Warner Bros. Television Studios: Difference between revisions

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{{PageButtons|Warner Bros. Television Studios|Logo Variations=1}}
''<span style="color:#ffa500">Logo descriptions by</span> Jason Jones and others''
<br>''<span style="color:#ffa500">Logo captures by</span> Eric S., AsdfTheRevival, Shadeed A. Kelly, V of Doom, Mr.Logo, mr3urious, Stephen Cezar, Sagan Blob, snelfu, TrickyMario7654, megamanj2004, Matthew Mayfield, ClosingLogosHD, OldSchoolLogoFanatic, TheEriccorpinc, originalsboy11, RedheadXilamGuy, mario9000seven and SomerHimpson''
{{PageCredits|description=Jason Jones and others|capture=Eric S., AsdfTheRevival, Shadeed A. Kelly, V of Doom, Mr.Logo, mr3urious, Stephen Cezar, Sagan Blob, snelfu, TrickyMario7654, megamanj2004, Matthew Mayfield, ClosingLogosHD, OldSchoolLogoFanatic, TheEriccorpinc, Originalsboy11, RedheadXilamGuy, mario9000seven, SomerHimpson and SuperMax124|edits=Eric S., Shadeed A. Kelly, Curious George 60, V of Doom, MrThorax281, MattBr, KramdenII, MJ2003, DisneyInternationalFan, SuperMax124, LMgamer36, Michael Kenchington, Tjdrum2000, TheRealMarcel2000, CrazySpruiker2001 and TheLogoFan2004|video=JohnnyL80, Eric S. (LogicSmash), youngleader610 (Mr.Logo), ClosingLogosHD, Broken Saw and others}}
{{Infobox company
<br>''<span style="color:#ffa500">Editions by</span> Eric S., Shadeed A. Kelly, Curious George 60, V of Doom, MrThorax281, and MattBr''
|name=Warner Bros. Television Studios
<br>''<span style="color:#ffa500">Video captures courtesy of</span> JohnnyL80, Eric S., youngleader610 (Mr.Logo), and others''
|image=File:Warner Bros. Television (2023, flat).png
|founded=March 21, 1955 ({{age|1955|3|21}} years ago)
|parent= [[Warner Bros. Discovery]]
|subsidiaries= [[Alloy Entertainment]]<br>
[[Blue Ribbon Content]]<br>
[[Studio T]]<br>
[[Telepictures Productions]]
|founder={{w|William T. Orr}}
|country=United States}}


===Background===
'''Warner Bros. Television''' is the television division of [[Warner Bros. Pictures]], founded on March 21, 1955 by studio vice president Jack L. '''Warner''' and headed by TV producer and actor William T. Orr (credited as "Wm. T. Orr"). The studio made its small screen debut with ''Warner Bros. Presents'' on September 20, 1955. On January 10, 1972, WBTV formed '''Warner Bros. Television Distribution'''. Then in 1989, after acquiring [[Lorimar-Telepictures]], WBTVD formed '''Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution''', the current syndication arm of WBTV.


Currently, it is a division of [[Warner Bros. Entertainment|Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc.]], a subsidiary of [[Warner Bros. Discovery]]. In 2020, it was renamed '''Warner Bros. Television Studios''' as part of a restructure of WB's TV studios. Despite the name change, the company is still designated as "Warner Bros. Television" on-screen and several other materials.
<u>Background</u>: Warner Bros. Television is the television division of [[Warner Bros. Pictures]], founded on March 21, 1955 by studio vice president Jack L. Warner and headed by TV producer and actor William T. Orr (credited as "Wm. T. Orr"). The studio made its small screen debut with ''Warner Bros. Presents'' on September 20, 1955. Around circa 1960, WBTV formed Warner Bros. Television Distribution. Currently, it is a division of Warner Bros. Entertainment, Inc., a subsidiary of WarnerMedia.


{{ImageTOC
|Wbtv1950s.JPG.jpg|1st Logo (September 20, 1955-July 1967)
|Wbtv67-fbi.jpg|2nd Logo (September 1967-March 1970)
|Warner-bros-television-1971.jpg|3rd Logo (September 1970-February 1972)
|Warner_Bros._Television_(1972)_1.png|4th Logo (February-September 1972)
|Warner_Bros._Television_(1972)_2.png|5th Logo (September 1972-September 1984)
|Warner Bros. Television (1992).png|6th Logo (September 21, 1984-May 9, 1997)
|WBTV logo (1993-1999).PNG|7th Logo (September 2, 1993-April 27, 1999)
|Warner_Bros._Television_(1994)_1.png|8th Logo (September 1, 1994-February 11, 2001)
|Warner_Bros._Television_(1998).png|9th Logo (Warner Bros. 75th anniversary logo) (January 1-December 1998)
|Warner Bros. Television (2000) (16x9).png|10th Logo (April 5, 2000-April 29, 2001)
|Warner Bros. Television (2003) (16x9) 1.png|11th Logo (January 29, 2001-October 1, 2021)
|Warner Bros. Television (2005) (16x9) 1.png|12th Logo (50th anniversary logo) (January-December 2005)
|Warner Bros. Television (Dead Boy Detectives).png|13th Logo (DCTV custom logo) (September 22, 2014-)
|Warner_Bros._Television_(2017).png|14th Logo (January 27, 2017-January 9, 2022)
|Warner Bros. Television (2022, New WB Discovery byline).jpeg|15th Logo (March 2, 2021-)
|Warner Bros. Television (December 2023-).png|16th Logo (December 23, 2023-)
}}


===1st Logo (September 20, 1955-July 1967)===
<tabber>
|-|Images=
<gallery mode="packed" heights="150">
Warner Bros. Television (1955-1967) (F-Troop).png
Ca59e4f8f094f9ec745f8111a98403a7.png
714032169f44e729b1bae63086ce5ea3.png
9e7497cfb87488ad38cf875f39fbcd52.png
I_v2g1z1WErXE8mgMiXm8w50612.jpg
Wbtv1950s.JPG.jpg
Wbtv1957.JPG.jpg
ZeEIDIuwRW3fD-_WYsR5xA47380.jpg
36be63f9-9dea-4362-ae30-8b7b9bbb53d2.jpg
Wbtv50s-77sunsetstrip.jpg
C0a2f6fd-8d41-4259-b55d-c655090d65d0.jpg
1bD4Puwi5ugMQyNmN6vbfQ46156.jpg
Warner-bros-television-1959-hawaiian-eye.jpg
FSGpw4WMfa8S4NJpcEGExA43285.jpg
OIXn7wcHfKE67JyiI94Ijw88663.jpg
WLwal9iugaJldxtGFrBm8g66711.jpg
TliVDYYI3Wp7Mdr1YqBEWw83055.jpg
Wbtv60s-fbi.jpg
Warner-bros-television-1965-f-troop.jpg
045656546745.jpg
ToruoALIueUUnPDs1DO1lQ29914.jpg
Warner_Bros._Animation_1960.jpg
Wbtv1960.jpg
</gallery>
|-|Videos=
{{YouTube|id=P4-9-KIKx70|id2=UYb0hS6nNDM|id3=i0tIWmZkbIs}}
</tabber>


'''Visuals:''' There is the famous Warner Bros. shield logo superimposed over the credits, minus the banner that usually reads "{{Font|Times New Roman|'''WARNER BROS. PICTURES'''}}". There is no company name on screen, except some cases.
=== 1st Logo (September 20, 1955-July 1967) ===


'''Variants:'''
* There was an opening variant where the shield zooms in over a shot of the Warner Bros. Studios (like the then-current Warner Bros. logo). The word "'''''presents'''''" in script may or may not appear above it.
* Also, there were different variants of the logo with text over the shield, such as "{{Font|Impact|Filmed at}} '''WARNER BROS. STUDIOS''' {{Font|Impact|IN BURBANK, CALIFORNIA}}".
* Some shows had the Warner Bros. logo over a grainy background, a la [[DuMont Television Network]].
* A color version of this logo featured a {{color|red}} background and the shield in its normal coloration ({{color|gold}} and {{color|dodgerblue|blue}}). On the superimposed variant, the shield and letters are {{color|gold|yellow}}.
* On some shows, in the opening variant, a "{{Font|Times New Roman|'''''presents'''''}}" banner is added.
* On ''The Bugs Bunny Show'', the WB shield is seen on a {{color|red}} background. Suddenly the shield opens to reveal Bugs Bunny munching his carrot and saying, "This, folks, is a Warner Bros. television production." The shield then closes.
* On ''General Electric True'' (or ''GE True''), a small version of the WB shield is shown with the text "{{Font|Impact|A WARNER BROS. PRODUCTION}}" under it.
* On the ''77 Sunset Strip'' episodes "Alimony League", "Not Such a Simple Knot" and "The Target" on Me-TV, the WB shield appears with the banner reading "{{Font|Times New Roman|'''WARNER BROS. PICTURES'''}}" on a dark background after the closing credits.


'''Technique:''' Compositing effects usually. Motion-controlled animation on the opening variant.


'''Audio:'''
<u>Nickname</u>: "Decorative WB Shield"
* Opening:
** A drum roll followed by a majestic fanfare with an announcer saying "A Warner Bros. Television Production" on some shows like ''Colt 55''.
** On the logo at the end of an opening for some TV shows, the announcer says "Produced by Warner Bros.". Sometimes, it would be accompanied by a 7-note fanfare followed by a drum sound when the grainy background variant is used.
** Another variant used after the opening of the series has a 6-note fanfare at the beginning followed by an orchestrated 6-note theme with the announcer saying "A Warner Bros. Television Production".
** For the ''Bugs Bunny Show'' variant, a bombastic fanfare at the start, and then a quieter tune, with Bugs Bunny (voiced by Mel Blanc) saying "This folks, is a Warner Bros. Television production". Another bombastic fanfare plays when the shield closes.


* Closing:
<u>Logo</u>: A superimposed rendition of the famous Warner Bros. shield logo, minus the banner that usually reads "<span style="font-family:'Times New Roman';">'''WARNER BROS. PICTURES'''</span>". There is no company name on screen, except some cases.
** The end-title theme from the series. The animated variant without "Presents" used a 17-note trumpet with an announcer saying either "This program has been produced by the Entertainment Capital of the World. Produced for television by Warner Bros." or "From the Entertainment Capital of the World. Produced for television by Warner Bros." after the fanfare ended.
** On some season 6 episodes of ''77 Sunset Strip'' seen on MeTV, a seven-note orchestral fanfare with the last note drawn out plays, followed by four drum beats as the logo fades out.
** Its appearance on the ''Sylvester & Tweety Mysteries'' episode "Froggone It" has the announcer (Jeff Bennett) say "From the Entertainment Capital of the World. Produced for television by Warner Bros.".


'''Availability:'''
<u>Variants</u>: This had many variants:
* The animated un-superimposed variant is seen on the end of ''Lawman'' on Encore Westerns and the opening "Presents" variant of the animated logo is seen on some episodes of ''Cheyenne'' on Encore Westerns and Retroplex.
:*There was an opening logo, which appears a shot of the Warner Bros. Studios (like the current Warner Bros. logo) and the famous shield zooms. The word "presents", in script, may or may not appear over it.
* Sometimes, this is plastered by a later logo.
:*Also, there were different variants of the shield with text over it like "<span style="font-family:'Impact';">Filmed at</span> '''WARNER BROS. STUDIOS''' <span style="font-family:'Impact';">IN BURBANK, CALIFORNIA</span>".
* On ''The F.B.I.'', the 2003 WBTD logo would follow after the "Presents" variant.
:*Some shows had the Warner Bros. logo over a grainy background, a la DuMont Television Network.
* This has been retained on ''F Troop'' (when it aired on Me-TV in 2016 and currently on Circle) and ''77 Sunset Strip'' (which currently airs on Me-TV).
:*Later, there would be a color version of this logo, with a red background and the usual colors of the shield, and for the superimposed variant, only the shield and the letters would appear in yellow.
* The Warner Bros. Pictures variant of the WB shield seen on season 6 of ''77 Sunset Strip'' is rare as it only appears on a few episodes of that show due to MeTV choosing to cut straight to their network ID after Jack Webb's executive producer credit at the end of the closing credits on most season 6 episodes.
:*On some shows, in the opening variant, there would be a "<span style="font-family:'Times New Roman';">'''''presents'''''</span>" banner.
* It also makes an appearance on the ''Sylvester & Tweety Mysteries'' episode "Froggone It" (it revolves around Michigan J. Frog being abducted from [[The WB]]), just before the end credits.
:*On ''The Bugs Bunny Show'', we see the WB shield on a red background. Suddenly the shield opens with Bugs Bunny munching his carrot saying, "This, folks, is a Warner Bros. television production." The shield then closes.
:*On ''General Electric True'' (or ''GE True''), a small version of the WB shield is shown and under it says "<span style="font-family:'Impact';">A WARNER BROS. PRODUCTION</span>".
:*On the ''77 Sunset Strip'' episodes "Alimony League", "Not Such a Simple Knot" and "The Target" on Me-TV, the WB shield appears with the banner reading "<span style="font-family:'Times New Roman';">'''WARNER BROS. PICTURES'''</span>" on a dark background after the closing credits.


===2nd Logo (September 1967-March 1970)===
<tabber>
|-|Images=
<gallery mode="packed" heights="200">
Wbtv67-fbi.jpg
C6NqDnNg0tYVTrLeW1B9Wg18174.jpg
18831132a588fdad8dc2415b6ec42e97.png
</gallery>
|-|Videos=
{{YouTube|id=HYgtj53m4Ao|id2=9wpViDG-2GY}}
</tabber>


'''Visuals:''' There is a superimposed stylized shield with a combination of a "{{color|gold|'''W'''}}" and a "{{color|gold|'''7'''}}" (representing the Warner Bros.-Seven Arts merger) against the ending titles. The company name "{{color|gold|{{Font|Impact|WARNER BROS.-SEVEN ARTS}}}}" is shown below.
<u>FX/SFX</u>: None, except on the studio buildings, where the studios and shield were zooming.


'''Variant:''' At the end of ''The Bugs Bunny/Road Runner Hour'', the logo is shown on a {{color|red}} background without the company name. Suddenly, the shield opens to reveal Bugs Bunny, who says "This has been a Warner Bros.-Seven Arts..." before being interrupted by the Road Runner, who zips into the scene and does his trademark "Beep-beep!". As the Road Runner zips out, Bugs chuckles and continues "Like the bird says, this has been a Warner Bros.-Seven Arts television presentation.". The shield then closes.
<u>Music/Sounds/Voice-over</u>:
:*Opening:
::#A drum roll followed by majestic fanfare with an announcer saying "A Warner Bros. Television Production" for the intro on some shows like ''Colt 55''.
::#On the logo at the end of an opening for some TV shows, the announcer says "Produced by Warner Bros." Sometimes it would be accompanied by a 7-note fanfare followed by a drum sound when the logo is on a grainy background.
::#Another intro after the opening of any series has a fanfare 6-note fanfare at the beginning followed by an orchestrated 6-note theme with the same announcer saying "A Warner Bros. Television Production".


'''Technique:''' Compositing effects.
:*Closing:
::#The end-title theme from any series. But, on the animated un-superimposed variant without "Presents", this had a 17-note trumpet and would be followed by an announcer saying "This program has been produced by the Entertainment Capital of the World. Produced for television by Warner Bros." as the fanfare ended.
::#On some season 6 episodes of ''77 Sunset Strip'' seen on MeTV, a seven-note orchestral fanfare plays under the WB shield with the last note drawn out, followed by four drum beats as the logo fades out.


'''Audio:''' None or the closing theme.


'''Availability:''' Was last seen on ''The F.B.I.'' and ''The Bugs Bunny/Road Runner Hour''. DVDs of ''The F.B.I.'' might have this intact if a later logo does not plaster it.
<u>Availability</u>: Rare.
:*The animated un-superimposed variant is seen on the end of ''Lawman'' on Encore Westerns and the opening "Presents" variant of the animated logo is seen on some episodes of ''Cheyenne'' on Encore Westerns and Retroplex.
:*Sometimes, this is plastered by the "Shield of Staleness".
:*On ''The F.B.I.'', the WB "Shield of Staleness" would follow after the "Presents" variant.
:*This has been retained on ''F Troop'' (when it aired on Me-TV in 2016) and ''77 Sunset Strip'' (which currently airs on Me-TV).
:*This logo was "revived" for the ''Children's Hospital'' episode "The Show You Watch" (a parody of 1950s variety shows), in place of the 11th logo.
:*The Warner Bros. Pictures variant of the WB shield seen on season 6 of ''77 Sunset Strip'' is ultra-rare as it only appears on a few episodes of that show due to MeTV choosing to cut straight to their network ID after Jack Webb's executive producer credit at the end of the closing credits on most season 6 episodes.


===3rd Logo (September 1970-February 1972)===
<tabber>
|-|Images=
<gallery mode="packed" heights="200">
Wbtv1971.jpg
Warner-bros-television-1971.jpg
Warner_bros_television_1970.jpg
</gallery>
|-|Video=
{{YouTube|id=c1nF2E58kMU}}
</tabber>


'''Visuals:''' On a {{color|blue}} background, there is the shield from the [[Warner Bros. Pictures]] logo from the time, with the words "{{color|gold|'''WARNER BROS. TELEVISION'''}}" underneath.
<u>Editor's Note</u>: None.


'''Variants:'''
=== 2nd Logo (September 1967-March 1970) ===
* At the beginning of the original ''Banyon'' TV movie, the word "{{color|gold|'''PRESENTS'''}}" appears below the logo.
* Sometimes, the print logo is shown in white on a black background.


'''Technique:''' A painting filmed by a cameraman.


'''Audio:''' None or the opening/closing theme.
<u>Nicknames</u>: "Blue/TV WB-7"


'''Availability:'''
<u>Logo</u>: Just a superimposed stylized shield, with a combination of a "W" and a "7" (representing Warner Bros.-Seven Arts) against the ending titles. The company name is WB-SA: 1967-1970 shown below in all caps.
* It appeared for a short time on some shows and made-for-TV movies of the era, such as ''The F.B.I.'' and ''The Jimmy Stewart Show''.
* This logo was also spotted on overseas syndicated prints of ''Archie's TV Funnies''.
* This doesn't appear on ''Nichols'', though an in-credit mention for Warner Bros. Television is used instead.


===4th Logo (February-September 1972)===
<u>Variant</u>: At the end of ''The Bugs Bunny/Road Runner Hour'', the logo is shown on a red background without the company name. Suddenly, the shield opens to reveal Bugs Bunny, who says "This has been a Warner Bros.-Seven Arts..." before being interrupted by the Road Runner, who zips into the scene and does his trademark "Beep-beep!". As the Road Runner zips out, Bugs chuckles and continues "Like the bird says, this has been a Warner Bros.-Seven Arts television presentation." The shield then closes.
<tabber>
|-|Images=
<gallery mode="packed" heights="200">
Warner Bros. Television (1972) 1.png
SixthLogo.jpg
</gallery>
|-|Video=
{{YouTube|id=Z90VUIKoSAc}}
</tabber>


'''Visuals:''' There is the standard shield logo over a {{color|navy|navy blue}} background, with the word "{{Font|Times New Roman|'''TELEVISION'''}}" in large letters on the banner, and the byline "{{color|gold|A WARNER COMMUNICATIONS COMPANY}}" underneath.
<u>FX/SFX</u>: None.


'''Variant:''' A superimposed version exists on ''The Picasso Summer''.
<u>Music/Sounds</u>: None or the closing theme.


'''Technique:''' A painting filmed by a cameraman.
<u>Availability</u>: Extremely rare as of now.
:*It was last seen on ''The F.B.I.'' and ''The Bugs Bunny/Road Runner Hour''.
:*Despite this, however, there is no video evidence of this logo on the internet at all. Although it should be seen more as Warner Archive is preserving more logos.
:*DVDs of ''The F.B.I.'' might have this intact should another logo not plaster it.


'''Audio:''' None or the closing theme of the show.


'''Availability:'''
<u>Editor's Note</u>: None.
* It was found on the 1984 [[Warner Home Video]] print of the pilot for ''Kung Fu'', but DVD editions of said pilot have the 2001 logo instead of this one.
* It also appeared on ''The F.B.I.'', the original ''Search'' TV movie (originally called ''Probe''), and some prints of ''The Picasso Summer'' (a feature film that debuted in the U.S. on television), but it's long gone and it might be replaced by the 2003 logo.
* It's also seen on the 1970s version of ''The Merrie Melodies Show'' on Teletoon Retro, and in the TV pilot of ''The Delphi Bureau'' called ''The Delphi Bureau: The Merchant of Death Assignment'' on the Warner Archive Instant.


===5th Logo (September 1972-September 1984)===
<tabber>
|-|Images=
<gallery mode="packed" heights="200">
Warner Bros. Television (1972) 2.png
Warner Bros. Television (1972) (16x9).png
Warner Bros. Television (1977).png
Warner Bros. Television (1977) (16x9).png
Warner Bros. Television Distribution (1974).png
Warner Bros Television Distribution (1972, B&W).png
Warner Bros. Television (1974) (Opening) (HD).png
</gallery>
|-|Videos=
{{YouTube|id=jHMfCUmmUpM|id2=ecMrBUIlujs|id3=EnRu1xQiKJo|id4=WmAFUS3y3p0}}
</tabber>


'''Visuals:''' On a {{color|red}} background, there is the 1973-1984 Warner Bros. logo (a white abstract "'''W'''" consisting of two slanted elongated circles and a shorter elongated circle inside a black square with rounded and soft corners), with the words "'''WARNER BROS TELEVISION'''" above it and the text "'''A WARNER COMMUNICATIONS COMPANY'''" below. All the text is in white and in the Handel Gothic font.


'''Variants:'''
=== 3rd Logo (September 1970-February 1972) ===
* The syndication logo had the words "'''DISTRIBUTED BY'''" cheaply tacked in above "'''WARNER BROS TELEVISION'''" in the early years of its usage. By 1974, the syndication variant featured the text "'''WARNER BROS TELEVISION DISTRIBUTION'''" instead.
* The words in the standard logo had a drop-shadow starting in 1977. Despite that, the Distribution variant stayed the same.
* There is an opening version that resembles the theatrical logo. It was seen on a few made-for-TV features, such as the original 1974 ''Wonder Woman'' movie.
* There is also a widescreen version seen on DVD and high-definition prints of some shows and TV movies.
* There is a superimposed variant of this logo that appeared on season 3 episodes of ''Alice''.
* There is an inverted version with a black abstract "'''W'''" on a white square. This was featured on some reprints of ''The Adventures of Superman''.
* Sometimes, the "'''DISTRIBUTED BY WARNER BROS'''" version of the movie logo is seen at the end of certain off-net syndicated TV series or TV movies on cable.
* Another series of logo variants involve two or three ''Looney Tunes'' characters: one seen on each side of the logo. This was common on ''The Bugs Bunny/Road Runner Hour'' and many ''Looney Tunes'' specials (see the 3rd logo on the [[Warner Bros. Animation]] page for more info).
* There's an in-credit variant of the closing logo seen in WB's films of this era, but the name "'''WARNER BROS TELEVISION'''" is used. This can be seen in the 1983 TV movie ''Sparkling Cyanide''.
* On the 1988 TV special ''Superman 50th Anniversary'', a still image of the WBTD logo is used.


'''Technique:''' A painting filmed by a cameraman. The opening variant uses motion-controlled animation.


'''Audio:''' None or the credit theme from the show or TV movie fading out.
<u>Nicknames</u>: "The Television Kinney Shield"


'''Audio Variant:''' On occasion, a dramatic seven-note horn fanfare is played.
<u>Logo</u>: Over a blue screen is an abstract shield (like those seen on WB '60s movie posters) in a <span style="color:#ffa500">golden</span> color with a dark brownish color inside. A simple lettering of the WB appears at the upper part and a rectangle of the same colors appear at the lower part of the shield, reading either "A KINNEY COMPANY" or "A KINNEY SERVICES COMPANY". The words "'''WARNER BROS. TELEVISION'''" appear underneath the logo.


'''Availability:'''
<u>Opening Variant</u>: The logo is the same, except "'''PRESENTS'''" in <span style="color:#ffa500">yellow</span> appears below the logo. This version appeared at the beginning of the original ''Banyon'' TV movie. Though sometimes, the logo is just a white print in a black background.
* It's still preserved on most 1972-1984 shows, including reruns of ''The Dukes of Hazzard'', ''Alice'', ''Bare Essence'', ''Challenge of the Super Friends'', ''The World's Greatest Super Friends'', and earlier episodes of ''Superfriends: The Legendary Super Powers Show'' when they were last shown on Boomerang, ''The F.B.I.'', and the first season of ''Night Court''.
** It's also retained on the DVD release of the latter.
* The later version of the syndication logo appears on the WCI Home Video releases of ''Dirty Harry'' and ''The Wild Bunch'', plastering the Kinney Shield on the former and preceding the W7 Shield on the latter, possibly due to those releases using the television masters instead of the theatrical prints.
* It's also seen on the 1st season (1983-1984) of ''Scarecrow and Mrs. King'', whenever it's rerun.
* The "Distributed By" version with the smaller logo also appeared on the U.S. reruns of ''Just the Ten of Us'' and on older SOAPnet reruns of ''Hotel''.
** It also appears on the VHS and Blu-ray releases of ''V: The Original Miniseries''.
* This logo was originally seen at the end of the 1st season of ''The Streets of San Francisco'', but with the exception of at least one local rerun episode, it's plastered over with either the 1974 or 1988 [[Worldvision Enterprises|Worldvision]] logos on older local reruns and Me-TV reruns of season three onwards or the 2006 [[CBS Paramount Television|CBS Paramount]] logo on DVD releases and Me-TV reruns of the first two seasons of the said show.
* On older Family Channel (now Freeform) reruns of ''Scarecrow and Mrs. King'', this logo, along with the [[B&E Enterprises]] logo (used on the 1st 11 episodes) of the 1st season, were all plastered with the next logo below.
** However, on PAX (now ION Television) reruns, this logo was used in tandem with the 1995 [[Warner Bros. Domestic Pay TV, Cable & Network Features|Domestic Pay TV, Cable & Network Features]] logo.
* Also, the "Distributed By" version was also used on a few season 4 episodes, either following the 6th logo or plastering it.
** On MeTV and Decades reruns of ''Wonder Woman'', this logo is either plastered by either the 6th or 11th (2001 version) logo, although one episode from its final season retained this logo.
** The "Distributed By" variant also made a sneak appearance on a Me-TV rerun of a season 2 Christmas episode of ''Welcome Back, Kotter''.
* The recent H&I (Heroes and Icons, formerly Me-Too) reruns of ''Kung Fu'' and the DVD releases have this plastered with the 11th logo (2001 version) with the low tone 1994 jingle.
* The black and white variant is retained on two episodes of ''The Adventures of Superman'' on its season 1 DVD release, titled "The Stolen Costume" and "The Unknown People, Part 2".
* On the S1 ''Night Court'' episode "The Former Harry Stone," this was plastered over with the 1996 [[Telepictures Distribution]] logo.
* The WBTD logo also makes an appearance on the 1988 TV special ''Superman 50th Anniversary'' instead of the next logo below.


