Draft:Nickelodeon/1990s

From the Audiovisual Identity Database, the motion graphics museum




Nick Is Kids (mid-1990s)

Visuals: The Nickelodeon logo is pulsating against a purple background. It cuts to dark images of Nickelodeon shows and stars. Then a Nickelodeon oval appears, and the image blurs. More footage is shown, then an orange Nickelodeon splat, and it stops pulsating. A red circle that reads "IS KIDS" appears below the logo.

Variant: A variant exists with the footage of the kids replaced with black and white footage of Nicktoons.

Technique: Computer effects and live action.

Audio: Almost throughout the entire ident, there is a heartbeat. There is also an idea/lightbulb sound effect but sounding a bit stuttering. A man says "Nick is..." and then ambience is heard and little swooshing noises can be heard and then the man says the same line and then what sounds like ambiance noise of a door closing several times before a small bang is heard which abruptly stops the heartbeat and then the man says "...kids."

Egg and Spoon (1990-April 1993)

Videos

Visuals: In a purple room, with an egg on a stand on top of a table full of Nickelodeon logos, a spoon taps on the egg, which gains the face of a monster, complete with green hair, horns, a bull's nose ring, and a giant mouth with fangs. The monster egg makes a weird noise resembling a low-pitched roar (think the MGM lion), which causes the spoon, which turns into a chicken, to start squawking in fear, then it runs off. The monster egg then looks at the camera, then turns towards it as he swallows the screen and as the Nickelodeon logo is shown imprinted on his uvula (the hanging ball in the back of your throat), and he makes the low pitched noise again.

Technique: CGI by Edward Bakst and Ampersand.

Audio: A weird brass theme that sounds a little like "Humpty Dumpty" when the spoon taps the egg, then a sample of the 1867 Modest Mussorgsky composition A Night On Bald Mountain starting when the egg becomes the monster. Low pitched grunts/roars from the monster egg (as well as a "Hmm?!" when he looks at the camera and chuckling when he starts to swallow the screen) and squawking from the chicken spoon are also heard.

Availability: It was once shown on NickRewind on TeenNick.

Legacy: Some may have been thrown off by the egg monster in this bumper, but it’s a memorable one from Nickelodeon’s classic era.

Nickelodeon Blimp (June 1992-Spring 2002)

Visuals: On a purple flashing background, there are three kids in white suits painting an orange blimp. Then more kids come in and put the letters of the word "NICKELODEON" on the blimp.

Technique: Live action and computer effects.

Audio: A bunch of drums.

Nicktoons Painter (August 1991-1994)

Visuals: A canvas falls down from the top of the screen. A green artist runs up to it carrying art supplies and a stool. He first uses a pencil, then grabs a paintbrush and splatters a bit of red paint, before throwing the palette onto the canvas. He then pulls out a cannon and throws some orange paint into it, he covers his ears and runs off screen as the cannon explodes. the canvas flies into air. the artist comes back into frame and catches it. He looks at the painting, His eyes turn into hearts before he kisses the painting. He then turns the canvas around to reveal the Nicktoons logo.

Variant: An early version of the ID has a different splat which has a static-like effect on it.

Technique: 2D animation by J.J. Sedelmaier Productions.

Audio: An upbeat theme, a stock explosion when the cannon explodes, the artist saying "UUH!" and something along the lines of "Make me sweat ah!"

Nickelodeon Characters (August 11, 1991-2004)

Visuals: Depends on the variant, but all variants of this ID involve characters from one of the Nicktoons interacting with an orange object with the Nickelodeon logo on it.

Variants:

