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{{PageCredits|description=edunk5 and |
{{PageCredits|description=edunk5, Henrynguye5 and SBF2004|capture=edunk5 and Henrynguye5|edits=Henrynguye5, Logoarto, Prodigy012, TheRealMarcel2000 and SBF2004|video=WorldOfTimmy2012 Studios, Josef Herzán and Teletoon Classics}} |
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===Background=== |
===Background=== |
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'''EM.TV & Merchandising AG''' was a German independent entertainment company founded by Thomas and Florian Haffa in 1989, based in Ismaning. Its initials stand for '''E'''ntertainment and '''M'''erchandising. |
'''EM.TV & Merchandising AG''' was a German independent entertainment company founded by Thomas and Florian Haffa in 1989, based in Ismaning. Its initials stand for '''E'''ntertainment and '''M'''erchandising. |
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In 1996, EM.TV launched a |
In 1996, EM.TV launched a channel for preschoolers called [[Junior]]. Two years later, the company launched a joint venture with [[Flying Bark Productions|Yoram Gross Film Studio]] (best known as the producer of the ''Blinky Bill'' franchise) to produce and distribute its shows internationally after a buyout by [[Village Roadshow Pictures|Village Roadshow]]. |
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In February 2000, EM.TV bought [[The Jim Henson Company]] for $680 million. Later that year, it acquired 50% of SLEC Ltd., known for being the holding company of the Formula One racing series. These acquisitions turned out to be a financial failure, as EM.TV's stocks quickly began to plummet. This led to the company selling full rights of ''Sesame Street'' to [[Sesame Workshop |
In February 2000, EM.TV bought [[The Jim Henson Company]] for $680 million. Later that year, it acquired 50% of SLEC Ltd., known for being the holding company of the Formula One racing series. These acquisitions turned out to be a financial failure, as EM.TV's stocks quickly began to plummet. This led to the company selling full rights of the ''Sesame Street'' Muppet characters to [[Sesame Workshop]]. In 2003, The Jim Henson Company was bought back by the Henson family for $84 million, while Thomas and Florian Haffa were subsequently fined for having deceived shareholders during the ownership. |
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In 2000, EM.TV began releasing its titles on home video in Germany and other countries, including various series and movies from the Junior library. Following EM.TV's acquisition by [[ |
In 2000, EM.TV began releasing its titles on home video in Germany and several other countries, including various series and movies from the Junior library. Following EM.TV's acquisition by [[Universum Film GmBH]], Universum continued distributing the EM.TV/Studio 100 library on DVD for a few years. After the deal expired, Studio 100 took over distribution by transferring it to their own home video division based in Germany. |
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In September 2001, former Sat.1 CEO Werner Klatten became the new CEO of EM.TV. He restructured the company, announced he would sell most of the company's assets and directed the purchase of German sports TV station DSF. In 2008, EM.TV was renamed to '''EM.Sport Media AG''' before being changed again to '''Constantin Medien AG''' the following year. On February |
In September 2001, former Sat.1 CEO Werner Klatten became the new CEO of EM.TV. He restructured the company, announced he would sell most of the company's assets and directed the purchase of German sports TV station DSF. In 2008, EM.TV's entertainment division was sold to Belgian television studio [[Studio 100]]. That same year, EM.TV was renamed to '''EM.Sport Media AG''' before being changed again to '''Constantin Medien AG''' the following year. On 13 February 2018, a takeover by Highlight Communications AG was completed. On 26 September 2019, the company was delisted from the Frankfurt Stock Exchange. At the Annual General Meeting 2019, the change of name to '''Sport1 Medien AG''' was resolved. The change was entered in the Commercial Register of the City of Munich (HRB 148 760) on 2 January 2020 and thus became effective. The change of name is also accompanied by a change in the Company's purpose, which was also resolved by the Annual General Meeting in July of the year prior and is now more strongly aligned to the company's activities in the digital sector. |
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===1st Logo (as EM.TV & Merchandising AG) (January 1, 1993-June 23, 2004)=== |
===1st Logo (as EM.TV & Merchandising AG) (January 1, 1993-June 23, 2004)=== |
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<gallery mode="packed" heights="150"> |
<gallery mode="packed" heights="150"> |
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File:EM TV & Merchandising AG (1993-2004).jpg |
File:EM TV & Merchandising AG (1993-2004).jpg |
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File:EM TV & Merchandising AG |
File:EM TV & Merchandising AG.jpg |
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File: |
File:EM.TV Wavery Productions.png |
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Lux Animation (2003, in-credit).png |
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File:Yoram Gross logo (E.M TV variant).jpg |
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File:EM.TV & Merchandising AG (2003, white background variant).jpg |
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</gallery> |
</gallery> |
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⚫ | |||
[[File:Yoram Gross-EM.TV (2004, fullscreen version).jpg|center|thumb]] |
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⚫ | |||
'''Nicknames:''' "Diamond Zig-Zag", "Zig-Zag M" |
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''' |
'''Visuals:''' Panning though a black and blue space background with stars, a shape that is red on the front and the rest of the sides in silver comes flying sideways from the front of the screen before turning clockwise and stopping down. It is revealed to be a row of three diagonal rectangles above a short zig-zagged "M" which represents the company's first two initials, "EM". It morphs from 3D to 2D, while at the same time, the background fades to black. Below, a spark of light wipes across to reveal the text "EM.TV & MERCHANDISING AG" in white. |