===6th Logo (September 21, 1984-May 9, 1997)===
<u>FX/SFX</u>: None.
<tabber>

|-|Images=
<u>Music/Sounds</u>: None or the opening/closing theme.
<gallery mode="packed" heights="150">

Warner Bros. Television (1984).png
<u>Availability</u>: Extremely rare.
Warner Bros. Television (1984) (16x9).png
:* It appeared for a short time on some shows and made-for-TV movies of the era, such as ''The F.B.I.'' and ''The Jimmy Stewart Show''.
Warner Bros. Television Distribution (1984).png
:*This logo was also spotted on overseas syndicated prints of ''Archie's TV Funnies''.
:*''Nichols'' did not feature this logo, but an in-credit mention for Warner Bros. Television is used instead.
Warner Bros Television Distribution (1984, B&W).png
Warner Bros. Television (1990) 1.png

Warner Bros. Television (1990) 2.png

Warner Bros. Television Distribution (1990).png
<u>Editor's Note</u>: None.
Warner Bros Television Distribution (1992, B&W).png

Warner Bros. Television (1992).png

Warner Bros. Television Distribution (1992).png

File:Warner Bros. Television Distribution (1992-1998, widescreen version).jpg
=== 4th Logo (February-September 1972) ===
Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution (1993).png
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'''Visuals:''' Same as its movie counterpart, but "{{color|gold|{{Font|Times New Roman|'''WARNER BROS. TELEVISION'''}}}}" is added above the shield.
<u>Nicknames</u>: "Television WCI Shield", "Decorative WB Shield II"

<u>Logo</u>: It's the standard shield logo over a navy blue background, with the word "<span style="font-family:'Times New Roman';">'''TELEVISION'''</span>", in large letters, over the banner, and "A WARNER COMMUNICATIONS COMPANY" underneath.

<u>Trivia</u>: This logo looks quite similar to the 1995-2001 "[[Warner Bros. Animation]]" logo seen on the former Kids WB! and Cartoon Network shows.


'''Bylines:''' The following bylines were used during the logo's run:
<u>Variant</u>: A superimposed version exists on ''The Picasso Summer''.
*1984-1990: "{{color|gold|{{Font|Times New Roman|'''A WARNER COMMUNICATIONS COMPANY'''}}}}"
*1990-1996: "{{color|gold|{{Font|Times New Roman|'''A TIME WARNER COMPANY'''}}}}"
*1992-1997: "{{color|gold|{{Font|Times New Roman|'''A TIME WARNER ENTERTAINMENT COMPANY'''}}}}"


'''Variants:'''
<u>FX/SFX</u>: None unless you like to count fade-ins from credits.
* Many post-1984 TV movies and/or mini-series such as ''North and South: Books I'' and ''II'' use the 1984 Warner Bros. Pictures logo at the end.
* A B&W version of the 1984 WBTD logo exists.
* On the 1988 pilot of ''Just in Time'', the words "''in association with''" appear above the Warner Bros. Television text.
* On the 1993 cartoon series ''Family Dog'', the logo is shown on the right side of the screen on a black background, with the 1991 [[Universal Television (1963-1998)|Universal Television]] logo on the left.
* On some occasions starting in 1990, the words "{{color|gold|{{Font|Times New Roman|'''WARNER BROS. TELEVISION'''}}}}" are slightly more stretched out and the Time Warner byline is slightly shortened in.
* A B&W version of the 1990 WBTD logo also exists, which was seen on old TV Land airings of ''Gilligan's Island'', as well is being seen on the ''Tiny Toon Adventures'' episode "Two-Tone Town" for the 1992 logo.
* On a 1993 VHS release of ''Batman: The Animated Series'', the text is in an alternate font.


'''Network Variant:''' From 1984 to 1997, the WB shield appears (including the banner reading "{{color|gold|{{Font|Times New Roman|'''WARNER BROS. PICTURES'''}}}}"), with "{{color|gold|{{Font|Times New Roman|'''WARNER BROS. TELEVISION'''}}}}" on top and the owner's byline at the bottom.
<u>Music/Sounds</u>: None or the closing theme of the show.


'''Syndication Variants:'''
<u>Availability</u>: Very rare, as it appeared for quite a short time on TV.
* 1984-1997: The WB shield appears (including the banner reading "{{color|gold|{{Font|Times New Roman|'''WARNER BROS. PICTURES'''}}}}"), with "{{color|gold|{{Font|Times New Roman|'''WARNER BROS. TELEVISION'''}}}}" on top, and the word "{{color|gold|{{Font|Times New Roman|'''DISTRIBUTION'''}}}}" below it.
:*It was found on the 1984 Warner Home Video print of the pilot for ''Kung Fu'', but DVD editions of said pilot have the 10th logo instead of this one.
* 1993-1997: Same as the previous variant, but the text above the shield is replaced by "{{color|gold|{{Font|Times New Roman|'''WARNER BROS. DOMESTIC TELEVISION DISTRIBUTION'''}}}}", with the first three words overlapping the other two.
:*It also appeared on ''The F.B.I.'', the original ''Search'' TV movie (originally called ''Probe''), and some prints of ''The Picasso Summer'' (a feature film that debuted in the U.S. on television), but it's quite gone and it might be replaced by the 11th logo.
* 1994-1996: On syndicated prints of ''Family Matters'' and ''Full House'', it features both names, with the text "{{color|gold|{{Font|Times New Roman|'''WARNER BROS. TELEVISION'''}}}}" (in a slightly different font) appearing at first, before it cross-fades to "{{color|gold|{{Font|Times New Roman|'''WARNER BROS. DOMESTIC TELEVISION DISTRIBUTION'''}}}}" afterward. This logo variant still had the words "{{color|gold|{{Font|Times New Roman|'''WARNER BROS. PICTURES'''}}}}" in the shield banner. This was seen on syndicated reruns of seasons 5 and 6 of ''Family Matters'' and season 7 of ''Full House'', but the latter now cuts directly to the 2001 WBTD logo after the 1992 WBTV logo.
:*It's also seen on the 1970s version of ''The Merrie Melodies Show'' on Teletoon Retro, and in the TV pilot of ''The Delphi Bureau'' called ''The Delphi Bureau: The Merchant of Death Assignment'' on the Warner Archive Instant.


'''Technique:''' A painting filmed by a cameraman, and later a digital graphic. Fading effects for the cross-fade variant.


'''Audio:''' Mostly none or the end-title theme from any show. For syndication, one of the voice-overs listed below can be heard. Here is a list of the voice-overs used for early-mid '90s shows that were syndicated by Warner Bros. Basically, the following spiels are followed by "...and is distributed by Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution" (although ''The People's Court'' and ''Merrie Melodies'' lacked the word "Distribution"):
<u>Editor's Note</u>: None.
* ''Full House'' (Dave Coulier (as Joey Gladstone)): ''Full House'' is produced by [[Jeff Franklin Productions]] with [[Miller-Boyett Productions]] in association with [[Lorimar Television]] (seasons 1-6), Warner Bros. Television (season 7).
*''Family Matters'' (Reginald VelJohnson (as Carl Winslow)): ''Family Matters'' is a Miller Boyett Production in association with Lorimar Television (seasons 1-4), Warner Bros. Television (season 5). ([[Bickley/Warren Productions]] started co-producing the show in season 3, but the voice-over was not changed to mention Bickley/Warren. The season 5 variant also has VelJohnson using a different tone.)
* ''Head of the Class'' (Leslie Bega (as Maria Borges)): ''Head of the Class'' is a [[Eustis Elias Productions|Eustis Elias Production]] in association with Warner Bros. Television.
* ''Perfect Strangers'' (Mark Linn-Baker (as Larry Appleton)): ''Perfect Strangers'' is a Miller-Boyett Production in association with Lorimar Television.
* ''Growing Pains'' (Kirk Cameron (as Mike Seaver), Tracey Gold (as Carol Anne Seaver), or Jeremy Miller (as Ben Seaver)): ''Growing Pains'' is a [[Guntzelman-Sullivan-Marshall Productions|Guntzelman-Sullivan-Marshall Production]] in association with Warner Bros. Television (seasons 5 and 6), Warner Bros. Production (season 7).
* ''Murphy Brown'' (Charles Kimbrough (as Jim Dial)): ''Murphy Brown'' is a [[Shukovsky English Entertainment|Shukovsky English Production]] in association with Warner Bros. Television. (This is kept on post-1994 episodes with the 1994 theme playing under the voice-over.)
* ''Fun House'' (announcer John "Tiny" Hurley): ''Fun House'' is a [[Stone Television|Stone Television Production]] in association with and is distributed by [[Lorimar-Telepictures|Lorimaaaaaaar-Telepictures]]! Cool! (first season only, later replaced with mentions to Lorimar Television and Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution ("Oy!") (except for the final season, which was produced by [[Telepictures Productions]] instead of Lorimar Television).
* ''Alf'' (Brian Cummings or Jerry Bishop): ''Alf'' is an [[Alien Productions|Alien Production]].
* ''The Hogan Family'' (Jason Bateman (as David Hogan)): ''The Hogan Family'' is a Miller-Boyett Production in association with Lorimar Television.
* ''The People's Court'' (Jack Harrell (1981-93)): ''The People's Court'' is produced by [[Ralph Edwards/Stu Billett Productions|Ralph Edwards-Stu Billett Productions]] and is distributed by Lorimar-Telepictures (1987-89), Warner Bros. Domestic Television (1989-93).
* ''The People's Court'' (Curt Chaplin (1997-2023)): ''The People's Court'' is a Ralph Edwards-Stu Billett Production, distributed by Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution (WB line used until 2001).
* ''Moral Court'' (Announcer Unknown): ''Moral Court'' was created and produced by Stu Billett Productions, distributed by Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution.
* ''Time Trax'' (Announcer Unknown): ''Time Trax'' is a [[Gary Nardino Productions, Inc.|Gary Nardino Production]] in association with Lorimar Television (early 1993 episodes), Warner Bros. Television (1993-1994 eps).
* ''Step by Step'' (Patrick Duffy (as Frank Lambert)): ''Step by Step'' is a Miller-Boyett Production in association with Lorimar Television (seasons 1 and 2), Warner Bros. Television (season 3). (Again, Bickley/Warren Productions co-produced the series but is not mentioned.)
* ''Merrie Melodies Starring Bugs Bunny & Friends'' (Announcer Unknown): ''Merrie Melodies'' is a production of [[Warner Bros. Animation]].
* ''Love Connection'' (various announcers): This is [name] speaking for ''Love Connection''. ''Love Connection'' is an [[Eric Lieber Productions|Eric Lieber Production]], produced in association with and is distributed by Lorimar-Telepictures (later Lorimar Television and distributed by Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution from 1989, 2000's GSN airings plaster this logo with the 10th logo). (The 1998 revival was a PEL Production, produced in association with Telepictures Productions and distributed by [[Telepictures Distribution]].)
* ''Kung Fu: The Legend Continues'' (Richard Anderson): ''Kung Fu: The Legend Continues'' is produced by Warner Bros. Distributing Canada, Limited and is distributed by Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution (1993-1994 episodes only). Later episodes from 1995 to 1997 use the WBTV Distribution voice-over but the WBTV 1994 jingle music plays after the voiceover finishes over the 1996 WBTD logo (though TNT airings use the Domestic Pay TV logo instead which kept this voice over intact on the 1993-94 episodes).
* ''Trump Card'' (Chuck Reilly): ''Trump Card'' is a production of Createl Ltd. and [[Fiedler/Berlin Productions]] in association with Telepictures Productions.
* ''Babylon 5'' (Douglas Netter): ''Babylon 5'' is a [[Babylonian Productions|Babylonian Production]] (early Season 1 episodes only).
* ''3rd Degree!'' (Bob Hilton/Don Morrow): ''3rd Degree!'' is a [[Kline and Friends, Inc.|Kline and Friends Production]], in association with [[Burt & Bert Productions]] and Lorimar Television. (This show uses the standard 1984 WBTV logo, instead of the 1984 WBTD logo commonly used on shows distributed by WBTD.)
* ''The Jenny Jones Show'' (Announcer Unknown): This is a [[David Salzman Enterprises|David Salzman Production]] in association with Telepictures Productions.
* ''Night Court'' (John Larroquette (as Dan Fielding)): ''Night Court'' is a Warner Bros. Television Production (seasons 7-9 only, mid-2000's TV Land airings plaster this logo with the 11th logo but kept the voice-over intact).


'''Audio Variants:'''
* On season 1 reruns of ''The Hogan Family'' (originally called ''Valerie''), the standard and high tone variants of the 1986 Lorimar-Telepictures "Crashing Comets" themes are played on the 1990 WBTD logo.
* On syndicated reruns of ''Martin'' and Encore Classics airings of ''Murphy Brown'', the 1994 WBTV theme is used over the 1990 WBTD logo, the latter also retains its voice over due to plastering the next logo below.
* On the ''Batman: The Animated Series'' episode "Day of the Samurai", the 2003 WBTV theme was heard on the 1992 WBTD logo. This may have been a result of a double plaster.
* On original ABC airings and reruns of early season 2 episodes of ''Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman'' last seen on TNT and Hub Network (now Discovery Family) and seasons 6-8 of ''Family Matters'' as well as HD prints of early season 9, it uses the 1994 WBTV theme from the 8th logo.
* On HD prints of later season 9 episodes of ''Family Matters'', it uses the 1998 fanfare from the 9th logo, sometimes in low tone.
* On the Region 1 DVD print of the ''ThunderCats'' episode "Turmagar the Tuska", the short version of the 1986 Lorimar-Telepictures "Crashing Comets" theme is heard over the 1984 WBTV Distribution logo, due to an editing error.


'''Availability:'''
* Seen on ''Batman: The Animated Series'', ''Animaniacs'' (Nickelodeon/Nicktoons airings of the latter plaster this with the 2001 WBTD logo while Cartoon Network used the 8th and 9th logos), ''Tiny Toon Adventures'', ''Taz-Mania'', the first three seasons of ''Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman'' last aired on the Hub Network (now Discovery Family) and the latter was also retained on TNT years ago (plastered by the 2003 logo on HBO Max), the season 7 DVD release of ''Full House'' (plastered by the 2003 WBTD logo on MeTV and HBO Max), season 3 of ''Matt Houston'' on Decades (before or after the 2007 [[CBS Television Distribution]] logo), and a couple episodes of ''Martin'' on TV One (plastered by the 2003 WBTD logo on MTV2 and BET), among others.
** However, it is omitted from the HBO Max prints of ''Superman: The Animated Series''; while they do retain the opening Warner Bros. Family Entertainment logo, the closing logos have been deleted.
* The Distribution variant is seen on the 1995 TV movie ''Prince For a Day'', and at the end of a DVD print of the [[Rankin/Bass Animated Entertainment|Rankin/Bass]] special ''The Year Without a Santa Claus'' (was intact on ABC Family (now Freeform) years ago).
* The 1990 WBTV Distribution logo also plasters over the 1971 Lorimar "LP" and 1978 "Line of Doom" logos on ''Eight is Enough''.
** It is also seen at the beginning of the UK VHS releases of ''The Boyfriend from Hell'', ''Dillinger'' (1990), and ''Murder in Mississippi'', respectively.
* This logo is also seen at the end of early S1 episodes of ''Beetlejuice: The Animated Series'', ''The Super Powers Team: Galactic Guardians'', ''Night Court'', ''Growing Pains'', ''Family Matters'', ''Head of the Class'', ''Just the Ten of Us'', and the final season of ''The Dukes of Hazzard'', among others.
* The 1984 Warner Communications byline variant also showed up on a late 2010s Seven Network airing of ''Godzilla'' (2014) in Australia, thought that may be from the Network's habits of editing out the closing credits on every film shown.
* The 1984 WBTV Distribution logo is also seen on ''Super Friends: The Legendary Super Powers Show'', on a DVD print of ''The World's Greatest SuperFriends'' episode "The Planet of Oz", and also on episodes of both Filmation's ''The Adventures of Batman'' and ''Tarzan, Lord of the Jungle'' included on the DVD release of ''Saturday Morning Cartoons: 1970s Volume 1''.
* The 1984 WBTV Distribution logo was also seen at the end of a June 2, 1991 airing of ''Badlands'' (1973) on affiliate WPIX.
* The 1984 WBTV logo is also preserved on a later print of ''Bugs and Daffy's Carnival of the Animals'' (1976), which is included on the 2007 DVD release of ''Looney Tunes Golden Collection: Volume 5'', the Warner Archive Collection DVD release of the 1985 remake of ''The Bad Seed'', Tubi streaming prints of ''Spenser: For Hire'', the 1986 TV movie ''Of Pure Blood'', and ''V'' (1984 TV series), and was also seen on the original airing of ''Off the Rack'', the 1988 pilot of ''Just in Time'', and the 1989 failed pilot of ''American Nuclear'', respectively.
* The 1990 WBTV logo was also seen on a June 14, 1992 airing of part 1 of the 1980 TV miniseries ''Scruples'' on affiliate WVUE.
* The 1992 WBTV logo is also seen at the end of the True Movies 1 airings of the 1994 TV movie ''Lies of the Heart: The Story of Laurie Kellogg''.
* The ''Family Matters'' voiceover variant of the 1993 WBDTVD logo is also left intact on TBS' prints of the first five seasons of the show (season 5 also preserves the 1994 variant featuring both names), likely due to the use of older syndicated prints. Likewise, the network's prints of season 6 also preserves the aforementioned variant with both names.


=== 5th Logo (September 1972-September 1984) ===
===7th Logo (September 2, 1993-April 27, 1999)===
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'''Visuals:''' On a black/{{color|blue}} gradient, there is a white WB shield, with the banner reading "WARNER BROS.". Underneath is the Time Warner Entertainment byline and copyright notice.
<u>Nickname</u>: "Abstract W", "\\'"


'''Variant:''' On season 1 of ''The John Larroquette Show'' and ''Daddy's Girls'', the logo is superimposed over the credits.
<u>Logo</u>: We see a white abstract "\\'" consisting of two slanted elongated circles and a shorter elongated circle design inside a black square field, whose corners have been rounded and softened (the 1973-1984 Warner Bros. logo, or the Warner Communications logo), over a <span style="color:#ff0000">red</span> background. The words "'''WARNER BROS TELEVISION'''" is at the top, while "'''A WARNER COMMUNICATIONS COMPANY'''" is at the bottom. The typeface for the company name is in white Handel Gothic font.


'''Technique:''' A still image rendered in CGI.
<u>Variants</u>:
:*The syndication logo originally had the words "'''DISTRIBUTED BY'''" cheaply tacked in, over "'''WARNER BROS TELEVISION'''" in the early years. It was later referred to as "'''WARNER BROS TELEVISION DISTRIBUTION'''" by 1974.
:*The words in the standard logo appear in shadow mode starting in 1977. Despite that, the Distribution variant would remain shadowless.
:*There is an opening version that resembles their theatrical logo. It was seen on a few made-for-TV features such as the original 1974 ''Wonder Woman'' starring Cathy Lee Crosby.
:*There is also a widescreen version of this logo, seen on DVD and high-definition prints of some shows and TV movies.
:*There is a superimposed variant of this logo that appeared on season 3 episodes of Alice.
:*There is a black and white inverted version of the logo with a black abstract "W" on a white square field. This was featured on some reprints of ''The Adventures of Superman''.
:*Sometimes, the movie logo: "'''DISTRIBUTED BY WARNER BROS'''" is seen at the end of certain off-net syndicated TV series or TV movies on cable.
:*Depending on the film print quality, the logo background would appear <span style="color:#ff0000">reddish</span>-<span style="color:#ffa500">orange</span>.
:*Another series of logo variants involve two or three Looney Tunes characters: one seen on each side of the logo. This was common on ''The Bugs Bunny/Road Runner Hour'' and many Looney Tunes specials (see the 3rd logo on the [[Warner Bros. Animation]] page for more info).
:*There's an in-credit variant of the closing logo seen in WB's films of this era, but instead with "WARNER BROS TELEVISION" on top. This can be seen in the 1983 TV movie ''Sparkling Cyanide''.
:*On the 1988 TV special ''Superman 50th Anniversary'', a still image of the WBTD logo is used.


'''Audio:'''
*The ending theme of the show.
*Unknown on ''Everything's Relative'', due to the NBC generic announcement.


'''Availability:''' Seen on ''The John Larroquette Show'', ''Daddy's Girls'', ''The Secret Lives of Men'', and ''Everything's Relative'', in which the latter hasn't been reran or released on home media.
<u>FX/SFX</u>: In the inverted B&W version of the logo seen in ''The Adventures of Superman'', the logo fades in from a white screen, then fades out after a few seconds back into white. This is due to the inversion of the logo colors.


===8th Logo (September 1, 1994-February 11, 2001)===
<u>Music/Sounds</u>: Usually shown with music from the show or TV movie fading out or silent. On occasion, a dramatic 7-note horn fanfare is played.
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|-|Images=
<u>Availability</u>: More common than the movie logo.
<gallery mode="packed" heights="150">
:*It's still saved on most 1972-1984 shows, including reruns of ''The Dukes of Hazzard'' last aired on CMT before reruns were pulled due to debate over the Confederate flag, ''Alice'' last aired on ION, ''Challenge of the Super Friends'', ''The World's Greatest Super Friends'', and earlier episodes of ''Superfriends: The Legendary Super Powers Show'' when they were last shown on Boomerang, ''The F.B.I.'', and the first season of ''Night Court''. It's also retained on the DVD release of the latter.
Warner Bros. Television (1994) 1.png
:*Surprisingly, the later version of the syndication logo appears on the WCI Home Video releases of ''Dirty Harry'' and ''The Wild Bunch'', plastering the Kinney Shield on the former and preceding the W7 Shield on the latter.
Warner Bros. Television (1994) 2.png
:*It's also seen on the 1st season (1983-84) of ''Scarecrow and Mrs. King'', whenever someone decides to rerun that show.
Warner Bros. Television (1994) (16x9).png
:*The "Distributed By" version with the smaller \\' logo also once appeared on USA reruns of ''Just the Ten of Us'' and on older SOAPnet reruns of ''Hotel'', as well. It also appears on the VHS and Blu-ray releases of ''V: The Original Miniseries''.
Warner Bros Television (1969-1994).png
:*This logo was originally seen at the end of the 1st season of ''The Streets of San Francisco'', but with the exception of at least one local rerun episode, it's plastered over with either the 1974 or 1988 [[Worldvision Enterprises|Worldvision]] logo on older local reruns and Me-TV reruns of season three onwards or the [[CBS Paramount Television|CBS Paramount]] logo on DVDs and Me-TV reruns of the first two seasons of the said show.
Warner Bros Television (1994, rare variant).jpg
:*On older Family Channel (now Freeform) reruns of ''Scarecrow and Mrs. King'', this logo along with the B&E Enterprises logo (used on the 1st 11 episodes) of the 1st season were all plastered with the next logo below, although on PAX (now ION Television) reruns, this logo was used in tandem with the [[Warner Bros. Domestic Pay TV Cable & Network Features|Domestic Pay TV Cable & Network Features]] logo.
Warner Bros Television (1995, Warner Bros version).jpg
:*Also, the "Distributed By" version was also used on a few season 4 episodes, either following the 6th logo or plastering it. On MeTV reruns of ''Wonder Woman'', this logo is either plastered by either the 6th or 10th logo, although one episode from its final season retained this logo. The "Distributed By" variant also made a sneak appearance on a Me-TV rerun of a season 2 Christmas episode of ''Welcome Back, Kotter''.
Warner Bros Television (1995, alt. Warner Bros. version).jpg
:*The recent H&I (Heroes and Icons, formerly Me-Too) reruns of ''Kung Fu'' and the DVDs have this plastered with the 10th logo with the low tone jingle. The black and white variant is retained on two episodes of ''The Adventures of Superman'' on its season 1 DVD release, titled "The Stolen Costume" & "The Unknown People, Part 2".
Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution (1994).png
:*On the S1 ''Night Court'' episode "The Former Harry Stone," this was inexplicably plastered over with the 1996 [[Telepictures Distribution]] logo.
Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution (1996).png
:*The WBTD logo also makes a strange appearance on the 1988 TV special ''Superman 50th Anniversary''.
Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution (1994) (16x9) 1.png

Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution (1994) (16x9) 2.png

<u>Editor's Note</u>: None.



=== 6th Logo (September 1984-1998) ===
<gallery mode="packed" heights="200px"> <div style='text-align: center;'>text</div>
File:Warner Bros. Television (1984).png
File:Warner Bros. Television (1984) (16x9).png
File:Warner Bros. Television Distribution (1984).png
File:Warner Bros. Television (1990) 1.png
File:Warner Bros. Television (1990) 2.png
File:Warner Bros. Television Distribution (1990).png
File:Warner Bros. Television (1992).png
File:Warner Bros. Television Distribution (1992).png
File:Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution (1993).png
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'''Visuals:''' Almost the same as the 6th logo, only this time, the text "{{color|gold|{{Font|Times New Roman|'''WARNER BROS. TELEVISION'''}}}}" is removed from above the shield and now appears inside the banner, and the company byline appears in a different font. The overall appearance of the shield is a lot "shinier" and more golden.
<u>Nicknames</u>: "Television WB Shield", "Shield of Staleness", "The Shield Returns"


'''Variants:'''
<u>Logo</u>: Same as its movie counterpart with "<span style="font-family:'Times New Roman';">'''WARNER BROS. TELEVISION'''</span>" above the shield, and the owner byline at the bottom.
* During this logo's duration, two cloud backgrounds are used: one with more detailed clouds and one with less-detailed clouds and a much brighter color.
* On most first-run and non-WB syndicated shows, the banner reads "{{color|gold|{{Font|Times New Roman|'''WARNER BROS.'''}}}}".
* On the ''Free Willy'' animated series, the logo appears in a box on a black screen with a copyright stamp below.
* A variant that is seen on some prints of the original 1983 TV movie episodes of the original ''V: The Series'' exists, plastering the 1972-1984 logo. This also has a rough fade-out compared to the standard 1994 WBTV logo and the byline's in the same font as the previous logo, plus the clouds and the shield itself are darker than in the standard version.
** A 4:3 version also exists, which is preserved on every episode of ''Mayberry R.F.D.'' on the season 1 DVD set.
* The less-detailed clouds version of the logo is doubled on PAL DVD releases of ''Friends'' season 3, where the logo fades to black as the ending theme ends, it reappears and the standard 1994 WBTV theme plays at PAL speed.
* On ''Whose Line Is It Anyway?'', the logo is slightly enhanced, and the sky is also more {{color|deepskyblue|bluish}}.
* On ''Muscle'' and ''Minor Adjustments'', a copyright stamp appears under the company byline, and the shield banner just reads "{{color|gold|{{Font|Times New Roman|'''WARNER BROS.'''}}}}".
* A syndicated version exists, which has the text "{{color|gold|{{Font|Times New Roman|'''WARNER BROS. DOMESTIC TELEVISION DISTRIBUTION'''}}}}" above the shield.
* A widescreen version of the Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution variant also exists. The proportion of the shield is kept intact while the background and the text above and below the shield are being stretched to 16:9.


'''Technique:''' A digital graphic.
<u>Bylines</u>: First here are the little differences in the logo, along with dates in which they were used:
:*1984-1990: Referred to as "<span style="font-family:'Times New Roman';">'''A WARNER COMMUNICATIONS COMPANY'''</span>"
:*1990-1996: Referred to as "<span style="font-family:'Times New Roman';">'''A TIME WARNER COMPANY'''</span>"
:*1992-1998: Referred to as "<span style="font-family:'Times New Roman';">'''A TIME WARNER ENTERTAINMENT COMPANY'''</span>"


'''Audio:''' A seven-note horn theme with a drum rolling throughout and a cymbal clash at the last 2-3 notes, sometimes with the echo at the end. The music is basically the final notes of the ''Looney Tunes''/''Merrie Melodies'' theme song, "Merrily We Roll Along". Sometimes, it's silent or the closing theme of the show.


