ADB Video: Difference between revisions
From the Audiovisual Identity Database, the motion graphics museum
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According to Johnny Walker of Northumbria University, ADB Video was an English company that existed (at least) in the summer of 1983.<ref name="walker">[https://nrl.northumbria.ac.uk/id/eprint/27770/1/Submitted_Video_Nicies_SubsequentAmends_4%20August.docx Video nicies: re-thinking the relationship between video entertainment and children in Britain during the early 1980s], page 9 (DOCX)</ref> |
According to Johnny Walker of Northumbria University, ADB Video was an English company that existed (at least) in the summer of 1983.<ref name="walker">[https://nrl.northumbria.ac.uk/id/eprint/27770/1/Submitted_Video_Nicies_SubsequentAmends_4%20August.docx Video nicies: re-thinking the relationship between video entertainment and children in Britain during the early 1980s], page 9 (DOCX)</ref> |
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ADB Video (1983).png |
ADB Video (1983).png |
Revision as of 04:42, 18 October 2021
Background
According to Johnny Walker of Northumbria University, ADB Video was an English company that existed (at least) in the summer of 1983.[1]
(1983)
Logo: A red "ADB" caption, in bold and blocky text, on a black background.
FX/SFX: None.
Music/Sounds: None.
Availability: Extremely rare: Walker mentions ADB advertising Fables of the Green Forest (Director unknown, 1978) and Tales of La Manca (Kunihiko Yuyama, 1980) as part of their “virtual childcare” range.[1]
Editor's Note: None.