"Show the guy on the phone, alright? Then you have the sound of a racetrack, the thing with the hand, and the stupid lens flare lines. (audience laughs) That'll work it."
Show the guy on the phone, alright? Then you have the sound of a racetrack, the thing with the hand, and the annoying corporate logo that looks like an xylophone.
0:37 At least the Sony Pictures Television International theme fits well for the CBS Television Distribution logo, so do as the United Artists logo with the Pathé music! 1:04
2:51 The gag now should be: "Show a guy in the phone, alright? Then you have the sound of a racetrack, the thing with the hand, and then *THE STUPID BARS WITH THE FLASHING* 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 that'll work".
3:35 it also sounds like the Sunburst theme was cut off by the 1989 theme, which was cut off by SPT, which really shows how SPT retains CPT's habit of not being good at plasters.
In Walter Hill's fact based western saga, "The Long Riders" (1980-1981) which was a rousing success. All of which it really shows really many people who have both good and bad habits. Six years later in the fall of 1985, when Japanese giant Sony Corporation finally dumped the Columbia TriStar logo and name from the television side for good and renamed into Sony Pictures Television on Monday, June 24. As an world class television syndication producer/distributor, they solely responsible for some of today's biggest hits including Days of Our Lives, The Young and the Restless, The Bold and the Beautiful, PBS News Hour, Jeopardy, Wheel of Fortune, Paternity Court, Shark Tank, Telemundo's Proms, Heartland's Night of the Proms, A&E's The Best Years, Bravo's Years Later, Ovation's Magic Moments, Telexitos' The Simple Life and Seinfeld.
Well in the final years everyone else has been seen the filmed variant of the Lorimar Television logo on both television shows: Dallas, Knots Landing, Hunter, Falcon Crest, Sisters, Max Headroom, Midnight Caller, Dark Justice, Time Tracy and Babylon Five. As well as television miniseries and specials from October 1988 through May 1993 when Lorimar has finally shut down for good after Time Warner purchased the television production company in 1988 because it was time for audiences to look for something even better. Now Lorimar Television and Warner Bros Television were finally folded into one new TV studio: Warner Bros Television, a Time Warner Company. From the fall of 1993 and today, only Warner Bros Television has been solely responsible for produced and distributed their wonderful library of television and movies such as Living Single, The Jamie Foxx Show, Flipper, Sex and the City, Everybody Loves Raymond, Martin, Politically Incorrect with Bill Maher, Sheryl Borden’s Creative Living, This Old House, Barney & Friends, Bad Movie Beatdown among others to name a few!
@@wyattmanhabel644 They could have used the original theme of that NBC Studios Logo instead, which is the same one that was later used for the NBC Universal Television Studio & NBC Universal Television Distribution Logos.
Some of my favorites have been the 1990s Paramount television theme heard over the Carsey-Werner logo on an episode of Roseanne and the 1989 Columbia television theme heard over the SPT bars of boredom on an episode of Married...with Children.
Carsey-Werner has joined forces with Lionsgate's Debmar-Mercury for co-distributing their library of successful shows on syndication: The Cosby Show, A Different World, Cosby, 3rd Rock from the Sun, Grounded for Life, Cybill, That 70's Show, Profiler, Roseanne and The Conners while newer prints of the Emmy nominated Married with Children which the current closing logo of Sony Pictures Television has plastered over the final Columbia name, logo and jingle from 1992-2000 on final seasons 7-11.
Of these 20, the messed-up gag on Mad About You stands out, as well as the 1990 Viacom theme under the 1960 CBS TV Network Presentation logo on Rawhide.
@@NSHG No, it ain't. Nothing exists. Have you ever learned anything new in entertainment lately? Huh? If you haven't, then you missed your opportunity because that's where the problem starts. It has nothing to do with the opposite stuff - but it has a whole lot to do with you and your attitude. Because I'll be damned that you won't get away with this mess. You got that? It's nobody's fault but yours. I'm sorry, okay? So listen to me real good and very carefully, please? From what I know that Lorimar is no longer making all kinds of television from 1972 to 1993 and for me, it was now folded into Warner Bros. Television under Time Warner from Fall 1993-present. You have to learn to keep up with the times for your sake. As well as our sake too. Happy Thanksgiving!