<u>Variants</u>:
'''Audio Variants:'''
* Some shows with the WBDTD variant have the first few (at least two) notes cut off. This variant is seen on first run syndicated shows and reruns like ''Living Single'' and ''Hangin' with Mr. Cooper''.
:*Many post-1984 TV movies and/or mini-series such as ''North and South: Books I'' and ''II'' would use the 1984 Warner Bros. Pictures logo at the end.
* Some shows produced in association with WBTV have the theme cut in half.
:*On the short-lived cartoon series ''Family Dog'', the logo was paired with the 1991 [[Universal Television]] logo with the Universal TV logo on the left and the 1990 WBTV logo on the right on a black background.
* Sometimes, a low tone version is heard, which also exists.
:*The 1990 WBTV shield will sometimes have the words "<span style="font-family:'Times New Roman';">'''WARNER BROS. TELEVISION'''</span>" slightly more stretched out and the Time Warner byline slightly shortened in.
* On ''The West Wing'', the fanfare is high-pitched; it is unknown if this came from an NTSC or a PAL print.
:*A B&W version of the 1990 WBTD logo was used on old TV Land airings of ''Gilligan's Island''.
* On ''Friends'', the last few seconds of the show's theme music, "I'll Be There For You" by The Rembrandts, is heard.
:*On ''The John Larroquette Show'', the logo is an in-credit logo on a black-dark blue gradient screen in a white color with a copyright notice underneath the TWE byline. Plus, the banner reads "<span style="font-family:'Times New Roman';">'''WARNER BROS.'''</span>". The first episode appears on a sunset scene from the show, while the rest of the 1st season has it superimposed over live-action scenes from the day's episode.
* Reruns of seasons 1-4 of ''The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air'' had a hip-hop theme.
:*On a 1993 VHS of ''Batman: The Animated Series'', the text is in an alternate font.
* On original WB broadcasts and some reruns of ''The Parent 'Hood'' and season 1 of ''The Jamie Foxx Show'' episode "Burned Twice by the Same Flame", the theme is double-high-toned (high-pitched) and in warp-speed on almost all episodes prior to 1999.
* The 1997 revival of ''The People's Court'' used Curt Chaplin's voice over on this logo. 1999-2001 episodes presided by Judge Jerry Sheindlin used Chaplin's re-recorded voice over.
* On pre-2003 syndicated prints of ''The Jamie Foxx Show'', Jamie Foxx's closing jingle, "Electrifying (Baby, That's Real)" plays in the background throughout the entire four-way logo combo. On DVD, however, it would retain its normal music.
* On the ''Mayberry R.F.D.'' episode "The Camper", an audio glitch causes the last few notes of the show's theme to replay quietly (and with static) over the usually silent logo.
* On some shows, the fanfare succeeded the show's ending theme. In some cases, the logo even cut to black after the end theme played, before cutting back to the logo just to play the fanfare. This was most common with seasons 2-4 of ''Friends'', and also occurs with the next four logos, with the 11th logo plastering over the previous four on HD remasters.
* NBC, CBS and some 1997 and post-1998 ABC airings used their respective generic themes.
* On both the pilot episode and episode 22 of ''Mortal Kombat: Conquest'' on the series' PAL DVD release, the high tone variant of the 1998 fanfare from the 9th logo is heard.


'''Availability:''' Seen on shows by the company from the time-period until 2001.
* Examples include ''Friends'', ''The Wayans Bros'', ''Living Single'', ''On Our Own'', and ''The Murphy Brown Retrospective Special'', among others.
* The standard version is currently preserved on the final season of ''Full House'' on DVD (although the 2003 logo replaces it on HBO Max and MeTV) and was also seen on the original FOX prints of ''Living Single'' on Bounce.
* The 1996 WBDTD version was seen on former ''Family Matters'' reruns on Nick at Nite and was also seen on reruns of ''Living Single'' in syndication years ago.
* The 1994 WBDTD version is still seen on ''Living Single'' on TV One (plastered by the 2003 logo on We, and was retained on USA Network years ago, but followed by the 2001 logo), as well as on ''Babylon 5'' PTEN airings for seasons 2-4.
* It is also seen on S1-1st half S3 episodes and 2nd half S4-S5 (until the episode "Oswald's Son") episodes of ''The Drew Carey Show'' and the 1999-00 season of ''Access Hollywood'' in syndication (replacing [[20th Television]]).
* This logo (along with the next ones) does not appear at the end of [[Cartoon Network Productions|Cartoon Network]] or [[Williams Street]] shows, although most of its shows are distributed by the company.


===9th Logo (Warner Bros. 75th anniversary logo) (January 1-December 1998)===
<u>Network Variant</u>: From 1984-1995, the WB shield appears (including the banner reading "<span style="font-family:'Times New Roman';">'''WARNER BROS. PICTURES'''</span>"), with "<span style="font-family:'Times New Roman';">'''WARNER BROS. TELEVISION'''<span>" on top, the owner byline at the bottom.
<tabber>
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</gallery>
|-|Videos=
{{YouTube|id=-YmYwp_OvQw|id2=1MFwOmrxm-k|id3=ECeNaKTAbRc}}
</tabber>


'''Visuals:''' There is a near-still shot of the 1997/1998 movie logo, with the words "{{color|gold|{{Font|Times New Roman|'''''75 YEARS'' Entertaining The World'''}}}}" on both sides of the WB shield, the banner either reading "{{color|gold|{{Font|Times New Roman|'''WARNER BROS.'''}}}}" or "{{color|gold|{{Font|Times New Roman|'''WARNER BROS. PICTURES'''}}}}", and a darker background.
<u>Syndication Variants</u>: Now here are the syndication variations of the logo, along with dates in which they were used:
:*1984-1997: The WB shield appears (including the banner reading "<span style="font-family:'Times New Roman';">'''WARNER BROS. PICTURES'''</span>"), with "<span style="font-family:'Times New Roman';">'''WARNER BROS. TELEVISION'''</span>" on top, and the word "<span style="font-family:'Times New Roman';">'''DISTRIBUTION'''</span>" below that.
:*1993-1997: The same as the previous variation, but this time, the words appear as "<span style="font-family:'Times New Roman';">'''WARNER BROS. DOMESTIC TELEVISION DISTRIBUTION'''</span>", the first three words overlapping the other two.
:*1994-1996: Some off-network shows would have a combo of the logo text. It appears as "<span style="font-family:'Times New Roman';">'''WARNER BROS. TELEVISION'''</span>" (in a slightly different font) at first, then cross-fades to "<span style="font-family:'Times New Roman';">'''WARNER BROS. DOMESTIC TELEVISION DISTRIBUTION'''</span>" soon afterward. This logo variant still had the words "<span style="font-family:'Times New Roman';">'''WARNER BROS. PICTURES'''</span>" in the shield banner. This was seen on syndicated reruns 1993-94 episodes of ''Family Matters'' and ''Full House'', but the latter now cuts directly to the 2001 WBTD logo after the 1992 WBTV logo.


'''Trivia:''' This logo debuted before its movie counterpart, which first appeared on the movie ''Fallen'', released on January 16, 1998.


'''Variant:''' The "{{color|gold|{{Font|Times New Roman|'''WARNER BROS.'''}}}}" variant of the logo was doubled on PAL DVD releases of ''Friends'' season 4. The first one appears in a video master's quality, while the second one has much better quality, according to the uploader of these videos (ClosingLogosHD). Sometimes, the first one cuts to black.
<u>FX/SFX</u>: None, except the cross-fade text version in 1993.


'''Technique:''' CGI. Like the movie logo, this was done by Intralink Film Graphic Design.
<u>Music/Sounds/Voice-overs</u>: Mostly none or the end-title theme from any show. For syndication, the following voice-over can be heard below. Here is a list of the stars that did the voice-over and the production company stated for early-mid '90s shows that were syndicated by Warner Bros. Basically, the spiels are what we have listed here, but also add ".....and is distributed by Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution" (although ''The People's Court'' and ''Merrie Melodies'' lacked the word "Distribution") to each of these parts so you can get the full experience:
:*''Full House'' (Dave Couiler (as Joey Gladstone)): ''Full House'' is produced by Jeff Franklin Productions with Miller-Boyett Productions in association with [[Lorimar Television]] (1987-1993 episodes), Warner Bros. Television (1993-1994 season).
:*''Family Matters'' (Reginald Vel Johnson (as Carl Winslow)): ''Family Matters'' is a Miller Boyett Production in association with Lorimar Television (1989-1993 eps), Warner Bros. Television (1993-1994 season).
:*''Head of the Class'' (Leslie Bega (as Maria Borges)): ''Head of the Class'' is a Eustis-Elias Production in association with Warner Bros. Television.
:*''Perfect Strangers'' (Mark Linn-Baker (as Larry Appleton)): ''Perfect Strangers'' is a Miller-Boyett Production in association with Lorimar Television.
:*''Growing Pains'' (Kirk Cameron (as Mike Seaver) or Tracey Gold (as Carol Anne Seaver)): ''Growing Pains'' is a Guntzelman-Sullivan-Marshall Production in association with Warner Bros. Television.
:*''Murphy Brown'' (Charles Kimbrough (as Jim Dial)): ''Murphy Brown'' is a Shukovsky-English Production in association with Warner Bros. Television. (kept on post-1994 episodes with the 1994 theme playing under the voice over)
:*''Fun House'' (announcer John "Tiny" Hurley): ''Fun House'' is a Stone Television Production in association with and is distributed by [[Lorimar-Telepictures|Lorimaaaaaaar-Telepictures]]! Cool! (first season only, later replaced with mentions to Lorimar Television and Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution ("Oy!") (except for the final season, which was produced by [[Telepictures Productions]] instead of Lorimar Television).
:*''Alf'' (Brian Cummings (not on the show, an announcer)): ''Alf'' is an Alien Production.
:*''The Hogan Family'' (Jason Bateman (as David Hogan)): ''The Hogan Family'' is a Miller-Boyett Production in association with Lorimar Television.
:*''The People's Court'' (Jack Harrell (1981-93)): ''The People's Court'' is produced by Ralph Edwards-Stu Billett Productions and is distributed by Lorimar-Telepictures (1987-1989), Warner Bros. Domestic Television (1989-1993).
:*''The People's Court'' (Curt Chaplin (1997-present)): ''The People's Court'' is a Ralph Edwards-Stu Billett Production, distributed by Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution (WB line used until 2001).
:*''Moral Court'' (Announcer TBA): ''Moral Court'' was created and produced by Stu Billett Productions, distributed by Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution.
:*''Time Trax'' (Announcer TBA): ''Time Trax'' is a Gary Nardino Production in association with Lorimar Television (early 1993 episodes), Warner Bros. Television (1993-1994 eps).
:*''Step by Step'' (Patrick Duffy (as Frank Lambert)): ''Step by Step'' is a Miller-Boyett Production in association with Lorimar Television (1991-1993 episodes), Warner Bros. Television (1993-1994 season).
:*''Merrie Melodies Starring Bugs Bunny & Friends'' (Announcer TBA): ''Merrie Melodies'' is a production of Warner Bros. Animation.
:*''Love Connection'' (various announcers): This is [name] speaking for ''Love Connection''. ''Love Connection'' is an Eric Lieber Production, produced in association with and is distributed by Lorimar-Telepictures (later Lorimar Television and distributed by Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution from 1989, GSN airing plaster this logo with the 10th logo). For the short-lived 1998 revival, it was a PEL Production, produced in association with Telepictures Productions and distributed by Telepictures Distribution.
:*''Kung Fu: The Legend Continues'' (Richard Anderson): ''Kung Fu: The Legend Continues'' is produced by Warner Bros. Distributing Canada, Limited and is distributed by Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution (1993-1994 episodes only). Later episodes from 1995 to 1997 use the WBTV Distribution voice-over but the WBTV 1994 jingle music plays after the voiceover finishes over the 1996 WBTD logo (though TNT airings use the Domestic Pay TV logo instead).
:*''Trump Card'' (Chuck Reilly): ''Trump Card'' is a production of Createl Ltd. and [[Fiedler/Berlin Productions]] in association with Telepictures Productions.
:*''Babylon 5'' (Douglas Netter): ''Babylon 5'' is a Babylonian Production (early Season 1 episodes only).
:*''3rd Degree!'' (Bob Hilton/Don Morrow): ''3rd Degree!'' is a Kline and Friends Production, in association with Burt & Bert Productions and Lorimar Television. (Although this show inexplicably uses the standard 1984 WBTV logo, instead of the 1984 WBTD logo commonly used on shows distributed by WBTD.)
:*''The Jenny Jones Show'' (Announcer TBA): This is a David Salzman Production in association with Telepictures Productions.
:*''Night Court'', John Larroquette (as Dan Fielding): ''Night Court'' is a Warner Bros. Television Production (1989-1992 episodes only).


'''Audio:''' A truncated version of the wind-blowing theme from the 1998 theatrical logo or the end theme of a show.


<u>Music/Sounds Variants</u>:
'''Audio Variants:'''
* For the "Warner Bros. Pictures" version, this logo is usually silent or has the closing theme of the show/movie, but on rare occasions, the 1994 theme from the previous logo is heard.
:*On season 1 reruns of ''The Hogan Family'' (originally called Valerie), the Lorimar-Telepictures standard and high tone themes were played on the 1990 WBTD logo. This was a result due to bad plastering.
* The Roku Channel print of season 3, episode 10 of ''Suddenly Susan'' had the chimes audibly heard before the 2003 Warner Bros. Pictures logo, along with the 1999 fanfare, even appears.
:*On syndicated reruns of ''Martin'' and Encore Classics airings of ''Murphy Brown'', the 1994 WBTV theme is used over the 1990 WBTD logo, the latter also retains it's voice over due to plastering the next logo below.
* A low tone variant of the 1998 fanfare exists, which was heard on a few episodes of ''Meego'' (international airings).
:*On the ''Batman: The Animated Series'' episode "Day of the Samurai", the 2003 WBTV theme was heard on the 1992 WBTD logo. This may have been a result of a double plaster.
* A silent version of the standard logo was used on seasons 4 and 5 of ''ER'' and early 2000s TV Land airings of ''Gilligan's Island''.
:*On original ABC airinigs and reruns of early season 2 episodes of ''Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman'' last seen on TNT and Hub Network (now Discovery Family) and VOD releases of ''Family Matters'', it uses the logo theme from the next logo.
:*On VOD releases of the final season episodes of ''Family Matters'', it uses the music from the 8th logo.
* On old airings of ''Rudolph's Shiny New Year'' on Fox/ABC Family (now Freeform), it had the [[Rankin/Bass Animated Entertainment|Rankin/Bass]] logo music trailing underneath.
* The ending theme of the show used was also used on ''Animaniacs'' seasons 1-2 to plaster the 6th logo before falling silent.
* On PAL DVD prints of later season 4 episodes of ''Friends'', the ''Friends'' theme is heard. As the theme finishes, the 1998 theme is heard, but in high tone.
* ABC, CBS and NBC airings used the respective channels' generic themes.
* 1998 episodes of the 1997 revival of ''The People's Court'' used Curt Chaplin's voice over on this logo.
* A 2000 TBS airing of ''The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air'' used the hip-hop theme from the previous logo.


'''Availability:'''
* Seen on the fourth and fifth seasons of ''Friends'' (however, HD prints plaster this logo with the 2003 logo instead), the first and second seasons of ''Veronica's Closet'' when last reran on TV Guide Network (now Pop, one overseas airing had the 2003 logo follow this logo), some rerun episodes from the final season of ''Family Matters'', on the second half of season 4 episodes of ''The Parent 'Hood'', the first season of ''Whose Line Is It Anyway?'', 1998 episodes of the fourth and fifth seasons of ''ER'' (plastered on DVD, VOD, Max, and Pop airings by the 2003 logo, but retained on some episodes on TNT years ago, while some had this logo plastered by the 1995 Cable-Pay TV logo with the 1994 theme), early 2000s airings of ''The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air'' on TBS (current prints plaster this logo with the 2003 logo), 1998 episodes of ''The Rosie O'Donnell Show'' in syndication, some 1998 episodes of ''Extra'', ''The People's Court'', and ''The Jenny Jones Show'' in syndication, early 2000s TV Land prints of ''Gilligan's Island'', TNT airings of 1998 episodes of ''Babylon 5'', and early episodes of both ''Brimstone'' and ''Mortal Kombat: Conquest'' (the latter also has this logo plastered by the 2003 logo on remastered prints), among others.
* It is also seen on the second half of season 3 and the first half of season 4 episodes of ''The Drew Carey Show'' (Laff reruns of the show from 2017-2018 kept the logo, but when it aired on Rewind TV in 2024, it was plastered with the 2003 logo), and the second half of the final season of ''Murphy Brown''.
* This logo also plastered the 6th logo on 1998-2001 Cartoon Network airings of ''Animaniacs'', with the 1995 Cable-Pay TV version of the previous logo inserted after it (although post-season 3 episodes of the latter show have this logo follow the [[Warner Bros. Animation|Warner Bros. Television Animation]] logo of the time, and has the 1995 Cable-Pay TV logo following after this logo), though both this logo and the 1995 Cable-Pay TV logo followed the 6th logo on old TNT airings of the 1990 film ''Nightbreed''.
* This logo debuted on the last two episodes of ''Living Single'', which aired on New Years' Day (January 1st), 1998 (although recent VH1 reruns of the latter show have fallen victim to modern, Nickelodeon-style "last-scene-of-the-show" credits, along with this logo being plastered by the widescreen version of the "Distributed by" version of the 2003 logo [while the preceding [[SisterLee Productions]] logo has the words "In Association With"]).
* This logo was also used in tandem with the 1995 Cable-Pay TV logo for shows of the time that were aired/rerun on cable networks.
* This logo was also seen at the end of both Cartoon Network and Boomerang airings of ''Scooby-Doo on Zombie Island'' (1998) and an August 18, 2002 TCM airing of ''The Incredible Mr. Limpet'' (1964), respectively, which is then followed by the 1995 Warner Bros. Cable-Pay TV logo afterwards.
* It was also seen at the end of the pilot of ''Maximum Bob'', following the [[Sonnenfeld Josephson Worldwide Entertainment]] logo.
* It was also seen at the end of a Canadian airing of the pilot of ''Brimstone'' on Space (now CTV Sci-Fi Channel).
* It was also seen at the end of a February 11, 2006 airing of a 1995 episode of ''Friends'' on Minneapolis/St. Paul's ABC-affiliated KSTP-TV.
* It was also seen at the end of an April 1, 2024 U.S. airing of the 1958 ''Looney Tunes'' short "Knighty Knight Bugs" on Cartoon Network.


===10th Logo (April 5, 2000-April 29, 2001)===
<u>Availability</u>: Uncommon.
<tabber>
:*It was featured on ''Batman: The Animated Series'', ''Animaniacs'' (Nickelodeon/Nicktoons airings of the latter plaster this with the 10th WBTD logo while Cartoon Network used the next 2 logos below), ''Tiny Toon Adventures'', ''Taz-Mania'', the first three seasons of ''Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman'' last aired on the Hub Network (now Discovery Family) and the latter was also retained on TNT years ago, the season 7 DVD release of ''Full House'', season 3 of ''Matt Houston'' on Decades (before or after the [[CBS Television Distribution]] logo), and a couple episodes of ''Martin'' on TV One (plastered by the 11th WBTD logo on MTV2 and BET), among others.
|-|Images=
:*The Distribution variant was seen on original NBC airings of ''Prince For a Day'' and at the end of a DVD of the [[Rankin-Bass Animated Entertainment|Rankin-Bass]] special ''The Year Without a Santa Claus''.
<gallery mode="packed" heights="200">
:*The 1990 WBTV Distribution logo plastered over the Lorimar "LP" and "Line of Doom" logos on ''Eight is Enough''.
Warner Bros. Television (2000) (4x3).png
:*It also appeared at the end of early S1 episodes of ''Beetlejuice: The Animated Series'', ''The Super Powers Team: Galactic Guardians'', ''Night Court'', ''Growing Pains'', ''Family Matters'', ''Head of the Class'', ''Just the Ten of Us'', and the final season of ''The Dukes of Hazzard'', among others.
Warner Bros. Television (2000) (16x9).png
:*The Warner Communications byline variant also strangely showed up on a recent Seven Network airing of ''Godzilla'' (2014) in Australia, thought that may be from the Network's sloppy habits of editing out the closing credits on every film shown.
Warner Bros. Television (2000) (B&W).png

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Warner Bros. Television Distribution (2000) (16x9).png
<u>Editor's Note</u>: None.
Produced and Distributed by Warner Bros. Television logo (2000).PNG



=== 7th Logo (September 1994-December 1997, January 1999-January 2001) ===
<gallery mode="packed" heights="200px"> <div style='text-align: center;'>text</div>
File:Warner Bros. Television (1994) 1.png
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File:Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution (1996).png
</gallery>
</gallery>
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</tabber>


'''Visuals:''' On a sky background which is slightly better-defined than those from the previous logos, there is the Warner Bros. shield logo with the text "{{color|gold|{{Font|Times New Roman|'''WARNER BROS. TELEVISION'''}}}}" on the banner. The text "{{color|gold|{{Font|Times New Roman|'''DISTRIBUTED BY'''}}}}" or "{{color|gold|{{Font|Times New Roman|'''PRODUCED AND DISTRIBUTED BY'''}}}}" is above the shield (sometimes being omitted), and the byline (which is reverted to its first font) and a small URL for "{{color|gold|www.warnerbros.com}}" are below.
<u>Nicknames</u>: "Television WB Shield II", "Shield of Staleness II"


'''Variants:'''
<u>Logo</u>: Almost the same as the last logo, only this time, the word "<span style="font-family:'Times New Roman';">'''WARNER BROS. TELEVISION'''</span>" is removed from above the shield and now appears inside the shield banner, and the company byline appears under another typeface. The overall appearance of the shield is a lot "shinier" and golden.
* Reruns of season 1 episodes of ''Static Shock'' on Disney XD and some online prints of seasons 4 & 5 of ''ER'' use the static 2000 Warner Bros. Pictures logo (the former omitting the URL).
* A B&W and silent version was seen on the 2000 made-for-TV movie remake of ''Fail Safe''.


'''Technique:''' A digital graphic.
<u>Variants</u>:
:*During this logo's duration, two cloud backgrounds were used: one with more detailed clouds and one with less-detailed clouds and is much brighter.
:*The banner reads "<span style="font-family:'Times New Roman';">'''WARNER BROS.'''</span>" on most first-run and non-WB syndicated shows.
:*On the ''Free Willy'' animated series, the logo is seen in a box on a black screen with a copyright stamp below.
:*There is a rare widescreen filmed variant that was seen on some prints of the original 1983 TV movie episodes of the original ''V: The Series'', which plastered the Big \\'. This also had a rough fade-out compared to the standard 1994 WBTV logo and the byline has the same typeface as the previous logo, plus the clouds and the shield itself is more darker than the standard version is. There is also a 4:3 version that can be seen on every episode of ''Mayberry R.F.D.'' on the season 1 DVD set.
:*On ''Whose Line Is It Anyway?'', the logo is slightly enhanced. Plus, the sky is more bluish.
:*On the short-lived series ''Muscle'', a copyright stamp is seen under the company byline, and the shield banner just reads "<span style="font-family:'Times New Roman';">'''WARNER BROS.'''</span>" (likely because this was used as the closing logo for The WB Television Network's first night of shows).
:*A syndicated version has the text "<span style="font-family:'Times New Roman';">'''WARNER BROS. DOMESTIC TELEVISION DISTRIBUTION'''</span>".


'''Audio:''' The end-title theme of any series, the 1994 WBTV theme, or silence. ''The People's Court'', ''Moral Court'' and some episodes of ''Growing Pains'' all had voice overs on this logo.


'''Audio Variants:'''
<u>FX/SFX</u>: None.
* On the 2000 remake of ''The Fugitive'', a majestic fanfare is heard. However, on the pilot episode of the same show, the 1994 WBTV theme is sped up and pitched up by 5 semitones.
* On syndicated prints of season 6 of ''The Drew Carey Show'', the show's stinger theme is heard.
* On later season 1 and some season 2 episodes of ''The West Wing'', the fanfare is PAL pitched; it is unknown if this came from an NTSC or a PAL print.


'''Availability:''' This was only used for a short time before Time Warner merged with [[America Online]].
<u>Music/Sounds</u>: A 7-note loud horn theme with a drum rolling throughout. This is basically the last 7 notes of the "Merry-Go-Broke-Down" jingle from Looney Tunes.
* It was seen on older reruns of ''Growing Pains'' last aired on TeenNick and currently seen on Antenna TV though in split screen form.
* It was also seen on fall 2000-early 2001 episodes from the 2000-01 season of ''Access Hollywood'' in syndication, and pre-2001 episodes of ''Moral Court'' during its original syndication run and last seen on Ion reruns of said show.
* This also appeared on the NBC/WB sitcom ''For Your Love''.
* This was also seen on the last few season 5 (starting with the episode "Mr. Wick Returns") and the 1st half of season 6 episodes of ''The Drew Carey Show'' from this era; Laff and Rewind TV reruns have retained it.
* VOD, HBO Max, and Pop airings of season 1 and season 6 episodes, online airings of seasons 4 and 5, and reruns on TNT and syndication years ago of ''ER'' also had this logo, but were plastered on the DVD releases by the 2001 and 2003 logos below, respectively.
* As of 2018, this can still be seen on UP reruns of the 2000 and 2001-era episodes of the first incarnation of ''Whose Line Is It Anyway?''.
* This was also seen on original WB airings of the final season of ''The PJ's'', but other prints have the 2001 logo instead.
* This was also seen on the failed 2000 pilot to the TV adaptation of ''L.A. Confidential'' on Trio as part of their Brilliant But Cancelled block in 2003.


===11th Logo (January 29, 2001-October 1, 2021)===
<u>Music/Sounds Variants</u>:
<tabber>
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{{#tag:tabber|
{{!}}-{{!}}
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<gallery mode=packed heights=200>
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Warner Bros. Television Distribution (2001) (From - Channel 4 and E4 airings of Smallville).png
</gallery>
{{!}}-{{!}}
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}}


'''Visuals:''' The logo is now a TV rendition of the 1992 variant of the 11th [[Warner Bros. Pictures]] logo. The sky background is either darker or brighter, and the 1984 shield logo with the banner inscription "{{color|gold|{{Font|Times New Roman|'''WARNER BROS. TELEVISION'''}}}}" is seen. Like the previous logo, this one often includes either "{{color|gold|{{Font|Times New Roman|'''Distributed by'''}}}}" or "{{color|gold|{{Font|Times New Roman|'''Produced and Distributed by'''}}}}" above the shield, and the byline "{{color|gold|{{Font|Times New Roman|'''An AOL Time Warner Company'''}}}}" is below the shield, sometimes with a small website URL reading "{{color|gold|www.warnerbros.com}}".
:*Some shows with WBDTD would have the first few notes cut off used on first run syndicated shows and reruns like ''Living Single'' and ''Hangin' with Mr. Cooper''.
:*Some shows in association with WBTV would have the theme cut in half.
:*Reruns of ''The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air'' would have a hip-hop theme until the 1994-1996 episodes.
:*Original WB broadcasts and some reruns of ''The Parent 'Hood'', it used a high tone variation of the 1994 WBTV jingle on almost all episodes prior to 1998.
:*The 1997 revival of ''The People's Court'' used Curt Chaplin's voice over on this logo.
:*On pre-2003 syndicated prints of ''The Jamie Foxx Show'', Jamie Foxx's closing jingle, "Electrifying (Baby, That's Real)" plays in the background throughout the entire four-way logo combo. On DVD, however, it would retain its normal music.
:*On the ''Mayberry R.F.D.'' episode "The Camper", an audio glitch causes the last few notes of the show's theme to replay very quietly (and with an extra helping of static) over the usually silent logo.
:*In some instances, it used the end theme from a show or none. (the Cable-Pay TV logo would be silent most of the time except on some TNT airings of ''ER'', older ABC Family airings of ''Family Matters'' and the short lived series ''Crusade'').
:*On some shows, the fanfare would succeed the show's ending theme. In some cases, the logo would even cut to black after the end theme plays, then cut back to the logo just to play the fanfare. This was most common with ''Friends'', and also occurs with the next four logos, with the 11th plastered over the previous 4 in HD remasters''.''