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'''Variants:''' |
'''Variants:''' |
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*On ''Fairy Tale Police Department'' and ''Weird-Ohs'', a still version is shown. |
*On ''Fairy Tale Police Department'' and ''Weird-Ohs'', a still version is shown. |
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**On season 3 of ''Blinky Bill'', a variant with a white background with dark green "WAVERY" is used. |
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**On early seasons of the aforementioned show, the logo is white and in-credit. |
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**On the start of Junior videos and DVDs, the text is in a different small font. |
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*On ''Rainbow Fish'', it cuts to where the text wipes in. |
*On ''Rainbow Fish'', it cuts to where the text wipes in. |
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*The logo is in-credit on ''The Adventures of Blinky Bill'', ''The World of Tosh'', ''Old Tom'', and ''Creepschool''. |
*The logo is in-credit on ''The Adventures of Blinky Bill'', ''The World of Tosh'', ''Old Tom'', and ''Creepschool''. |
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*TBA. |
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''' |
'''Technique:''' CGI. |
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''' |
'''Audio:''' A calm synthesizer with a light soaring upbeat, a quiet clash, and a clicking sound when the text is formed. |
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''' |
'''Audio Variants:''' |
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*Most shows had the closing theme playing over it. |
*Most shows had the closing theme playing over it. |
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*On ''Weird-Ohs'', a shortened version of the music was used. |
*On ''Weird-Ohs'', a shortened version of the music was used. |
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⚫ | |||
* It was seen on ''The Adventures of Blinky Bill'', the first two seasons of ''Flipper and Lopaka'', ''Fairy Tale Police Department'', ''Old Tom'', ''Rainbow Fish'', ''The World of Tosh'', ''Creepschool'', former Amazon Prime Video prints of ''Twipsy'', and ''Tabaluga & Leo: A Christmas Adventure''. It was also seen on various DVDs under the Junior label as a de-facto home video logo. |
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** It is also seen on Spanish prints of Junior material such as ''The Little Lulu Show''. |
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'''Editor's Note:''' It's a creative logo with good visuals and CGI effects that have aged relatively well. The music is also nice to listen to. |
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===2nd Logo (2004-2008)=== |
===2nd Logo (2004-2008)=== |
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File:EM Entertainment GMBH 2.jpg |
File:EM Entertainment GMBH 2.jpg |
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File:EM Entertainment GMBH 3.jpg |
File:EM Entertainment GMBH 3.jpg |
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Flying Bark Productions logo (2007).jpg |
File:Flying Bark Productions logo (2007).jpg |
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Flying Bark Distribution.jpg |
File:Flying Bark Distribution.jpg |
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Flying Bark Distribution 2.jpg |
File:Flying Bark Distribution 2.jpg |
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Flying Bark Distribution 3.jpg |
File:Flying Bark Distribution 3.jpg |
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</gallery> |
</gallery> |
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''' |
'''Visuals:''' On a red background, there is a redesigned EM.TV symbol with the text "EM.TV", all in white. |
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'''Variants:''' TBA. |
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''' |
'''Variants:''' Unknown. |
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'''Technique:''' A still, digital graphic. |
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'''Music/Sounds:''' None. |
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'''Audio:''' None or the closing theme of the show. |
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⚫ | |||
'''Availability:''' Unknown. {{AvailabilityExamples}} |
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'''Editor's Note:''' None. |
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{{TV-Navbox}} |
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{{Animation-Navbox}} |
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{{Home Entertainment-Navbox}} |
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[[Category:German television logos]] |
[[Category:German television logos]] |
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[[Category:German animation logos]] |
[[Category:German animation logos]] |
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[[Category:German home entertainment logos]] |
[[Category:German home entertainment logos]] |
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[[Category: |
[[Category:Germany]] |
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[[Category:Television logos]] |
[[Category:Television logos]] |
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[[Category:Animation logos]] |
[[Category:Animation logos]] |
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[[Category:Home entertainment logos]] |
[[Category:Home entertainment logos]] |
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[[Category:German-language logos]] |
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[[Category:English-language logos]] |
EM.TV & Merchandising AG was a German independent entertainment company founded by Thomas and Florian Haffa in 1989, based in Ismaning. Its initials stand for Entertainment and Merchandising.