Although not as popular (some are, some aren't): - Blue Ribbon Merrie Melodies from around 1950-1963 tend to plaster the original LT intro but maintain the opening theme (it still is a form of plastering, considering the abrupt cut into the title cards. - Hungarian dubs of Scooby Doo Show have an error on one episode (forgot the name of the episode, but the clip used to circulate in YT a few years ago...) where the H-B Action logo plays with the theme from the 1987 warp speed Turner logo. I recall seeing it done twice though - the second time it happened was on the 70s Scooby Doo Where Are You, and Polish dubs of The Addams Family were also reported to have the same error though I don't remember if they had video proof on this one. - certain B/W Clampett era LT shorts have spliced opening and closing. "The Daffy Doc" is a very notable example - the original print features the same wacky ending theme present on The Sour Puss, while both the restored MeTV and the comp. colorized prints replace the opening and closing themes with the 1939 renditions, despite the short being made in 1938. Other examples - 1940's The Chewin Bruin uses the first half of the 1938 LT theme and the 39-41 theme for the second half; numerous shorts have the opening theme replaced with the fast 1937 theme from Porky's Railroad and Porky's Badtime Story (in both of their restored and computer colorized forms); Timid Toreador also replaces the 1940s opening theme with the 1938 theme, with an audible splice during the title card fade in - this was carried from the redrawn version apparently, and it wouldn't be completw without 1936s Fish Tales, where at least the comp. colorized print uses the whole opening cue from Rover's Rival, which came a whole 2 years later.
Regarding The Scooby-Doo Show, when rerun on USA Network's Cartoon Express from 1990 to 1994, there was one episode that bypassed the 1974 H-B "Rainbow" logo completely, with the 1988 Worldvision logo appearing after a few seconds of silence. This is not to be confused with the 1980-81 episodes of Scooby & Scrappy-Doo that have the '88 Worldvision logo replacing the H-B "Swirling Star." Other episodes of The Scooby-Doo Show usually replaced the '74 logo with the '79 "Swirling Star" (including on "The Gruesome Game of the Gator Ghoul"), but "Hang in There, Scooby-Doo" had the '69 H-B "Box" logo (from season 1 of Scooby-Doo, Where Are You?) with the '79 jingle.
In 1997, the Seagram Company has decide to dump the MCA TV Exclusive Distributor CGI logo and renamed "Universal International Television" with James Horner's 1990-1997 fanfare.
That's the 1994-96 version, and Blockbuster acquired Spelling in 1993. Subsequently, Viacom acquired Blockbuster, but for a time from 1996-99 it tried unsuccessfully to sell the division.
3:10 The Columbia TriStar Television theme plays over the CBS Productions logo, followed by the Columbia TriStar Television logo which has the TriStar Television theme.
3:01, not to mention, the logo is also shown twice but with the correct theme! Are you out of your mind Sony?! Also, at 3:10, the CBS Productions logo also had the Columbia TriStar Television jingle barely starting, but then it cuts to the CTT 1994 logo with the TriStar Television jingle! Make up your mind Sony!
On the other hand the Columbia Pictures Television logo was first used on Saturday August 15, 1992 and continue until May 19, 2001, It’s been lasted for nine successful years.
@@wyattmanhabel644 Well, that's where you're wrong because this was the final 1992-2001 closing logo of both CPT and CPTD under the SPE byline and banner - where the studio solely produced and distributed many successful programs: The Ricki Lake Show, Mad About You, Raven, Telemundo's Proms, Night of the Proms, The Best Years, Years Later, Top of the Charts and The Simple Life, Ovation's Magic Moments, Seinfeld, BET's New Attitude, Discovery's Beakman's World, The Nanny, The King of Queens, Early Edition and Malcolm & Eddie. Plus movie packages including Columbia Night at the Movies, TriStar Showcase and the MGM Premiere Network since September 14, 1987. I'm sorry but I'm make things a little easier for you so you can enjoy them for many years to come. That's all there is to it! Happy Thanksgiving to you & your family. Peace!
Probably because it’s Paul Reiser’s fault for saying such harsh things on the Emmy winning television series Mad About You from 1992 to 1999 which can ruined his career because of this. After the series finale has ended in 1999, Paul Reiser was parted ways with Sony Pictures Entertainment and announced he’s not going to work with the studio anymore because of his attitude. Just like James L. Brooks, Penny Marshall and other legendary artists are cutting ties with the studio since 1996 and finally went back to News Corporation based Fox Filmed Entertainment from Fall 1985 to present.