'''Variants:'''
* Early 2001-2003: This logo has a different cloud background, and a shinier WB shield logo, like that of the [[Warner Bros. Animation|Warner Bros. Classic/Television Animation]] version, albeit without sparkles on the shield logo. The text "{{color|gold|{{Font|Times New Roman|'''Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution'''}}}}" is above the shield logo with the new byline below it. The company URL is also temporarily removed. This was seen on the February 23, 2001 episode of ''Access Hollywood'', early episodes of ''The Ellen DeGeneres Show'' and some 2003 episodes of ''Street Smarts'', the latter two both used prior to the debut of the 2003 logo.
* A narrow version of the 2001 logo exists.
* One of the seasons of ''Extra'' earlier in the 2000s had the 2001 logo logo play as usual, except it ended with a shot of the logo on a television screen inside a giant X (this was when ''Extra'' had their logo revised from the '90s black and white one, to the "x" in a {{color|blue}} circle logo).
* A variant of the 2001 logo where the banner only reads "{{color|gold|{{Font|Times New Roman|'''WARNER BROS.'''}}}}" also exists, which is seen on the HBO miniseries ''Band of Brothers'', and the Kids' WB! series ''The Nightmare Room''.
* Another variant of the 2001 logo with the URL omitted which only the shield and the byline appear also exists, which is seen on ''Thieves'' (2001), and the second and third episodes of ''Birds of Prey''.
* An open-matte 2001 distribution variant also exists.
* A complete widescreen version of the 2001 logo with the clouds being enhanced also exists, which can be found on ''Witchblade''.
* On a Dutch airing of ''Third Watch'', the open-matte version is shown, but the URL has a different internet code, which is "{{color|gold|co.uk}}". This is the British website for Warner Bros.
** This was also seen on the UK airings of ''The West Wing'', and is also preserved on a season 3 episode of ''Kung Fu'' on DVD.
* A variant of the 2001 logo found on UK airings of ''Friends'', ''ER'' and ''The West Wing'' have an AOL Keyword below the logo "'''AOL''' Keyword: (Name of Either Show, i.e. "West Wing")" ("'''AOL'''" in its corporate acronym of the time) with the URL website reading "'''www.warnerbros.co.uk'''".
* A B&W variant of the 2001 Distribution variant also exists.
* On the final episode of ''The Rosie O'Donnell Show'', the copyright stamp appears below the AOL Time Warner byline and the URL which also exists.


'''Technique:''' A digital graphic.
<u>Availability</u>: Uncommon.
:*The standard version is currently seen on the final season of ''Full House'' on DVD and the original FOX prints of ''Living Single'' on Bounce.
:*The WBTV/WBDTD cross-fade version appeared on 1993-1996 episodes of ''Full House'' and ''Family Matters''.
:*The 1996 WBDTD version appeared on former ''Family Matters'' reruns on Nick at Nite. The 1994 WBDTD version still appears on ''Living Single'' on TV One (plastered by the 11th logo on We, and was retained on USA Network years ago but followed by the 10th logo).
:*It's also seen on S1-1st half S3 episodes and 2nd half S4-S5 (until the episode "Oswald's Son") episodes of ''The Drew Carey Show'' and the 1999-00 season of ''Access Hollywood'' in syndication (replacing [[20th Television]]).


'''Audio:''' The 1994 theme from the 8th logo, the closing theme of the show (also on the "Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution" variant), or none.


'''Audio Variants:'''
<u>Editor's Note</u>: None.
* Sometimes, a low tone variant of the 1994 theme is heard.
* On ABC Family (now Freeform) reruns of ''Family Matters'', ''Full House'', ''Growing Pains'', and ''Step by Step'', the theme sounds like it's been played at a stadium.
* When ''Full House'' was reran on Nick@Nite and TeenNick, WBTV used Dave Coulier's syndicated voice-over closing.
* Game Show Network airings of ''Love Connection'' plaster this logo over the 6th logo while retaining John Cervenka's voice over.
* On newer ABC Family airings of ''Full House'', the logos were shown first (with the closing theme playing over it), and the credits were shown afterwards in split-screen.
* On the first episode of season 3 and the eighteenth episode of season 4 of ''Dallas'' on their respective DVD releases, it has the 1971 [[Lorimar Productions|Lorimar]] theme on this logo due to a sloppy plaster job.
* On season 1 episodes of ''What I Like About You'' on its DVD release, the ''Smallville'' episode "Whisper" and the ER season 3 episode "One More for the Road" on the S3 DVD release thereof, it uses the music from the next logo, both due to a rush plastering job.
* On syndicated prints of seasons 6-8 of ''The Drew Carey Show'', the show's stinger theme is heard.
* ABC, CBS, Fox and NBC airings used their generic themes.


'''Availability:'''

* This logo was seen on ABC Family (now Freeform) and TeenNick reruns of ''Full House''.

* This logo was a standard for plastering logos in the 2000s, plastering the 1972 "Big \\'" on H&I reruns and DVD releases of ''Kung Fu'' and the Me-TV reruns and DVD releases of ''Wonder Woman'', as well as the 1978 Lorimar logo on most episodes of the first eight seasons of ''Dallas'' on DVD and also was seen on ''Down to Earth'' on Good Life TV (now Youtoo) in the early 2000s, USA Network airings of ''Living Single'' in the early 2000s (after the 1994-2001 WBDTD logo), as well as Nickelodeon/Nicktoons airings of ''Animaniacs''.
=== 8th Logo (75th Anniversary) (January 1-December 1998) ===
* A version with the website text can be found on reruns of ''The Oblongs'' on Adult Swim.
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* Seen on the second half of S6-S8 episodes of ''The Drew Carey Show'', and also on 2001 episodes from the 2000-01 season of ''Access Hollywood'' right before [[NBC Enterprises]] took over in the fall of 2001.
File:Warner Bros. Television (1998).png
* This logo was also seen on [[Boomerang]] U.S. airings of ''The 13 Ghosts of Scooby-Doo'', but is omitted from the DVD, Boomerang and Tubi streaming service prints thereof.
* It was also seen on a getTV airing of ''Young Guns II'' (a [[Morgan Creek Entertainment|Morgan Creek]] film), before the 2002 [[Sony Pictures Television|SPT]] logo.
* When GetTV reran ''The Jimmy Stewart Show'' in 2015, the original ending with the third logo (the "Kinney Shield") was plastered by the "Distributed by" variant with the URL given below the AOL byline (the show's original closing theme music plays over the latter logo as well).
** This is also plastered on the Warner Archive DVD release.
* Despite having ended use in late 2003, after the Time Warner name was reinstated, the 2001 logo was strangely seen on the season 7-8 episodes of the first incarnation of ''Whose Line Is It Anyway?'' (and continuing to keep it this way as of the current UP reruns of the latter) up to its 2007 end.
* It was also seen at the end of an old TCM airing of ''The Making of 'Cannery Row'<nowiki/>'' (1982), a later print of ''The Doorway to Hell'' (1930), the pilot episode of ''Black Bart'', (included on the 2014 UK Blu-ray release of ''Blazing Saddles'' (1974), plastering the 5th logo), and an old TG4 airing of ''Scooby's Mystery Funhouse'' as part of their Cúla4 block, following the blacked out 1979-era variant of the 1979 [[Hanna-Barbera]] "Swirling Star" logo.
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'''Visuals:''' Same as the 2001 logo, but the colors are brighter and the company byline is omitted - this is because all of the WB divisions were organized as "Warner Bros. Entertainment" (under Time Warner, later WarnerMedia, now Warner Bros. Discovery) since late 2003, sometimes with the WB URL below and like the 2000 and 2001 logos, either "{{color|gold|{{Font|Times New Roman|'''Distributed by'''}}}}" or "{{color|gold|{{Font|Times New Roman|'''Produced and Distributed by'''}}}}" (in the same font as the 2001 logo) seen above the 1984 shield, sometimes being omitted.
<u>Nicknames</u>: "Television WB Shield III", "Television CGI Shield", "Shield of Staleness III"

<u>Logo</u>: A near still shot of the 1998 movie logo at the time, with the words "<span style="font-family:'Times New Roman';">'''''75 YEARS''''' '''Entertaining The World'''</span>" across both sides of the WB Shield with the banner simply reading "<span style="font-family:'Times New Roman';">'''WARNER BROS.'''</span>" or "<span style="font-family:'Times New Roman';">'''WARNER BROS. PICTURES'''</span>" and a darker background.

<u>Trivia</u>: This logo debuted before its full movie counterpart later came about with the rise of ''Fallen'', which came out on the 16th of the same month (January) and year (1998).

<u>FX/SFX</u>: Just the clouds moving. None for the "<span style="font-family:'Times New Roman';">'''WARNER BROS. PICTURES'''</span>" version, unless you want to count the fade-in & out.

<u>Music/Sounds</u>: A truncated version of the wind-blowing theme from the 1998 theatrical logo or the end theme of a show.

<u>Music/Sounds Variants</u>:


'''Trivia:'''
:*The alternate 1994 theme is used for the "<span style="font-family:'Times New Roman';">'''WARNER BROS. PICTURES'''</span>" version, but a silent version was used for this logo on TCM & Cartoon Network.
* In the 2013 film ''Saving Mr. Banks'', when Mrs. Travers arrives at the Los Angeles airport, a trio of cab drivers are holding signs for different film companies (one for [[Warner Bros. Pictures|Warner Bros.]], one for [[Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios|MGM]], one for [[Walt Disney Pictures|Walt Disney]]). The logo depicted on the sign is this one, which is historically inaccurate.
:*A low-tone variant was heard on a few episodes of ''Meego'' (international airings).
* The "{{color|gold|{{Font|Times New Roman|'''Distributed by'''}}}}" variant was surprisingly seen on a July 20, 2016 TBS airing of ''The Big Bang Theory'' episode "The Boyfriend Complexity", though this is probably a plastering error because this proceeded the [[Michael Patrick King Productions]] logo, which was also found on the same airing. Also, ''TBBT'' uses the completely bylineless version, meaning that TBS accidentally used the combo for ''2 Broke Girls'' instead.
:*A silent version of the standard logo was used on early 2000s TV Land airings of ''Gilligan's Island''.
:*On old airings of ''Rudolph's Shiny New Year'' on FOX/ABC Family (now Freeform), it strangely had the Rankin-Bass logo music trailing underneath.
:*The end theme of the show used was also used on ''Animaniacs'' seasons 1-2 to plaster the 6th logo before falling silent.


'''Variants:'''
* Series distributed by Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution have a further-back view of the logo, while Warner Bros. Television Distribution series feature a closer view. Though ''Mike & Molly'' was a new WB series and most new network WBTV series usually used the completely bylineless 2003 WBTV logo, the show used the 2003 WBTD version instead (with no URL).
* On ''The Perils of Penelope Pitstop'' on DVD, the Boomerang streaming service and former Boomerang U.S. airings, the 1967 film ''Up the Down Staircase'' on TCM, and syndie reruns of ''Curb Your Enthusiasm'' from 2010-2011, it just uses the open-matted 2003 version of the then-current closing logo for Warner Bros. Pictures.
* As in the 2003 variant, the banner is sometimes slightly stretched.
* On a S3 episode of ''The Jamie Foxx Show'' titled "Taps For Royal" from a recent Centric rerun, the text "{{color|gold|{{Font|Times New Roman|'''Distributed by'''}}}}" is omitted, but just before the music from the [[Bent Outta Shape Productions]] and [[Foxx Hole Productions]] logos finishes out, it suddenly appears in its original position. As a result, this plasters the 1996 [[Telepictures Distribution]] logo that usually followed on syndie reruns. This also happens on ''George Lopez'' on a season 1 episode titled "Who's Your Daddy?".
* On the series finale of ''The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air'' titled "I, Done" in syndication, and TCM prints of ''Nancy Drew... Troubleshooter'', the widescreen version of the 2003 logo is squashed to fit the 4:3 dimensions.
* A B&W version of the 2003 logo exists, which is seen on the series finale of ''Children's Hospital'' ("The Grid"), and some films on TCM.
* On some shows, like ''TMZ'' and ''Extra'', the logo fades in from black. On ''The Tyra Banks Show'', the logo crossfades from the [[Telepictures Productions|Telepictures]] logo.
* On ''Lifechangers'' and 2020-2021 episodes of ''TMZ'', the logo is part of the split screen credits.
* The 2003 logo also sometimes shares the screen with other logos.
* On ''Undercovers'', the colors are more vivid.
* On the ''Everwood'' episode "East Meets West", the colors are very light.
* On the American version of ''The Tomorrow People'', the colors are slightly brighter than the ''Undercovers'' variant.
* On a ''TMZ Live'' demo reel, the banner reads "DOMESTIC TELEVISION DISTRIBUTION" instead.


'''Technique:''' A digital graphic.
<u>Availability</u>: Rare.
:*It was seen on the fourth and fifth seasons of ''Friends'' (HD prints plaster this logo with the 11th logo), the first and second seasons of ''Veronica's Closet'' when last reran on TV Guide Network (now Pop, one overseas airing had the 11th logo follow this logo), some rerun episodes from the final season of ''Family Matters'', on the 2nd half S4 episodes of ''The Parent 'Hood'', the first season of ''Whose Line Is It Anyway?'', 1998 episodes of the fourth and fifth seasons of ''ER'' (plastered on DVD, VOD and Pop airings by the 11th logo but retained on TNT years ago), 1998 episodes of ''The Rosie O'Donnell Show'' in syndication, some 1998 episodes of ''Extra'' in syndication, early 2000s TV Land prints of ''Gilligan's Island'', TNT airings of 1998 episodes of ''Babylon 5'', and early episodes of both ''Brimstone'' and ''Mortal Kombat: Conquest'' (the latter also had this logo plastered by the 11th logo on remastered prints), among others.
:*It's also seen on 2nd half S3 and 1st half S4 episodes of ''The Drew Carey Show'' and the second half of the final season of ''Murphy Brown''.
:*This logo plastered the 6th logo on 1998-2001 Cartoon Network airings of ''Animaniacs'', with the Cable-Pay TV version of the previous logo inserted after it (although post-season 3 episodes of the latter show have this logo follow the [[Warner Bros. Animation|Warner Bros. Television Animation]] logo of the time, and has the Cable-Pay TV logo following after this logo), though both this logo and the Cable-Pay TV logo follows the 6th logo on old TNT airings of the 1990 film ''Nightbreed''.
:*This debuted on the last two episodes of ''Living Single'', which aired on New Years' Day (January 1st), 1998 (although recent VH1 reruns of the latter show have fallen victim to modern, Nickelodeon-style "last-scene-of-the-show" credits, along with this logo being [weirdly!] plastered by the widescreen version of the "Distributed by" version of the 11th logo [while the preceding the [[SisterLee Productions]] logo has the words "In Association With", to make matters even worse]).
:*This was used in tandem with the Cable-Pay TV version of the last logo for shows of the time that were aired/rerun on cable networks.


'''Audio:''' The 2nd part of the <!-- Do not change this to 1998 because the theme (from the movie logo) debuted in 1999, not in 1998. --> 1999 <!-- [[Warner Bros. Pictures]] should not use the theme in 1998. --> WB theme based on the song "As Time Goes By" from the WB film ''Casablanca'', originally from the Broadway musical ''Everybody's Welcome''. Some shows in association with WBTV had the theme cut in half or have the theme sped up. Like before, it's the closing theme of the show or none.


'''Audio Trivia:''' The 2003 theme debuted on the series premiere of ''Two and a Half Men'' (as well as on the ''Eve'' episode "Condom Mania"), broadcast on September 22, 2003.
<u>Editor's Note</u>: None.


'''Audio Variants:'''
* On network shows from 2003 to 2005 as well as episode 8 of season 1 of ''Cold Case'' on Universal Channel Asia, the 2003 WBTV fanfare is in mono. The strings are more prominent in this variation and the low brass note on the third note of the theme can barely be heard. ''All of Us'' continued using this variant until 2007.
* An alternate version of the 2003 theme was used in the early days of the 2003 logo. This version had a faster tempo, a piano note at the beginning, and a slightly different ending.
* Sometimes, the 1994 theme is used, sometimes shortened.
* On ''Smallville'', one of the following themes is used:
** When the 2003 logo plasters the 2001 logo (4:3 prints retains the 2001 logo), the 1994 fanfare is used.
** On 2006 season 5 episodes until the series finale, the 2003 theme is heard, carrying it from the then-current [[DC Entertainment|DC Comics]] logo.
*** Due to reverse plastering over the next logo, some 2005 episodes of ''Smallville'' have the 2003 theme play over again (the first two notes are played over the DC Comics logo then it cuts to the 2003 logo with the theme starting over again).
* On some re-runs of ''Friends'', this plasters the 1994 logo; the closing theme of the TV show is heard, followed by the 1994 fanfare. Some occasions cut-off the closing theme, on some local airings.
** On HBO Max prints of season 4 of the aforementioned ''Friends'', the 1998 theme is heard instead.
** However, on airings on certain local stations including WADL Detroit, the closing theme continues over this logo instead.
* The 1998 theme is also heard on the 2003 logo on 1998 episodes of ''The Wayans Bros.'' on HBO, the final season of ''Murphy Brown'' on Nick at Nite, the last two episodes of ''Living Single'' on Max and on DVD prints of ''Mortal Kombat: Conquest''.
* The 1994 low tone WBTV theme is also heard on the short 2003 Warner Bros. Pictures logo.
* On ''Children's Hospital'', the music (usually just the last note) is cut off by the [[Williams Street]] logo.
* On ''The Carrie Diaries'', the last bit of the sped-up [[CBS Studios|CBS Television Studios]] jingle can be heard before the sped-up version of the 2003 theme, which might've implied the WBTV theme was ripped straight out of ''The Vampire Diaries''.
* On HD prints of some episodes from ''Perfect Strangers'' and ''Step by Step'' along with syndicated prints of ''The New Adventures of Old Christine'', the theme has a weird echo effect. This is due to a mixing error where only the rear surround channels are used.
* On syndicated prints of ''The Jamie Foxx Show'', the song "Electrifying (Baby, That's Real)" (likely Jamie Foxx's closing song) plays in the background throughout the entire four-way logo combo.
* Starting with the 6th episode of season 2 of ''Jane The Virgin'', only the last note of the 2003 theme is heard.
* The first two seasons of ''Arrow'', the first four episodes of the American version of ''The Tomorrow People'' and the pilot of ''The Flash'' used a slowed down version of the 2003 theme.
* The unaired pilot of ''Commando Nanny'' has the 2003 theme double pitched.
* On ''Freddie'', the 2003 theme is mixed between the first note and the last two notes.
* On some episodes of ''Judge Mathis'' between 2012 and 2020, the echo of the last note of the [[Millar Gough Ink]] theme from late 2002 is heard over the first note of the 2003 WBTV theme, which also might've implied the aforementioned theme was ripped straight out of ''Smallville''.
* On ''Life Unexpected'', the theme is even faster and mixed between the second note and the last note.
* Mid-2000's TV Land airings of 1989-1992 episodes of ''Night Court'' use John Larroquette's voice over due to plastering the 6th logo.
* ABC, CBS, Fox, NBC and post-2003 The WB (later The CW) used their generic themes.
* On Hulu's print of the ''Living Single'' episode "I'll Take Your Man", Synclaire is heard saying "Oh, Overton!" on the distribution variant.
* On the unaired pilot of ''Nolan Knows Best'', Phil Nolan (played by Brian Dennehy) says "Sex has a new name!".
* On the unaired pilot of ''Strange Brew'', people angrily shouting is heard over the closing theme.


'''Availability:'''
* Seen on first-run syndication series such as ''The People's Court'' (until October 1, 2021, where it would be replaced with an in-credit notice of the 15th logo), ''Judge Mathis'', ''TMZ on TV'' (until September 15, 2021 due to [[Fox Alternative Entertainment]] taking over), ''The Ellen DeGeneres Show'' and ''Extra'' (both until 2021 when it was replaced with the 15th logo), and also current network, cable and off-network shows such as ''Conan'' on TBS, ''George Lopez'' on Nick at Nite and Ion Television, ''The Jamie Foxx Show'' when it was last aired on Centric (before the rebrand to BET Her), ''The Wayans Bros.'' on MTV2, and on Max, ''Friends'' in local syndication, Max, TBS and Nick at Nite, ''Eve'' on TV One, ''ER'' (seasons 3-5 and 10-15) on Pop, Max, and on its DVD releases (seasons 2-5 and 10-15), ''The Real'' in local syndication and on BET, and on various shows on the Max streaming service, among others.
* It is also seen on shows produced by Bonanza Productions (such as ''Mike & Molly'', ''2 Broke Girls'' and ''The 100''), a division of WBTV that was founded in 1991, as they do not have their own logo.
* Any series from this era reran on TV One would keep the original logo intact.
* The alternate theme can be found on various [[Hanna-Barbera]] and Lorimar shows on Max, ''All of Us'', ''The Mullets'', ''Run of the House'', ''All About the Andersons'', ''Like Family'', ''Blue Collar TV'', ''The Help'', the first five episodes of season 2 of ''Eve'', reruns of ''George Lopez'', the director's cut of the ''Twenty Good Years'' pilot, the unaired pilots of ''Nikki and Nora'' and ''Starting Under'', ''Full House'' on HBO Max and MeTV (except season 7, where the ending of the show's theme is heard underneath from plastering the 6th logo instead), some episodes of ''Veronica Mars'', ''The Evidence'', post-2020 reruns of ''The Flintstones'' on both Me-TV and Blu-ray, DVD and Blu-ray releases of ''The New Scooby-Doo Movies'' (also preserved on Blu-ray releases of ''Scooby-Doo, Where Are You!''), and was also seen on an RTE Two HD airing of ''The New Scooby-Doo Mysteries'' episode "The Nutcracker Scoob".
** This variant is also preserved on streaming prints of ''Smallville'' S3 episode "Phoenix" as well as episode 7 of season 1 of ''Cold Case'' on Universal Channel Asia.
* The 1994 theme can be found on ''The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air'' episode "Sleepless in Bel-Air", Lifetime airings of ''Will & Grace'' and the TV movie ''Deadly Intentions... Again?'', Nick @ Nite, Antenna TV, and HD airings of ''Murphy Brown'', the pilots of ''Rock Me Baby'' and ''Eve'' on UPN, on Centric (now BET HER, on some episodes), HBO Max airings of ''The Wayans Bros.'', HD prints of ''Smallville'' seasons 1, and HBO Max prints of ''Scooby-Doo and Scrappy-Doo'' and ''The New Scooby and Scrappy-Doo Show'', among others.
* The 1994 WBTV low-tone version theme with the 2003 open-matted "Distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures" logo is preserved on shows like ''The Perils of Penelope Pitstop'' on former Boomerang U.S. airings, DVD releases and the Boomerang streaming service, the 1967 film ''Up the Down Staircase'' on TCM, and before syndie reruns of ''Curb Your Enthusiasm'' from 2010-2011.
* The "Produced and Distributed by" variant is seen on ''Jack and Bobby'', ''Chase'', ''Reign'' (season 1 and the first two episodes of season 2), and then-current episodes of ''The People's Court'' starting on the 2012-2013 season until the 2017-2018 season.
** This variant is also strangely seen on the 6th episode of ''Aliens in America'' (while it was produced by Warner Bros. Television, CBS Paramount was considered the distributor. This is also strange due to the fact that every other episode includes the regular "Distributed by" variant).
* The final season (2004) of ''The Drew Carey Show'' also has the 2003 logo, and the WBTD version of this logo also plasters the 2001 logo on Laff airings of a special from said show, "Drew Carey's Back-to-School Rock 'n' Roll Comedy Hour" (which also doubled as that show's S7 premiere episode).
* This logo was also seen on the season 6 episodes of the first incarnation of ''Whose Line Is It Anyway?'' on ABC, while the last two seasons use the 2001 logo on ABC Family.
* This logo was used in tandem with the 13th, 14th, and 15th logos until 2022.
** The 14th logo replaced this logo starting with the 2018-2019 season, and this logo was still used in syndication until September 2021.
** However, due to Warner Bros. rebranding their on-screen logos with their 2019 print logo alongside the 13th logo from 2020-2023, this logo is retired.
* This logo is also preserved on a Hulu print of the ''Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends'' episode "Adoptcalypse Now".
* This logo also plasters the 1998 [[Warner Bros. Family Entertainment|WB Family Entertainment]] logo at the start of Starz and Netflix prints of the 1998 theatrical film ''Quest for Camelot''.
* This logo is also seen at the end of HBO Max prints of ''Hangin' with Mr. Cooper''.
* This logo is also seen at the end of Tubi prints of the ''A Pup Named Scooby-Doo'' episode "A Bicycle Built for Boo", following the 1988 version of the 1986 Hanna-Barbera "CGI Swirling Star" logo.
* This logo is also seen at the end of an HD print of ''A Flintstone Christmas'' (1977), following the 1974 Hanna-Barbera "Rainbow H-B" logo.
* This logo is also seen at the start of the 1987 TV movie ''The Quick and the Dead'' on GREAT! Movies Action, with the 1998 [[SFM Entertainment]] logo at the end.
* This logo is also seen at the end of the MeTV Toons airings of ''Captain Planet and the Planeteers'', following the 1983 [[Turner Program Services]] logo.
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=== 9th Logo (April 5, 2000-January 2001) ===
===12th Logo (50th anniversary logo) (January-December 2005)===
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'''Visuals:''' On the cloud background from the 2003 version of the previous logo, there is a smoother WB shield with a ribbon that says "{{Font|Times New Roman|'''50 YEARS OF QUALITY'''}}" wrapped around the bottom of it. The clouds can be seen moving to the right of the shield.
<u>Nicknames</u>: "Television WB Shield III", "Shield of Staleness IV"


'''Variants:'''
Logo: The logo has a slightly different cloudy background, which is a bit better defined. The shield logo has an up to date banner inscription, still reading "<span style="font-family:'Times New Roman';">'''WARNER BROS. TELEVISION'''</span>" and includes either "<span style="font-family:'Times New Roman';">'''DISTRIBUTED BY'''</span>" or "<span style="font-family:'Times New Roman';">'''PRODUCED AND DISTRIBUTED BY'''</span>" above the shield logo or nothing above it and a small "www.warnerbros.com" below the byline appears across. The byline (reverted back to its first typeface) is higher now, to make room for the small website URL below.
* Sometimes, the website URL is seen below.
* Sometimes, the shield is close to the screen and zooms back.
* For syndication, the text "{{color|gold|{{Font|Arial|Distributed by}}}}" appears above.
* On ''Blue Collar TV'', the logo is open-matted.