  • Rugrats #1: There is a giant eye watching an orange Nickelodeon caterpillar. The camera zooms out to reveal it's Chuckie Finster, and he scrambles to get the caterpillar off him until it turns into a Nickelodeon butterfly.
  • Rugrats #2: Reptar stomps in and roars. Then he hears another dinosaur roaring and runs away in a fright as an orange Nickelodeon dinosaur approaches.
  • Rugrats #3: Angelica Pickles sings into a microphone. She runs away as the white background shatters to reveal an orange one with the Nickelodeon logo, and Angelica peeks in from the right side and shrugs.
  • Rugrats #4: Tommy and Dil Pickles are having a fight over an orange Nickelodeon ball and tug at it until they both let go and it turns into the orange Nickelodeon splat. Dil briefly cries, before he and Tommy smile at the logo.
  • Ren & Stimpy: Ren Höek is in an orange Nickelodeon bathtub and hears something bubbling. He lifts his leg and Stimpy J. Cat jumps out of the tub, holding a bar of soap.
  • Doug: Doug Funnie is carrying an orange Nickelodeon sign while Porkchop sits on the other end, waving at Doug. Doug turns his head and shrugs, dropping the sign on his foot as Porkchop slides over to his arms and licks him.
  • Hey Arnold!: Helga Pataki passes an orange Nickelodeon ball to the other kids, ending with Arnold Shortman, who hits it with a baseball bat and sends it crashing into the screen. Everyone except for Arnold runs away, and Arnold hides his bat behind him, smiling nervously.
  • The Angry Beavers: Norbert and Daggett Beaver stare at each other and start removing their underwear layer-by-layer. Eventually Norbert is wearing an orange speedo and Daggett rips off the fur on his torso, before using Norbert's speedo to hide himself and revealing the Nickelodeon logo.
  • CatDog: Cat and Dog chase after an orange Nickelodeon garbage truck and Dog gobbles the whole truck up, leaving them both bloated. Dog gags and Cat vomits, forming the Nickelodeon logo.
  • SpongeBob SquarePants: SpongeBob SquarePants tries to blow an orange Nickelodeon bubble, but fails. So he takes a deep breath, accidentally swallowing the bubble and spitting several bubbles out through his pores. The bubbles form a giant Nickelodeon bubble, pleasing SpongeBob.
  • The Fairly OddParents: Cosmo and Wanda in black and white are standing in front of a black-and-white Nickelodeon heart, and they change themselves to color before noticing the heart and also coloring it. The logo then tips over and splashes orange paint on them.
  • As Told by Ginger: Ginger Foutley, Dodie Bishop, and Macie Lightfoot are dancing until Courtney Gripling and Miranda Killgallen show up. Suddenly, orange splat water balloons are thrown by Carl and Hoodsey, forming the Nickelodeon logo, leading everyone to leave the scene except Ginger, who chases after Carl and Hoodsey.
  • The Wild Thornberrys: Eliza and Darwin Thornberry run towards the camera, screaming when they're close enough, and it's revealed that they're running from an orange Nickelodeon rhino with Donnie dangling by its tail.
  • Rocket Power: Reggie Rocket is roller-skating, Otto's riding a bike, and Twister Rodriguez and Sam Dullard are skateboarding. They all join together and crash into a wall, leaving an orange imprint of themselves with the Nickelodeon logo on it.
  • Pelswick: Pelswick Eggert rides his wheelchair over some orange hills, which are revealed to be the Nickelodeon splat logo.
  • Jimmy Neutron: Same as the Rugrats #2 bumper, but the orange dinosaur's top opens up to reveal Jimmy Neutron and Goddard piloting it.
  • Jimmy Neutron #2: Same as the Wild Thornberrys bumper, but the rhino is instead an orange rocket with the Nickelodeon logo on it piloted by Jimmy and Goddard, with the latter holding a rope that Donnie's dangling by.
  • Oh Yeah! Cartoons #1: Vlad the Count is frightened by Mina Harper's jack-o-lantern and flies away in bat form. Mina shows her pumpkin to the audience, revealing the Nickelodeon logo.
  • Oh Yeah! Cartoons #2: Goose Lady is performing magic tricks as Dot and Randy watch. She uses her wand to make Nickelodeon objects appear, such as bone, a plane, a cactus, and a firework, which explodes, with it appearing as a scribble.
  • ChalkZone: Rudy draws an orange hot air balloon. When he is done, he and Snap ride on it where they see many Nickelodeon objects, planes, a boat and a sheep.

Technique: 2D animation. Most of the variations were done at Nickelodeon Animation Studio, while the Ren & Stimpy and Doug ones were done by J.J. Sedelmaier Productions, the Rugrats, Ginger, Thornberrys and Rocket Power ones were done by Klasky Csupo's commercial animation division Class-Key Chew-Po Commercials, the Jimmy Neutron bumpers were done by DNA Productions, and the Pelswick bumper was likely done by the Canada-based animation studio Nelvana.

Audio: Depends. It's usually the theme song of the show, culminating in the familiar Nickelodeon jingle, as well as sound effects and voice actors that correspond to what happens in the bumper. However, the Doug bumper, the Ren and Stimpy bumper, the Fairly OddParents bumper and the second Oh Yeah! Cartoons bumper do not use the Nickelodeon jingle.

Availability: The first Rugrats bumper was shown on NickRewind during a break in July 2017, and the Angry Beavers bumper was shown on NickRewind’s Twitter account during Throwback Thursday. The Jimmy Neutron bumpers were only used in 2001 to promote the film.

New Year Baby (1991?-unknown retirement year)

Visuals: The sequence starts by seeing a movie set with a bunch of cameras, a director walking, some cutout clouds and an orange screen. In front of the orange screen, a baby is wearing a ribbon that says "NEW YEAR", sitting on a pillar. The logo then cuts closer to the baby and after that, the logo cuts to a guy, holding a giant piece of paper saying "BABY: "HAPPY NEW YEARS FROM NICKELODEON"". The logo again cuts over to a new angle of the full studio setup. After that, a guy is using a clapboard. The logo then cuts to the baby (Now sitting on a cloud over a cloudy background with an orange sun, containing the Nickelodeon logo, shining down on the baby.), saying its dialogue.