@@1991sth It’s Paul Reiser’s fault for saying negative things on TV’s Emmy winning seven year run of Mad About You from 1992 to 1999 and then it ruined his career because of this. His former indie production company was Nuance Enterprises was responsible for co-producing this along with Columbia Pictures Television’s 1992-2000 final closing logo with the 1987 Columbia Pictures Television jingle, not the 1992-2000 jingle. I’m sorry but it’s so sad that because Paul Reiser is not associated with Sony Pictures Entertainment after 13 years and he had decided that he had enough for his own sake. But now, he has finally move from acting to directing with such successful programs like the Emmy winning Office and BET’s Emmy nominated Everybody Hates Chris-Final Seasons Three and Four. He has also wrote many successful best selling novels about changing your life from acting to parenting, since then he has been changed his roots for the better because he wants to be the best that he can be and he has done it even better as a indie entertainer since 1982.
Aren't you forgetting the Paramount movie logo with MGM's Leo roaring? I saw that once and was like "WHAT THE HELL?!" Oh, and don't forget Viacom plastering the V of Steel on The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour with not one, but _TWO,_ Viacom 1990 logos!
Lemme add a few more I know: - Orion Classics with the 1980 Gaumont theme (and later again with the 1996 and 1995 counterparts on both Orion and Gaumont) - what I think was either the 75th or the 1999 version of WB Pictures logo with the 1935-1953 20th Century Fox theme - this was on Polar Express, that's all I know about it... - foreign dubs of "Hare Tonic" plaster thr srcond half of Bugs' soundtrack with the 1946-1955 LT ending theme
@@jctotboiofficial I saw a new Viacom dual logo, and this one was just lazy! It was on another episode of The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour from 1994, and after some really fast credits (courtesy of Viacom's poor editing), we see the "In-Progress" variant of the V of Steel, but it freezes mid-shine, but the jingle still plays out. Then it rapidly fades to black, and then? *_BOOM!_* The Spreading Letters logo follows right behind it!
@@jctotboiofficial I saw a new Viacom dual logo, and this one was just lazy! It was on another episode of The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour from 1994, and after some really fast credits (courtesy of Viacom's poor editing), we see the "In-Progress" variant of the V of Steel, but it freezes mid-shine, but the jingle still plays out. Then it rapidly fades to black, and then? *_BOOM!_* The Spreading Letters logo follows right behind it!
I find 2:26 and 3:37 to be the worst plasters ever, because the way how the Sony Pictures Television and NBCUniversal Television Distribution logos are placed at the level of its omnipresence.
How about the AAP print of Popeye Cookin' With Gags, where you can briefly see a sliver of the Famous Studios on the Paramount mountain? I remember a Sybil print where the Lorimar jingle plays at the last of the credits.
I have seen the 1979 Hanna Barbera "Swirling Star" logo with the 1968/1969 Zooming HB Box logo sound on an episode of "Scooby-Doo, Where Are You" back in the 1990s.
Hey Luke, remember me? I am IsaacMedia. I fled the LC and I am on an ongoing quest to reunite with my best buddies I knew back in 2016 and 2017. I am done with all the EG crap, and have moved on to something else. Do you use a platform where we can talk again? I use Discord, Hangouts, and Twitter
You forgot about the 1995 Pixar variant Walt Disney Pictures logos plasterings on Toy Story 1 and 2, Monster's Inc, Finding Nemo, and Cars. That adds unnecessary time for Toy Story 1 and 2, Finding Nemo, and Cars. It also takes away the Pixar charm. I hate the 2006 version of the Disney logo.
Well, that was Fall 1967 where most shows were filmed on the CBS lot: Star Trek, Mission: Impossible, Gunsmoke, The Carol Burnett Show, The Ed Sullivan Show, Mannix and more!
The CPT coming after the Boxes from Punky Brewster reminds me....I was wondering how plastering worked, technically. Because it brought to mind the Viacom Pinball being seen after CBSTD on MeTV, so I wondered if there's a technique where they somehow stick the new logo in front of the old one, then chop the old one off?
