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Normal (1993-1998)
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"e/i" variant (1997-1999)
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The "Surprise!" variant (1993-1999)
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{{DescriptionsIncomplete}}
{{Guidance|reason=jumpscare}}{{PageCredits|description=mr3urious, BenIsRandom
{{Infobox company|founded=July 11, 1994 ({{age|1994|7|11}} years ago)|country=United States|formerly=PTV (1994-1999)|image=PBS Kids logo (2022).svg|parent=[[PBS]]|name=PBS Kids}}
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{{ImageTOC
|P-Pals ID (1993).png|1st Logo (August 30, 1993-November 15, 1999)
|PTV (1993).png|2nd Logo (July 11, 1994-
}}
|PBS Kids|
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'''Trivia:'''
*The logo was designed and animated by Gene Mackles and Chris Pullman at [[WGBH|WGBH Boston]] using Macromedia Director on Macintosh computers. This is the same team that did the animations for ''Where in the World
*Allusions are made to both the 4th and 5th [[PBS]] logos:
**When P-Pet runs across the screen as "'''{{font|serif|PBS}}'''" fades in, it's a reference to the spectral lines of the 4th logo.
**The finished product closely resembles that of the 5th logo.
*The first P-head is actually named Pernell, one of PTV's mascots. In this logo he is differently colored, as he is brown in other PTV material (as well as green in merchandise). Collectively, the mascots are known as the "P-Pals".
**There was reportedly a promo where the P-Pals talked about their family, but it is lost media.
*The logo was shot on videotape.
*P-Pet is rumored to have had his
'''Variants:'''
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*There is a variation where the camera quickly goes through a doorway on a black background and the three color-changing P-Pals are seen against a white background, with confetti falling from the top, and they yell "Surprise!" and cheer with loud party horns heard in the background. The patterns the P-heads change are also different and there is no text. This was a short-lived version, introduced during the PTV brand's prototype (or test) run and eventually premiering nationwide in July 1994, and was usually played in-between shows as a promo. The short version was used all the way up until 1999 on IPTV.
**There is a long version of the "Surprise!" variant which first takes place on a black background. The door opens and closes as one of the P-Pals, Penny, peeks in and out. P-Pet (from the standard version) walks through the screen and into the door. Then another P-Pal, Pete, peeks in and out from the above. Then the door opens and the ident proceeds into the animation above.
***There is another variant of this long version, where the animation is believed to come from. During the above animation, some kids say "The P-Pals are coming!" various times. Then, before the door opens, they say "Who are the P-Pals?" After the P-Pals yell "Surprise!", they shout "The P-Pals are coming!" and one of the kids says "Watch for them!" This dialogue was common in early P-Pals material from the test run.
*On a 1994 episode of ''In the Mix'', the logo looks a bit washed-out with the brightness and contrast pumped up in excess.
*There is a variant where there's a bird's-eye-view of the "PTV Park" setting, which starts with a sign that says "PTV" in its corporate font being guarded by two P-Pals,
'''Technique:''' Digital ink-and-paint animation.
'''Audio:''' A techno-pop tune with a synth-horn, drums (performed by means of
*The "Surprise!" variation just has loud party horns and cheering, in the voices of characters from PTV shows (e.g. Big Bird and Elmo from ''Sesame Street''). The long versions of the "Surprise!" variation have giggling and a door creaking, as well as the children's voices in the original version.
*The "PTV Park" variant features a playful, circus-like tune with bongos, marimba, electric piano and whistling, as well as two kids saying "Hi! You're in PTV Park on..." before continuing into the theme from the regular logo.
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*This can be seen on video releases of ''Theodore Tugboat'', ''Zoom'' (1999 version), and ''Arthur'', and early ''Teletubbies'' tapes from [[Warner Bros. Home Entertainment|Warner Home Video]]; the Paramount re-release of "Here Come the Teletubbies" on VHS from 2004 preserves this, while the DVD release from that same year has the 1999 PBS Kids logo instead.
*The original version of this logo is also preserved on some PolyGram Video releases of ''Wishbone'' episodes, including "Salty Dog" and "Terrified Terrier", though it's missing on "The Prince and the Pooch", "The Slobbery Hound", and "Twisted Tail".