Technique: Cel animation

Audio: First, the producers are heard talking in the background. Then a guy says "Action", which is followed by the sound of the clapboard. After that, there is a short harp melody followed by a male announcer saying "Happy new year from Nickelodeon".

Nick is Everyday (1991-1996)



Visuals: On a black background, there is a white mannequin silhouette dancing toward the screen, and then it shakes its head and moves away (as if so not to invade personal space). The screen flashes as the colors invert, and a boy runs away from a Nickelodeon bomb. The bomb fades away, and the words "NICK" and "IS" appear before cutting to a schoolgirl thinking something. Then, she leans against the words "EVERY DAY", which fade out as dancing silhouettes drop down. They disappear as a Nickelodeon sun fades into the center of the screen while it flashes. "MON" appears with an orange silhouette of a boy, "TUE" appears with a kid doing her hair and a ringing alarm clock, "WED" and "THU" appear under the sun (with shadows), "FRI" appears with a green stick figure rotating over the "I" and falling to the ground. Then, a boy holds "SAT" and the image flips around to a girl holding "SUN". Then the words "NICK", "IS", and "EVERY DAY" flash in on a magenta, green, and blue background respectively. The Nickelodeon splat logo zooms in. The screen fades to black and the green silhouette is seen falling from the top of the screen and yelling "Nick is every day!"

Technique: Cut-out animation.

Audio: Minimal (that is, low and synthesized) jazz music and the guy yelling "Nick is every day!" at the end (voiced by Marc Summers of Double Dare).

Dog Blocks (February 1992-1996)

Unknown

Nicktoons Blob (February 1993-2000)

Visuals: An orange drip of slime falls and hits the ground, forming the Nicktoons logo at the time. Afterwards, it becomes a dolphin, which jumps and hits the ground, turning back into the Nicktoons logo. The logo then becomes a dinosaur that briefly walks before melting and turning back into the logo. Finally, the logo turns into a man who walks to the right. The man slips on a banana peel and forms the Nicktoons splat.

Variants:

  • On some prints of the Oh Yeah! Cartoons' Fairly OddParents short "Where's the Wand", the ID starts out normal, but it goes to the the man transformation. The executive producers' credit (which reads "Executive Producers: Fred Seibert, Larry Huber") appears, then the title card for the short appears.
  • A trailer for Harriet the Spy features the last few seconds of this logo on a black background, and "NICKELODEON" replaces "NICKTOONS".
  • When this appeared on Nick Rewind in 2006, the last few seconds of the ID were replaced by a 2D Nickelodeon splat.
  • When The 90s Are All That became The Splat, the logo made a huge comeback as a bumper. In between the transformations, the Nicktoons logo is replaced by The Splat logo, which is on a pink background with patterns everywhere.

Technique: CGI from Blue Sky Studios.

Audio: A hip-hop theme with sound effects for each transformation.

Audio Variant: The "Where's the Wand" variant uses a different edit of the music with most of the sound effects removed. The music continues to the title card.

Availability: It returned on The 90's Are All That (now NickRewind) on December 31, 2011. The variant only appeared in some prints of the Oh Yeah! Cartoons' Fairly OddParents short "Where's the Wand". The part where the guy slips on a banana peel was used in the beginning of a promo for Nicktoons tapes on the VHS version of It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown. It returned to television on October 5, 2015. It can be seen on NickRewind.

Legacy: A very creative and memorable ID for those that grew-up with Nickelodeon in the '90s.

Basketball (June 1992-1996)

Unknown

Gymnast (June 1992-1996?)

Unknown

Football Halftime (June 1992-1993?)

Unknown

Lockers (June 1992-Spring 2002)

Visuals: In a black-and-white school hallway is kids getting stuff from lockers and going to class. As more kids go to class is the lockers have the Nickelodeon logo in black-and-white on them. One locker is open, but a kid runs to shut it. The logo then turns to color.

Technique: Live action.

Audio: Just the kids chattering and locker doors clanging shut.

Letters (1992-1993)

Unknown

Nickelodeon Home Video Open (1993-1999)

See the Nickelodeon Home Video Opening page for a description.

Head on Chair (May 1993-1996)

Visuals: In a house with blue walls, a yellow door on the back, and a wooden floor, there is a boy's head rocking from side to side on a chair while watching television. A few moments later, thunder flashes, somewhat alarming the boy's head as the door opens to reveal orange mist outside. The mist soon rips off the walls and the roof, revealing "NICKELODEON" on the top. The boy's head stares at the mist for a few seconds and yawns, after which he continues rocking his head.

Technique: Live action.

Audio: Same as the "Eggs" ID, with some wind sounds from the mist.