3:10 The CBS Productions logo plastered with the Columbia TriStar Television logo gets plastered by the Columbia TriStar Television logo that plastered the TriStar logo. (I don’t remember making this comment)
Where's that awful WB Pictures logo plaster for the 2011 re-issue of Lethal Weapon 4 (1998)? It's quite puzzling to describe, so here's the link to the plaster: ua-cam.com/video/Bd1BciCEZTI/v-deo.html, and a separate link to the original opening of the movie: ua-cam.com/video/09MXLo3eS-o/v-deo.html. In case you don't know about this it's to be noted that in both the original opening and the plaster, there's an explosion at around 0:15, which can scare you.
It has nothing to do with you, but it has something to do with Colex and its jingle. But of them didn't work well & fit perfectly. That's one of the reasons why nobody wants to be involved with this. In December 1987, Colex is no more. It has now folded into Sony Pictures Television from June 24, 1985 thru today.
"The sound of the racetrack, the thing with the hand, and the BARS OF BOREDOM, that'll work!" Not to mention C-TS '96 "I'm about to ruin CPT '82's whole career!" CPT '82 "HOLD MY BEER"
Some of plastered music really fits other logos well, I love seeing plaster results
@impolonium_i love it too
The United Artists (2001)/Pathé (2002) theme and logo combo sound really good.
"Show the guy on the phone, alright? Then you have the sound of a racetrack, the thing with the hand, and the stupid lens flare lines. (audience laughs) That'll work it."
So that's what it's meant to be. A lens flare.
Show the guy on the phone, alright? Then you have the sound of a racetrack, the thing with the hand, and the annoying corporate logo that looks like an xylophone.
They could have just had the actor come back in to do ADR to change that one line and save the gag.
the WORST PLATER IN THE WHOLE WOLD would probably be a logo with the TAT Communications music.... all hope lost
0:37 At least the Sony Pictures Television International theme fits well for the CBS Television Distribution logo, so do as the United Artists logo with the Pathé music! 1:04
2:51 The gag now should be: "Show a guy in the phone, alright? Then you have the sound of a racetrack, the thing with the hand, and then *THE STUPID BARS WITH THE FLASHING* 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 that'll work".
@@alloyoopproductions9804 That's a better one!
You can hear a little of tri star television jingle in the background during the SPT logo
3:09 funniest plaster ever
3:35 it also sounds like the Sunburst theme was cut off by the 1989 theme, which was cut off by SPT, which really shows how SPT retains CPT's habit of not being good at plasters.
3 layers of plasters? wow
In Walter Hill's fact based western saga, "The Long Riders" (1980-1981) which was a rousing success. All of which it really shows really
many people who have both good and bad habits.
Six years later in the fall of 1985, when Japanese giant Sony Corporation finally dumped the Columbia TriStar logo and name
from the television side for good and renamed into Sony Pictures Television on Monday, June 24.
As an world class television syndication producer/distributor, they solely responsible for some of today's biggest hits including
Days of Our Lives, The Young and the Restless, The Bold and the Beautiful, PBS News Hour, Jeopardy, Wheel of Fortune,
Paternity Court, Shark Tank, Telemundo's Proms, Heartland's Night of the Proms, A&E's The Best Years, Bravo's Years Later,
Ovation's Magic Moments, Telexitos' The Simple Life and Seinfeld.
1:28 First time I see a filmed variant of the Lorimar Television logo!
Well in the final years everyone else has been seen the filmed variant of the
Lorimar Television logo on both television shows: Dallas, Knots Landing, Hunter,
Falcon Crest, Sisters, Max Headroom,
Midnight Caller, Dark Justice, Time Tracy
and Babylon Five.
As well as television miniseries and
specials from October 1988
through May 1993 when Lorimar
has finally shut down for good
after Time Warner purchased the
television production company
in 1988 because it was time
for audiences to look for
something even better.
Now Lorimar Television and
Warner Bros Television were
finally folded into one new
TV studio: Warner Bros
Television, a Time Warner
Company.
From the fall of 1993 and
today, only Warner Bros
Television has been
solely responsible for
produced and distributed
their wonderful library of
television and movies
such as Living Single,
The Jamie Foxx Show,
Flipper, Sex and the
City, Everybody Loves
Raymond, Martin,
Politically Incorrect
with Bill Maher,
Sheryl Borden’s Creative
Living, This Old House,
Barney & Friends,
Bad Movie Beatdown
among others to
name a few!
