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{{PageCredits|description=Jason Jones, James Fabiano, Jess Williams, Ryan Mead, Michael Bode, bmasters9, Shadeed A. Kelly and Logophile|capture=Shadeed A. Kelly, Eric S, V of Doom, snelfu, James Stanley Barr, Derrick Anderson, ClosingLogosHD, Pygmalion X, JohnnyL80, mr3urious, Michael Bass, TrickyMario7654, snelfu, Logoboy95, Gilblitz112, Sagan Blob, TheEriccorpinc, SloshedMail, Brendan Richards, BaldiBasicsFan and others|edits=Shadeed A. Kelly, Logophile, V of Doom, MrThorax281, CuriousGeorge60, Brendan Richards, BenIsRandom, Vahan Nisanian, KramdenII, Lee Cremeans, Brendan Richards, Kramden II, ccateni28, mario9000seven, Unnepad, BaldiBasicsFan, Nova, TheRealMarcel2000 and Michael Kenchington|video=ChadODell, gman1290, JohnnyL80, mcydodge919, Matthew Mayfield (Logophile), youngleader610 (Mr. Logo), ClassicTVMan1981X, DanDMan16, SloshedMail, and Broken Saw}}{{Infobox company|founded=November 1948 (74 years ago)|country=United States|image=Screen Gems 1999.svg|name=Screen Gems (1948-1974)|successors=Columbia Pictures Television|founder=Ralph Cohn|defunct=May 6, 1974 ({{age|1974|5|6}} years ago)|fate=Renamed as Columbia Pictures Television|predecessors=Pioneer Telefilms ( |
{{PageCredits|description=Jason Jones, James Fabiano, Jess Williams, Ryan Mead, Michael Bode, bmasters9, Shadeed A. Kelly and Logophile|capture=Shadeed A. Kelly, Eric S, V of Doom, snelfu, James Stanley Barr, Derrick Anderson, ClosingLogosHD, Pygmalion X, JohnnyL80, mr3urious, Michael Bass, TrickyMario7654, snelfu, Logoboy95, Gilblitz112, Sagan Blob, TheEriccorpinc, SloshedMail, Brendan Richards, BaldiBasicsFan and others|edits=Shadeed A. Kelly, Logophile, V of Doom, MrThorax281, CuriousGeorge60, Brendan Richards, BenIsRandom, Vahan Nisanian, KramdenII, Lee Cremeans, Brendan Richards, Kramden II, ccateni28, mario9000seven, Unnepad, BaldiBasicsFan, Nova, TheRealMarcel2000 and Michael Kenchington|video=ChadODell, gman1290, JohnnyL80, mcydodge919, Matthew Mayfield (Logophile), youngleader610 (Mr. Logo), ClassicTVMan1981X, DanDMan16, SloshedMail, and Broken Saw}}{{Infobox company|founded=November 1948 (74 years ago)|country=United States|image=Screen Gems 1999.svg|name=Screen Gems (1948-1974)|successors=Columbia Pictures Television|founder=Ralph Cohn|defunct=May 6, 1974 ({{age|1974|5|6}} years ago)|fate=Renamed as Columbia Pictures Television|predecessors=Pioneer Telefilms (1947-1948)|parent=Columbia Pictures}} |
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===Background=== |
===Background=== |
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* October 2, 1952-1969: Copyright © (year) Screen Gems, Inc. All Rights Reserved. |
* October 2, 1952-1969: Copyright © (year) Screen Gems, Inc. All Rights Reserved. |
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* September 30, 1960-April 5, 1963: Copyright © (year) Hanna-Barbera Productions (Used on the first three seasons of ''The Flintstones'' and the short-lived show ''The Jetsons'') |
* September 30, 1960-April 5, 1963: Copyright © (year) Hanna-Barbera Productions (Used on the first three seasons of ''The Flintstones'' and the short-lived show ''The Jetsons'') |
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* September 18, |
* September 18, 1965-May 26, 1970: Copyright © (year) Sidney Sheldon Productions, Inc. All Rights Reserved. (Used on ''I Dream of Jeannie'') |
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* 1969-August 29, 1974: Copyright © (year) Screen Gems, Inc. A Division of Columbia Pictures Industries, Inc. All Rights Reserved. |
* 1969-August 29, 1974: Copyright © (year) Screen Gems, Inc. A Division of Columbia Pictures Industries, Inc. All Rights Reserved. |
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Screen Gems, previously the cartoon division of Columbia Pictures, was revived as a television subsidiary in 1948. It was formed when Columbia acquired Pioneer Telefilms, a television commercial company founded in 1947 by Ralph M. Cohn, the son of Columbia Pictures co-founder, Jack Cohn, and the nephew of longtime Columbia Pictures president and co-founder, Harry Cohn. Pioneer Telefilms was renamed to Screen Gems after the acquisition. It was responsible for television production, TV movies, syndicating the Columbia Pictures movie library, and starting in 1958, The Three Stooges shorts starting with the Curly series. Screen Gems became a fully-fledged studio in 1951 by moving into Telefilm syndication and later into television production in 1952. On July 1, 1956, Columbia studio veteran Irving Briskin formed Briskin Productions to oversee all of Screen Gems' productions. On December 10, 1956, Screen Gems acquired television syndication company Hygo Television Films (a.k.a. "Serials Inc.") as well as its affiliated company, United Television Films, Inc. On August 2, 1957, Screen Gems agreed to syndicate the Universal Horror Package from Universal-International for 10 years under the names Shock and Son of Shock. From 1957-1966, Screen Gems held a 20% stake in Hanna-Barbera and acted as their distributor; Screen Gems (and later, Columbia Pictures itself) also owned the distribution rights to The Flintstones until the 1980s. In January 1961, Columbia Pictures Corporation and Screen Gems, Inc. were split into separate companies, when the former studio sold 11% of the latter's stock to the public. On December 23, 1968, Screen Gems merged with its parent Columbia Pictures Corporation and the whole organization was reincorporated as "Columbia Pictures Industries, Inc.".