Anagrams (May 1993-1996)

Visuals: Over a blue and orange flashing background is "ICE KOLD NEON" spelled under a black box where three girls say each word. Then it changes to "LIKED NO CONE" and the girls repeat it. Then it changes to "COOL KEEN DIN" and the girls repeat that. Finally, the word changes to a Nickelodeon oval as all the girls say "Nickelodeon".

Technique: Live action and computer effects.

Audio: The girls talking with bongos and weird music playing.

Anagrams 2 (May 1993-1996)

Visuals: Over a multi-colored flashing background is "DO NO CLINKEE" spelled under a black box where three girls say each word. Then it changes to "DEN LOOK NICE" and the girls repeat it. Then it changes to "LINK CODE ONE" and the girls repeat that. Finally, the word changes to a bunch of Nickelodeon arrows as all the girls say "Nickelodeon".

Technique: Live action and computer effects, designed by Don St. Mars.

Audio: Rap rock music with Y-DX7 synth bass sounds, along with the pitch of the girl's voice raising and lowering.

Disco Dogs (May 1993-Spring 2002)

Visuals: There are six dogs (or more specifically, wire fox terriers) tugging on a Nickelodeon sheet against a flashing blue and green background (a la a disco floor) as it zooms on the Nickelodeon logo. Then three dogs in orange Nickelodeon suits morph out of the sheet and dance. It zooms in on the middle dog as the logo is shown on his suit.

Technique: Pixilation and computer effects.

Audio: A woman saying "Do the Nick thing!" followed by dogs barking and girls singing the Nickelodeon theme with disco music in the background, the woman is singing "Nick is Kids!" ending with the girls singing "On Nick!"

Availability: This can be seen in a break bumper for NickRewind on TeenNick.

Opera (May 1993-Spring 2002)

Visuals: There is a conductor with long hair, glasses, a mustache, and a short beard on a stage as he uses his baton to start the show. Then it zooms out on a lady (played by Karen Lagerstrom-Stevens) with a big orange wig that reads "NICKELODEON" wearing a purple dress singing the "Nick Nick Nick" jingle. It briefly closes up to her mouth. Then her whole body is shown as she loudly sings "Nick is kids!" Then the conductor is shown with a shocked look on his face as his glasses break from the high note.

Trivia: The opera lady was performed by Karen Lagerstrom-Stevens, whose niece worked as a trivia question and stunt writer for Double Dare at the time. The conductor was performed by Blue Brick's junior designer.

Technique: All live-action. This was directed by Paul Krygowski at Blue Brick Design in New York City, with camera by Greg Andracki, with editing by Peter Krygowski and Paul Collins. The wig was designed by Broadway prop maker Martin Izquierdo.

Audio: An orchestra is heard tuning up until after the conductor begins the show, then the lady sings with an orchestral number in the background with the sound of the conductor's glasses breaking at the end. Composed by David Baron and Tom Pomposello.

Availability: Last shown on TeenNick during The 90's Are All That (now NickRewind) for the week of December 27-31, 2011, along with several other classic Nick IDs. It's also the thumbnail for NickRewind's video "A Tribute to Nickelodeon Bumpers".

Bone (May 1993-2000)

Visuals: A girl holds up a Nickelodeon bone to a black and white dog and throws it. Then a close-up of the spinning Nickelodeon bone is shown. Then the dog catches it.

Technique: All live-action, with a bit of CGI for the bone spinning.

Audio: The music from the "Ants" ident (more on that below) except with barking from the dog and the tempo is sped up.

Availability: It was recently posted on NickRewind's Twitter account during Throwback Thursday.

Pinchface (May 1993-Spring 2002)



Visuals: In a very psychedelic, pop art-inspired "room", there are two picture frames with two fists made to look like faces (wearing a hat, some googly eyes, and painted-on "lips") on the right wall, and a picture frame with the Nickelodeon logo in it on the left wall. Two eyes, glasses, dentures and a tie drop down to the middle of the screen and float and bounce around while remaining in place to look like a face. As the colors of the background and even the Nick picture frame continually flash and change throughout the bumper, the fists do the "Nick Nick Nick" section of the Nickelodeon theme, with the Pinchface saying "Nickelodeon." (as it does this, the picture frame reads "Nickelodeon" instead of "Nick"). After the second time the Pinchface says "NickelOOOOOOdeOOOOON!", an orange background with "NICKELODEON" on it flashes three times.

Technique: A combination of chroma-key effects, pixilation, and puppetry.

Audio: A funky-sounding Balkan brass rendition of the Nickelodeon theme, sung by New York-based klezmer group The Klezmatics, and composed by David Baron. This was sung by Lorin Sklamberg.