'''Technique:''' CGI by The Illusion Factory.
<u>Variants</u>:
:*Reruns of season 1 episodes of ''Static Shock'' on Disney XD and some online airings of seasons 4 & 5 of ''ER'' would use the static 2000 Warner Bros. Pictures logo.
:*A B&W and silent version was seen on the 2000 made-for-TV movie remake of ''Fail Safe''.


'''Audio:''' Same as the 2003 version of the previous logo. Like before, it's the closing theme of the show or none.


'''Availability:'''
<u>FX/SFX</u>: None.
* It's still saved on reruns of 2005 episodes of Warner Bros. shows, such as ''Eve'' on TV One, ''Supernatural'' on TNT and FX, ''Nip/Tuck'' on Logo, and ''Without a Trace'' on Ion Television, among others.
* This was also seen on ''Alice'', ''Spenser: For Hire'', and ''Scarecrow and Mrs. King'' (plastering the 1972-84 WBTV logo on the 1st season's rerun) back in 2005 during Warner Bros. Television's 50-hour marathon on TV Land.
* This logo is also plastered on local syndication reruns of ''Two and a Half Men'' with the 2003 logo, but it is still retained on Australian reruns.
* Episode 18 of season 5 of ''Smallville'' has this logo seen for a split-second before it cuts immediately to the previous logo (most likely a bad plastering job).


===13th Logo (DCTV custom logo) (September 22, 2014-)===
<u>Music/Sounds</u>: The end-title theme of any series, the 1994 WBTV theme, or silence. ''The People's Court'', ''Moral Court'' and some episodes of ''Growing Pains'' all had voice overs on this logo.
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<u>Music/Sounds Variant</u>: On the 2000 remake of ''The Fugitive'', a majestic fanfare is heard.
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'''Visuals:''' After the 2012-2016 DC Comics logo (the 2016-present logo starting in 2016) or the [[DC Vertigo|Vertigo]] logo, the Warner Bros. shield with varying textures and colors appears, slowly zooming in from a mostly dark background. Four designs for this logo have been used:
<u>Availability</u>: Rare.
*2014-2021: A larger version of the movie preview trailer WB shield seen on the names and crew members list, with the Warner Bros. Television banner over it in the Times New Roman font.
:*It was seen on older reruns of ''Growing Pains'' last aired on TeenNick and currently seen on Antenna TV though in split screen form.
*2018-2020: The 2017 WBTV logo.
:*It had only appeared for a short time before Time Warner merged with America Online.
*2020-2023: The 2019 WB logo without the "'''WARNER BROS. TELEVISION'''" text.
:*It was also seen on pre-2001 episodes of the short-lived series ''Moral Court'' during its original syndication run and last seen on ION reruns of said show.
*2024-present: A bannerless 2023 WB logo.
:*This also appeared on the NBC/WB sitcom ''For Your Love'' as well.
:*Currently seen on the last few S5 (starting with the episode "Mr. Wick Returns") and 1st half S6 episodes of ''The Drew Carey Show'' from this era.
:*The VOD and Pop airings of the season 1 and season 6 episodes and online airings of seasons 4 & 5 of ''ER'' also had this logo, but were plastered on the DVDs by the next 2 logos below respectively but was retained on TNT years ago.
:*As of 2018, this can still be seen on UP reruns of 2000 & 2001-era episodes of the first incarnation of ''Whose Line Is It Anyway?''.


'''Variants:''' See [[Warner Bros. Television Studios/Logo Variations|this page]] for variants.


'''Technique:''' CGI.
<u>Editor's Note</u>: None.


'''Audio:''' Sound effects that correspond with the action, which varies from show to show. The ''Supergirl'' pilot had the 2003 logo's music, while the ''Lucifer'' pilot had no music.


'''Availability:'''
* Currently seen after the [[DC Entertainment]] logo on every new TV series based on a DC Comics property, beginning with ''Gotham'' and on the third season of ''Arrow'', ''The Flash'', ''Constantine'', ''iZombie'', ''Legends of Tomorrow'', ''Lucifer'', ''Supergirl'' and ''Batwoman'', in place of the 2003 version of the 11th logo and later the 14th logo, then the 15th logo, and currently the 16th logo.
* All variants (except ''Constantine'') can be found on the DCTV's official YouTube account on the video "DCTV - Logo Extravaganza!". Used in tandem with the 11th, 14th, 15th, and 16th logos.
* Although ''Chilling Adventures of Sabrina'', ''AJ and the Queen'', ''Maid'' and ''Keep Breathing'' (as an opening custom variant for the latter two shows, although the closing variant used the 15th logo instead) are not owned by DC Comics, they still use the DC Comics' version of the WBTV shield instead.


=== 10th Logo (January 29, 2001-Late 2003) ===
===14th Logo (January 27, 2017-January 9, 2022)===
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Blackjack, Thunder Road, WBTV.jpeg
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'''Visuals:''' Same as the 2003 version of the 11th logo, but the shield and cloud background are redone, with the shield redone in 3D and made to look like the shield from the 1998 theatrical logo, and looking a little shinier. The clouds move to the right of the shield as it zooms in slowly.
<u>Nicknames</u>: "Television WB Shield IV", "Shield of Staleness V"


'''Variants:'''
<u>Logo</u>: The logo is now a TV rendition of their current movie logo. The background is darker, and once again the shield logo reads "<span style="font-family:'Times New Roman';">'''WARNER BROS. TELEVISION'''</span>" across. Like the 9th logo, this one includes either "<span style="font-family:'Times New Roman';">'''Distributed by'''</span>" or "<span style="font-family:'Times New Roman';">'''Produced and Distributed by'''</span>" above the shield logo in Garamond font or nothing above it and sometimes a small website URL reading "www.warnerbros.com" website below the byline reappears.
* There is a still variant that can be seen on Netflix prints of ''Riverdale'', ''Disjointed'', the pilot of ''Love You More'' on Prime Video, and ''Lovecraft Country'' on HBO.
* On ''Lovecraft Country'', the shield appears closer.
* There is an opening variant of this logo in which the shield zooms out from the bottom of the screen in an extreme upward angle and then settles in its normal position, shining towards the end of the animation. It then slowly zooms out afterwards.
* A 4:3 fullscreen version exists; here, the animation is the same as the opening variant.
* On ''The Fugitive'', the shield is still and on a black background, with the [[Blackjack Films]] and [[Thunder Road Pictures]] logos next to it. Some episodes replace the latter logo with the [[3 Arts Entertainment]] logo.


'''Technique:''' CGI. A still image for the still version.
<u>Byline</u>: Referred as "<span style="font-family:'Times New Roman';">'''An AOL Time Warner Company'''</span>" (also in Garamond) this time due to the AOL and Time Warner merger that year.


'''Audio:''' Same as the 2003 version of the 11th logo. The opening variant has some whoosh sounds.
<u>Variants</u>:
:*Fall 2003: This logo has yet another different cloud background. It has a shinier WB shield logo with a updated banner inscription, like that of the Warner Bros. Classic/Television Animation version. The words "<span style="font-family:'Times New Roman';">'''Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution'''</span>" reappear above the shield logo with the new byline below it. The company URL is temporarily removed. This was seen on early episodes of ''The Ellen DeGeneres Show'' and some 2003 episodes of ''Street Smarts'', both used prior to the debut of the 11th logo.
:*There is also a narrow version of the logo.
:*One of the seasons of ''Extra'' earlier in the 2000s had this logo play as usual, except it would end with a shot of it on a television screen (this was when ''Extra'' had their logo revised from the '90s black and white one, to the "x" in a blue circle logo).
:*There is a variant where the banner only reads as "<span style="font-family:'Times New Roman';">'''WARNER BROS.'''</span>". This can be seen on the HBO miniseries ''Band of Brothers''.
:*There's another rare variant of this logo without the URL website, only leaving its cheesy shield and byline. It can be seen on the very short-lived TV show ''Thieves'' (2001), as well as the 2nd and 3rd episode of ''Birds of Prey''.
:*An open-matte distribution variant exists.
:*A complete widescreen version of the logo with the clouds being enhanced and well transformed appears on the short-lived TV show ''Witchblade''.
:*On a Dutch airing of ''Third Watch'', the open-matte version is shown, only with a very rare URL that has a different internet code, which is "co.uk". This is the British website for Warner Bros. This also appeared on British airings of ''The West Wing'' as well as a season 3 episode of ''Kung Fu'' on DVD.
:*An extremely rare variant found on British airings of ''Friends'' and ''The West Wing'' have an AOL Keyword below the logo "'''AOL''' Keyword: (Name of Either Show, i.e. "West Wing")"("'''AOL'''" in its corporate acronym of the time).
:*A B&W variant of the Distribution variant exists.


'''Audio Variants:'''
* A sped-up version of the theme exists.
* On post-2020 prints of ''Babylon 5'', the 1994 theme is heard; pre-1995 episodes use the closing theme of the show.
* On season 1 of ''The Flight Attendant'', the closing theme of the show is heard.
* The logo is silent on ''Lovecraft Country'' and the beginning of ''Disjointed''.


'''Availability:'''
<u>FX/SFX</u>: None.
* It was first seen on international Netflix prints of ''Riverdale'' (where it airs as a Netflix original; in the United States, the 2003 logo is used), ''Disjointed'', and the pilot of ''Love You More'' on Prime Video.
* Starting with the 2018-2019 TV season, this logo replaced the 2003 logo on network shows.
* The opening variant can be seen at the beginning of shows like the first 2 seasons of ''The Kominsky Method'' and season 4 and season 5 episodes of ''Lucifer'' on Netflix, after the [[Netflix Originals]] logo.
* Also appeared until September 2021 on shows formerly produced by [[Warner Horizon Unscripted Television|Warner Horizon Scripted Television]], like season 5 of ''Queen Sugar'' and the first 10 episodes of season 5 of ''Animal Kingdom''.
* The 4:3 variant has begun plastering previous logos on older shows produced with said aspect ratio, such as ''Babylon 5'' (seen on all HD prints of the show starting in 2020, including the 2023 Blu-ray release).
* Some syndicated shows (such as ''Judge Mathis'', ''The Ellen DeGeneres Show'', and ''TMZ on TV'') do not use this logo.
* Even after the next logo debuted, this appeared on season 2 of ''Special'', the first four episodes of season 3 of ''In the Dark'', ''The Republic of Sarah'' on off-network prints (The CW prints use the next logo), the first 10 episodes of season 5 of ''Animal Kingdom'', the first episode of season 3 of ''Roswell, New Mexico'', and the first six episodes of season 4 of ''Claws''. Following episodes in each respective series' season now uses the current logo.


===15th Logo (March 2, 2021-)===
<u>Music/Sounds</u>: Same as the 7th logo.
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<u>Music/Sounds Variants</u>:
<gallery mode="packed" heights="150">
:*Sometimes a low tone is heard.
Warner Bros. Television (2021).png|WarnerMedia version
:*On ''ER: The Complete First'', ''Sixth'', ''Seventh'', and ''Eighth'' Seasons DVDs and Pop airings of the said show, this logo is silent.
Warner Bros. Television (2021) (18x9).png|2:1 widescreen version
:*On ABC Family (now Freeform) reruns of ''Family Matters'', ''Full House'', ''Growing Pains'', and ''Step by Step'', the theme sounds like it's been played at a stadium.
Warner Bros. Television (2022, CinemaScope).jpeg|CinemaScope version
:*When ''Full House'' was reran on Nick@Nite and TeenNick, WBTV used Dave Coulier's syndicated voice-over closing.
Warner Bros Television (2021, wide-screen variant).png|''Lisey's Story'' variant
:*Game Show Network airings of ''Love Connection'' plaster this logo over the 6th logo while retaining John Cervenka's voice over.
Warner Bros. Television (2021, Darker Colors).png|''Ted Lasso'' season 2 and ''Head of the Class'' (2021) variant
:*On newer ABC Family airings of ''Full House'', the logos were shown first (with the closing theme playing over it), and the credits were shown afterwards in split-screen.
Warner Bros. Television (2021, Even Darker Colors).png|''Lucifer'' season 6 variant
:*On the first episode of season 3 and the eighteenth episode of season 4 of ''Dallas'' on their respective DVD releases, it has the 1971 Lorimar theme on this logo due to a sloppy plaster job.
Warner Bros. Television (Shining Vale variant).jpeg|''Shining Vale'' episodes 1-2 variant
:*On season 1 episodes of ''What I Like About You?'' on it's DVD release and the ER season 3 episode "One More for the Road" on the S3 DVD, it uses the music from the next logo, both due to a rush plaster job.
Distributed by Warner Bros. Television (2021).png|"Distributed by" variant (WarnerMedia)

Warner Bros. Television (2022, Split-screen).png|''The Real'' split-screen credits variant

Warner Bros. Television Distribution logo (Extra variant).PNG|''Extra'' split-screen credits variant
<u>Availability</u>: Common.
Warner Bros. Television Group (2021).PNG|''The People's Court'' in-credit variant

Illinois Film, Telepictures and WBTVG (2022).PNG|''Judge Mathis'' in-credit variant
:*It was seen on ABC Family (now Freeform) and TeenNick reruns of ''Full House''.
Warner Bros. Television (2022, New WB Discovery byline).jpeg|Warner Bros. Discovery version
:*This logo was a standard for plastering logos in the 2000s, plastering the "Big \\'" on recent H&I reruns and DVD's of ''Kung Fu'' and the Me-TV reruns and DVDs of ''Wonder Woman'', as well as the Lorimar logo on most episodes of the first 8 seasons of ''Dallas'' on DVD and also was seen on ''Down to Earth'' on Good Life TV (now Youtoo) in the early 2000s, USA Network airings of ''Living Single'' in the early 2000s, as well as Nickelodeon/Nicktoons airings of ''Animaniacs''.
Warner Bros. Television (2022, Scope).jpeg|2:1 Warner Bros. Discovery widescreen version
:*A version with the website text can be seen on reruns of ''The Oblongs'' on Adult Swim.
Warner Bros. Television logo (Shrinking variant).PNG|''Shrinking'' and ''The Big Cigar'' variant
:*Currently seen on second half S6-S8 episodes of ''The Drew Carey Show'', and was seen 2001 episodes from the 2000-01 season of ''Access Hollywood'' right before [[NBC Enterprises]] took over in the fall of '01.
Warner_Bros._Television_(2023).png|''Bookie'' variant
:*It was also seen on a recent getTV airing of ''Young Guns II'' (a Morgan Creek film), before the SPT logo.
Distributed by Warner Bros. Television (2022).PNG|"Distributed by" variant (Warner Bros. Discovery)



<u>Editor's Note</u>: Despite having ended use in late 2003, after the Time Warner name was reinstated, this logo was still used on the later episodes of the first incarnation of ''Whose Line Is It Anyway?'' (and as of the current UP reruns of the latter, continue to keep it this way) up to its 2006 end, due to the fact the last of the episodes were produced and had it completed between late 2002/2003, but did not air until after those dates.

=== 11th Logo (July 2003- ) ===
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'''Visuals:''' It's the tail end of the 2021 theatrical logo, except the shield zooms in slowly similarly to the previous logo as a lens flare shines over it. "'''WARNER BROS.'''" in white and in the same font used on the company's print logo (Warner Bros. Sans) in its bold condensed version is seen below the shield, with "'''TELEVISION'''" in its heavy version of the same font below it. The byline is also seen below.
<u>Nicknames</u>: "Television WB Shield V", "Shield of Staleness VI"


'''Trivia:'''
<u>Logo</u>: A lighter conception of the last logo only this time, there's no company byline whatsoever for the first time in 36 years. This is done as all of the WB divisions are organized as "Warner Bros. Entertainment" under Time Warner. Sometimes the WB URL is seen below. Like the 2000 and the 2001 logos, either the text "<span style="font-family:'Garamond';">'''Distributed by'''</span>" or "<span style="font-family:'Garamond';">'''Produced and Distributed by'''</span>" (in the same font as the previous logo) is seen above or nothing above it.
*This marks the first time since the 2001 logo that a company byline has appeared on the logo.
*The fanfare in this logo debuted before the movie logo, which did so in ''Non Mi Uccidere'' (''Don't Kill Me''), which was released on April 21, 2021 in Italy.


'''Bylines:'''
<u>Trivia</u>:
*March 2, 2021-: "a '''Warner'''Media company"
:*In the 2013 film ''Saving Mr. Banks'', when Mrs. Travers arrives at the Los Angeles airport, a trio of cab drivers are holding signs for different film companies (one for Warner Bros., one for MGM, one for Walt Disney). The logo depicted on the sign is this one, which is historically out of place, not to mention that Warner Bros. didn't have a proper logo for its Television arm until 1972.
*May 23, 2022-: "A '''WARNER BROS. DISCOVERY''' COMPANY"
:*The "<span style="font-family:'Times New Roman';">'''Distributed by'''</span>" was surprisingly seen on a July 20, 2016 TBS airing of ''The Big Bang Theory'' episode "The Boyfriend Complexity", though this is probably a plastering error because this proceeded the Michael King Productions logo, which was also found on the same airing. Also, TBBT uses the completely bylineless version, meaning that TBS accidentally used the combo for 2 Broke Girls instead.


'''Variants:'''
*Depending on how long this logo is shown on screen, the size of this logo varies. The 2-second and 1.5 second versions of this logo have the logo appear closer.
*A widescreen 2:1 version of the logo exists.
*On ''Lisey's Story'', the colors are more vivid.
*On season 2 of ''Ted Lasso'', season 6 of ''Lucifer'', the 2021 reboot of ''Head of the Class'', ''Shrinking'', ''Bookie'', and ''The Big Cigar'', the colors are darker, with the ''Lucifer'', ''Shrinking'', ''Bookie'', and ''The Big Cigar'' variants being even darker. Therefore, the ''Lucifer'' variant is slightly darker and the ''Bookie'' variant is slightly brighter than the ''Shrinking'' and ''The Big Cigar'' variants.
*On the first two episodes of ''Shining Vale'', the colors are very light.
*There's an opening variant where the shield zooms out and rotates upwards like the previous logo and then shines. The company name and byline fade in afterwards. The entire logo zooms out during this process. This can also appear as a closing logo.
**A CinemaScope version of this logo exists. ''The Sandman'' uses the Warner Bros. Discovery byline.
*For syndication, "DISTRIBUTED BY" (in its bold version of the same font mentioned above) is seen above the shield. On the variant above this one, after the shield finishes zooming out, it fades in with the company name and byline (seen on ''Extra'' as of August 31, 2021). However, ''Ellen'', ''The Real'' (as of September 27, 2021) and ''The Jennifer Hudson Show'' use the main variant where the shield does not zoom out.
*Sometimes, the lens flare is already there.
*An in-credit variation exists, with the text "DISTRIBUTED BY: WARNER BROS. TELEVISION GROUP" and the 2019 WB shield. This was spotted on post-October 2021 episodes of ''The People's Court''.
*On post-October 2021 episodes of ''Judge Mathis'', the Warner Bros. Television Group logo is in-credit (without the words "DISTRIBUTED BY") and shares the screen with the Illinois Film Office and [[Telepictures Productions|Telepictures]] logos.
*On ''The Real'' and ''Extra'', the logo is part of the split-screen credits.


'''Technique:''' CGI, including the opening variant, derived from the theatrical logo by [[Devastudios]]. Also, like its movie counterpart, the sky and clouds were done using Terragen from Planetside Software.
<u>Variants</u>:
:*For Warner Bros. Television Distribution, when the logo is further back, it's by Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution. If it's closer up, it's by Warner Bros. Television Distribution. Though ''Mike & Molly'' is a new WB series and usually most new network WBTV series would use the completely bylineless 2003 WBTV logo, one episode accidentally used the 2003 WBTD version instead.
:*On ''The Perils of Penelope Pitstop'' on former Boomerang airings, the 1967 film ''Up the Down Staircase'' on TCM,and syndie reruns of ''Curb Your Enthusiasm'' from 2010-2011, it just uses the open-matted 2003 version of the current closing logo for Warner Bros. Pictures.
:*On a S3 episode of ''The Jamie Foxx Show'' titled "Taps For Royal" from a recent Centric rerun, the words "Distributed by" are missing from the top of the 2003 WBTV logo. But about 2 seconds later just before the music from the [[Bent Outta Shape Productions]] and the [[Foxx Hole Productions]] logo finishes out, the "Distributed by" byline magically appears back into its original position. As a result, this plastered the 1996 Telepictures Distribution logo that usually followed on syndie reruns. This also happened on ''George Lopez'' on a season 1 episode titled "Who's Your Daddy?".
:*On the series finale of ''The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air'' titled "I, Done" in syndication, the widescreen version of this logo is squashed to fit the 4:3 dimensions.
:*A B&W version is used on the series finale of ''Children's Hospital'' ("The Grid") and some films on TCM.
:*On 2020s episodes of ''TMZ'', the logo is part of the split screen credits alongside the [[Harvey Levin Productions]], [[ParaMedia]], and Telepictures logos.


'''Audio:''' The final note of the 2021 theatrical logo's fanfare composed by Ludwig Göransson.


'''Audio Variants:'''
<u>FX/SFX</u>: None. Sometimes on some shows like ''TMZ'' and ''Extra'' have the logo fade in.
*A short version of the fanfare exists.
*Sometimes, the logo is silent, using the closing theme of the show, or using the network respective generic themes.
*On a few shows, the 2003 fanfare is heard, sometimes in warp-speed.
*An alternate theme exists where the final note of the middle section of the new fanfare is used, which has the same chord as the main fanfare, with strings on it. A "ding" is heard when the lens flare appears. This is only heard on the short 2-second and 1.5-second versions of this logo.
*In the opening variant, the same whoosh sounds from the previous logo can be heard. Starting with season 6 of ''Lucifer'', the whoosh sounds are slightly different than the previous logo.
*The closing version of the above variant has all 4 notes of the middle section of the fanfare. This can also be heard on its [[Warner Bros. International Television Production|international counterpart]].


'''Availability:'''
<u>Music/Sounds</u>: The 2nd part of the 1999 WB theme of the song "As Time Goes By" from the WB film ''Casablanca''. Some shows in association with WBTV would have the theme cut in half.
*This first appeared on the ''Prodigal Son'' episode "Face Value".
*The opening variant made its debut at the beginning of season 3 of ''The Kominsky Method'', and it also appears as a closing variant at the end of said season, using the 2003 fanfare. However, the closing variant with the middle section of the fanfare made its debut on season 2 of ''The Flight Attendant''. The scope version of this logo debuted on ''The Sandman''. The version with the Warner Bros. Discovery byline made its debut with ''The Peripheral''.
*The syndication variant made its debut on the August 31, 2021 episode of ''Extra''.
*This logo has been spotted plastering the previous logo on a rerun of the ''Young Sheldon'' episode "Training Wheels and an Unleashed Chicken" on CBS.
*It doesn't appear on ''TMZ on TV'', since [[WarnerMedia]] sold the TMZ website to Fox Corporation.
*This logo is also seen on shows formerly produced by [[Warner Horizon Unscripted Television|Warner Horizon Scripted Television]] which are later season 5-7 episodes of ''Queen Sugar'', season 2 of ''David Makes Man'', the remainder of season 5-6 of ''Animal Kingdom'', season 3 of ''You'' and season 4 of ''Claws'' starting with "Chapter Seven: Ascension".
*The in-credit variant made its debut on the October 4, 2021 episode of ''The People's Court''.
*This logo also appeared on new and future shows from this company such as ''All American: Homecoming'', ''Shining Vale'', ''The Sex Lives of College Girls'', ''Pivoting'' and ''Abbott Elementary'', among others.
*The Warner Bros. Discovery byline made its first appearances on the season 3 finale of ''Bob Hearts Abishola'' and as well on the season 4 finale of ''All American''. As of now, it is used alongside the WarnerMedia byline, although that could change in the foreseeable future.


===16th Logo (December 23, 2023-)===
<u>Music/Sounds Variants</u>:
<tabber>
:*An alternate version of the fanfare was used in the early days of the logo. This version had a faster tempo, a piano note at the beginning, and a slightly different ending. This variant can be seen on ''All of Us'', reruns of ''George Lopez'', and DVD releases of ''The New Scooby Doo Movies''.
|-|Images=
:*On ''The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air'' episode "Sleepless in Bel-Air", Lifetime airings of ''Will & Grace'' and the TV movie ''Deadly Intentions... Again?'', Nick @ Nite, Antenna TV, and HD airings of ''Murphy Brown'', the pilot of ''Rock Me Baby'' on UPN, and on Centric airings of ''The Wayans Bros.'', the 1994 theme is used.
<gallery mode=packed heights=150>
:*On some re-runs of ''Friends'', this plasters the 1994 logo; the closing theme of the TV show is heard, followed by the 1994 fanfare. Some occasions cut-off the closing theme, on some local airings; the 1998 theme is heard instead, on airings on certain local stations including WADL Detroit, the closing theme continues over this logo instead.
Warner Bros. Television (December 2023-).png
:*The 1998 theme is also heard on this logo on the final season of ''Murphy Brown'' on Nick at Nite and on DVD prints of ''Mortal Kombat: Conquest''.
Warner Bros. Television logo (zoomed in variant, 2024).PNG|True 16:9 aspect ratio version
:*The 1994 low tone WBTV theme is also heard on the short 2003 Warner Bros. Pictures logo.
WBTV logo (2024) (2x1).PNG|2:1 widescreen version
:*In 2009 on ''The Vampire Diaries'' and the 2012 mini-series ''Coma'', there is a sped-up version of the 2003 theme.
Warner Bros. Television (2024, Distributed By).png|"Distributed by" variant
:*On ''Children's Hospital'', the music (usually just the last note) is cut off by the [[Williams Street Productions]] logo.
Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution logo (Extra variant, 2024).PNG|''Extra'' split-screen credits variant
:*The first six season one episodes of ''Cold Case'' on Universal Channel Asia had the last 3 notes of the 1994 theme.
:*A silent version exists on the ''ER'' seasons 4 (except on 2 episodes) & 5 DVD's, some films on TCM, and the first 5 episodes of ''Jane the Virgin''.
:*On syndicated prints of ''The Jamie Foxx Show'', Jamie Foxx's closing jingle, "Electrifying (Baby, That's Real)" plays in the background throughout the entire four-way logo combo.
:*Starting with episode 6 of ''Jane The Virgin'', only the last note is heard.
:*The pilot of ''The Flash'' used a slowed down version of the fanfare.


<u>Availability</u>: Very common.
:*It appears on first-run syndication series such as ''The People's Court'', ''Judge Mathis'', ''TMZ on TV'', ''The Ellen DeGeneres Show'', ''Extra'', and also current network, cable and off network shows such as ''Conan'' on TBS, ''George Lopez'' on Nick at Nite and Ion Television, ''The Jamie Foxx Show'' last aired on Centric (before the rebrand as BET Her), ''The Wayans Bros.'' on MTV2, ''Friends'' in local syndication, TBS and Nick at Nite, ''Eve'' on TV One, ''ER'' (seasons 3-5 and 10-15) last aired on Pop and on it's DVD releases, and ''The Real'' in local syndication and on BET, among others.
:*Any series from this era reran on TV One would keep the original logo intact.
:*The 1994 WBTV low-tone version theme with the 2003 open-matted "Distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures" logo appears on shows like ''The Perils of Penelope Pitstop'' on former Boomerang airings and DVD, the 1967 film ''Up the Down Staircase'' on TCM, and before syndie reruns of ''Curb Your Enthusiasm'' from 2010-2011.
:*The "Produced and Distributed by" variant is somewhat rare and can be seen on the short-lived series ''Jack and Bobby'', and current episodes of ''The People's Court'' starting on the 2012-2013 season. This variant was also strangely seen on the 6th episode of ''Aliens in America'' (while it was produced by Warner Bros Television, CBS Paramount was considered the distributor. This is also strange due to the fact that every other episode includes the regular "Produced by" variant).
:*The final season (2004) of ''The Drew Carey Show'' also has this as well, and the WBTD logo also plasters the 10th logo on Laff airings of a special from said show, "Drew Carey's Back-to-School Rock 'n' Roll Comedy Hour" (which also doubled as that show's S7 premiere episode).
:*As of 2018, it is now in tandem with the 13th and 14th logos (though the 14th logo is replacing this logo during the 2018-2019 season, this logo's days may be numbered).
:*Strangely, this also appears on a Hulu print of the ''Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends'' episode "Adoptcalypse Now".