On May 6, 1974, Screen Gems was reincorporated as "Columbia Pictures Television".
Logo: On a light grey background, we see a TV tube-like shape that's outlined in dark grey and filled in black. There are about eight abstract stars shining inside around the phrase "A SCREEN GEMS INC. Presentation" or "A SCREEN GEMS INC. Production".
Variants:
Technique: Traditional animation.
Music/Sounds: The end title theme of any show.
Availability: Ultra rare.
Logo: Like the 1942 version of the 1936-1976 Columbia Pictures logo, we see a lady (Columbia, a representation of the USA) holding a light torch on top a pedestal with a backdrop of clouds over her. The Torch Lady's head and upper body is between the words "SCREEN GEMS" with the letter "A" in Vivaldi font above it and "FILM PRESENTATION" or "FILM PRODUCTION" below it. The byline "TELEVISION SUBSIDIARY COLUMBIA PICTURES CORPORATION" appears below that.
Variants:
Technique: Likely traditional cel animation.
Music/Sounds/Voice-over:
Music/Sounds Variant: When the movie 20 Million Miles to Earth premiered on television, Screen Gems plastered the Columbia Pictures logo, keeping the fanfare intact.
Availability: Rare.
Logo: Same as the 1955 logo, excluding the clouds and the additional captions. Only the name "SCREEN GEMS" remains, and the words are smaller and somewhat stretched out, and are shown on each side of the Torch Lady's lower body and legs.
Variants:
Technique: Same as the last logo.
Music/Sounds: Either silence or the end title theme from any show playing over this with Hal Gibney announcing:
Availability: Rare.
Logo: Eleven animated lines "drop down" at the right of the black screen to ascending jazz notes as a swarm of circles scatter near the middle of the left side leaving behind the words "SCREEN GEMS" in a Benguiat Frisky font (these circles were what one rec.arts.animation post described as the "spotlights". The "stars" may come from the fact that the circles sparkle like stars). As this happens, the lines shrink somewhat and spread out, filling the right half and shaking slightly back and forth.
Variant: When filmed and broadcast in color, the sticks and the dots are in various colors, and "SCREEN GEMS" is gold.
Technique: Traditional animation by Hanna-Barbera Cartoons.
Music/Sounds: An eight-note jazzy trumpet fanfare that ascends as the sticks drop in, and ends with a five-note stinger when the logo finishes. An announcer states that the production is "A Screen Gems production" (for shows produced in-house) or "A Screen Gems presentation" (for co-productions with other companies or shows merely distributed by Screen Gems) near the end.
Music/Sounds Variants:
Availability: Rare.
Logo: On a yellow background, two red parallelograms (or lines) come from the top and bottom of the screen, and the upper one is at a distance while the lower is closer. They fly towards each other, and the higher moves forward while the lower backs away. As they do so, they grow in length and wrap around a space where a red dot appears, forming a stylized "S". Under that, the text "SCREEN GEMS" zooms in.
Trivia:
Variants:
Technique: Camera-controlled cel animation.
Music/Sounds:
Music/Sounds Variants:
Availability: Pretty common.
Legacy:
Here is some information about the copyright stamps on the Screen Gems Television shows and TV movies:
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Screen Gems Television |
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Vine Alternative Investments | |||||
The Walt Disney Company |
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Bertelsmann |
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BBC | |||||
ITV |
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Amazon | |||||
Comcast |
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Sony Group Corporation |
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Warner Bros. Discovery |
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Paramount Global |
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Amblin Partners | |||||
Corus Entertainment | |||||
AMC Networks | |||||
Hearst Communications | |||||
Lionsgate | |||||
Banijay Group |
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Hasbro Inc. | |||||
Village Roadshow | |||||
Nexstar Media Group, Inc. | |||||
ProSiebenSat.1 Media | |||||
International Olympic Committee | |||||
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