*This was also used on original airings of seasons 3-5 of ''Barney and Friends'' and
**On [[Barney Home Video]] releases of episodes from Seasons 2-3 and Sprout (now Universal Kids)
*The "Surprise!" variants were only used as an ident for a year or two; however, the short variant was used on IPTV well into 1999 and UNC-TV until late 2001. It's unknown in particular if certain stations even aired it at all, such as WNET; if they did, then it was only for a brief amount of time. According to a YouTube commenter,
**The original "Surprise!" variant was found at the end of a 1993 episode of ''Sesame Street''.
*The logo made its first appearance on the ''Mister Rogers' Neighborhood'' week "Mister Rogers Talks About Then and Now", and the E/I variant first appeared on ''The Magic School Bus'' episode "Meets Molly Cule".
*The 1993 variant appeared on Twitch.tv's prints of various ''Mister Rogers' Neighborhood'' episodes from the era, as well as Episode #1643 from 1991 and the 1997 E/I variant appeared on Twitch.tv prints of many episodes that were created between 1997 and 1999.
*The 1997 variant made an appearance on a 2004 WFWA broadcast of a ''Reading Rainbow'' episode from the era.
*The last known appearance of this logo on television was in 2005 on ETPTV after an episode of ''Square One TV Math Talk''. This logo was used on WIPR-TV in Puerto Rico well into 2002. The last known new program to use this logo was the ''In the Mix'' episode "Cliques: Behind the Labels", broadcast on November 15, 1999.
*On ''Adventures from the Book of Virtues'', the original version appeared on the three-part primetime premiere (it was plastered by the 1996 PBS logo on the individual rebroadcasts the next year, which additionally have an added funding credit for public television viewers that wasn't on the primetime premiere versions), and the later version appeared on all episodes of the second season; among those episodes featured in the three-part primetime premiere, it's been confirmed to appear on a Reader's Digest-branded videocassette of "Courage", where the opening PBS logo is replaced by an opening graphic for Reader's Digest.
*The standard 1993 variant is also retained on Amazon Video's print of ''Sesame Street Stays Up Late'' and also appeared on the VHS of ''Barney's First Adventures'' after the PolyGram Television logo, even though the special did not air on PBS (and rather Fox Kids) and none of the other ''Barney'' VHS tapes had this logo; any tapes that did instead had the [[PBS]] logo of the time.
*VHS releases of ''Ghostwriter'' do not contain this logo and instead have a generic "Public Television" slide.
*This logo also appeared after ''Katie & Orbie'' in its initial PBS run from late 1996 to early 1997.
*Most master tapes of ''The Magic School Bus'' also have this logo, with the exceptions of "Gets Lost in Space", "Hops Home", and "In the Arctic." It doesn't appear on the KidVision or Warner Home Video releases, as they go straight from the closing funding credits to the book promo at the end of each episode.
*On ''Shining Time Station'', it plasters the 3rd and 4th PBS logos on "Things That Go Ga-Hooga in the Night" and "Is This the End?"
*On pledge programming, this
*The PTV Park variant was retired with the "e/i" version of the normal logo being introduced in 1997. It was seen at the end of some broadcasts of ''Sesame Street'' and ''Mister Rogers' Neighborhood'', but was otherwise only occasionally seen in-between shows like the "Surprise!" variant.
'''Legacy:''' Fondly remembered by many who grew up with this logo, especially ''Arthur'' fans. Others may have been scared or annoyed by the loud music, flashing effects and the logo's plastering of older PBS logos; some even believe that the logo feels out of place on ''Teletubbies'' and ''Barney'', due to it clashing greatly with the saccharine nature of preceding broadcasts of the two shows (and kicking off 1998-1999 Teletubbies VHS tapes, following the [[Warner Home Video]] logo). The "Surprise!" variant is notorious for frightening children with its quick zoom and faster flashing effects, which led it to be rumored that it was pulled on some stations.
===2nd Logo (July 11, 1994-
<gallery mode="packed" heights="200">
PTV (1993).png
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'''Audios:''' A drum beat, with an announcer calling out each letter as they appear.
'''Availability:''' This logo and other similar spots appeared following shows aimed at older children during the era, such as ''Reading Rainbow'' and reruns of ''Square One TV''. It stopped being used once the "preschool-aged children" and "school-aged children" shows were merged round 1997, with the introduction of the "E/I" variant of the first logo.
==PBS Kids==
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* This logo was designed by Richard McGuire (an artist that creates PBS Kids-style characters for the magazine ''The New Yorker'', although he has created PBS Kids-style characters long before this logo was introduced) and Bob Shea for Lee Hunt Associates; the company was acquired by Razorfish in December 1999.
