Colex Enterprises

From the Audiovisual Identity Database, the motion graphics museum

Revision as of 21:08, 30 October 2023 by AUnnamedDragon (talk | contribs)


Background

Colex Enterprises was formed on January 30, 1984 as a joint venture between Columbia Pictures Television (now "Sony Pictures Television") and Lexington Broadcast Services (later known as "LBS Communications", now "Fremantle") to distribute classic Screen Gems/CPT shows and TV movies. All distribution went through LBS. When Coca-Cola Telecommunications was created on November 24, 1986, CCT represented Colex and took distribution of the Screen Gems programs distributed by Colex, thus closing the company. CCT closed its own doors on January 1, 1988, ten days after the establishment of Columbia Pictures Entertainment (now "Sony Pictures Entertainment"), and most of the library was later transferred into the reorganized Columbia Pictures Television Distribution. Currently, the name is part of Sony Pictures Television.

Logo (January 30, 1984-January 1, 1988)


Visuals: On a blue background, two sets of three red lines come from either side and merge into one set of three. "Colex", written in a cursive font based on the Coca-Cola logo in a white and blue gradient color, drops down onto the lines and at the bottom, a four-pointed star passes, leaving the word "ENTERPRISES" in white. You can also see the shadow of the logo's formation and the finished product on the background's "floor".

Variants:

  • A black & white variant of this logo exists, which appears used on prints of classic Screen Gems shows in said colors.
  • On Antenna TV airings of The Monkees episode "Son of a Gypsy", the logo bizarrely appeared twice (before and after the 1966 NBC Productions logo). If you listen closely, you can hear the logo's music playing faintly in-between.

Technique: Computer animation.

Audio: A synthesized nine-note tune: two pairs of four ascending notes (the second pair is higher than the first) ending with one last high note and a "ping" when the star finishes writing out "Enterprises". Appears to have been composed by Andrew Holtzman (who also composed the 1984 LBS logo introduced that year) with the "Celesta" preset on a Casio MT-40 keyboard.

Availability:

  • Currently seen on several episodes of Father Knows Best and occasionally on other shows on Antenna TV, such as The Burns and Allen Show, Hazel, and The Monkees, with the former also appearing on Hulu.
  • It also previously appeared on Dennis the Menace as well, but Antenna TV's prints have it plastered with the 2002 SPT logo.
  • On a print of The Canterville Ghost (1986) last seen on Encore Mystery (now Starz Encore Suspense), this was retained, even after the '92 Columbia logo (and more recently, the 2003 SPTI "Cylinder" logo).
    • This is however not intact on the film's DVD release from Sony Pictures' Choice Collection.
  • What's Happening Now!! also had this logo, but replaced it with the 1989 LBS logo and the 2002 Sony Pictures Television logo, but some local reruns of a few S1 episodes had this logo plastered with the 1982 CPT Torch Lady.
  • This is also seen on a handful of Hardcastle and McCormick episodes as well, which was last seen on getTV and recently on a Decades binge, and on an episode of The Monkees on IFC (followed by the 1996 CTTD and 2014 Sony/SPT logos).
  • This has also appeared on '80s syndicated airings of films owned by Hope Enterprises like Road to Rio; it might also appear on VHS prints of Hope Enterprises films, but it doesn't appear on the DVD releases.
  • Additionally, this logo also appears on some episodes of The Donna Reed Show on Me-TV and several episodes of Father Knows Best on FETV (the color version is used on both networks, strangely enough).
  • This was also seen after the 2002 SPT logo on a print of the TV movie Miracle of the Heart: A Boys' Town Story as seen on Gospel Music Channel (now UP).
  • An Amazon Prime print of Three Wishes for Jamie also has this intact as well.
  • This logo was also seen on old USA Network airings of the TV series adaptation of Bob and Carol and Ted and Alice, and is also seen on Crackle's prints of said show, plastering the Screen Gems Television logo.
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