2:05, reason this is plastered is because this show originally used the MTM logo, and someone had probably forgot to remove the MTM sound.
Yeah I don't blame them, they probably couldn't easily do ir
@@wyattmanhabel644
They could have used the original theme of that NBC Studios Logo instead, which is the same one that was later used for the NBC Universal Television Studio & NBC Universal Television Distribution Logos.
Some of my favorites have been the 1990s Paramount television theme heard over the Carsey-Werner logo on an episode of Roseanne and the 1989 Columbia television theme heard over the SPT bars of boredom on an episode of Married...with Children.
Carsey-Werner has joined forces with Lionsgate's Debmar-Mercury for co-distributing their library of successful shows on syndication:
The Cosby Show, A Different World, Cosby, 3rd Rock from the Sun, Grounded for Life, Cybill, That 70's Show, Profiler, Roseanne and
The Conners while newer prints of the Emmy nominated Married with Children which the current closing logo of Sony Pictures Television
has plastered over the final Columbia name, logo and jingle from 1992-2000 on final seasons 7-11.
Of these 20, the messed-up gag on Mad About You stands out, as well as the 1990 Viacom theme under the 1960 CBS TV Network Presentation logo on Rawhide.
For me, it'd be the 1990 Lorimar Television with WBTV's 1994 theme.
Wonder if the opposite exists?
@@NSHG No, it ain't. Nothing exists. Have you ever learned anything new in entertainment lately? Huh? If you haven't, then you
missed your opportunity because that's where the problem starts. It has nothing to do with the opposite stuff - but it has a whole
lot to do with you and your attitude. Because I'll be damned that you won't get away with this mess. You got that? It's nobody's fault
but yours. I'm sorry, okay? So listen to me real good and very carefully, please? From what I know that Lorimar is no longer making
all kinds of television from 1972 to 1993 and for me, it was now folded into Warner Bros. Television under Time Warner from
Fall 1993-present. You have to learn to keep up with the times for your sake. As well as our sake too. Happy Thanksgiving!
The last one, from Punky Brewster, where the CPT '82 logo shows, even after the CTTV 1996 logo tries to plaster it.
Although not as popular (some are, some aren't):
- Blue Ribbon Merrie Melodies from around 1950-1963 tend to plaster the original LT intro but maintain the opening theme (it still is a form of plastering, considering the abrupt cut into the title cards.
- Hungarian dubs of Scooby Doo Show have an error on one episode (forgot the name of the episode, but the clip used to circulate in YT a few years ago...) where the H-B Action logo plays with the theme from the 1987 warp speed Turner logo. I recall seeing it done twice though - the second time it happened was on the 70s Scooby Doo Where Are You, and Polish dubs of The Addams Family were also reported to have the same error though I don't remember if they had video proof on this one.
- certain B/W Clampett era LT shorts have spliced opening and closing. "The Daffy Doc" is a very notable example - the original print features the same wacky ending theme present on The Sour Puss, while both the restored MeTV and the comp. colorized prints replace the opening and closing themes with the 1939 renditions, despite the short being made in 1938. Other examples - 1940's The Chewin Bruin uses the first half of the 1938 LT theme and the 39-41 theme for the second half; numerous shorts have the opening theme replaced with the fast 1937 theme from Porky's Railroad and Porky's Badtime Story (in both of their restored and computer colorized forms); Timid Toreador also replaces the 1940s opening theme with the 1938 theme, with an audible splice during the title card fade in - this was carried from the redrawn version apparently, and it wouldn't be completw without 1936s Fish Tales, where at least the comp. colorized print uses the whole opening cue from Rover's Rival, which came a whole 2 years later.
Regarding The Scooby-Doo Show, when rerun on USA Network's Cartoon Express from 1990 to 1994, there was one episode that bypassed the 1974 H-B "Rainbow" logo completely, with the 1988 Worldvision logo appearing after a few seconds of silence. This is not to be confused with the 1980-81 episodes of Scooby & Scrappy-Doo that have the '88 Worldvision logo replacing the H-B "Swirling Star."