* Dash and Dot were modeled after Lee Hunt's two children, who also appeared in a [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mZDQPIx49Ns PBS Kids image spot].
* For their first few weeks, these two idents were used in tandem with the first logo. Eventually, they replaced the first logo. However, some PBS stations used the previous logo until 2002, and some stations used PTV Park material well into 2004.
* Dash was voiced by Mason Therrel from 2006 to 2007, Max Marko from 2008 to 2009, Regan Mizrahi in 2010, Jake Beale in 2011 and Bob Schwartzman in 2012.
* As revealed in a Dash's Picks of the Week clip from 2010, Dash and Dot have a family (two parents and two grandparents, as well as a baby sister, two cousins and a dog).
* Tara Strong is rumored to have voiced Dot in several bumpers.
** Elise Fisher (known for playing Agnes in the first two ''Despicable Me''
'''Variants:'''
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'''Technique:''' Traditional animation (digitally colored and composited with USAnimation software, then exported to a DVD-esque format) by [[Passion Animation Studios|Passion Pictures]] and King Camera for Lee Hunt Associates.
'''Audio:''' A tongue rolling sound, then a catchy four-note a cappella tune sung by a specific gender of kids, depending on each variant; the Dot variant has a chorus of young girls, and the Dash variant has a chorus of young boys. At the end of both (and other variants) idents, a "doink" sound is heard and they all end up eventually singing the company name. In both variants, a bubbling sound is heard when the thought bubble appears. Composed in C major by David Wilson from music studio Baron & Baron.
'''Audio Variants:'''
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'''Availability:'''
* While seen on older prints of PBS Kids shows, it is becoming hard to find on TV, as many of the shows that used it were either "repackaged" (plastered) by prints containing the 2013 and 2022 logos, or were taken off of PBS stations completely. On the other hand, however, it had appeared on many home video releases, from its debut until the 2010s.
*Also, this logo plastered the 1993 logo on some prints of PBS Kids programs, though other prints, however, used the 1993 logo
*The "'''kids'''video" variant can be seen on ''Caillou'', ''Theodore Tugboat'', ''Zoboomafoo'' and ''Teletubbies'' DVDs and tapes from Warner Home Video and Paramount Home Entertainment, but the Dot variant was dropped starting with the PBS Kids 3 pack DVD set in October 2006.
*The standard/regular variants are a little harder to find on DVD, but the Dot variant can be found on DVD releases of ''Between the Lions'' and ''Dragon Tales'', while the Dash variant can be found on a couple of DVDs of ''Sagwa the Chinese Siamese Cat'', particularly "Great Purr-Formances", and some ''Super Why!'', ''Dinosaur Train'', ''Martha Speaks'', and ''Daniel Tiger's Neighborhood'' DVDs of the era, and the first ''Peg + Cat'' DVD called ''Chickens on the Loose'' instead of the PBS Kidvideo logo.
*A few episodes of the teen program ''In the Mix'' also ended with this logo.
* This doesn't appear on international prints of PBS Kids programs, as it is replaced alongside the funding credits by the International variant. Said variant can be found on ''Clifford the Big Red Dog'' tapes and ''Maya & Miguel'' DVDs from Artisan Home Entertainment/Lionsgate.
*This also doesn't appear at the beginning of ''Jakers! The Adventures of Piggley Winks'' DVDs from Paramount Home Entertainment, as they only had the [[Paramount DVD]] and [[Entara]] logos.
* Appears on numerous 1979-2001 episodes of ''Mister Rogers' Neighborhood'' on Twitch.tv, often plastering older logos. On the 2017 PBS rebroadcast of the latter, the Dash variant was preserved on Episodes #1465 (followed by a period promo from 1979 for an educational booklet made as a tie-in to the week's episodes), #1475, #1644 (marking the logo's first national appearance in years), #1653, #1655, #1695, #1709, and #1716, and the Dot variant was preserved on Episodes #1652, #1721, #1755, and #1756. In September of 2018, PBS began re-using older prints of these episodes, so both variants were still intact on their respective episodes until the show was repackaged in October 2021 removing both logos and replacing them with 2013 logos.
