my co..

"Top 100 Best to Worst Logos" made by TR3X PR0DÚCTÍ0NS, 30/05/2020.
After a few days of planning the list to this video, I have finally finished this video. The video starts off with logos that I view as good from 100-61. The logos from 60-41 are viewed by me as either neutral or mediocre (despite some in the 50s section are good). From 40-1, these logos are despised by me. Keep in mind that this video is a personal list, so please don't complain about missing logos, since some of them could be in the "Honourable Mentions" list. I had help with this video from a few friends of mine from my DM group, so credit to individuals like Metro, Juan, Cam, etc. This is my first "Top 100" video in nearly 4 years! My next video for this channel will be "Viacom Logo History (UPDATED)".

-TR3X

"Georgia Public Broadcasting Logo/Ident History" made by TR3X PR0DÚCTÍ0NS, 23/05/2020.
This video takes a look at the idents Georgia Public Broadcasting (formerly Georgia Public Television) has used since 1970! From a logo resembling Radio Québec to a logo that is surrounded by film projectors, the majority of these idents have taken their own approach. KUHT (Houston) will be my next logo/ident history video. Credit to the people that found the captures included in this video.

-TR3X

"Public Broadcasting Service Logo History (UPDATED)" made by TR3X PR0DÚCTÍ0NS, 21/05/2020.
My original logo history on PBS (made on 20/05/2017) was rushed and did not have a lot of footage of the logos included in it, so I decided to make a poll on my community page asking whether I should do PBS again for my next logo history video along with GPTB and KUHT. Since PBS got the most votes, here is what the majority of you wanted! :-)

-TR3X

"KQED Ident History" made by TR3X PR0DÚCTÍ0NS, 20/05/2020.
Felt like doing another logo/ident history video on a PBS affiliate, and this is KQED in San Francisco, California! This video takes a look at the majority of idents KQED have used since they launched all the way back in 1954. Credit to the people that found the captures included in this video.

-TR3X

"KTCA/Twin Cities PBS Ident History" made by TR3X PR0DÚCTÍ0NS, 19/05/2020.
It's been a while since I did a logo/ident history video of a PBS affiliate; I think the last one I did was WGBH, which was over 2 years ago! I decided to do a history on the KTCA and Twin Cities PBS idents because I've been interested in them since 2016, and I was originally going to do a history video on them in the same year (along with KQED). Speaking of which, I might do KQED next for my logo history series. Credit to the people that found the captures included in this video.
The TR3X Discord Ssrver: https://discord.gg/Qwnqj3w .

-TR3X

"Roadshow Television Logo Compilation" made by TR3X PR0DÚCTÍ0NS, 17/05/2020.
Originally going to be a logo history video showcasing the two logos from Roadshow Television, I decided to make this into a logo compilation video since I thought this would work better. The first and second logos from Roadshow Television mostly appear with major film studio logos, like Orion Pictures, Castle Rock Entertainment, Morgan Creek, etc. Credit to the people that own the captures which were included in this video.

-TR3X

"Top 5 Best & Worst Logos of 2019" made by TR3X PR0DÚCTÍ0NS, 08/04/2020.
I was originally going to make this video back in December 2019, but I decided to finish it off near to my 16th birthday. This video takes a look at what I believe is the worst and best logos from the year 2019. Remember, if there are logos missing, then that means they're in the dishonourable/honourable mentions list.

-TR3X

"Top 50 Greatest Logos from the 2000s" made by TR3X PR0DÚCTÍ0NS, 07/04/2020.
It's been 15 months since I last did these type of videos! Anyways, here is a list of what I personally think is the top 50 greatest logos from the decades of the 2000s. If I missed any, then those will be in the 'Honourable Mentions' list. Credit to those that found the captures included in this presentation.

-TR3X

Captured on 10/03/2020, uploaded on 12/03/2020.

"Southern/TVS/Meridian Logo/Ident History" made by TR3X PR0DÚCTÍ0NS, 09/03/2020. Uploaded on 10/03/2020.
Requested by a good friend of mine (CoolBeef66), I originally thought this would be shorter than the previous two ident histories I recently uploaded in the weekend... turns out I'm wrong! I actually enjoyed making this, as I found a couple of rarities along the way. Southern Television is my most favourite out of the three, but the two following successors are awesome too. The next logo/ident history will be on the BBC Television Service (BBC Television), requested by my brother Dylan. Credit to Andy Farrar for the Corfe Castle photograph included in the thumbnail.

-TR3X

What a rare surprise!
Taken from TSW's opening show on 1st January 1982.

Both opening and closing versions of this colour Border Television logo were taken from "Look Who's Talking".

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Created 4 years, 7 months ago.

33 videos

Category Entertainment

Hello everyone, and welcome to my BitChute channel! This channel was set up on 17th November 2019 in the United Kingdom.

This channel is home to many various content. I will list out each one as follows:
TR3X PR0DÚCTÍ0NS: Home to different content, like documentaries, memes, restorations, archives and much more.
The Logo Collection: Home to logo content like logo histories, logo compilations, logo lists, etc.
The Custom Logo Collection: Home to my creative content that is dedicated to motion graphics.
The Buildings Collection: Home to architecture content like railways, castles, settlements, etc.
The Composer Collection: Home to musical content like the Jazz Age, Big-Band, Rock & Roll, Classic Pop, etc.

The operator of this channel is Fabian Musto, who is a British-Welsh person that founded Trex Productions back on 6th September 2014. He was born on 16th April 2004, and has had a passion of making professional videos since 7th April 2012. Thank you all for reading.