<u>Editor's Note</u>: None.

=== 12th Logo (January-December 2005) ===
<gallery mode="packed" heights="200px"> <div style='text-align: center;'>text</div>
File:Warner Bros. Television (2005) (Open Matte).png
File:Warner Bros. Television (2005) (16x9) 1.png
File:Warner Bros. Television (2005) (16x9) 2.png
File:Warner Bros. Television Distribution (2005) (16x9).png
</gallery>
</gallery>
|-|Videos=
{{YouTube|id=Id4WmDs1iMQ|id2=iWHAijNnK-A|id3=vHfV-NjwRrU|id4=sUcIbptTcFI|id5=TGwQpnmGieU|id6=7uxxsULoiiA|id7=QjRBMdeGOvI|id8=hQkHXkia2no|id9=amOXplTZ19w}}
</tabber>


'''Visuals:''' The last couple seconds of the 2023 theatrical logo, with the word "TELEVISION" replacing "PICTURES" on the banner. The shield and byline also zoom in towards the center of the screen, similar to the previous two logos.
<u>Nicknames</u>: "Television WB Shield VI", "CGI Shield II", "WB 50 Years of Quality", "Plastic Shield"

<u>Logo</u>: A smoother WB shield with a ribbon that's wrapped around it from below that says "<span style="font-family:'Times New Roman';">'''50 YEARS OF QUALITY'''</span>". Sometimes the website URL is seen below. For syndication, the text "Distributed by" appears above. Sometimes the shield is up close and zooms back.

<u>FX/SFX</u>: The zooming of the shield and gliding clouds or just the shield superimposed with the clouds gliding.

<u>Music/Sounds</u>: The 2003 WBTV theme, the end-title theme from any show, and silence on seasons 11-12 of ''ER''.

<u>Availability</u>: Uncommon.
:*It's still saved on reruns of ''Eve'' on TV One, ''Supernatural'' on TNT and FX, ''Nip/Tuck'' on Logo, and ''Without a Trace'' on Ion, among others.
:*This was also seen on ''Alice'', ''Spenser: For Hire'', and ''Scarecrow and Mrs. King'' (plastering the 1972-84 WBTV logo on the 1st season's rerun) back in 2005 during Warner Bros. Television's 50-hour marathon on TV Land.
:*This is plastered on local syndication reruns of ''Two and a Half Men'' with the 11th logo.


<u>Editor's Note</u>: None.



=== 13th Logo (September 22, 2014- ) ===


<u>Nicknames</u>: "Decorative WB Shield III", "The DC Comics WB Shield", "DC/WB Combo"

<u>Logo</u>: After the 2012-2016 (or 2016-present) [[DC Entertainment|DC Comics]] logo or the [[Vertigo Comics|Vertigo]] logo, a larger version of the movie preview trailer WB Shield seen on the names and crew members list is seen with the Warner Bros. Television ribbon in the middle of it in the same font as that of the 2008-2014 Warner Bros. Animation logo slowly zooms in from a mostly dark background.

<u>Variants</u>:
:*Beginning with Season 3 of ''Arrow'', the background and logo are all in a dark green and black color. There are also sharp green arrows zipping around the logo as well.
:*On ''Constantine'', the logo is engulfed in flames on a black and glowing fire background.
:*On ''Gotham'', there is slight drops of rain around the logo, which is in a black and dark gray color on a black background with light gray mist in it.
:*On the new version of ''The Flash'', the logo is in a electrified gold color with electricity moving around the logo, accompanied by a electric sound effect on a dark red background with black in it.
:*On ''iZombie'', the logo is gray surrounded by blood in a red brain background.
:*On the ''Supergirl'' pilot, the logo is all red and is on a blue-black gradient background.
:*On ''Supergirl'', the logo is in the clouds and is red and blue.
:*On the ''Lucifer'' pilot, the logo's colored in red and gold and is put on a dark background.
:*On ''Lucifer'', there is a city background and the logo is red and gold.
:*On ''Legends of Tomorrow'', the logo is silver and shiny, and the background is also silver and shiny with a blue-ish hue and a purple-ish hue.
:*On ''The Flash'' episode "Untouchable", the ''Arrow'' episode "Bratva", the ''Supergirl'' episode "The Martian Chronicles", and the ''Legends of Tomorrow'' episode "Turncoat", the logo is made out of LEGO. Depending on the show, something happens to form the logo. This was done to promote The LEGO Batman Movie.
:*On ''Powerless'', the logo is on a white city background, the inside of the shield is dark blue, and the text is black, while the shield is white with a black outline.
:*On ''Batwoman'', the logo is surrounded by dark, rainy skies, the shield is a dark blue (the inside is black), while the text is a glowing shade of red. Bats fly around the logo.
:*For the 2019 Arrowverse crossover event ''Crisis on Infinite Earths'', the five variants of the DC Comics and WBTV logos are combined into an extra-long variant, going in order of ''Supergirl'', ''Legends of Tomorrow'', ''The Flash'' (the transition from ''Legends'' to ''Flash'' being the transition from DC to WB), ''Arrow'', and ''Batwoman''.


<u>FX/SFX</u>: The zooming in of the shield, along with the effects that vary from each show.

<u>Music/Sounds</u>: No background music. Just the corresponding sound effects of the action, which varies from show to show. The ''Supergirl'' pilot had the 11th logo's music.

<u>Availability</u>: Common.
:*Currently seen after the DC Entertainment logo on every new TV version of the DC Comics heroes, beginning with Season 3 of ''Arrow'' and on ''The Flash'', ''Constantine'', ''iZombie'', ''Legends of Tomorrow'', ''Lucifer'', ''Gotham'', ''Supergirl'' and ''Batwoman'', in place of the 11th logo.
:*All variants (except ''Constantine'') can be found on the DCTV's official YouTube account, as DCTV - Logo Extravaganza!. Used in tandem with the 11th logo.


<u>Editor's Note</u>: None.



=== 14th Logo (January 27, 2017- ) ===
<gallery mode="packed" heights="200px"> <div style='text-align: center;'>text</div>
File:Warner Bros. Television (2017).png
</gallery>


'''Variants:'''
<u>Nicknames</u>: "Television WB Shield VII", "Shield of Staleness VII"
*Just like the previous logo, for syndication, "DISTRIBUTED BY" (set in the bold version of Warner Bros. Sans) is seen above the shield.
**<u>''Extra''</u>, from its January 22, 2024 episode onward, uses this variant with the same animation as the previous logo's opening variant, with "DISTRIBUTED BY" fading in with the byline.
*Just like the previous two logos, an opening variant exists, where the shield zooms out and rotates upwards, then shines. The byline fades in afterwards. The entire logo zooms out during this process. This can also appear as a closing logo.
*A true 16:9 ratio variant exists, where the logo is zoomed in to fit the aspect ratio.
*A widescreen 2:1 variant also exists.


'''Technique:''' CGI done by Devastudios, who also made the previous logo. The CG elements were re-rendered using the Academy Color Encoding System (ACES) color pipeline from the [[Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Production|Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences]] (AMPAS). Just as before, like its movie counterpart, the sky and clouds were done using Terragen from Planetside Software.
<u>Logo</u>: Same as the 11th logo, but the shield and cloud background are redone. The shield is also 3D and made to look like the shield from the theatrical logo, and it is a little more shiny. The clouds move to the right of the shield, as it zooms in slowly.


'''Audio:''' The final two notes of "Classic Reflection" (a new rendition of "As Time Goes By" from ''Casablanca'', originally from the Broadway musical ''Everybody's Welcome''), composed and arranged by Jacob Yoffee, orchestrated by Nolan Markey and mixed by Jason LaRocca, recorded at the Eastwood Scoring Stage at Warner Bros. Studios.
<u>Variants</u>:
:*There is a still variant.
:*There is an opening variant of this logo: The shield zooms out from the bottom of the screen in an extreme upward angle and then settles in its normal position. It then slowly zooms out afterwards.


'''Audio Trivia:''' Debuting before the theatrical fanfare, this is the first appearance of the "Classic Reflection" fanfare.


'''Audio Variants:'''
<u>FX/SFX</u>: The clouds, and the zooming of the shield.
*An extended version of the fanfare exists.
*In some cases, like on <u>''The Jennifer Hudson Show''</u> and the first three episodes of the fifth and final season of ''<u>Bob Hearts Abishola</u>'', the previous fanfare from the 15th logo is used.
*Like before, it's the closing theme of the show, the generic network theme or none.


'''Availability:''' Like the movie counterpart, this logo is currently used in tandem with the previous logo as of this writing.
<u>Music/Sounds</u>: Same as the 11th logo. There is also a sped-up version.
*It first appeared on the Christmas episode of the 2023 ''Night Court'' revival (entitled "A Night Court Before Christmas"; which serves as the season 2 premiere of the show), and later appears on the third season of ''Abbott Elementary'' and the fifth and final season of ''Bob Hearts Abishola''.
*The true 16:9 aspect ratio variant made its debut on the seventh and final season of ''Young Sheldon''.
*The widescreen 2:1 variant made its debut on the third season of ''The Cleaning Lady'', and later appears on the sixth season of ''All American'' and the television adaptation of ''Presumed Innocent''.
*The syndication variant made its debut on the January 12, 2024 episode of ''The Jennifer Hudson Show''.


===Copyright Stamps===
<u>Availability: Current</u>.
Here is some information about the copyright stamps on Warner Bros. TV series:
:*It was first seen on Netflix International prints of ''Riverdale'' (where it airs as a Netflix original; in the United States, the 11th logo is used) and ''Disjointed''.
:*As of the 2018-2019 season, it has replaced the 11th logo on network shows, including ''Riverdale''.
:*The opening variant can be seen at the beginning of season 4 episodes of ''Lucifer'' on Netflix, after the [[Netflix Originals]] logo.


*'''1970-1978, 1992-2003:''' Copyright © [YEAR] Warner Bros. Television. All Rights Reserved.
*'''1978-1992:''' Copyright © [YEAR] Warner Bros., Inc. All Rights Reserved.
*'''1993-1996, 1999:''' © [YEAR] Warner Bros. (Used on ''The John Larroquette Show'' and ''Everything's Relative'')
*'''1993-1995:''' © [YEAR] Warner Bros., A Time-Warner Entertainment Company (Used on ''Animaniacs'')
*'''1999-2023:''' Copyright © [YEAR] AND Syndicated Productions Inc. All Rights Reserved (Used on ''Judge Mathis'', ''The Bachelor'' and ''The Sharon Osbourne Show'')
*'''2003-:''' Copyright © [YEAR] Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.


{{Chronology|[[Lorimar-Telepictures]]<br>[[Warner Bros. Domestic Pay TV, Cable & Network Features]]<br>[[Turner Entertainment Co.]]<br>[[Turner Television]]<br>[[Telepictures Distribution]]<br>[[Lorimar Television]]<br>[[New Line Television]]<br>[[Warner Horizon Unscripted Television|Warner Horizon Scripted Television]]|}}
<u>Editor's Note</u>: None.


{{TV-Navbox}}{{Navbox-WarnerBrosDiscovery}}
[[Category: Television Logos]] [[Category: WarnerMedia]] [[Category: Warner Bros.]]
[[Category:American television logos]]
[[Category:United States]]
[[Category:Television logos]]
[[Category:The CW]]
[[Category:Warner Bros. Television]]
[[Category:Warner Bros.]]
[[Category:Warner Bros. Discovery]]
[[Category:Logos made by Intralink Film Graphic Design]]
[[Category:Logos made by The Illusion Factory]]
[[Category:Logos made by Devastudios]]
[[Category:Logos made by Chermayeff & Geismar & Haviv]]
[[Category:Logos that vary depending on the source]]
[[Category:Logos with music by The Rembrandts]]
[[Category:Logos with music by Jamie Foxx]]
[[Category:Logos with music by Ludwig Göransson]]
[[Category:Logos with music by Jacob Yoffee]]

Revision as of 19:20, 4 July 2024



Background

Warner Bros. Television is the television division of Warner Bros. Pictures, founded on March 21, 1955 by studio vice president Jack L. Warner and headed by TV producer and actor William T. Orr (credited as "Wm. T. Orr"). The studio made its small screen debut with Warner Bros. Presents on September 20, 1955. On January 10, 1972, WBTV formed Warner Bros. Television Distribution. Then in 1989, after acquiring Lorimar-Telepictures, WBTVD formed Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution, the current syndication arm of WBTV.

Currently, it is a division of Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc., a subsidiary of Warner Bros. Discovery. In 2020, it was renamed Warner Bros. Television Studios as part of a restructure of WB's TV studios. Despite the name change, the company is still designated as "Warner Bros. Television" on-screen and several other materials.



1st Logo (September 20, 1955-July 1967)

Visuals: There is the famous Warner Bros. shield logo superimposed over the credits, minus the banner that usually reads "WARNER BROS. PICTURES". There is no company name on screen, except some cases.

Variants:

  • There was an opening variant where the shield zooms in over a shot of the Warner Bros. Studios (like the then-current Warner Bros. logo). The word "presents" in script may or may not appear above it.
  • Also, there were different variants of the logo with text over the shield, such as "Filmed at WARNER BROS. STUDIOS IN BURBANK, CALIFORNIA".
  • Some shows had the Warner Bros. logo over a grainy background, a la DuMont Television Network.
  • A color version of this logo featured a red background and the shield in its normal coloration (gold and blue). On the superimposed variant, the shield and letters are yellow.
  • On some shows, in the opening variant, a "presents" banner is added.
  • On The Bugs Bunny Show, the WB shield is seen on a red background. Suddenly the shield opens to reveal Bugs Bunny munching his carrot and saying, "This, folks, is a Warner Bros. television production." The shield then closes.
  • On General Electric True (or GE True), a small version of the WB shield is shown with the text "A WARNER BROS. PRODUCTION" under it.
  • On the 77 Sunset Strip episodes "Alimony League", "Not Such a Simple Knot" and "The Target" on Me-TV, the WB shield appears with the banner reading "WARNER BROS. PICTURES" on a dark background after the closing credits.

Technique: Compositing effects usually. Motion-controlled animation on the opening variant.

Audio:

  • Opening:
    • A drum roll followed by a majestic fanfare with an announcer saying "A Warner Bros. Television Production" on some shows like Colt 55.
    • On the logo at the end of an opening for some TV shows, the announcer says "Produced by Warner Bros.". Sometimes, it would be accompanied by a 7-note fanfare followed by a drum sound when the grainy background variant is used.
    • Another variant used after the opening of the series has a 6-note fanfare at the beginning followed by an orchestrated 6-note theme with the announcer saying "A Warner Bros. Television Production".
    • For the Bugs Bunny Show variant, a bombastic fanfare at the start, and then a quieter tune, with Bugs Bunny (voiced by Mel Blanc) saying "This folks, is a Warner Bros. Television production". Another bombastic fanfare plays when the shield closes.
  • Closing:
    • The end-title theme from the series. The animated variant without "Presents" used a 17-note trumpet with an announcer saying either "This program has been produced by the Entertainment Capital of the World. Produced for television by Warner Bros." or "From the Entertainment Capital of the World. Produced for television by Warner Bros." after the fanfare ended.
    • On some season 6 episodes of 77 Sunset Strip seen on MeTV, a seven-note orchestral fanfare with the last note drawn out plays, followed by four drum beats as the logo fades out.
    • Its appearance on the Sylvester & Tweety Mysteries episode "Froggone It" has the announcer (Jeff Bennett) say "From the Entertainment Capital of the World. Produced for television by Warner Bros.".

Availability:

  • The animated un-superimposed variant is seen on the end of Lawman on Encore Westerns and the opening "Presents" variant of the animated logo is seen on some episodes of Cheyenne on Encore Westerns and Retroplex.
  • Sometimes, this is plastered by a later logo.
  • On The F.B.I., the 2003 WBTD logo would follow after the "Presents" variant.
  • This has been retained on F Troop (when it aired on Me-TV in 2016 and currently on Circle) and 77 Sunset Strip (which currently airs on Me-TV).
  • The Warner Bros. Pictures variant of the WB shield seen on season 6 of 77 Sunset Strip is rare as it only appears on a few episodes of that show due to MeTV choosing to cut straight to their network ID after Jack Webb's executive producer credit at the end of the closing credits on most season 6 episodes.
  • It also makes an appearance on the Sylvester & Tweety Mysteries episode "Froggone It" (it revolves around Michigan J. Frog being abducted from The WB), just before the end credits.

2nd Logo (September 1967-March 1970)

Visuals: There is a superimposed stylized shield with a combination of a "W" and a "7" (representing the Warner Bros.-Seven Arts merger) against the ending titles. The company name "WARNER BROS.-SEVEN ARTS" is shown below.

Variant: At the end of The Bugs Bunny/Road Runner Hour, the logo is shown on a red background without the company name. Suddenly, the shield opens to reveal Bugs Bunny, who says "This has been a Warner Bros.-Seven Arts..." before being interrupted by the Road Runner, who zips into the scene and does his trademark "Beep-beep!". As the Road Runner zips out, Bugs chuckles and continues "Like the bird says, this has been a Warner Bros.-Seven Arts television presentation.". The shield then closes.

Technique: Compositing effects.

Audio: None or the closing theme.

Availability: Was last seen on The F.B.I. and The Bugs Bunny/Road Runner Hour. DVDs of The F.B.I. might have this intact if a later logo does not plaster it.

3rd Logo (September 1970-February 1972)

Visuals: On a blue background, there is the shield from the Warner Bros. Pictures logo from the time, with the words "WARNER BROS. TELEVISION" underneath.

Variants:

  • At the beginning of the original Banyon TV movie, the word "PRESENTS" appears below the logo.
  • Sometimes, the print logo is shown in white on a black background.

Technique: A painting filmed by a cameraman.

Audio: None or the opening/closing theme.

Availability:

  • It appeared for a short time on some shows and made-for-TV movies of the era, such as The F.B.I. and The Jimmy Stewart Show.
  • This logo was also spotted on overseas syndicated prints of Archie's TV Funnies.
  • This doesn't appear on Nichols, though an in-credit mention for Warner Bros. Television is used instead.

4th Logo (February-September 1972)

Visuals: There is the standard shield logo over a navy blue background, with the word "TELEVISION" in large letters on the banner, and the byline "A WARNER COMMUNICATIONS COMPANY" underneath.

Variant: A superimposed version exists on The Picasso Summer.

Technique: A painting filmed by a cameraman.

Audio: None or the closing theme of the show.

Availability:

  • It was found on the 1984 Warner Home Video print of the pilot for Kung Fu, but DVD editions of said pilot have the 2001 logo instead of this one.
  • It also appeared on The F.B.I., the original Search TV movie (originally called Probe), and some prints of The Picasso Summer (a feature film that debuted in the U.S. on television), but it's long gone and it might be replaced by the 2003 logo.
  • It's also seen on the 1970s version of The Merrie Melodies Show on Teletoon Retro, and in the TV pilot of The Delphi Bureau called The Delphi Bureau: The Merchant of Death Assignment on the Warner Archive Instant.

5th Logo (September 1972-September 1984)

Visuals: On a red background, there is the 1973-1984 Warner Bros. logo (a white abstract "W" consisting of two slanted elongated circles and a shorter elongated circle inside a black square with rounded and soft corners), with the words "WARNER BROS TELEVISION" above it and the text "A WARNER COMMUNICATIONS COMPANY" below. All the text is in white and in the Handel Gothic font.

Variants:

  • The syndication logo had the words "DISTRIBUTED BY" cheaply tacked in above "WARNER BROS TELEVISION" in the early years of its usage. By 1974, the syndication variant featured the text "WARNER BROS TELEVISION DISTRIBUTION" instead.
  • The words in the standard logo had a drop-shadow starting in 1977. Despite that, the Distribution variant stayed the same.
  • There is an opening version that resembles the theatrical logo. It was seen on a few made-for-TV features, such as the original 1974 Wonder Woman movie.
  • There is also a widescreen version seen on DVD and high-definition prints of some shows and TV movies.
  • There is a superimposed variant of this logo that appeared on season 3 episodes of Alice.
  • There is an inverted version with a black abstract "W" on a white square. This was featured on some reprints of The Adventures of Superman.
  • Sometimes, the "DISTRIBUTED BY WARNER BROS" version of the movie logo is seen at the end of certain off-net syndicated TV series or TV movies on cable.
  • Another series of logo variants involve two or three Looney Tunes characters: one seen on each side of the logo. This was common on The Bugs Bunny/Road Runner Hour and many Looney Tunes specials (see the 3rd logo on the Warner Bros. Animation page for more info).
  • There's an in-credit variant of the closing logo seen in WB's films of this era, but the name "WARNER BROS TELEVISION" is used. This can be seen in the 1983 TV movie Sparkling Cyanide.
  • On the 1988 TV special Superman 50th Anniversary, a still image of the WBTD logo is used.

Technique: A painting filmed by a cameraman. The opening variant uses motion-controlled animation.

Audio: None or the credit theme from the show or TV movie fading out.

Audio Variant: On occasion, a dramatic seven-note horn fanfare is played.

Availability:

  • It's still preserved on most 1972-1984 shows, including reruns of The Dukes of Hazzard, Alice, Bare Essence, Challenge of the Super Friends, The World's Greatest Super Friends, and earlier episodes of Superfriends: The Legendary Super Powers Show when they were last shown on Boomerang, The F.B.I., and the first season of Night Court.
    • It's also retained on the DVD release of the latter.
  • The later version of the syndication logo appears on the WCI Home Video releases of Dirty Harry and The Wild Bunch, plastering the Kinney Shield on the former and preceding the W7 Shield on the latter, possibly due to those releases using the television masters instead of the theatrical prints.
  • It's also seen on the 1st season (1983-1984) of Scarecrow and Mrs. King, whenever it's rerun.
  • The "Distributed By" version with the smaller logo also appeared on the U.S. reruns of Just the Ten of Us and on older SOAPnet reruns of Hotel.
    • It also appears on the VHS and Blu-ray releases of V: The Original Miniseries.
  • This logo was originally seen at the end of the 1st season of The Streets of San Francisco, but with the exception of at least one local rerun episode, it's plastered over with either the 1974 or 1988 Worldvision logos on older local reruns and Me-TV reruns of season three onwards or the 2006 CBS Paramount logo on DVD releases and Me-TV reruns of the first two seasons of the said show.
  • On older Family Channel (now Freeform) reruns of Scarecrow and Mrs. King, this logo, along with the B&E Enterprises logo (used on the 1st 11 episodes) of the 1st season, were all plastered with the next logo below.
  • Also, the "Distributed By" version was also used on a few season 4 episodes, either following the 6th logo or plastering it.
    • On MeTV and Decades reruns of Wonder Woman, this logo is either plastered by either the 6th or 11th (2001 version) logo, although one episode from its final season retained this logo.
    • The "Distributed By" variant also made a sneak appearance on a Me-TV rerun of a season 2 Christmas episode of Welcome Back, Kotter.
  • The recent H&I (Heroes and Icons, formerly Me-Too) reruns of Kung Fu and the DVD releases have this plastered with the 11th logo (2001 version) with the low tone 1994 jingle.
  • The black and white variant is retained on two episodes of The Adventures of Superman on its season 1 DVD release, titled "The Stolen Costume" and "The Unknown People, Part 2".
  • On the S1 Night Court episode "The Former Harry Stone," this was plastered over with the 1996 Telepictures Distribution logo.
  • The WBTD logo also makes an appearance on the 1988 TV special Superman 50th Anniversary instead of the next logo below.

6th Logo (September 21, 1984-May 9, 1997)

Visuals: Same as its movie counterpart, but "WARNER BROS. TELEVISION" is added above the shield.

Bylines: The following bylines were used during the logo's run:

  • 1984-1990: "A WARNER COMMUNICATIONS COMPANY"
  • 1990-1996: "A TIME WARNER COMPANY"
  • 1992-1997: "A TIME WARNER ENTERTAINMENT COMPANY"

Variants:

  • Many post-1984 TV movies and/or mini-series such as North and South: Books I and II use the 1984 Warner Bros. Pictures logo at the end.
  • A B&W version of the 1984 WBTD logo exists.
  • On the 1988 pilot of Just in Time, the words "in association with" appear above the Warner Bros. Television text.
  • On the 1993 cartoon series Family Dog, the logo is shown on the right side of the screen on a black background, with the 1991 Universal Television logo on the left.
  • On some occasions starting in 1990, the words "WARNER BROS. TELEVISION" are slightly more stretched out and the Time Warner byline is slightly shortened in.
  • A B&W version of the 1990 WBTD logo also exists, which was seen on old TV Land airings of Gilligan's Island, as well is being seen on the Tiny Toon Adventures episode "Two-Tone Town" for the 1992 logo.
  • On a 1993 VHS release of Batman: The Animated Series, the text is in an alternate font.

Network Variant: From 1984 to 1997, the WB shield appears (including the banner reading "WARNER BROS. PICTURES"), with "WARNER BROS. TELEVISION" on top and the owner's byline at the bottom.

Syndication Variants:

  • 1984-1997: The WB shield appears (including the banner reading "WARNER BROS. PICTURES"), with "WARNER BROS. TELEVISION" on top, and the word "DISTRIBUTION" below it.
  • 1993-1997: Same as the previous variant, but the text above the shield is replaced by "WARNER BROS. DOMESTIC TELEVISION DISTRIBUTION", with the first three words overlapping the other two.
  • 1994-1996: On syndicated prints of Family Matters and Full House, it features both names, with the text "WARNER BROS. TELEVISION" (in a slightly different font) appearing at first, before it cross-fades to "WARNER BROS. DOMESTIC TELEVISION DISTRIBUTION" afterward. This logo variant still had the words "WARNER BROS. PICTURES" in the shield banner. This was seen on syndicated reruns of seasons 5 and 6 of Family Matters and season 7 of Full House, but the latter now cuts directly to the 2001 WBTD logo after the 1992 WBTV logo.

Technique: A painting filmed by a cameraman, and later a digital graphic. Fading effects for the cross-fade variant.