*Though the logo was first seen on ''Dragon Tales'' (which premiered on September 6, 1999), promos for the show ran as early as the first week of September 1999 (when the
*The Dash variant was preserved on reruns of ''The Berenstain Bears'' on SDPB, though many PBS stations have removed the show.
*Though the logo stopped being used regularly in 2008, it continued to be used as a secondary ID on reruns of older PBS Kids shows until 2013, when it was replaced with the 2013 logos on the many rebroadcasts of those shows, and on 2000-2014 home video releases of PBS Kids shows, when it was replaced by the 2013 logos on post-2014 releases.
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'''Visuals:''' On a background with two halves of different colors, there is a kid's head and a thought bubble on the bottom and top halves. The background transforms from two different objects to another kid's head. The sponsors for the shows on which this bumper appeared on are next to the kids' heads. Throughout the bumper, the kids' heads smile at the viewer and look around.
*'''PBS Kids Ready To Learn:''' The top half is yellow and the bottom half is blue. On the bottom left, there is a girl's head. The girl (unofficially named Kaleigh) looks to the left as a flower appears in the thought bubble above, then she looks up when the flower changes to a pair of musical notes and smiles. Lastly, she looks at the camera with an excited look on her face as the musical notes change to a boy's head before abruptly returning to normal. The PBS Kids Dot logo looks slightly different; it is more sloppily drawn and the "KIDS" text is off-centered.
*'''US Department of Education:''' The top half is orange and the bottom half is green. On the bottom left, there is a boy's head (unofficially named Estuardo). The thought bubble has a truck, a kite, and the next girl's head.
*'''Corporation for Public Broadcasting:''' The top half is red, the bottom half is yellow, and the girl (unofficially named Demi) from the previous screen is seen on the bottom-right. The objects appearing in the thought bubble above the girl's head are a monkey, a star and a snow/ice cream cone.
'''Trivia:''' The unofficial names given the first two kids' heads (Kaleigh & Estuardo) are a possible reference to former ''Zoom'' cast members Kaleigh Cronin & Estuardo Alvizures respectively.
'''Variants:'''
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*Sometimes, the PBS Kids Ready to Learn logo has two registered trademark symbols and features the regular PBS Kids Dot logo next to the text.
*For ''Sesame Street'' and ''Dragon Tales'', the kids' heads and bubbles were removed while the logos are centered on the screen. The CPB logo appears on the second screen as well. For season 3 episodes of ''Dragon Tales'', the text "Viewers Like You" and "Thank You" appear on top of the red/yellow half screen with the girl, but the CPB logo and the thought bubble are removed.
*Most of the time, the bumper is sped-up/shortened.
'''Technique:''' 2D computer animation by Razorfish, the successor to Lee Hunt Associates, for the original 2000 variant (Primal Screen for the 2001-2006 variants).
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*On ''Sesame Street'', it's an instrumental brass/woodwind version of the show's theme song.
*On ''Reading Rainbow'', the music starts and cuts-off partway through.
*At the end of the ''Dragon Tales: Let's Start a Band!'' direct-to-video special, the audio can be heard echoing after the screen cuts to black.
'''Voice-overs:'''
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**'''2005 episodes (closing) and reruns (2006-2009):''' "And by a Ready To Learn television cooperative agreement from the US Department of Education through the Public Broadcasting Service."
*'''Sesame Street:''' Gordon (played by Roscoe Orman) says "Sesame Street is also brought to you by a Ready To Learn television cooperative agreement from the US Department of Education through the Public Broadcasting Service. And by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting."
*'''Dragon Tales (Season 3):''' Scott Lipe says "This program was funded in part by a Ready to Learn, No Child Left Behind grant from the US Department of Education though the Public Broadcasting Service, and by contributions to your PBS station from viewers like you! Thank you."
'''Availability:''' It can be seen on old PBS Kids DVDs and on VHS tapes or recordings.
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*A cropped 16:9 version of the Dot variant exists. Seen on ''DragonflyTV''.
'''Technique:'''
'''Audio:''' A quirky, avant-garde synth-pop theme different from the one before, also composed by Baron & Baron. It starts off with some kids softly scatting the music from the 1999 logo, which is one octave higher, at first accompanied by a synthesizer, then a weird bubbling-up-like rocket ship sound effect (which can be heard echoing in the Dash variant), and then the kids singing the company name in a higher tone than the previous logo.
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* On CBBC airings of ''Martha Speaks'', the Fishbowl ident is still.