Audio Variant: One version had the Pinchface do a count-off at the beginning in Yiddish: "Eyns, tsvey, dray, fir!" (translation: One, two, three, four!) This version can only be heard on the "The Jetsam Collection" disc of the "Nickelodeon Music & Sound Library" CD boxset.

Availability: It reappeared in a bumper for the 2011 Nickelodeon block The 90's Are All That (now NickRewind) on TeenNick. It's on NickRewind's promo "A Tribute to Nickelodeon Bumpers" for a few seconds, too. It's also on a 1994 Earth Day promo for Nickelodeon.

Legacy: A very creative and memorable ID for those that grew-up with Nickelodeon in the '90s.

Funky Dance (May 1993-Spring 2002)

Visuals: There is a group of kids in a circle as a man sings "Everybody over here." Then the Nickelodeon theme plays. The kids start to dance while carrying a Nickelodeon parachute as they walk in a circle. Two kids jump over the parachute as the rest of them dance. Then they cover themselves in the Nickelodeon parachute.

Technique: Live-action.

Audio: A male singer sings over funk drums "Everybody wants to bounce!" and a female singer sings "Nick!" The male singer resumes singing "Now everybody over here!" while the female singer sings the same word again. Then after a few seconds, the male singer sings "Nick" repeatedly, while the female singer sings "Nick is kids!"

Ants (May 1993-1996)

Visuals: A bunch of bloated ants are on a picnic blanket with all the food eaten (including cheese, and a sandwich). One plays a guitar and another sticks out of a soda can with a night cap on as they all sing the "Nick Nick Nick" jingle while some ants hiccup. A quarter of the presented food have Nick or Nickelodeon logos on them. At the end, it zooms out so the camera can read the word "NICKELODEON" on the picnic blanket.

Trivia: A slightly sped-up version of the music was later reused in another Nickelodeon bumper featuring a girl and her dog (described above).

Technique: Cel animation.

Audio: All the ants singing the "Nick Nick Nick" jingle with a guitar/ukulele playing in the background.

Availability: Last shown on TeenNick during The 90's Are All That (now NickRewind) for the week of December 27-31, 2011, along with several other classic Nickelodeon IDs. Aired on NickRewind beginning on December 2, 2015.

Nick is Kids Arena Rock (May 1993-Spring 2002)

Visuals: On a black background, there is a Nickelodeon logo, which folds into a white screen covered in small dancing stick figures, which is constantly shaking. After a moment, the screen transitions into a close up of four of the aforementioned people, whose heads are shaped like a nickel, a sack or load, an "E", and a light bulb that turns on (it's a pun: "Nickel-Load-E-ON"). Then it wipes to the Nick logo which also shakes a bit.

Technique: Cut-out animation.

Audio: A heavy metal jingle with loud drums plays throughout almost the entire bumper. There's also a voice shouting "Come on now!" and other things, and the people yelling "Nick-Nick-Nick...". At the end, the guy screams "Nick is kids!"

Availability: It reappeared on NickRewind.

Folding Chair (May 1993-1996)

Visuals: In a blue room, there is a kid sitting on an odd-looking orange recliner. A group of kids appear behind and under the "chair", and the boy jumps off it, revealing it is a giant cross-shaped piece of fabric with "NICKELODEON" written on the center. The kids play with the fabric a bit, and then pretend to flap it as if it were a butterfly, at which point the fabric suddenly flies away on its own, much to the kids' confusion.

Technique: Sped-up live-action and puppetry.

Audio: A female singer scats and repeatedly sings "Nick" followed by the "Nick Nick Nick" jingle, ending with a male voice saying "Like, Nick is kids!"

Farm (May 1993-1998)

Visuals: There is all kinds of animals and objects on a toy farm set. At each scene, the Nickelodeon logo is right at the top of the screen in the form of orange clouds.

Technique: Still live action shots.

Audio: Some nasal-sounding vocalists sing the "Nick Nick Nick" jingle with bluegrass twang in the background. A pause occurs with a Cartoon Trax frog croak sound and other stock cartoon sounds. Then the vocalists sing "Nick is kids!" followed by a Cartoon Trax chicken cluck sound.

Availability: Was last seen during Thanksgiving week on NickRewind on TeenNick, and on its Twitter account during Throwback Thursday.

Paper Chase (May 1993-1996)

Visuals: Unknown

Technique: Cut-out animation.

Audio: A cute cartoony theme, inspired by the music of They Might Be Giants. On "The Jetsam Collection," the song is listed as "They Might Be Midgets."

Nickelodeon Ball (May 1993-Spring 2002)

Visuals: It starts with a group of photos zooming into the selected picture. It then cuts with a montage of kids playing with the orange ball showing "NICKELODEON" and other activities out there.

