Pink Video (Australia): Difference between revisions

From the Audiovisual Identity Database, the motion graphics museum

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===1st logo (1984-Late 1980s)===
===1st logo (1984-Late 1980s)===
<gallery mode="packed" heights="200">
Pink Video (1984-Late 1980s).jpeg
</gallery>
{{YouTube|id=UZ0X3QrpyIk|id2=XFldTUjbxcY}}
{{YouTube|id=UZ0X3QrpyIk|id2=XFldTUjbxcY}}


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[[Category:Logos with library music by Johnny Pearson]]
[[Category:Logos with library music by Johnny Pearson]]
[[Category:14th Mandolin Productions]]
[[Category:14th Mandolin Productions]]
[[Category:English-language logos]]

Latest revision as of 09:21, 5 November 2024


Background

When adult films were officially legalized in Australia in 1983, Pink Video, a subsidiary of 14th Mandolin Productions, became one of the first distributors of such material, starting in 1984 and continuing on throughout the '80s.

1st logo (1984-Late 1980s)


Visuals: The screen pans down from a starry sky. Then, this cuts to the same animation from the King of Video logo, except with "Pink Video" in pink zooming in.

Technique: Same as the King of Video logo.

Audio: An energetic horn and string fanfare, which is apparently an abridged version of a piece of stock music made in the '70s by Johnny Pearson, "Contact".

Availability: Seen on pornographic tapes released in Australia.

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