Other episodes of The Scooby-Doo Show usually replaced the '74 logo with the '79 "Swirling Star" (including on "The Gruesome Game of the Gator Ghoul"), but "Hang in There, Scooby-Doo" had the '69 H-B "Box" logo (from season 1 of Scooby-Doo, Where Are You?) with the '79 jingle.
some plasters have good combinations (like the Universal Television logo with the 1991 theme)
The beginning of the transition
In 1997, the Seagram Company has decide to dump the MCA TV Exclusive Distributor CGI logo and renamed "Universal International
Television" with James Horner's 1990-1997 fanfare.
honestly, some of these fit quite well
2:39 The 1990 Viacom logo’s audio plays over the 1960 CBS logo! Bad plastering job.
1:34 ok when did blockbuster own worldvision
That's the 1994-96 version, and Blockbuster acquired Spelling in 1993. Subsequently, Viacom acquired Blockbuster, but for a time from 1996-99 it tried unsuccessfully to sell the division.
Thanks for the info
3:10 The Columbia TriStar Television theme plays over the CBS Productions logo, followed by the Columbia TriStar Television logo which has the TriStar Television theme.
3:01, not to mention, the logo is also shown twice but with the correct theme! Are you out of your mind Sony?! Also, at 3:10, the CBS Productions logo also had the Columbia TriStar Television jingle barely starting, but then it cuts to the CTT 1994 logo with the TriStar Television jingle! Make up your mind Sony!
I think it was meant to be the CPT 1993 logo
On the other hand the Columbia Pictures Television logo was first
used on Saturday August 15, 1992
and continue until May 19, 2001,
It’s been lasted for nine successful years.
Sadly, two years later it was folded and re-named Sony Pictures Television in Fall 2002.
@@wyattmanhabel644 Well, that's where you're wrong because this was the final 1992-2001 closing logo of both CPT and CPTD
under the SPE byline and banner - where the studio solely produced and distributed many successful programs: The Ricki Lake Show, Mad About You, Raven, Telemundo's Proms, Night of the Proms, The Best Years, Years Later, Top of the Charts and
The Simple Life, Ovation's Magic Moments, Seinfeld, BET's New Attitude, Discovery's Beakman's World, The Nanny,
The King of Queens, Early Edition and Malcolm & Eddie. Plus movie packages including Columbia Night at the Movies,
TriStar Showcase and the MGM Premiere Network since September 14, 1987. I'm sorry but I'm make things a little easier
for you so you can enjoy them for many years to come. That's all there is to it! Happy Thanksgiving to you & your family. Peace!
How dare they get rid of the stupid horse with the wings!
Probably because it’s Paul Reiser’s fault for saying such harsh things on the Emmy winning television series Mad About You from 1992 to 1999 which can ruined his career because of this. After the series finale has ended in 1999, Paul Reiser was parted ways with Sony Pictures Entertainment and announced he’s not going to work with the studio anymore because of his attitude.
Just like James L. Brooks, Penny Marshall and other legendary artists are cutting ties with the studio since 1996 and finally
went back to News Corporation based Fox Filmed Entertainment from Fall 1985 to present.
2:05 That was brief, and I didn’t get to hear Mimsie’s meow.
The plaster on the Mad About You credits is still so infuriating, completely ruins the joke.
I don't get it. what was gonna come next?
@@user-cvbnmHe was going to say 'the stupid horse with the wings'
@@1991sth It’s Paul Reiser’s fault for saying negative things on TV’s Emmy winning seven year run of Mad About You from
1992 to 1999 and then it ruined his career because of this. His former indie production company was Nuance Enterprises was responsible for co-producing this along with Columbia Pictures Television’s 1992-2000 final closing logo with the 1987 Columbia Pictures Television jingle, not the 1992-2000 jingle. I’m sorry but it’s so sad that because Paul Reiser is not
associated with Sony Pictures Entertainment after 13 years and he had decided that he had enough for his own sake.
But now, he has finally move from acting to directing with such successful programs like the Emmy winning Office
and BET’s Emmy nominated Everybody Hates Chris-Final Seasons Three and Four. He has also wrote many successful
best selling novels about changing your life from acting to parenting, since then he has been changed his roots for the
better because he wants to be the best that he can be and he has done it even better as a indie entertainer since 1982.
