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| founder = Linda Morgenstern |
| founder = Linda Morgenstern |
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| parent = [[Sony Music Entertainment]]<br>(1992-2007)<br>[[Sony Pictures Home Entertainment]]<br>(2007-2020) |
| parent = [[Sony Music Entertainment]]<br>(1992-2007)<br>[[Sony Pictures Home Entertainment]]<br>(2007-2020) |
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|country=|defunct=2020; 3 years ago}} |
|country=|defunct=2020; 3 years ago|successors=[[Sony Pictures Home Entertainment]]<br>[[Sony Pictures Television Kids]]}} |
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===Background=== |
===Background=== |
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'''Sony Wonder''' is the children's music and home video arm of [[Sony Music Entertainment]], originally formed in 1992 as "Sony Kids' Music/Video". In 1993, Sony Wonder began distributing [[Nickelodeon]] videos until 1996, when their license with Nickelodeon expired. In 1995, the company began distributing ''Kidsongs'' video releases after acquiring the rights from [[KidVision]] until 1998, and [[Sesame Workshop]] releases from 1995 to 2007, as well as ''Arthur'' videos from 2000 to 2006. By 1997, they distributed videos from [[Golden Books Family Entertainment]], which became [[Classic Media]] in 2002. |
'''Sony Wonder''' is the children's music and home video arm of [[Sony Music Entertainment]], originally formed in 1992 as "Sony Kids' Music/Video". In 1993, Sony Wonder began distributing [[Nickelodeon]] videos until 1996, when their license with Nickelodeon expired. In 1995, the company began distributing ''Kidsongs'' video releases after acquiring the rights from [[KidVision]] until 1998, and [[Sesame Workshop]] releases from 1995 to 2007, as well as ''Arthur'' videos from 2000 to 2006. By 1997, they distributed videos from [[Golden Books Family Entertainment]], which became [[Classic Media]] in 2002. |
This article covers logos that contain flashing images. Editors should list the timestamps, under the videos where such content occurs. |
Sony Wonder is the children's music and home video arm of Sony Music Entertainment, originally formed in 1992 as "Sony Kids' Music/Video". In 1993, Sony Wonder began distributing Nickelodeon videos until 1996, when their license with Nickelodeon expired. In 1995, the company began distributing Kidsongs video releases after acquiring the rights from KidVision until 1998, and Sesame Workshop releases from 1995 to 2007, as well as Arthur videos from 2000 to 2006. By 1997, they distributed videos from Golden Books Family Entertainment, which became Classic Media in 2002.
Sony Wonder also had a TV division, which produced and distributed TV shows. This division of the company purchased Sunbow Entertainment in 1998, but in October 2000 the company sold their TV division including Sunbow to Germany's TV-Loonland AG.
On March 13, 2007, Sony BMG Music Entertainment announced they would shut down Sony Wonder so that they can focus on their central music businesses; it would be moved to Sony Pictures Home Entertainment as an in-name-only division on June 20, 2007. The releases by Classic Media (now part of NBCUniversal) and Sesame Workshop were then transferred to Genius Products. From 2010 to 2018, Sesame Street DVDs were distributed by Warner Bros. Home Entertainment, and since late 2018, they have been released by Shout! Factory Kids.
Logo: On an orange-pinkish background filled with brown silhouettes of kids, we see a blue upside down triangle with the familiar Sony logo on top of it. There is also a yellow ribbon-like rectangle over the triangle with the black words "KIDS' VIDEO" (with jumbled letters) and a huge black music note between them.
Technique: None.
Music/Sounds: An ominous, screechy choir, which sounds like something from a horror/thriller movie. This ends with a quick orchestral glissando, similar to the Paramount Television "Closet Killer" logo.
Availability: Rare. It was spotted on a 1992 VHS of Snow White. Also seen on VHS tapes of The Ratties.
Logo: On an aqua background with childish drawings of various objects in several different colors, we see the familiar Sony logo in pink with a purple outline. Below that is a dark blue TV with yellow knobs on a pink checkered floor. Inside the TV is a blue musical note moving and bouncing around inside the TV while the wave background behind it spins and changes color. Around the TV is a yellow banner with dark blue text reading "KIDS' VIDEO".