*Sometimes the '''pbskids.org''' URL appears when the PBS Kids logo appears.
*There is a prototype variant of the Snow Globe bumper where the color of the background is a bit darker and more purple, the pond has a
* There is a accurate widescreen version of the Fishbowl bumper also has the word "'''KIDS'''" being added below the circular PBS Kids logo; however, there are no other changes. It includes differences that the Fishbowl variant of this logo is presented in widescreen: It is zoomed in slightly at the beginning of the logo when Dash looks at a goldfish in his fishbowl, the close-up of the fishbowl is a bit zoomed out, the fish are slightly off the screen, the bubbles are more brighter and bigger and the word "'''KIDS'''" is added below the circular PBS Kids logo. This variant is seen on season 2 of ''Jakers! The Adventures of Piggley Winks'', early-2008 episodes of ''Sid the Science Kid'' and ''Lomax the Hound of Music''.
*Cropped 16:9 versions exist.
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*An uncropped version of the Fishbowl ident (no URL is shown) appeared on [[NCircle Entertainment]] DVD releases of ''WordWorld''.
'''Technique:'''
'''Audio:'''
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*'''Sandcastles:''' On a bright sunny background in a beach-like setting, there is Dash in a bathing suit and sandals. To the right of him is a sandcastle that he built. He tries to show it off to Dot but then he is surprised as the camera zooms out to reveal Dot's sand structure, which is a sphinx with her head on it. She dusts off her hands as Dash looks in awe at her structure. Then the screen fades to the circular PBS Kids logo.
'''Technique:'''
'''Audio:''' Same as the 1st logo's Dot variant with additional sound effects.
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'''Audio:''' The PBS Kids theme played in different tones and by different instruments, which vary depending on the variant.
'''Availability:''' Only seen
===8th Logo (September 1, 2008-October 7, 2013)===
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'''Trivia:''' This logo was designed by longtime PBS Kids creative director Chris Bishop, and animated by Primal Screen, previously responsible for PBS Kids' 2001 and 2008 branding elements.
'''Technique:'''
'''Audio:''' The music from the 1st logo is used again, but without the kids chanting or the kid saying the company name at the end. Like the previous logo, the musical instruments these variants are played with vary depending on the activity, exactly like the 12th PBS ident. Also, the 1st logo's theme can be heard in different pitches. All themes were composed by Flavorlab. <ref>https://vimeopro.com/user4960481/flavorlab-pbs-kids-rebrand</ref>
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* '''''City Island'' and ''Together We Can'':''' Fireworks explode over a purple city skyline. The 2022 PBS Kids logo appears from the fireworks.
'''Technique:'''
'''Audio:''' The ending theme of the TV series.
'''Audio Variants:'''
*On the ''Clifford the Big Red Dog'' reboot, it uses a ukulele theme with a twelve-note whistling tune and
* On PBS Kids airings of said series, the logo is silent.
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[[Category:Logos with music by Stephen Mank]]
[[Category:Logos with sound effects by Sound Ideas]]
[[Category:English-language logos]]
|
One or more descriptions on this page are missing or incomplete. If you have any further information on these logos, please consider editing this page to make our descriptions more complete. |
This article covers logos that contain a jump scare. Editors should list the timestamps, under the videos where such content occurs. |
PBS Kids is a children's programming block on PBS and a 24-hour digital channel.
This logo contains a jump scare at 0:11. |
Visuals: On a white background, three crudely-drawn P-heads are seen (their outlines wiggle throughout the logo). The first one is wearing a red cap and an earring. They sing "This is! P-B-SSSSSS!" (the "P-B-SSSSSS!" part of which is done by a female choir) while moving their arms and changing patterns (which are described below; the first two patterns are repeated before the third one):
Near the end, they raise their arms in the air and the first one ad-libs "Woo-hoo-hooooo!" a-la Michael Jackson as his cap flies off. The word "PBS" in the same font as the 3rd PBS logo fades in as the cap drops back on his head, and an orange P-head dog "P-Pet", runs across the screen, barks and walks away.
Trivia:
Variants:
Technique: Digital ink-and-paint animation.
Audio: A techno-pop tune with a synth-horn, drums (performed by means of the Roland R-8) and a bass, as well as the P-Pals singing their lines and P-Pet barking. The tune sounds similar to the Schoolhouse Rock! short "Verb: That's What's Happening", as well as an old commercial for Sonic the Hedgehog on the Sega Genesis.