Audio: Mostly none or the end-title theme from any show. For syndication, one of the voice-overs listed below can be heard. Here is a list of the voice-overs used for early-mid '90s shows that were syndicated by Warner Bros. Basically, the following spiels are followed by "...and is distributed by Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution" (although The People's Court and Merrie Melodies lacked the word "Distribution"):

  • Full House (Dave Coulier (as Joey Gladstone)): Full House is produced by Jeff Franklin Productions with Miller-Boyett Productions in association with Lorimar Television (seasons 1-6), Warner Bros. Television (season 7).
  • Family Matters (Reginald VelJohnson (as Carl Winslow)): Family Matters is a Miller Boyett Production in association with Lorimar Television (seasons 1-4), Warner Bros. Television (season 5). (Bickley/Warren Productions started co-producing the show in season 3, but the voice-over was not changed to mention Bickley/Warren. The season 5 variant also has VelJohnson using a different tone.)
  • Head of the Class (Leslie Bega (as Maria Borges)): Head of the Class is a Eustis Elias Production in association with Warner Bros. Television.
  • Perfect Strangers (Mark Linn-Baker (as Larry Appleton)): Perfect Strangers is a Miller-Boyett Production in association with Lorimar Television.
  • Growing Pains (Kirk Cameron (as Mike Seaver), Tracey Gold (as Carol Anne Seaver), or Jeremy Miller (as Ben Seaver)): Growing Pains is a Guntzelman-Sullivan-Marshall Production in association with Warner Bros. Television (seasons 5 and 6), Warner Bros. Production (season 7).
  • Murphy Brown (Charles Kimbrough (as Jim Dial)): Murphy Brown is a Shukovsky English Production in association with Warner Bros. Television. (This is kept on post-1994 episodes with the 1994 theme playing under the voice-over.)
  • Fun House (announcer John "Tiny" Hurley): Fun House is a Stone Television Production in association with and is distributed by Lorimaaaaaaar-Telepictures! Cool! (first season only, later replaced with mentions to Lorimar Television and Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution ("Oy!") (except for the final season, which was produced by Telepictures Productions instead of Lorimar Television).
  • Alf (Brian Cummings or Jerry Bishop): Alf is an Alien Production.
  • The Hogan Family (Jason Bateman (as David Hogan)): The Hogan Family is a Miller-Boyett Production in association with Lorimar Television.
  • The People's Court (Jack Harrell (1981-93)): The People's Court is produced by Ralph Edwards-Stu Billett Productions and is distributed by Lorimar-Telepictures (1987-89), Warner Bros. Domestic Television (1989-93).
  • The People's Court (Curt Chaplin (1997-2023)): The People's Court is a Ralph Edwards-Stu Billett Production, distributed by Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution (WB line used until 2001).
  • Moral Court (Announcer Unknown): Moral Court was created and produced by Stu Billett Productions, distributed by Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution.
  • Time Trax (Announcer Unknown): Time Trax is a Gary Nardino Production in association with Lorimar Television (early 1993 episodes), Warner Bros. Television (1993-1994 eps).
  • Step by Step (Patrick Duffy (as Frank Lambert)): Step by Step is a Miller-Boyett Production in association with Lorimar Television (seasons 1 and 2), Warner Bros. Television (season 3). (Again, Bickley/Warren Productions co-produced the series but is not mentioned.)
  • Merrie Melodies Starring Bugs Bunny & Friends (Announcer Unknown): Merrie Melodies is a production of Warner Bros. Animation.
  • Love Connection (various announcers): This is [name] speaking for Love Connection. Love Connection is an Eric Lieber Production, produced in association with and is distributed by Lorimar-Telepictures (later Lorimar Television and distributed by Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution from 1989, 2000's GSN airings plaster this logo with the 10th logo). (The 1998 revival was a PEL Production, produced in association with Telepictures Productions and distributed by Telepictures Distribution.)
  • Kung Fu: The Legend Continues (Richard Anderson): Kung Fu: The Legend Continues is produced by Warner Bros. Distributing Canada, Limited and is distributed by Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution (1993-1994 episodes only). Later episodes from 1995 to 1997 use the WBTV Distribution voice-over but the WBTV 1994 jingle music plays after the voiceover finishes over the 1996 WBTD logo (though TNT airings use the Domestic Pay TV logo instead which kept this voice over intact on the 1993-94 episodes).
  • Trump Card (Chuck Reilly): Trump Card is a production of Createl Ltd. and Fiedler/Berlin Productions in association with Telepictures Productions.
  • Babylon 5 (Douglas Netter): Babylon 5 is a Babylonian Production (early Season 1 episodes only).
  • 3rd Degree! (Bob Hilton/Don Morrow): 3rd Degree! is a Kline and Friends Production, in association with Burt & Bert Productions and Lorimar Television. (This show uses the standard 1984 WBTV logo, instead of the 1984 WBTD logo commonly used on shows distributed by WBTD.)
  • The Jenny Jones Show (Announcer Unknown): This is a David Salzman Production in association with Telepictures Productions.
  • Night Court (John Larroquette (as Dan Fielding)): Night Court is a Warner Bros. Television Production (seasons 7-9 only, mid-2000's TV Land airings plaster this logo with the 11th logo but kept the voice-over intact).

Audio Variants:

  • On season 1 reruns of The Hogan Family (originally called Valerie), the standard and high tone variants of the 1986 Lorimar-Telepictures "Crashing Comets" themes are played on the 1990 WBTD logo.
  • On syndicated reruns of Martin and Encore Classics airings of Murphy Brown, the 1994 WBTV theme is used over the 1990 WBTD logo, the latter also retains its voice over due to plastering the next logo below.
  • On the Batman: The Animated Series episode "Day of the Samurai", the 2003 WBTV theme was heard on the 1992 WBTD logo. This may have been a result of a double plaster.
  • On original ABC airings and reruns of early season 2 episodes of Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman last seen on TNT and Hub Network (now Discovery Family) and seasons 6-8 of Family Matters as well as HD prints of early season 9, it uses the 1994 WBTV theme from the 8th logo.
  • On HD prints of later season 9 episodes of Family Matters, it uses the 1998 fanfare from the 9th logo, sometimes in low tone.
  • On the Region 1 DVD print of the ThunderCats episode "Turmagar the Tuska", the short version of the 1986 Lorimar-Telepictures "Crashing Comets" theme is heard over the 1984 WBTV Distribution logo, due to an editing error.

Availability:

  • Seen on Batman: The Animated Series, Animaniacs (Nickelodeon/Nicktoons airings of the latter plaster this with the 2001 WBTD logo while Cartoon Network used the 8th and 9th logos), Tiny Toon Adventures, Taz-Mania, the first three seasons of Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman last aired on the Hub Network (now Discovery Family) and the latter was also retained on TNT years ago (plastered by the 2003 logo on HBO Max), the season 7 DVD release of Full House (plastered by the 2003 WBTD logo on MeTV and HBO Max), season 3 of Matt Houston on Decades (before or after the 2007 CBS Television Distribution logo), and a couple episodes of Martin on TV One (plastered by the 2003 WBTD logo on MTV2 and BET), among others.
    • However, it is omitted from the HBO Max prints of Superman: The Animated Series; while they do retain the opening Warner Bros. Family Entertainment logo, the closing logos have been deleted.
  • The Distribution variant is seen on the 1995 TV movie Prince For a Day, and at the end of a DVD print of the Rankin/Bass special The Year Without a Santa Claus (was intact on ABC Family (now Freeform) years ago).
  • The 1990 WBTV Distribution logo also plasters over the 1971 Lorimar "LP" and 1978 "Line of Doom" logos on Eight is Enough.
    • It is also seen at the beginning of the UK VHS releases of The Boyfriend from Hell, Dillinger (1990), and Murder in Mississippi, respectively.
  • This logo is also seen at the end of early S1 episodes of Beetlejuice: The Animated Series, The Super Powers Team: Galactic Guardians, Night Court, Growing Pains, Family Matters, Head of the Class, Just the Ten of Us, and the final season of The Dukes of Hazzard, among others.
  • The 1984 Warner Communications byline variant also showed up on a late 2010s Seven Network airing of Godzilla (2014) in Australia, thought that may be from the Network's habits of editing out the closing credits on every film shown.
  • The 1984 WBTV Distribution logo is also seen on Super Friends: The Legendary Super Powers Show, on a DVD print of The World's Greatest SuperFriends episode "The Planet of Oz", and also on episodes of both Filmation's The Adventures of Batman and Tarzan, Lord of the Jungle included on the DVD release of Saturday Morning Cartoons: 1970s Volume 1.
  • The 1984 WBTV Distribution logo was also seen at the end of a June 2, 1991 airing of Badlands (1973) on affiliate WPIX.
  • The 1984 WBTV logo is also preserved on a later print of Bugs and Daffy's Carnival of the Animals (1976), which is included on the 2007 DVD release of Looney Tunes Golden Collection: Volume 5, the Warner Archive Collection DVD release of the 1985 remake of The Bad Seed, Tubi streaming prints of Spenser: For Hire, the 1986 TV movie Of Pure Blood, and V (1984 TV series), and was also seen on the original airing of Off the Rack, the 1988 pilot of Just in Time, and the 1989 failed pilot of American Nuclear, respectively.
  • The 1990 WBTV logo was also seen on a June 14, 1992 airing of part 1 of the 1980 TV miniseries Scruples on affiliate WVUE.
  • The 1992 WBTV logo is also seen at the end of the True Movies 1 airings of the 1994 TV movie Lies of the Heart: The Story of Laurie Kellogg.
  • The Family Matters voiceover variant of the 1993 WBDTVD logo is also left intact on TBS' prints of the first five seasons of the show (season 5 also preserves the 1994 variant featuring both names), likely due to the use of older syndicated prints. Likewise, the network's prints of season 6 also preserves the aforementioned variant with both names.

7th Logo (September 2, 1993-April 27, 1999)

Visuals: On a black/blue gradient, there is a white WB shield, with the banner reading "WARNER BROS.". Underneath is the Time Warner Entertainment byline and copyright notice.

Variant: On season 1 of The John Larroquette Show and Daddy's Girls, the logo is superimposed over the credits.

Technique: A still image rendered in CGI.

Audio:

  • The ending theme of the show.
  • Unknown on Everything's Relative, due to the NBC generic announcement.

Availability: Seen on The John Larroquette Show, Daddy's Girls, The Secret Lives of Men, and Everything's Relative, in which the latter hasn't been reran or released on home media.

8th Logo (September 1, 1994-February 11, 2001)

Visuals: Almost the same as the 6th logo, only this time, the text "WARNER BROS. TELEVISION" is removed from above the shield and now appears inside the banner, and the company byline appears in a different font. The overall appearance of the shield is a lot "shinier" and more golden.

Variants:

  • During this logo's duration, two cloud backgrounds are used: one with more detailed clouds and one with less-detailed clouds and a much brighter color.
  • On most first-run and non-WB syndicated shows, the banner reads "WARNER BROS.".
  • On the Free Willy animated series, the logo appears in a box on a black screen with a copyright stamp below.
  • A variant that is seen on some prints of the original 1983 TV movie episodes of the original V: The Series exists, plastering the 1972-1984 logo. This also has a rough fade-out compared to the standard 1994 WBTV logo and the byline's in the same font as the previous logo, plus the clouds and the shield itself are darker than in the standard version.
    • A 4:3 version also exists, which is preserved on every episode of Mayberry R.F.D. on the season 1 DVD set.
  • The less-detailed clouds version of the logo is doubled on PAL DVD releases of Friends season 3, where the logo fades to black as the ending theme ends, it reappears and the standard 1994 WBTV theme plays at PAL speed.
  • On Whose Line Is It Anyway?, the logo is slightly enhanced, and the sky is also more bluish.
  • On Muscle and Minor Adjustments, a copyright stamp appears under the company byline, and the shield banner just reads "WARNER BROS.".
  • A syndicated version exists, which has the text "WARNER BROS. DOMESTIC TELEVISION DISTRIBUTION" above the shield.
  • A widescreen version of the Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution variant also exists. The proportion of the shield is kept intact while the background and the text above and below the shield are being stretched to 16:9.

Technique: A digital graphic.

Audio: A seven-note horn theme with a drum rolling throughout and a cymbal clash at the last 2-3 notes, sometimes with the echo at the end. The music is basically the final notes of the Looney Tunes/Merrie Melodies theme song, "Merrily We Roll Along". Sometimes, it's silent or the closing theme of the show.

Audio Variants:

  • Some shows with the WBDTD variant have the first few (at least two) notes cut off. This variant is seen on first run syndicated shows and reruns like Living Single and Hangin' with Mr. Cooper.
  • Some shows produced in association with WBTV have the theme cut in half.
  • Sometimes, a low tone version is heard, which also exists.
  • On The West Wing, the fanfare is high-pitched; it is unknown if this came from an NTSC or a PAL print.
  • On Friends, the last few seconds of the show's theme music, "I'll Be There For You" by The Rembrandts, is heard.
  • Reruns of seasons 1-4 of The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air had a hip-hop theme.
  • On original WB broadcasts and some reruns of The Parent 'Hood and season 1 of The Jamie Foxx Show episode "Burned Twice by the Same Flame", the theme is double-high-toned (high-pitched) and in warp-speed on almost all episodes prior to 1999.
  • The 1997 revival of The People's Court used Curt Chaplin's voice over on this logo. 1999-2001 episodes presided by Judge Jerry Sheindlin used Chaplin's re-recorded voice over.
  • On pre-2003 syndicated prints of The Jamie Foxx Show, Jamie Foxx's closing jingle, "Electrifying (Baby, That's Real)" plays in the background throughout the entire four-way logo combo. On DVD, however, it would retain its normal music.
  • On the Mayberry R.F.D. episode "The Camper", an audio glitch causes the last few notes of the show's theme to replay quietly (and with static) over the usually silent logo.
  • On some shows, the fanfare succeeded the show's ending theme. In some cases, the logo even cut to black after the end theme played, before cutting back to the logo just to play the fanfare. This was most common with seasons 2-4 of Friends, and also occurs with the next four logos, with the 11th logo plastering over the previous four on HD remasters.
  • NBC, CBS and some 1997 and post-1998 ABC airings used their respective generic themes.
  • On both the pilot episode and episode 22 of Mortal Kombat: Conquest on the series' PAL DVD release, the high tone variant of the 1998 fanfare from the 9th logo is heard.

Availability: Seen on shows by the company from the time-period until 2001.

  • Examples include Friends, The Wayans Bros, Living Single, On Our Own, and The Murphy Brown Retrospective Special, among others.
  • The standard version is currently preserved on the final season of Full House on DVD (although the 2003 logo replaces it on HBO Max and MeTV) and was also seen on the original FOX prints of Living Single on Bounce.
  • The 1996 WBDTD version was seen on former Family Matters reruns on Nick at Nite and was also seen on reruns of Living Single in syndication years ago.
  • The 1994 WBDTD version is still seen on Living Single on TV One (plastered by the 2003 logo on We, and was retained on USA Network years ago, but followed by the 2001 logo), as well as on Babylon 5 PTEN airings for seasons 2-4.
  • It is also seen on S1-1st half S3 episodes and 2nd half S4-S5 (until the episode "Oswald's Son") episodes of The Drew Carey Show and the 1999-00 season of Access Hollywood in syndication (replacing 20th Television).
  • This logo (along with the next ones) does not appear at the end of Cartoon Network or Williams Street shows, although most of its shows are distributed by the company.

9th Logo (Warner Bros. 75th anniversary logo) (January 1-December 1998)

Visuals: There is a near-still shot of the 1997/1998 movie logo, with the words "75 YEARS Entertaining The World" on both sides of the WB shield, the banner either reading "WARNER BROS." or "WARNER BROS. PICTURES", and a darker background.

Trivia: This logo debuted before its movie counterpart, which first appeared on the movie Fallen, released on January 16, 1998.

Variant: The "WARNER BROS." variant of the logo was doubled on PAL DVD releases of Friends season 4. The first one appears in a video master's quality, while the second one has much better quality, according to the uploader of these videos (ClosingLogosHD). Sometimes, the first one cuts to black.

Technique: CGI. Like the movie logo, this was done by Intralink Film Graphic Design.

Audio: A truncated version of the wind-blowing theme from the 1998 theatrical logo or the end theme of a show.

Audio Variants:

  • For the "Warner Bros. Pictures" version, this logo is usually silent or has the closing theme of the show/movie, but on rare occasions, the 1994 theme from the previous logo is heard.
  • The Roku Channel print of season 3, episode 10 of Suddenly Susan had the chimes audibly heard before the 2003 Warner Bros. Pictures logo, along with the 1999 fanfare, even appears.
  • A low tone variant of the 1998 fanfare exists, which was heard on a few episodes of Meego (international airings).
  • A silent version of the standard logo was used on seasons 4 and 5 of ER and early 2000s TV Land airings of Gilligan's Island.
  • On old airings of Rudolph's Shiny New Year on Fox/ABC Family (now Freeform), it had the Rankin/Bass logo music trailing underneath.
  • The ending theme of the show used was also used on Animaniacs seasons 1-2 to plaster the 6th logo before falling silent.
  • On PAL DVD prints of later season 4 episodes of Friends, the Friends theme is heard. As the theme finishes, the 1998 theme is heard, but in high tone.
  • ABC, CBS and NBC airings used the respective channels' generic themes.
  • 1998 episodes of the 1997 revival of The People's Court used Curt Chaplin's voice over on this logo.
  • A 2000 TBS airing of The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air used the hip-hop theme from the previous logo.

Availability:

  • Seen on the fourth and fifth seasons of Friends (however, HD prints plaster this logo with the 2003 logo instead), the first and second seasons of Veronica's Closet when last reran on TV Guide Network (now Pop, one overseas airing had the 2003 logo follow this logo), some rerun episodes from the final season of Family Matters, on the second half of season 4 episodes of The Parent 'Hood, the first season of Whose Line Is It Anyway?, 1998 episodes of the fourth and fifth seasons of ER (plastered on DVD, VOD, Max, and Pop airings by the 2003 logo, but retained on some episodes on TNT years ago, while some had this logo plastered by the 1995 Cable-Pay TV logo with the 1994 theme), early 2000s airings of The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air on TBS (current prints plaster this logo with the 2003 logo), 1998 episodes of The Rosie O'Donnell Show in syndication, some 1998 episodes of Extra, The People's Court, and The Jenny Jones Show in syndication, early 2000s TV Land prints of Gilligan's Island, TNT airings of 1998 episodes of Babylon 5, and early episodes of both Brimstone and Mortal Kombat: Conquest (the latter also has this logo plastered by the 2003 logo on remastered prints), among others.
  • It is also seen on the second half of season 3 and the first half of season 4 episodes of The Drew Carey Show (Laff reruns of the show from 2017-2018 kept the logo, but when it aired on Rewind TV in 2024, it was plastered with the 2003 logo), and the second half of the final season of Murphy Brown.
  • This logo also plastered the 6th logo on 1998-2001 Cartoon Network airings of Animaniacs, with the 1995 Cable-Pay TV version of the previous logo inserted after it (although post-season 3 episodes of the latter show have this logo follow the Warner Bros. Television Animation logo of the time, and has the 1995 Cable-Pay TV logo following after this logo), though both this logo and the 1995 Cable-Pay TV logo followed the 6th logo on old TNT airings of the 1990 film Nightbreed.
  • This logo debuted on the last two episodes of Living Single, which aired on New Years' Day (January 1st), 1998 (although recent VH1 reruns of the latter show have fallen victim to modern, Nickelodeon-style "last-scene-of-the-show" credits, along with this logo being plastered by the widescreen version of the "Distributed by" version of the 2003 logo [while the preceding SisterLee Productions logo has the words "In Association With"]).
  • This logo was also used in tandem with the 1995 Cable-Pay TV logo for shows of the time that were aired/rerun on cable networks.
  • This logo was also seen at the end of both Cartoon Network and Boomerang airings of Scooby-Doo on Zombie Island (1998) and an August 18, 2002 TCM airing of The Incredible Mr. Limpet (1964), respectively, which is then followed by the 1995 Warner Bros. Cable-Pay TV logo afterwards.
  • It was also seen at the end of the pilot of Maximum Bob, following the Sonnenfeld Josephson Worldwide Entertainment logo.
  • It was also seen at the end of a Canadian airing of the pilot of Brimstone on Space (now CTV Sci-Fi Channel).
  • It was also seen at the end of a February 11, 2006 airing of a 1995 episode of Friends on Minneapolis/St. Paul's ABC-affiliated KSTP-TV.
  • It was also seen at the end of an April 1, 2024 U.S. airing of the 1958 Looney Tunes short "Knighty Knight Bugs" on Cartoon Network.

10th Logo (April 5, 2000-April 29, 2001)

Visuals: On a sky background which is slightly better-defined than those from the previous logos, there is the Warner Bros. shield logo with the text "WARNER BROS. TELEVISION" on the banner. The text "DISTRIBUTED BY" or "PRODUCED AND DISTRIBUTED BY" is above the shield (sometimes being omitted), and the byline (which is reverted to its first font) and a small URL for "www.warnerbros.com" are below.

Variants:

  • Reruns of season 1 episodes of Static Shock on Disney XD and some online prints of seasons 4 & 5 of ER use the static 2000 Warner Bros. Pictures logo (the former omitting the URL).
  • A B&W and silent version was seen on the 2000 made-for-TV movie remake of Fail Safe.

Technique: A digital graphic.

Audio: The end-title theme of any series, the 1994 WBTV theme, or silence. The People's Court, Moral Court and some episodes of Growing Pains all had voice overs on this logo.

Audio Variants:

  • On the 2000 remake of The Fugitive, a majestic fanfare is heard. However, on the pilot episode of the same show, the 1994 WBTV theme is sped up and pitched up by 5 semitones.
  • On syndicated prints of season 6 of The Drew Carey Show, the show's stinger theme is heard.
  • On later season 1 and some season 2 episodes of The West Wing, the fanfare is PAL pitched; it is unknown if this came from an NTSC or a PAL print.

Availability: This was only used for a short time before Time Warner merged with America Online.

  • It was seen on older reruns of Growing Pains last aired on TeenNick and currently seen on Antenna TV though in split screen form.
  • It was also seen on fall 2000-early 2001 episodes from the 2000-01 season of Access Hollywood in syndication, and pre-2001 episodes of Moral Court during its original syndication run and last seen on Ion reruns of said show.
  • This also appeared on the NBC/WB sitcom For Your Love.
  • This was also seen on the last few season 5 (starting with the episode "Mr. Wick Returns") and the 1st half of season 6 episodes of The Drew Carey Show from this era; Laff and Rewind TV reruns have retained it.
  • VOD, HBO Max, and Pop airings of season 1 and season 6 episodes, online airings of seasons 4 and 5, and reruns on TNT and syndication years ago of ER also had this logo, but were plastered on the DVD releases by the 2001 and 2003 logos below, respectively.
  • As of 2018, this can still be seen on UP reruns of the 2000 and 2001-era episodes of the first incarnation of Whose Line Is It Anyway?.
  • This was also seen on original WB airings of the final season of The PJ's, but other prints have the 2001 logo instead.
  • This was also seen on the failed 2000 pilot to the TV adaptation of L.A. Confidential on Trio as part of their Brilliant But Cancelled block in 2003.

11th Logo (January 29, 2001-October 1, 2021)

Visuals: The logo is now a TV rendition of the 1992 variant of the 11th Warner Bros. Pictures logo. The sky background is either darker or brighter, and the 1984 shield logo with the banner inscription "WARNER BROS. TELEVISION" is seen. Like the previous logo, this one often includes either "Distributed by" or "Produced and Distributed by" above the shield, and the byline "An AOL Time Warner Company" is below the shield, sometimes with a small website URL reading "www.warnerbros.com".

Variants:

  • Early 2001-2003: This logo has a different cloud background, and a shinier WB shield logo, like that of the Warner Bros. Classic/Television Animation version, albeit without sparkles on the shield logo. The text "Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution" is above the shield logo with the new byline below it. The company URL is also temporarily removed. This was seen on the February 23, 2001 episode of Access Hollywood, early episodes of The Ellen DeGeneres Show and some 2003 episodes of Street Smarts, the latter two both used prior to the debut of the 2003 logo.
  • A narrow version of the 2001 logo exists.
  • One of the seasons of Extra earlier in the 2000s had the 2001 logo logo play as usual, except it ended with a shot of the logo on a television screen inside a giant X (this was when Extra had their logo revised from the '90s black and white one, to the "x" in a blue circle logo).
  • A variant of the 2001 logo where the banner only reads "WARNER BROS." also exists, which is seen on the HBO miniseries Band of Brothers, and the Kids' WB! series The Nightmare Room.
  • Another variant of the 2001 logo with the URL omitted which only the shield and the byline appear also exists, which is seen on Thieves (2001), and the second and third episodes of Birds of Prey.
  • An open-matte 2001 distribution variant also exists.
  • A complete widescreen version of the 2001 logo with the clouds being enhanced also exists, which can be found on Witchblade.
  • On a Dutch airing of Third Watch, the open-matte version is shown, but the URL has a different internet code, which is "co.uk". This is the British website for Warner Bros.
    • This was also seen on the UK airings of The West Wing, and is also preserved on a season 3 episode of Kung Fu on DVD.
  • A variant of the 2001 logo found on UK airings of Friends, ER and The West Wing have an AOL Keyword below the logo "AOL Keyword: (Name of Either Show, i.e. "West Wing")" ("AOL" in its corporate acronym of the time) with the URL website reading "www.warnerbros.co.uk".
  • A B&W variant of the 2001 Distribution variant also exists.
  • On the final episode of The Rosie O'Donnell Show, the copyright stamp appears below the AOL Time Warner byline and the URL which also exists.

Technique: A digital graphic.

Audio: The 1994 theme from the 8th logo, the closing theme of the show (also on the "Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution" variant), or none.

Audio Variants:

  • Sometimes, a low tone variant of the 1994 theme is heard.
  • On ABC Family (now Freeform) reruns of Family Matters, Full House, Growing Pains, and Step by Step, the theme sounds like it's been played at a stadium.
  • When Full House was reran on Nick@Nite and TeenNick, WBTV used Dave Coulier's syndicated voice-over closing.
  • Game Show Network airings of Love Connection plaster this logo over the 6th logo while retaining John Cervenka's voice over.
  • On newer ABC Family airings of Full House, the logos were shown first (with the closing theme playing over it), and the credits were shown afterwards in split-screen.
  • On the first episode of season 3 and the eighteenth episode of season 4 of Dallas on their respective DVD releases, it has the 1971 Lorimar theme on this logo due to a sloppy plaster job.
  • On season 1 episodes of What I Like About You on its DVD release, the Smallville episode "Whisper" and the ER season 3 episode "One More for the Road" on the S3 DVD release thereof, it uses the music from the next logo, both due to a rush plastering job.
  • On syndicated prints of seasons 6-8 of The Drew Carey Show, the show's stinger theme is heard.
  • ABC, CBS, Fox and NBC airings used their generic themes.