Variant:
Technique: 2D computer animation.
Music/Sounds: None or TBA.
Music/Sounds Variant: On This Pretty Planet: Tom Chapin Live In Concert, it's the opening theme of the program, and the closing theme on the variant.
Availability: Very rare. It was spotted on a 1992 VHS of This Pretty Planet: Tom Chapin Live In Concert. It also appears on some educational tapes like My first Cooking Video.
Logo: On a white background, we see the dark blue Sony logo. At the same time, a green (or teal) box falls from the top to the bottom-middle of the screen, squeezing in as it does so. Once it hits the bottom, it bounces back up, spreading and widening itself, and stops below "SONY", revealing the word "WONDER" in the Herman font.
Variant: On the 1994 VHS of Jim Lee's WildC.A.T.S. Cry of the Coda, a still of the logo is seen with the words "ALSO AVAILABLE FROM" above it in the same color as the Sony logo. This is after the initial logo's sequence ends.
Technique: CGI.
Music/Sounds: None, except for the variant listed above, which has an announcer saying "Also available from Sony Wonder."
Availability: Rare. It can be seen on pre-1995 Nickelodeon tapes from the era, which are easily available on Amazon and eBay. The later Nickelodeon tapes (the ones that say "Nickelodeon Video") have the next logo. Also seen on VHS tapes of A Bunch of Munsch, Dog City, Wild C.A.T.S., Cadillacs and Dinosaurs, and Tales from the Cryptkeeper.
Legacy: This logo is notable for appearing on Nickelodeon tapes prior to Viacom's purchase of Paramount.
Logo: We see a cloudy background playing backwards, with the sun glowing behind it. The word "WONDER" (in the Herman font, more simple from before), in a purple ribbon, flies from the top-right to the bottom of the screen, turning magenta in the process. The ribbon then turns blue when stopping at the near center, and we see a CGI yellow sun appear in place of the "O" in "WONDER" (and directly behind where the other sun resides) via a light effect. The Sony logo fades in at the top of the ribbon as the CGI sun's rays wiggle. The end result is almost the same as the first logo.
Variants:
Technique: CGI. For the still widescreen version, none.
Music/Sounds: When the logo starts, we hear a riveting string note being held out, and when the ribbon appears, descending harp notes play in-sync with the ribbon. As the ribbon is in its position with the sun appearing, a brief flute melody plays, and when the Sony logo appears, everything rises to a majestic note complete with tubular bells that slowly stops once the logo fades. This is all synthesized, with some samples produced on the E-mu Proteus 2 Orchestral digital synthesizer.
Music/Sounds Variants:
Availability: Common. It can be seen on many Sony Wonder tapes and DVDs from the late 1990s to the mid-2000s, along with TV shows as well.
This logo contains flashing images for the whole duration. |
Variant: On some releases, the text "sonywonder.com" (in grey) fades in under the "WONDER" text.
Technique: Computer animation by Bemis Balkind.
Music/Sounds: We hear a quick jet zooming sound, then multiple xylophone notes and a "TWING!" as the circular sun zooms back. As the sun spins around, we hear several drum taps meant to represent a wheel spinning, then three bouncing sounds. Two "dwong" sounds are heard as the Sony Wonder logo is finally formed, followed by an ascending twinkle.
Availability: Rare. This logo was rather short-lived:
Logo: On a lighted environment background (similar to the website at the time), we see white words that spell "Sony wonder", in the same plain, bold font like the print logo at the time (with a black drop-shadow at the right) on the center of the screen.
Technique: None, except fading effects.
Music/Sounds: None.
Availability: Extremely rare. It was only seen on Playmobil: The Secret of Pirate Island.
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The Walt Disney Company |
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Bertelsmann | |||||
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ITV | |||||
Amazon | |||||
Comcast |
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Sony Group Corporation | |||||
Warner Bros. Discovery |
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Paramount Global | |||||
Hearst Communications | |||||
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Hasbro | |||||
The Jim Henson Company | |||||
Corus Entertainment | |||||
WildBrain |
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Mattel | |||||
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Studio Ghibli | |||||
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Tatsunoko Production | |||||
Other |
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