Variants:

  • Paris Ball: It takes place in Paris, where, starting at the Eiffel Tower kids toss the Nickelodeon ball, followed by a little girl holding the Nickelodeon clapboard. Next with a little boy kicking the same ball from the first. Then the same ball is thrown while in front of a statue. Now back to the Eiffel Tower with the same ball rolling to the right. Then the same ball on a chair, coming next is a little boy catching the same ball while near the fountain. It cuts to the Nickelodeon ball being still beside the different statue, and finally, a little girl kicks the ball and the little boy stops it by holding it.
  • Asia Ball #1: It takes place in Thailand. It includes clips where a boy is shown holding a Nickelodeon ball, and the same ball along with women dressed up in Thai culture.
  • Asia Ball #2: It takes place in China, where there, shows a Chinese little girl with the Nickelodeon ball, and ends with the same ball being held by a Chinese boy.
  • Guatemala Ball: It takes place in Guatemala, where there, is a montage of a group of kids catching and throwing the Nickelodeon ball, including with a boy holding a Nickelodeon clapboard, and the same ball rolling near the pole.
  • Africa Ball: It takes place in Africa. There, it starts with an African girl, and when it's fully shown, it cuts to the black kids with the Nickelodeon ball, waving. It then shows a montage of activities of kids playing, including with the Nickelodoen ball, a girl holding a Nickelodeon
  • Ball Montage: A montage of all the previous 5 variants above. However, it doesn't start with a group of photos zooming into the selected picture.

Technique: A combination of computer effects and live-action. Directed by Graham Elliott at Cat & Crossbones Productions in New York.

Audio: Depends on the variant:

  • Paris Ball: Same music as the "Funky Dance" ID.
  • Asia Ball #1 and #2: Soothing music plays while a group of female singers repeatedly sing "Nick", while another group sings "Nickelodeon" slowly, following a high-tone note of "ooo". While the group continues singing "Nick" repeatedly, a woman quietly says "Nick is kids."
  • Guatemala Ball: A fast-paced samba tune incorporating the "Nick Nick Nick" jingle.
  • Africa Ball: An African-style rendition of the "Nick Nick Nick" jingle.
  • Ball Montage: The music from the "Funky Dance", "Reggae Sun", and "Folding Chair" IDs, ending with a Series 1000 "children cheering" sound effect.

These were composed by David Baron.

Eggs (May 1993-1996)

Visuals: There is a large black rooster singing "Nick is kids!" while holding an orange egg with "NICKELODEON" on it, and the egg jumps out of his hand, walking on the legs of the chick that is hatching out. The rooster dances while trying to get the egg as a bunch of hens sing the Nickelodeon theme. Finally, he catches the orange egg while holding up a basket with a bunch of orange eggs in it.

Technique: 2D animation by Mark Baldo.

Audio: An energetic gospel-like rendition of the Nickelodeon theme.

Availability: It was shown occasionally on NickRewind.

Eyes in the Dark (June 1992-1995)

Visuals: Unknown

Variant: In Germany, the text was translated to German.

Technique: A blend of 2D animation and CGI.

Audio: The kids giggling and cartoon sound effects, as well as the dad yelling "Hey, what do you think this is?!".

Audio Variant: In Germany, the man speaks German.

Reggae Sun (May 1993-1996)

Visuals: Unknown

Technique: A blend of cel animation and stop-motion.

Audio: A reggae version of the Nick theme. Composed by David Baron, with vocals by Pato Banton.

Floating Kids (May 1993-1997)

Visuals: On a blue background, there are seven technicolored children, some of them looking ugly and deformed, looking at the camera, as it pans to the right. The camera reaches to the end with the pinkish red girl and cross-fades to the kids looking at a morphing Nickelodeon logo. The camera zooms out as a plane flies by from the top left.

Technique: Clay animation by One Eighty One Productions.

Audio: Same music as the "Asia Ball" IDs, with a whoosh at the end.

Fall (1993-1997)

Unknown

Turkey (1993-1997)

Visuals: Unknown

Technique: 2D animation.

Audio: Cartoon sounds and the people at the table exclaiming.

Reindeer (1993-1997)

Visuals: Unknown

Technique: 2D animation.

Audio: Unknown

Shaker (1993-1997)

Visuals: A fireplace scene is shown. The camera zooms out of a house, revealing a snowglobe with a Nickelodeon bow wrapped around it.

Technique: CGI animation.

Audio: Mellow violin music, which transitions to livelier holiday music with trumpets, ending with three notes.

Thing in a Box (May 1993-1996)

Visuals: On a blue background with semi-transparent Nickelodeon logos, there is a box with a morphing Nickelodeon logo. The camera then enters the inside of the box. Then a green blob that looks like a mix of Klasky-Csupo's "Splaat", the Stretch Films "Laughing Mouth", and Slimer from the film Ghostbusters with a cartoonish eye and a realistic eye and flesh-toned funnel-shaped ears emerges from the bottom. The face sees the viewer and it laughs in a weird way. The box suddenly closes and the screen zooms out.