In 1996, EM.TV launched a channel for preschoolers called Junior. Two years later, the company launched a joint venture with Yoram Gross Film Studio (best known as the producer of the Blinky Bill franchise) to produce and distribute its shows internationally after a buyout by Village Roadshow.
In February 2000, EM.TV bought The Jim Henson Company for $680 million. Later that year, it acquired 50% of SLEC Ltd., known for being the holding company of the Formula One racing series. These acquisitions turned out to be a financial failure, as EM.TV's stocks quickly began to plummet. This led to the company selling full rights of the Sesame Street Muppet characters to Sesame Workshop. In 2003, The Jim Henson Company was bought back by the Henson family for $84 million, while Thomas and Florian Haffa were subsequently fined for having deceived shareholders during the ownership.
In 2000, EM.TV began releasing its titles on home video in Germany and several other countries, including various series and movies from the Junior library. Following EM.TV's acquisition by Universum Film GmBH, Universum continued distributing the EM.TV/Studio 100 library on DVD for a few years. After the deal expired, Studio 100 took over distribution by transferring it to their own home video division based in Germany.
In September 2001, former Sat.1 CEO Werner Klatten became the new CEO of EM.TV. He restructured the company, announced he would sell most of the company's assets and directed the purchase of German sports TV station DSF. In 2008, EM.TV's entertainment division was sold to Belgian television studio Studio 100. That same year, EM.TV was renamed to EM.Sport Media AG before being changed again to Constantin Medien AG the following year. On 13 February 2018, a takeover by Highlight Communications AG was completed. On 26 September 2019, the company was delisted from the Frankfurt Stock Exchange. At the Annual General Meeting 2019, the change of name to Sport1 Medien AG was resolved. The change was entered in the Commercial Register of the City of Munich (HRB 148 760) on 2 January 2020 and thus became effective. The change of name is also accompanied by a change in the Company's purpose, which was also resolved by the Annual General Meeting in July of the year prior and is now more strongly aligned to the company's activities in the digital sector.
Visuals: Panning though a black and blue space background with stars, a shape that is red on the front and the rest of the sides in silver comes flying sideways from the front of the screen before turning clockwise and stopping down. It is revealed to be a row of three diagonal rectangles above a short zig-zagged "M" which represents the company's first two initials, "EM". It morphs from 3D to 2D, while at the same time, the background fades to black. Below, a spark of light wipes across to reveal the text "EM.TV & MERCHANDISING AG" in white.
Variants:
Technique: CGI.
Audio: A calm synthesizer with a light soaring upbeat, a quiet clash, and a clicking sound when the text is formed.
Audio Variants:
'Availability:
Visuals: On a red background, there is a redesigned EM.TV symbol with the text "EM.TV", all in white.
Variants: Unknown.
Technique: A still, digital graphic.
Audio: None or the closing theme of the show.
Availability: Unknown. [Examples?]
Animation logos (Random page) | |||||||||
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Fox Corporation | |||||||||
The Walt Disney Company |
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Bertelsmann | |||||||||
BBC | |||||||||
ITV | |||||||||
Amazon | |||||||||
Comcast |
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Sony Group Corporation | |||||||||
Warner Bros. Discovery |
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Paramount Global | |||||||||
Hearst Communications | |||||||||
Lionsgate | |||||||||
Hasbro | |||||||||
The Jim Henson Company | |||||||||
Corus Entertainment | |||||||||
WildBrain |
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Mattel | |||||||||
Splash Entertainment | |||||||||
9 Story Media Group | |||||||||
Boat Rocker Media | |||||||||
Banijay Group | |||||||||
Sega Sammy Holdings | |||||||||
Studio Ghibli | |||||||||
Toho | |||||||||
Tatsunoko Production | |||||||||
Other |
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Home entertainment logos (Random page) | |
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The Walt Disney Company |
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Bertelsmann |
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BBC | |
ITV | |
Amazon | |
Comcast | |
Sony Group Corporation | |
Warner Bros. Discovery | |
Paramount Global | |
Amblin Partners | |
Lionsgate |
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Lantern Capital | |
Access Industries | |
beIN Media Group | |
Media Blasters | |
Bandai Namco Holdings | |
Vivendi | |
AMC Networks | |
Banijay Group | |
Village Roadshow | |
Gaia, Inc. | |
Availabilities & Others | |