Availability:
Legacy: Fondly remembered by many who grew up with this logo, especially Arthur fans. Others may have been scared or annoyed by the loud music, flashing effects and the logo's plastering of older PBS logos; some even believe that the logo feels out of place on Teletubbies and Barney, due to it clashing greatly with the saccharine nature of preceding broadcasts of the two shows (and kicking off 1998-1999 Teletubbies VHS tapes, following the Warner Home Video logo). The "Surprise!" variant is notorious for frightening children with its quick zoom and faster flashing effects, which led it to be rumored that it was pulled on some stations.
Visuals: Over footage of kids in red and blue uniforms swinging jump ropes around, the P-head zooms in, facing left as it did until 1984. Then a stylized "T", looking like three red}} dots across with three red dots below, zooms similarly, followed by a green square with a cutout "V".
Trivia: The drum break used in this logo is known as the Funky Drummer break, originating from the drum break performed by Clyde Stubblefield in the James Brown single "Funky Drummer" (1970). The sample also appears as the first sample on the first track of "Zero-G Datafile" (1990), volume one, and is well-known for being in the theme tune to The Powerpuff Girls.
Technique: Live action and computer-generated animation.
Audios: A drum beat, with an announcer calling out each letter as they appear.
Availability: This logo and other similar spots appeared following shows aimed at older children during the era, such as Reading Rainbow and reruns of Square One TV. It stopped being used once the "preschool-aged children" and "school-aged children" shows were merged round 1997, with the introduction of the "E/I" variant of the first logo.
Visuals:
Trivia:
Variants:
Technique: Traditional animation (digitally colored and composited with USAnimation software, then exported to a DVD-esque format) by Passion Pictures and King Camera for Lee Hunt Associates.
Audio: A tongue rolling sound, then a catchy four-note a cappella tune sung by a specific gender of kids, depending on each variant; the Dot variant has a chorus of young girls, and the Dash variant has a chorus of young boys. At the end of both (and other variants) idents, a "doink" sound is heard and they all end up eventually singing the company name. In both variants, a bubbling sound is heard when the thought bubble appears. Composed in C major by David Wilson from music studio Baron & Baron.[1]
Audio Variants:
Availability:
Legacy: A very well-known logo and one that is fondly remembered by many for its art style and quirky, experimental music. It can be seen as annoying by some for how long it lasted and plastered older logos, though. It is also a common subject of "logo edits" on YouTube.
Visuals: On a background with two halves of different colors, there is a kid's head and a thought bubble on the bottom and top halves. The background transforms from two different objects to another kid's head. The sponsors for the shows on which this bumper appeared on are next to the kids' heads. Throughout the bumper, the kids' heads smile at the viewer and look around.
Trivia: The unofficial names given the first two kids' heads (Kaleigh & Estuardo) are a possible reference to former Zoom cast members Kaleigh Cronin & Estuardo Alvizures respectively.
Variants:
Technique: 2D computer animation by Razorfish, the successor to Lee Hunt Associates, for the original 2000 variant (Primal Screen for the 2001-2006 variants).
Audio: A synth tune with beating drums, scatting, a quiet synth bassline, and a "whoosh" sound combined with a toungue rolling sound at the end. Composed by Baron & Baron (who also composed other music used on PBS Kids IDs during this time).
Audio Trivia: The music in this logo originated from a Zoom ident (albeit extended) that debuted a year earlier.
Audio Variants:
Voice-overs:
Availability: It can be seen on old PBS Kids DVDs and on VHS tapes or recordings.
Legacy:
Visuals:
Trivia:
Variants:
Technique: Same as the 1st logo.
Audio: A quirky, avant-garde synth-pop theme different from the one before, also composed by Baron & Baron. It starts off with some kids softly scatting the music from the 1999 logo, which is one octave higher, at first accompanied by a synthesizer, then a weird bubbling-up-like rocket ship sound effect (which can be heard echoing in the Dash variant), and then the kids singing the company name in a higher tone than the previous logo.
Audio Variants:
Availability:
Legacy: Same as the first logo.
Visuals: There is the PBS Kids logo (which has "KIDS" in white below) above in-credit. The text, "THIS PROGRAM [WAS] PARTIALLY FUNDED BY" is seen above the logo.
Technique: A still digital graphic.
Audio: The closing theme of the show.