Availability:

  • This logo was seen on ABC Family (now Freeform) and TeenNick reruns of Full House.
  • This logo was a standard for plastering logos in the 2000s, plastering the 1972 "Big '" on H&I reruns and DVD releases of Kung Fu and the Me-TV reruns and DVD releases of Wonder Woman, as well as the 1978 Lorimar logo on most episodes of the first eight seasons of Dallas on DVD and also was seen on Down to Earth on Good Life TV (now Youtoo) in the early 2000s, USA Network airings of Living Single in the early 2000s (after the 1994-2001 WBDTD logo), as well as Nickelodeon/Nicktoons airings of Animaniacs.
  • A version with the website text can be found on reruns of The Oblongs on Adult Swim.
  • Seen on the second half of S6-S8 episodes of The Drew Carey Show, and also on 2001 episodes from the 2000-01 season of Access Hollywood right before NBC Enterprises took over in the fall of 2001.
  • This logo was also seen on Boomerang U.S. airings of The 13 Ghosts of Scooby-Doo, but is omitted from the DVD, Boomerang and Tubi streaming service prints thereof.
  • It was also seen on a getTV airing of Young Guns II (a Morgan Creek film), before the 2002 SPT logo.
  • When GetTV reran The Jimmy Stewart Show in 2015, the original ending with the third logo (the "Kinney Shield") was plastered by the "Distributed by" variant with the URL given below the AOL byline (the show's original closing theme music plays over the latter logo as well).
    • This is also plastered on the Warner Archive DVD release.
  • Despite having ended use in late 2003, after the Time Warner name was reinstated, the 2001 logo was strangely seen on the season 7-8 episodes of the first incarnation of Whose Line Is It Anyway? (and continuing to keep it this way as of the current UP reruns of the latter) up to its 2007 end.
  • It was also seen at the end of an old TCM airing of The Making of 'Cannery Row' (1982), a later print of The Doorway to Hell (1930), the pilot episode of Black Bart, (included on the 2014 UK Blu-ray release of Blazing Saddles (1974), plastering the 5th logo), and an old TG4 airing of Scooby's Mystery Funhouse as part of their Cúla4 block, following the blacked out 1979-era variant of the 1979 Hanna-Barbera "Swirling Star" logo.

  • Visuals: Same as the 2001 logo, but the colors are brighter and the company byline is omitted - this is because all of the WB divisions were organized as "Warner Bros. Entertainment" (under Time Warner, later WarnerMedia, now Warner Bros. Discovery) since late 2003, sometimes with the WB URL below and like the 2000 and 2001 logos, either "Distributed by" or "Produced and Distributed by" (in the same font as the 2001 logo) seen above the 1984 shield, sometimes being omitted.

    Trivia:

    • In the 2013 film Saving Mr. Banks, when Mrs. Travers arrives at the Los Angeles airport, a trio of cab drivers are holding signs for different film companies (one for Warner Bros., one for MGM, one for Walt Disney). The logo depicted on the sign is this one, which is historically inaccurate.
    • The "Distributed by" variant was surprisingly seen on a July 20, 2016 TBS airing of The Big Bang Theory episode "The Boyfriend Complexity", though this is probably a plastering error because this proceeded the Michael Patrick King Productions logo, which was also found on the same airing. Also, TBBT uses the completely bylineless version, meaning that TBS accidentally used the combo for 2 Broke Girls instead.

    Variants:

    • Series distributed by Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution have a further-back view of the logo, while Warner Bros. Television Distribution series feature a closer view. Though Mike & Molly was a new WB series and most new network WBTV series usually used the completely bylineless 2003 WBTV logo, the show used the 2003 WBTD version instead (with no URL).
    • On The Perils of Penelope Pitstop on DVD, the Boomerang streaming service and former Boomerang U.S. airings, the 1967 film Up the Down Staircase on TCM, and syndie reruns of Curb Your Enthusiasm from 2010-2011, it just uses the open-matted 2003 version of the then-current closing logo for Warner Bros. Pictures.
    • As in the 2003 variant, the banner is sometimes slightly stretched.
    • On a S3 episode of The Jamie Foxx Show titled "Taps For Royal" from a recent Centric rerun, the text "Distributed by" is omitted, but just before the music from the Bent Outta Shape Productions and Foxx Hole Productions logos finishes out, it suddenly appears in its original position. As a result, this plasters the 1996 Telepictures Distribution logo that usually followed on syndie reruns. This also happens on George Lopez on a season 1 episode titled "Who's Your Daddy?".
    • On the series finale of The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air titled "I, Done" in syndication, and TCM prints of Nancy Drew... Troubleshooter, the widescreen version of the 2003 logo is squashed to fit the 4:3 dimensions.
    • A B&W version of the 2003 logo exists, which is seen on the series finale of Children's Hospital ("The Grid"), and some films on TCM.
    • On some shows, like TMZ and Extra, the logo fades in from black. On The Tyra Banks Show, the logo crossfades from the Telepictures logo.
    • On Lifechangers and 2020-2021 episodes of TMZ, the logo is part of the split screen credits.
    • The 2003 logo also sometimes shares the screen with other logos.
    • On Undercovers, the colors are more vivid.
    • On the Everwood episode "East Meets West", the colors are very light.
    • On the American version of The Tomorrow People, the colors are slightly brighter than the Undercovers variant.
    • On a TMZ Live demo reel, the banner reads "DOMESTIC TELEVISION DISTRIBUTION" instead.

    Technique: A digital graphic.

    Audio: The 2nd part of the 1999 WB theme based on the song "As Time Goes By" from the WB film Casablanca, originally from the Broadway musical Everybody's Welcome. Some shows in association with WBTV had the theme cut in half or have the theme sped up. Like before, it's the closing theme of the show or none.

    Audio Trivia: The 2003 theme debuted on the series premiere of Two and a Half Men (as well as on the Eve episode "Condom Mania"), broadcast on September 22, 2003.

    Audio Variants:

    • On network shows from 2003 to 2005 as well as episode 8 of season 1 of Cold Case on Universal Channel Asia, the 2003 WBTV fanfare is in mono. The strings are more prominent in this variation and the low brass note on the third note of the theme can barely be heard. All of Us continued using this variant until 2007.
    • An alternate version of the 2003 theme was used in the early days of the 2003 logo. This version had a faster tempo, a piano note at the beginning, and a slightly different ending.
    • Sometimes, the 1994 theme is used, sometimes shortened.
    • On Smallville, one of the following themes is used:
      • When the 2003 logo plasters the 2001 logo (4:3 prints retains the 2001 logo), the 1994 fanfare is used.
      • On 2006 season 5 episodes until the series finale, the 2003 theme is heard, carrying it from the then-current DC Comics logo.
        • Due to reverse plastering over the next logo, some 2005 episodes of Smallville have the 2003 theme play over again (the first two notes are played over the DC Comics logo then it cuts to the 2003 logo with the theme starting over again).
    • On some re-runs of Friends, this plasters the 1994 logo; the closing theme of the TV show is heard, followed by the 1994 fanfare. Some occasions cut-off the closing theme, on some local airings.
      • On HBO Max prints of season 4 of the aforementioned Friends, the 1998 theme is heard instead.
      • However, on airings on certain local stations including WADL Detroit, the closing theme continues over this logo instead.
    • The 1998 theme is also heard on the 2003 logo on 1998 episodes of The Wayans Bros. on HBO, the final season of Murphy Brown on Nick at Nite, the last two episodes of Living Single on Max and on DVD prints of Mortal Kombat: Conquest.
    • The 1994 low tone WBTV theme is also heard on the short 2003 Warner Bros. Pictures logo.
    • On Children's Hospital, the music (usually just the last note) is cut off by the Williams Street logo.
    • On The Carrie Diaries, the last bit of the sped-up CBS Television Studios jingle can be heard before the sped-up version of the 2003 theme, which might've implied the WBTV theme was ripped straight out of The Vampire Diaries.
    • On HD prints of some episodes from Perfect Strangers and Step by Step along with syndicated prints of The New Adventures of Old Christine, the theme has a weird echo effect. This is due to a mixing error where only the rear surround channels are used.
    • On syndicated prints of The Jamie Foxx Show, the song "Electrifying (Baby, That's Real)" (likely Jamie Foxx's closing song) plays in the background throughout the entire four-way logo combo.
    • Starting with the 6th episode of season 2 of Jane The Virgin, only the last note of the 2003 theme is heard.
    • The first two seasons of Arrow, the first four episodes of the American version of The Tomorrow People and the pilot of The Flash used a slowed down version of the 2003 theme.
    • The unaired pilot of Commando Nanny has the 2003 theme double pitched.
    • On Freddie, the 2003 theme is mixed between the first note and the last two notes.
    • On some episodes of Judge Mathis between 2012 and 2020, the echo of the last note of the Millar Gough Ink theme from late 2002 is heard over the first note of the 2003 WBTV theme, which also might've implied the aforementioned theme was ripped straight out of Smallville.
    • On Life Unexpected, the theme is even faster and mixed between the second note and the last note.
    • Mid-2000's TV Land airings of 1989-1992 episodes of Night Court use John Larroquette's voice over due to plastering the 6th logo.
    • ABC, CBS, Fox, NBC and post-2003 The WB (later The CW) used their generic themes.
    • On Hulu's print of the Living Single episode "I'll Take Your Man", Synclaire is heard saying "Oh, Overton!" on the distribution variant.
    • On the unaired pilot of Nolan Knows Best, Phil Nolan (played by Brian Dennehy) says "Sex has a new name!".
    • On the unaired pilot of Strange Brew, people angrily shouting is heard over the closing theme.

    Availability:

    • Seen on first-run syndication series such as The People's Court (until October 1, 2021, where it would be replaced with an in-credit notice of the 15th logo), Judge Mathis, TMZ on TV (until September 15, 2021 due to Fox Alternative Entertainment taking over), The Ellen DeGeneres Show and Extra (both until 2021 when it was replaced with the 15th logo), and also current network, cable and off-network shows such as Conan on TBS, George Lopez on Nick at Nite and Ion Television, The Jamie Foxx Show when it was last aired on Centric (before the rebrand to BET Her), The Wayans Bros. on MTV2, and on Max, Friends in local syndication, Max, TBS and Nick at Nite, Eve on TV One, ER (seasons 3-5 and 10-15) on Pop, Max, and on its DVD releases (seasons 2-5 and 10-15), The Real in local syndication and on BET, and on various shows on the Max streaming service, among others.
    • It is also seen on shows produced by Bonanza Productions (such as Mike & Molly, 2 Broke Girls and The 100), a division of WBTV that was founded in 1991, as they do not have their own logo.
    • Any series from this era reran on TV One would keep the original logo intact.
    • The alternate theme can be found on various Hanna-Barbera and Lorimar shows on Max, All of Us, The Mullets, Run of the House, All About the Andersons, Like Family, Blue Collar TV, The Help, the first five episodes of season 2 of Eve, reruns of George Lopez, the director's cut of the Twenty Good Years pilot, the unaired pilots of Nikki and Nora and Starting Under, Full House on HBO Max and MeTV (except season 7, where the ending of the show's theme is heard underneath from plastering the 6th logo instead), some episodes of Veronica Mars, The Evidence, post-2020 reruns of The Flintstones on both Me-TV and Blu-ray, DVD and Blu-ray releases of The New Scooby-Doo Movies (also preserved on Blu-ray releases of Scooby-Doo, Where Are You!), and was also seen on an RTE Two HD airing of The New Scooby-Doo Mysteries episode "The Nutcracker Scoob".
      • This variant is also preserved on streaming prints of Smallville S3 episode "Phoenix" as well as episode 7 of season 1 of Cold Case on Universal Channel Asia.
    • The 1994 theme can be found on The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air episode "Sleepless in Bel-Air", Lifetime airings of Will & Grace and the TV movie Deadly Intentions... Again?, Nick @ Nite, Antenna TV, and HD airings of Murphy Brown, the pilots of Rock Me Baby and Eve on UPN, on Centric (now BET HER, on some episodes), HBO Max airings of The Wayans Bros., HD prints of Smallville seasons 1, and HBO Max prints of Scooby-Doo and Scrappy-Doo and The New Scooby and Scrappy-Doo Show, among others.
    • The 1994 WBTV low-tone version theme with the 2003 open-matted "Distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures" logo is preserved on shows like The Perils of Penelope Pitstop on former Boomerang U.S. airings, DVD releases and the Boomerang streaming service, the 1967 film Up the Down Staircase on TCM, and before syndie reruns of Curb Your Enthusiasm from 2010-2011.
    • The "Produced and Distributed by" variant is seen on Jack and Bobby, Chase, Reign (season 1 and the first two episodes of season 2), and then-current episodes of The People's Court starting on the 2012-2013 season until the 2017-2018 season.
      • This variant is also strangely seen on the 6th episode of Aliens in America (while it was produced by Warner Bros. Television, CBS Paramount was considered the distributor. This is also strange due to the fact that every other episode includes the regular "Distributed by" variant).
    • The final season (2004) of The Drew Carey Show also has the 2003 logo, and the WBTD version of this logo also plasters the 2001 logo on Laff airings of a special from said show, "Drew Carey's Back-to-School Rock 'n' Roll Comedy Hour" (which also doubled as that show's S7 premiere episode).
    • This logo was also seen on the season 6 episodes of the first incarnation of Whose Line Is It Anyway? on ABC, while the last two seasons use the 2001 logo on ABC Family.
    • This logo was used in tandem with the 13th, 14th, and 15th logos until 2022.
      • The 14th logo replaced this logo starting with the 2018-2019 season, and this logo was still used in syndication until September 2021.
      • However, due to Warner Bros. rebranding their on-screen logos with their 2019 print logo alongside the 13th logo from 2020-2023, this logo is retired.
    • This logo is also preserved on a Hulu print of the Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends episode "Adoptcalypse Now".
    • This logo also plasters the 1998 WB Family Entertainment logo at the start of Starz and Netflix prints of the 1998 theatrical film Quest for Camelot.
    • This logo is also seen at the end of HBO Max prints of Hangin' with Mr. Cooper.
    • This logo is also seen at the end of Tubi prints of the A Pup Named Scooby-Doo episode "A Bicycle Built for Boo", following the 1988 version of the 1986 Hanna-Barbera "CGI Swirling Star" logo.
    • This logo is also seen at the end of an HD print of A Flintstone Christmas (1977), following the 1974 Hanna-Barbera "Rainbow H-B" logo.
    • This logo is also seen at the start of the 1987 TV movie The Quick and the Dead on GREAT! Movies Action, with the 1998 SFM Entertainment logo at the end.
    • This logo is also seen at the end of the MeTV Toons airings of Captain Planet and the Planeteers, following the 1983 Turner Program Services logo.

    12th Logo (50th anniversary logo) (January-December 2005)

    Visuals: On the cloud background from the 2003 version of the previous logo, there is a smoother WB shield with a ribbon that says "50 YEARS OF QUALITY" wrapped around the bottom of it. The clouds can be seen moving to the right of the shield.

    Variants:

    • Sometimes, the website URL is seen below.
    • Sometimes, the shield is close to the screen and zooms back.
    • For syndication, the text "Distributed by" appears above.
    • On Blue Collar TV, the logo is open-matted.

    Technique: CGI by The Illusion Factory.

    Audio: Same as the 2003 version of the previous logo. Like before, it's the closing theme of the show or none.

    Availability:

    • It's still saved on reruns of 2005 episodes of Warner Bros. shows, such as Eve on TV One, Supernatural on TNT and FX, Nip/Tuck on Logo, and Without a Trace on Ion Television, among others.
    • This was also seen on Alice, Spenser: For Hire, and Scarecrow and Mrs. King (plastering the 1972-84 WBTV logo on the 1st season's rerun) back in 2005 during Warner Bros. Television's 50-hour marathon on TV Land.
    • This logo is also plastered on local syndication reruns of Two and a Half Men with the 2003 logo, but it is still retained on Australian reruns.
    • Episode 18 of season 5 of Smallville has this logo seen for a split-second before it cuts immediately to the previous logo (most likely a bad plastering job).

    13th Logo (DCTV custom logo) (September 22, 2014-)

    Visuals: After the 2012-2016 DC Comics logo (the 2016-present logo starting in 2016) or the Vertigo logo, the Warner Bros. shield with varying textures and colors appears, slowly zooming in from a mostly dark background. Four designs for this logo have been used:

    • 2014-2021: A larger version of the movie preview trailer WB shield seen on the names and crew members list, with the Warner Bros. Television banner over it in the Times New Roman font.
    • 2018-2020: The 2017 WBTV logo.
    • 2020-2023: The 2019 WB logo without the "WARNER BROS. TELEVISION" text.
    • 2024-present: A bannerless 2023 WB logo.

    Variants: See this page for variants.

    Technique: CGI.

    Audio: Sound effects that correspond with the action, which varies from show to show. The Supergirl pilot had the 2003 logo's music, while the Lucifer pilot had no music.

    Availability:

    • Currently seen after the DC Entertainment logo on every new TV series based on a DC Comics property, beginning with Gotham and on the third season of Arrow, The Flash, Constantine, iZombie, Legends of Tomorrow, Lucifer, Supergirl and Batwoman, in place of the 2003 version of the 11th logo and later the 14th logo, then the 15th logo, and currently the 16th logo.
    • All variants (except Constantine) can be found on the DCTV's official YouTube account on the video "DCTV - Logo Extravaganza!". Used in tandem with the 11th, 14th, 15th, and 16th logos.
    • Although Chilling Adventures of Sabrina, AJ and the Queen, Maid and Keep Breathing (as an opening custom variant for the latter two shows, although the closing variant used the 15th logo instead) are not owned by DC Comics, they still use the DC Comics' version of the WBTV shield instead.

    14th Logo (January 27, 2017-January 9, 2022)

    Visuals: Same as the 2003 version of the 11th logo, but the shield and cloud background are redone, with the shield redone in 3D and made to look like the shield from the 1998 theatrical logo, and looking a little shinier. The clouds move to the right of the shield as it zooms in slowly.

    Variants:

    • There is a still variant that can be seen on Netflix prints of Riverdale, Disjointed, the pilot of Love You More on Prime Video, and Lovecraft Country on HBO.
    • On Lovecraft Country, the shield appears closer.
    • There is an opening variant of this logo in which the shield zooms out from the bottom of the screen in an extreme upward angle and then settles in its normal position, shining towards the end of the animation. It then slowly zooms out afterwards.
    • A 4:3 fullscreen version exists; here, the animation is the same as the opening variant.
    • On The Fugitive, the shield is still and on a black background, with the Blackjack Films and Thunder Road Pictures logos next to it. Some episodes replace the latter logo with the 3 Arts Entertainment logo.

    Technique: CGI. A still image for the still version.

    Audio: Same as the 2003 version of the 11th logo. The opening variant has some whoosh sounds.

    Audio Variants:

    • A sped-up version of the theme exists.
    • On post-2020 prints of Babylon 5, the 1994 theme is heard; pre-1995 episodes use the closing theme of the show.
    • On season 1 of The Flight Attendant, the closing theme of the show is heard.
    • The logo is silent on Lovecraft Country and the beginning of Disjointed.

    Availability:

    • It was first seen on international Netflix prints of Riverdale (where it airs as a Netflix original; in the United States, the 2003 logo is used), Disjointed, and the pilot of Love You More on Prime Video.
    • Starting with the 2018-2019 TV season, this logo replaced the 2003 logo on network shows.
    • The opening variant can be seen at the beginning of shows like the first 2 seasons of The Kominsky Method and season 4 and season 5 episodes of Lucifer on Netflix, after the Netflix Originals logo.
    • Also appeared until September 2021 on shows formerly produced by Warner Horizon Scripted Television, like season 5 of Queen Sugar and the first 10 episodes of season 5 of Animal Kingdom.
    • The 4:3 variant has begun plastering previous logos on older shows produced with said aspect ratio, such as Babylon 5 (seen on all HD prints of the show starting in 2020, including the 2023 Blu-ray release).
    • Some syndicated shows (such as Judge Mathis, The Ellen DeGeneres Show, and TMZ on TV) do not use this logo.
    • Even after the next logo debuted, this appeared on season 2 of Special, the first four episodes of season 3 of In the Dark, The Republic of Sarah on off-network prints (The CW prints use the next logo), the first 10 episodes of season 5 of Animal Kingdom, the first episode of season 3 of Roswell, New Mexico, and the first six episodes of season 4 of Claws. Following episodes in each respective series' season now uses the current logo.

    15th Logo (March 2, 2021-)

    Visuals: It's the tail end of the 2021 theatrical logo, except the shield zooms in slowly similarly to the previous logo as a lens flare shines over it. "WARNER BROS." in white and in the same font used on the company's print logo (Warner Bros. Sans) in its bold condensed version is seen below the shield, with "TELEVISION" in its heavy version of the same font below it. The byline is also seen below.

    Trivia:

    • This marks the first time since the 2001 logo that a company byline has appeared on the logo.
    • The fanfare in this logo debuted before the movie logo, which did so in Non Mi Uccidere (Don't Kill Me), which was released on April 21, 2021 in Italy.

    Bylines:

    • March 2, 2021-: "a WarnerMedia company"
    • May 23, 2022-: "A WARNER BROS. DISCOVERY COMPANY"

    Variants:

    • Depending on how long this logo is shown on screen, the size of this logo varies. The 2-second and 1.5 second versions of this logo have the logo appear closer.
    • A widescreen 2:1 version of the logo exists.
    • On Lisey's Story, the colors are more vivid.
    • On season 2 of Ted Lasso, season 6 of Lucifer, the 2021 reboot of Head of the Class, Shrinking, Bookie, and The Big Cigar, the colors are darker, with the Lucifer, Shrinking, Bookie, and The Big Cigar variants being even darker. Therefore, the Lucifer variant is slightly darker and the Bookie variant is slightly brighter than the Shrinking and The Big Cigar variants.
    • On the first two episodes of Shining Vale, the colors are very light.
    • There's an opening variant where the shield zooms out and rotates upwards like the previous logo and then shines. The company name and byline fade in afterwards. The entire logo zooms out during this process. This can also appear as a closing logo.
      • A CinemaScope version of this logo exists. The Sandman uses the Warner Bros. Discovery byline.
    • For syndication, "DISTRIBUTED BY" (in its bold version of the same font mentioned above) is seen above the shield. On the variant above this one, after the shield finishes zooming out, it fades in with the company name and byline (seen on Extra as of August 31, 2021). However, Ellen, The Real (as of September 27, 2021) and The Jennifer Hudson Show use the main variant where the shield does not zoom out.
    • Sometimes, the lens flare is already there.
    • An in-credit variation exists, with the text "DISTRIBUTED BY: WARNER BROS. TELEVISION GROUP" and the 2019 WB shield. This was spotted on post-October 2021 episodes of The People's Court.
    • On post-October 2021 episodes of Judge Mathis, the Warner Bros. Television Group logo is in-credit (without the words "DISTRIBUTED BY") and shares the screen with the Illinois Film Office and Telepictures logos.
    • On The Real and Extra, the logo is part of the split-screen credits.

    Technique: CGI, including the opening variant, derived from the theatrical logo by Devastudios. Also, like its movie counterpart, the sky and clouds were done using Terragen from Planetside Software.

    Audio: The final note of the 2021 theatrical logo's fanfare composed by Ludwig Göransson.

    Audio Variants:

    • A short version of the fanfare exists.
    • Sometimes, the logo is silent, using the closing theme of the show, or using the network respective generic themes.
    • On a few shows, the 2003 fanfare is heard, sometimes in warp-speed.
    • An alternate theme exists where the final note of the middle section of the new fanfare is used, which has the same chord as the main fanfare, with strings on it. A "ding" is heard when the lens flare appears. This is only heard on the short 2-second and 1.5-second versions of this logo.
    • In the opening variant, the same whoosh sounds from the previous logo can be heard. Starting with season 6 of Lucifer, the whoosh sounds are slightly different than the previous logo.
    • The closing version of the above variant has all 4 notes of the middle section of the fanfare. This can also be heard on its international counterpart.

    Availability:

    • This first appeared on the Prodigal Son episode "Face Value".
    • The opening variant made its debut at the beginning of season 3 of The Kominsky Method, and it also appears as a closing variant at the end of said season, using the 2003 fanfare. However, the closing variant with the middle section of the fanfare made its debut on season 2 of The Flight Attendant. The scope version of this logo debuted on The Sandman. The version with the Warner Bros. Discovery byline made its debut with The Peripheral.
    • The syndication variant made its debut on the August 31, 2021 episode of Extra.
    • This logo has been spotted plastering the previous logo on a rerun of the Young Sheldon episode "Training Wheels and an Unleashed Chicken" on CBS.
    • It doesn't appear on TMZ on TV, since WarnerMedia sold the TMZ website to Fox Corporation.
    • This logo is also seen on shows formerly produced by Warner Horizon Scripted Television which are later season 5-7 episodes of Queen Sugar, season 2 of David Makes Man, the remainder of season 5-6 of Animal Kingdom, season 3 of You and season 4 of Claws starting with "Chapter Seven: Ascension".
    • The in-credit variant made its debut on the October 4, 2021 episode of The People's Court.
    • This logo also appeared on new and future shows from this company such as All American: Homecoming, Shining Vale, The Sex Lives of College Girls, Pivoting and Abbott Elementary, among others.
    • The Warner Bros. Discovery byline made its first appearances on the season 3 finale of Bob Hearts Abishola and as well on the season 4 finale of All American. As of now, it is used alongside the WarnerMedia byline, although that could change in the foreseeable future.

    16th Logo (December 23, 2023-)

    Visuals: The last couple seconds of the 2023 theatrical logo, with the word "TELEVISION" replacing "PICTURES" on the banner. The shield and byline also zoom in towards the center of the screen, similar to the previous two logos.

    Variants:

    • Just like the previous logo, for syndication, "DISTRIBUTED BY" (set in the bold version of Warner Bros. Sans) is seen above the shield.
      • Extra, from its January 22, 2024 episode onward, uses this variant with the same animation as the previous logo's opening variant, with "DISTRIBUTED BY" fading in with the byline.
    • Just like the previous two logos, an opening variant exists, where the shield zooms out and rotates upwards, then shines. The byline fades in afterwards. The entire logo zooms out during this process. This can also appear as a closing logo.
    • A true 16:9 ratio variant exists, where the logo is zoomed in to fit the aspect ratio.
    • A widescreen 2:1 variant also exists.

    Technique: CGI done by Devastudios, who also made the previous logo. The CG elements were re-rendered using the Academy Color Encoding System (ACES) color pipeline from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS). Just as before, like its movie counterpart, the sky and clouds were done using Terragen from Planetside Software.

    Audio: The final two notes of "Classic Reflection" (a new rendition of "As Time Goes By" from Casablanca, originally from the Broadway musical Everybody's Welcome), composed and arranged by Jacob Yoffee, orchestrated by Nolan Markey and mixed by Jason LaRocca, recorded at the Eastwood Scoring Stage at Warner Bros. Studios.

    Audio Trivia: Debuting before the theatrical fanfare, this is the first appearance of the "Classic Reflection" fanfare.

    Audio Variants:

    • An extended version of the fanfare exists.
    • In some cases, like on The Jennifer Hudson Show and the first three episodes of the fifth and final season of Bob Hearts Abishola, the previous fanfare from the 15th logo is used.
    • Like before, it's the closing theme of the show, the generic network theme or none.

    Availability: Like the movie counterpart, this logo is currently used in tandem with the previous logo as of this writing.

    • It first appeared on the Christmas episode of the 2023 Night Court revival (entitled "A Night Court Before Christmas"; which serves as the season 2 premiere of the show), and later appears on the third season of Abbott Elementary and the fifth and final season of Bob Hearts Abishola.
    • The true 16:9 aspect ratio variant made its debut on the seventh and final season of Young Sheldon.
    • The widescreen 2:1 variant made its debut on the third season of The Cleaning Lady, and later appears on the sixth season of All American and the television adaptation of Presumed Innocent.
    • The syndication variant made its debut on the January 12, 2024 episode of The Jennifer Hudson Show.

    Copyright Stamps

    Here is some information about the copyright stamps on Warner Bros. TV series:

    • 1970-1978, 1992-2003: Copyright © [YEAR] Warner Bros. Television. All Rights Reserved.
    • 1978-1992: Copyright © [YEAR] Warner Bros., Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    • 1993-1996, 1999: © [YEAR] Warner Bros. (Used on The John Larroquette Show and Everything's Relative)
    • 1993-1995: © [YEAR] Warner Bros., A Time-Warner Entertainment Company (Used on Animaniacs)
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