Technique: CGI.

Audio: A drum-heavy theme, along with some weird giggling for the face.

Audio Variant: Apparently, according to a Lost Media Wiki forum post, this ident originally used a different theme not dissimilar to the "Sleeping Boy" ident.

Legacy: The logo has gained notoriety for the face's appearance and the fact that it laughs.

Nick Sings (Spring 1996-Spring 2002; 2011)

Visuals: Unknown

Technique: 2D animation.

Audio: A distorted bongo tune, a slurping sound, and a deep voice laughing.

Availability: Last shown on TeenNick during The 90's Are All That (now NickRewind) for the week of December 27-31, 2011, along with several other classic Nickelodeon IDs.

Machine (1995-unknown retirement year)

Visuals: There is a robed figure in black (presumably a magician) in front of the camera moving back to show a scene from the year 1905 (with a wrestler, a monkey and a clown in the background) as a girl runs into a nickelodeon theater. The girl puts a coin into a projector, which shows a loop of a man walking wearing a top hat and a suit and holding a cane. The loop slows down and the man grows a beard before a burst of green lightning transforms him into a man dressed in '70s fashion dancing. The scene cuts to him dancing with other children in a city with Nickelodeon signs, now in the year 1979 (when Nickelodeon was officially launched). The camera zooms over to show one girl dressed as the Statue of Liberty lighting an orange animal-shaped rocketship with "NICKELODEON" on it, which takes off and circles the globe before arriving on the other side of the world, where some bored children are seen standing in a dark environment. The rocketship brightens the environment and the children play with objects that it drops, including a robot, a frog, a monster, a party horn, and a chicken, which lays an egg with the Nickelodeon logo on it.

Technique: 2D animation (black-and-white for the first part and in color for the rest of the bumper) by Studio Film Bilder in Germany.

Audio: For the first part, some 1900s-esque carnival music followed by a silent movie piano tune that slows down before being replaced by a disco theme that seems to be based on the Bee Gees song "Stayin' Alive". All of which are accompanied by various sound effects. In Germany, a male German narrator speaks throughout the ID.

Availability: Was originally made for Nickelodeon Germany and presumably last seen on The Splat/NickSplat; it was more recently spotted on an intro for NickRewind in 2019.

Windshield (Spring 1996-Spring 2002)

Visuals: There is a man driving a car. Three orange splats saying "NICK" appear. The man gets angry and he decides to use the windshield wipers. The wipers turn the three splats into a bigger splat saying "NICKELODEON". The man is confused.

Technique: 2D animation by International Rocketship for Drucker Motion Pictures.

Audio: The man muttering, along with some splatting sounds.

Availability: Seen on the Paramount VHS of Rugrats: Angelica The Divine.

Parking Meter (1995-Spring 2002)

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Visuals: Unknown

Technique: CG animation by Primal Screen.

Audio: Various robotic noises and the robot repeating "Wow!"

DJ (1995-Spring 2002)

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Visuals: A green DJ plays records with the Nickelodeon logo on them; one of them is spun by the DJ towards the camera towards the end, covering almost the entire screen.

Technique: 2D animation.

Audio: A rap remix of the Nick theme.

Availability: Most recently made a cameo in a bumper for The 90's Are All That.

Accordion Clown (1995-February 6, 2001)

Visuals: An accordion clown bounces around the screen with the Nickelodeon logo on his body.

Technique: 2D animation.

Audio: Horrific sound effects and the clown laughing.

Availability: Most recently made a cameo in a bumper for The 90's Are All That.

Surfer Dude (Spring 1996-Spring 2002)

Visuals: Unknown

Technique: 2D animation by Pete List.

Audio: A surf rock score and crashing waves as someone shouts "eh" six times.

Cave Drawing (Spring 1996-Spring 2002)

Visuals: Unknown

Technique: 2D animation by Funline Animation.

Audio: The TV buzzing and the animals' hooves.

Whoopee (Spring 1996-Spring 2002)

Visuals: Unknown

Technique: 2D animation by Olexa Hewryk and Primal Screen.

Audio: Cartoon sounds.

Rhino Ballerina (Spring 1996-Spring 2002)

Visuals: A rhino is performing ballet on stage. It falls through the floor and the stage is covered by Nickelodeon curtains. The rhino emerges from the floor as some animals giggle.

Technique: Cut-out animation.

Audio: String music, then the rhino exclaiming, glass shattering, and the animals giggling.

Submarine (Spring 1996-Spring 2002)

Visuals: Unknown

Technique: CG animation.

Audio: A group of creaking and popping noises.

Availability: Occasionally seen on The Splat.

Jackhammer (Spring 1996-Spring 2002)

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Visuals: Unknown

Technique: 2D animation.

Audio: Jackhammer sounds and the worker yelling. Underneath these, a funky tune plays.

