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imported>CnowEnt Do we REALLY need all these nicknames? |
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<center><youtube width=240 height=185>TXgwQuMq2v0</youtube><youtube width=240 height=185>jQMlsaZ21_U</youtube><youtube width=240 height=185>RdF826koI04</youtube></center>
'''Logo:''' On a {{Font color|royalblue|royal blue}} background, a splash of white paint (which looks more like milk or whipped cream) flies through the air, going from left to right. Then, another splash is seen going the other direction, and then a third flying down from left to right. Then, white paint "bubbles" out in the center, then pulls back and to the right as the paint orbits around to form a stylized atom design. The text "'''FREMANTLE'''MEDIA", in Futura font with different font weights, fades in to the left of the atom, as 4 white paint drops appear around the atom to complete the logo.
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<center><youtube width=240 height=185>MJ0Om5acuhk</youtube></center>
'''Logo:''' On a black background, two shots fade in and out depicting the letters "Fr" and "e" in white being written out in cursive. A third shot shows a cursive white "m" being drawn, which zooms out to reveal the words "Fremantle" being drawn out in cursive handwriting. The stem of the "t" is the last of the lettering to be drawn after the zoom out.
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FremantleMedia (doing business as Fremantle) is a British-based media conglomerate company founded in 2000 as a merger of Pearson Television and CLT-UFA; the companies merged to become "RTL Group" and by renaming Pearson Television to FremantleMedia, who currently owns the All American, Mark Goodson, and Reg Grundy libraries, among other formats. In 2003, FremantleMedia acquired Australian production company Crackerjack Productions, who merged with Grundy Television to form "FremantleMedia Australia". On September 7, 2018, the company changed its onscreen name to simply "Fremantle," though FremantleMedia remains its legal name. Today, Fremantle is a division of the RTL Group, and is 90% owned by German media conglomerate, Bertelsmann SE & Co. KGaA, which is 80.9% owned by the Bertelsmann Foundation and 19.1% owned by the Mohn Family.
Logo: On a royal blue background, a splash of white paint (which looks more like milk or whipped cream) flies through the air, going from left to right. Then, another splash is seen going the other direction, and then a third flying down from left to right. Then, white paint "bubbles" out in the center, then pulls back and to the right as the paint orbits around to form a stylized atom design. The text "FREMANTLEMEDIA", in Futura font with different font weights, fades in to the left of the atom, as 4 white paint drops appear around the atom to complete the logo.
Variants:
FX/SFX: The flying and bubbling paint, the text fading in, and the design of the atom logo.
Music/Sounds: A gentle sounder with a guitar strum, bongos, and a piano note. This was composed by Score Productions, which did music for The Price is Right, Family Feud and the 1986 Lorimar-Telepictures logo.
Music/Sounds Variants:
Availability: Very common.
Editor's Note: The logo is clean and the sounder is relaxing, but it's not a popular logo by many due to its wide prevalance on television, in part due to its plastering older logos, though it's not on the scale of Sony Pictures Television, 20th Television or CBS Television Distribution.
Logo: On a black background, two shots fade in and out depicting the letters "Fr" and "e" in white being written out in cursive. A third shot shows a cursive white "m" being drawn, which zooms out to reveal the words "Fremantle" being drawn out in cursive handwriting. The stem of the "t" is the last of the lettering to be drawn after the zoom out.
Variants:
FX/SFX: The writing and the zooming.
Music/Sounds: A dramatic three-note orchestral theme followed by a chorus stinger when the stem of the "t" is drawn. The shorter version cuts out the first two notes. On CBS programs, the network's generic theme (which is slightly high-pitched) is used.
Availability: Current.
Editor's Note: This logo is a perfect example of the "simplicity" trend in modern logos, which could be seen as either cheesy or refreshing depending on who you ask.