I remember a few of these. I watch PBS all the time. My favorite shows are The joy of Painting, Antiques Roadshow, and NOVA. PBS is so much fun to watch, and a lot of the programs teach you so many different things. Public television is an amazing learning tool, because you learn so much from it, and it’s entertaining at the same time too.
The very 1st Sesame Street episode was originally through the last NET lego, meaning the only colored one prior of the early transition to the first PBS logo.
Funny how the degraded sound quality in film and tape seems to affect music more than speech. The first globe variant of the NET logo here has the best audio quality of the other copies of that variant even though the others have better video quality. Just goes to show what happens to sound after decades of film and tape storage.
Sound quality of broadcast TV of any kind in the 1960's was awful. Color dazzled people into ignoring that fact. The networks cut corners knowing that they could get away with poor sound quality. It wasn't until people incorporated movies into their sound systems that such became obvious for broadcast TV. Add to that, videotape of any kind deteriorates over the decades, even more for sound than for picture quality. It isn't only low-budget NET and PBS. CBS showed an old cartoon of "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer" made for the kiddies over fifty years ago. The sound quality was atrocious. CBS must have been showing an original tape without re-processing.
I remember a few of these. I watch PBS all the time. My favorite shows are The joy of Painting, Antiques Roadshow, and NOVA. PBS is so much fun to watch, and a lot of the programs teach you so many different things. Public television is an amazing learning tool, because you learn so much from it, and it’s entertaining at the same time too.
The very 1st Sesame Street episode was originally through the last NET lego, meaning the only colored one prior of the early transition to the first PBS logo.
23:42 -- Boy that takes me back. I remember hearing that jingle right before a 1995 broadcast of The Beatles' movie Help! that I taped.
The logo design tracks with the Microsoft Windows design through the years. 24:35 straight outta Windows 98.
22:32 "Infinity" from the PBS children's program "Square One"
Last Night I Watched Sesame Street and Rosie’s Rules.
If you think I'll let go for a little… educational television?! Oh, no! **screams**
PBS TV
Why are you screaming?
@@screamy5268 It was a scene in SpongeBob.
Funny how the degraded sound quality in film and tape seems to affect music more than speech. The first globe variant of the NET logo here has the best audio quality of the other copies of that variant even though the others have better video quality. Just goes to show what happens to sound after decades of film and tape storage.
2:40 It's off centered and what not! That's funny to me. 🤣
I Know About All of These Episodes Because Sesame Street Aired On November 10, 1969 and Rosie’s Rules Aired On October 3, 2022.
The off-key tunes of this video are very hilarious!!!!!
Sound quality of broadcast TV of any kind in the 1960's was awful. Color dazzled people into ignoring that fact. The networks cut corners knowing that they could get away with poor sound quality. It wasn't until people incorporated movies into their sound systems that such became obvious for broadcast TV. Add to that, videotape of any kind deteriorates over the decades, even more for sound than for picture quality.
It isn't only low-budget NET and PBS. CBS showed an old cartoon of "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer" made for the kiddies over fifty years ago. The sound quality was atrocious. CBS must have been showing an original tape without re-processing.
NET Timestamps: 0:07 0:30 0:51 01:16 01:41 02:45 05:38 06:09 06:17 08:03 11:00 12:09 12:22 13:00 14:50 14:58 15:02 15:11
PBS Timestamps: 15:30 15:48 20:17 21:40 23:00 24:00 24:30 24:36 24:45 25:30 25:39 26:03 27:12 27:45 28:40 29:29
Saturday night live re-created PBS in 1982
NBC's 1950 logo jingle was taped on KVPR PBS One's 2005 broadcast of the classic show on NET
#NBC #NET #PBS
This is NET National Educational Television 😊
This is PBS The Public Broadcasting Service
You Know Sesame Street Lived in Alphabet City in Manhattan, Also New York and Rosie’s Rules Lived in Texas
6:48 The goofy ahh pitch bend on all of those 5 idents
Be warned. Once PBS is no longer an option… the world is coming to an end.
PBS is always gonna be an option, we’re not in the 2012 movie.
My childhood memories #PBS❤❤
1:16 is as far back as I can go.....
15:50 for me. They used that one for a long time.
Which would make my life a lot easier thank you well what I mean is that aardvarks like Arthur shouldn't talk
This is PBS, the Public Broadcasting Service
TTV Is an Pubilc Broadcasting Television Founded in 1957 (NET (now PBS)/ABC in Affiliate)
23:22
National Educational Television and Public Broadcasting Service
1:43
this is PBS!!
NET / PBS Logo History
28:16 (Concert plays) Be more, PBS!
Second
23:42
28:15
Is there the 1996-1999 pbs logo?
Yes❤❤❤
I could be wrong about this but, is PBS owned by Viacom?
Let me try to Google
No.
So PBS it's owned is owned by this lady Paula Kerger
2:47 EG Marshall voiceover
9:00 pm
KLRN PBS 9 San Antonio TX
21:04 Happy birthday to you
It is not your birthday.
Draw a PBS Logo
I don't care what happens to Arthur
National Educational Television Network
NET National Educational Television
NET The Public Television Network
PBS Public Broadcasting Service
Just I just told you animals like Arthur fourth wall they could not talk
23:42 PBS Theme Song
This is PBS The Paldean Broadcasting Service
20:30 classic.
Weekdays!
PBS logo for sale and PBS Kids™!
#pbs #pbskids
PBS
12:00 am
First!
PBS PRESENTS
U FORGOT 2021 AGAIN
8:57
13:02 the e’s white
6:16
6:32
6:48
7:03
7:18
7:31
I Know About All of These Episodes Because Sesame Street Aired On November 10, 1969 and Rosie’s Rules Aired On October 3, 2022.
Last Night I Watched Sesame Street and Rosie’s Rules.
National Educational Television and Public Broadcasting Service
11:33
28:38
21:03
9:00 am
13:05
21:04
16:02
28:39
16:02
28:56
28:38
27:16
21:04
29:15