Campfire (Spring 1996-Spring 2002)

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Visuals: Unknown

Technique: 2D animation.

Audio: Just some woodland sounds and some splats.

Alien (1995-Spring 2002)

Visuals: In space, a Nickelodeon UFO passes by the moon and peers towards a green landscape. It crashes into the land, then bounces into the moon, and slams into a nearby comet, turning all of them orange with "NICK" imprinted on them (as well as turning the moon into a crescent). The UFO spins to the center, and a green alien pops out of the top, dizzily waving at us.

Technique: CG animation by Steve Speer.

Audio: An electronic rendition of the Nick theme.

Availability: It can be found on the Paramount reissues of the Rugrats tapes "A Baby's Gotta Do What a Baby's Gotta Do" and "Chuckie the Brave".

Gifts (1995-1998)

Visuals: Two human hands open many gifts with Nickelodeon logos printed on them. Suddenly, a Nickelodeon blimp flies out and the camera follows the blimp.

Technique: Stop-motion by an unknown company for Drucker Motion Pictures.

Audio: A '50s-style theme along with a kid saying "Huh?"

Availability: It was last seen on The 90s Are All That (now NickRewind) on TeenNick for their "Party Like It's The 90s" weekend in December 2011.

3D Robot (1995-1997?)

Visuals: A Nick robot moves through designs and the robot in different colors.

Trivia: The robot re-appears in a "We'll Be Right Back" bumper for Rugrats that aired at the time of this ident's usage.

Technique: CG animation.

Audio: A funky dance tune.

Availability: So far, this ident has only been spotted on off-air VHS recordings of pre-1998 Nickelodeon shows.

Pop Goes The Monkey (Spring 1996-Spring 2002)

Visuals: Unknown

Technique: 2D animation by International Rocketship.

Audio: Two "boing" sounds and a popping noise. Quiet calliope music is heard in the background.

Monster Disco (Spring 1996-Spring 2002)

Visuals: Unknown

Technique: Stop-motion by Webster Colcord.

Audio: Disco music, one of the monsters saying "Step aside!", and everyone cheering him on.

Fly Fishing (1995-Spring 1998)

Visuals: A fly buzzes past a bowl with some orange Nickelodeon soup in it. A green fish pops out of the bowl and eats the fly. The fly comes out of the soup a few seconds later.

Technique: 2D animation produced by Primal Screen for Drucker Motion Pictures.

Audio: A Hanna-Barbera fly buzzing sound, then a short guitar riff.

Availability: It was last seen on The 90s Are All That (now NickRewind) on TeenNick for their "Party Like It's The 90s" weekend in December 2011.

Butterfly (Spring 1996-Spring 2002)

Visuals: Unknown

Technique: 2D animation by Trip Park, filmed at Curious Pictures' studio.

Audio: The bug making noises and a shimmer sound when he becomes a butterfly.

Sweater (Spring 1996-Spring 2002)

Visuals: Unknown

Technique: 2D animation.

Audio: Cartoon sounds and the two people exclaiming.

Kookoo (Spring 1996-Spring 2002)

Visuals: Unknown

Technique: 2D animation by Trip Park, filmed at Curious Pictures' studio.

Audio: The cuckoo shouts "Koo-koo!" twice, then boings onto and smudges down the screen with a Hanna-Barbera eye blink sound.

Buggy Drink (Spring 1996-Spring 2002)

Visuals: In a concrete room, there are two blue flies drinking juice. While they are drinking, a bug swatter swats the left fly, forming the Nickelodeon splat. When the right fly stops drinking, he then realizes that the left bug was swatted, and screams.

Technique: Stop-motion, produced by the musician Aurelio Voltaire.

Audio: The flies slurping their drinks, the left one getting swatted and the other one freaking out as dramatic music starts.

Availability: Most recently made a cameo in a bumper for The 90's Are All That.

Cactus (Spring 1996-Spring 2002)

Visuals: On a crumpled up piece of notebook paper, there is a close up of the Nickelodeon logo shaped like a cactus. The logo zooms out to reveal a teal turtle who touches it three times.

Variant: A prototype version of the ID is a little extended, showing the turtle placing his hand over his mouth.

Technique: 2D/cut-out animation produced by Our Gang Productions and Computer Cafe for Drucker Motion Pictures.

Audio: A nice mariachi tune with the turtle saying "Nick, Nick, Nick." The prototype version had a banjo version of the "Nick Nick Nick" jingle and the turtle saying "Ow" three times.

Availability: It makes a cameo appearance in a promo for the NickRewind block on TeenNick, along with other IDs.

Farmer (1997-1999)

Visuals: A farmer on a tractor plows the word "NICKELODEON" on a field. Once he's done, a raincloud makes the plowed word an orange Nickelodeon puddle, and a fish jumps in it.

Technique: 2D animation.

Audio: Unknown

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