Availability: Seen on Sagwa, the Chinese Siamese Cat and before the NBCUniversal logo on international prints of Curious George.
Visuals:
Variants:
Technique: 2D computer animation by Primal Screen in Atlanta, Georgia, who were also known for their work with Cartoon Network.
Audio:
Audio Variant: An error version of the Fishbowl ident uses the Snow Globe variant theme. This can be only heard on early PBS Kids airings of most episodes of WordWorld.
Audio Trivia: The music and sound design for the 2001 expansion branding (including this logo) was done by Stephen Mank, from Primal Screen themselves. [2]
Availability:
Legacy: Also a well-known and memorable logo from PBS.
Visuals:
Technique: 2D computer animation by Wild Brain.
Audio: Same as the 1st logo's Dot variant with additional sound effects.
Availability: These were only shown during the Big Big Friend Day special, which aired on PBS Kids on November 25, 2005.
Visuals: They generally vary, but they typically feature the PBS Kids logo at the end.
Technique: 2D computer animation.
Audio: The PBS Kids theme played in different tones and by different instruments, which vary depending on the variant.
Availability: Only seen at the end of programs within the PBS Kids Preschool block between September 4, 2006 to September 4, 2009.
Visuals: The logo shows Dot and Dash doing a certain activity before the PBS Kids circular logo is shown with the URL elsewhere on the screen.
Activities: Here are some of the variations of the activities included:
Trivia: These IDs were animated and composed by Primal Screen, who previously made PBS Kids' 2001 branding elements (see the 5th logo). Stephen Mank, as with the 5th logo, handled this logo's music. [3]
Variants:
Technique: Traditional animation mixed with CGI environments.
Audio:
Availability:
Legacy: Several disliked the new art style, slower pacing, lack of quirkiness/surrealism and the more conservative/conventional jingle when they first came out. As with many other idents however, these are still fondly remembered and well-liked by many.
Better images of this logo are needed due to poor picture quality or other issues. You can help AVID by uploading them. |
Visuals: In the same vein as the previous logo, the logo shows a redesigned Dot, along with two new characters, a girl with a biker helmet named Dee and a boy with a raccoon tail named Del, doing a certain activity. Then the PBS Kids circular logo is shown, with Dash using his 1999 design. Also, Dash's PBS Kids logo is seen on every variation (as Dot's version had been retired around this time).
Variants: Like the previous logo, here are some of the variations of the activities included:
A second set of system cues were created in 2015:
Trivia: This logo was designed by longtime PBS Kids creative director Chris Bishop, and animated by Primal Screen, previously responsible for PBS Kids' 2001 and 2008 branding elements.
Technique: 2D computer animation by Primal Screen.
Audio: The music from the 1st logo is used again, but without the kids chanting or the kid saying the company name at the end. Like the previous logo, the musical instruments these variants are played with vary depending on the activity, exactly like the 12th PBS ident. Also, the 1st logo's theme can be heard in different pitches. All themes were composed by Flavorlab. [4]
Audio Variant: On home media releases from 2016 to 2022, a female announcer says "PBS Kids opens worlds of possibilities for all children, thanks to PBS stations and viewers like you." for the Paint Flip variant, or "Help all kids grow and learn with PBS Kids. Thank you for supporting your PBS station." for the Frisbee Climb variant.
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Legacy: These idents are a lot more divisive among fans than the 8th logo. Some dislike the new art style, faster pacing, character designs, and removal of Dash. Other fans like the idents however, finding them cute and creative.
Visuals: There are some animals (or robots for the Clifford variant) doing an activity like dancing or playing a game while the funding credits are announced. The animation for these are usually recycled from existing station idents used by PBS stations.
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Technique: Animation that is recycled from existing station idents, as mentioned above.
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Visuals: There is the PBS Kids logo either still or getting formed by objects.
Variants: Each vary by show:
Technique: 2D computer animation by Interface Media Group or Steve Karp.
Audio: The ending theme of the TV series.
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Visuals: It reuses animation from the 2013 and 2015 system cues, but replaces the logo with the new version, which is a blue circle with "PBS KIDS", with "PBS" in green and "KIDS" in white.
Variants: Same as the 9th logo.
Technique: Same as the 9th logo.
Audio: Same as the 9th logo.
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Legacy: The design of the new logo is polarizing, with some considering it another example to the minimalization trend in logo design and others considering it a breath of fresh air.