Aren't you forgetting the Paramount movie logo with MGM's Leo roaring? I saw that once and was like "WHAT THE HELL?!" Oh, and don't forget Viacom plastering the V of Steel on The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour with not one, but _TWO,_ Viacom 1990 logos!
Lemme add a few more I know:
- Orion Classics with the 1980 Gaumont theme (and later again with the 1996 and 1995 counterparts on both Orion and Gaumont)
- what I think was either the 75th or the 1999 version of WB Pictures logo with the 1935-1953 20th Century Fox theme - this was on Polar Express, that's all I know about it...
- foreign dubs of "Hare Tonic" plaster thr srcond half of Bugs' soundtrack with the 1946-1955 LT ending theme
@@NSHG T.A.T. Communications: am I a joke to yo- *_THIS IS CBS_*
If there's one thing I love it's am I a joke to you
@@jctotboiofficial I saw a new Viacom dual logo, and this one was just lazy! It was on another episode of The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour from 1994, and after some really fast credits (courtesy of Viacom's poor editing), we see the "In-Progress" variant of the V of Steel, but it freezes mid-shine, but the jingle still plays out. Then it rapidly fades to black, and then? *_BOOM!_* The Spreading Letters logo follows right behind it!
@@jctotboiofficial I saw a new Viacom dual logo, and this one was just lazy! It was on another episode of The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour from 1994, and after some really fast credits (courtesy of Viacom's poor editing), we see the "In-Progress" variant of the V of Steel, but it freezes mid-shine, but the jingle still plays out. Then it rapidly fades to black, and then? *_BOOM!_* The Spreading Letters logo follows right behind it!
I find 2:26 and 3:37 to be the worst plasters ever, because the way how the Sony Pictures Television and NBCUniversal Television Distribution logos are placed at the level of its omnipresence.
Have you done the memorial screen with the Lorimar jingle from The Ninth Configuration?
How about the AAP print of Popeye Cookin' With Gags, where you can briefly see a sliver of the Famous Studios on the Paramount mountain?
I remember a Sybil print where the Lorimar jingle plays at the last of the credits.
2:57 Mad About Sony
0:46 Ok For Me This One Is Kinda Cool
I have seen the 1979 Hanna Barbera "Swirling Star" logo with the 1968/1969 Zooming HB Box logo sound on an episode of "Scooby-Doo, Where Are You" back in the 1990s.
2:54 😬
If I saw the second one as a kid, I don't know how I'd survive the surprise attack of the SFH music!
90% of these plasters are done by my favorite logo, SPT.
St. Elsewhere preserves Mimsie meowing under the 20th Century Fox Television logo?
Here's another bad plaster-
ua-cam.com/video/5XgzWzeQQyk/v-deo.html
The Jim Henson logo appears for a split second before it cuts to Lionsgate.
Hey Luke, remember me? I am IsaacMedia. I fled the LC and I am on an ongoing quest to reunite with my best buddies I knew back in 2016 and 2017. I am done with all the EG crap, and have moved on to something else. Do you use a platform where we can talk again? I use Discord, Hangouts, and Twitter
2:29 best sync
These plasters remind me of a certain phrase: "Reject Modernity, Embrace Tradition"
You forgot about the 1995 Pixar variant Walt Disney Pictures logos plasterings on Toy Story 1 and 2, Monster's Inc, Finding Nemo, and Cars. That adds unnecessary time for Toy Story 1 and 2, Finding Nemo, and Cars. It also takes away the Pixar charm. I hate the 2006 version of the Disney logo.
1:18 lorimar television like Warner Bros Television
Don't Blame Yourselves, Blame the Production Company and its Distributor.
I thought that the Paramount TV logo first used the music from DesiLu Productions final logo when it was bought by Paramount and merged with it.
Well, that was Fall 1967 where most shows were filmed on the CBS lot: Star Trek, Mission: Impossible, Gunsmoke,
The Carol Burnett Show, The Ed Sullivan Show, Mannix and more!
CBSTD with SPT(I) music = the Frankenstein's Monster that terrorizes logo fans.
The CPT coming after the Boxes from Punky Brewster reminds me....I was wondering how plastering worked, technically. Because it brought to mind the Viacom Pinball being seen after CBSTD on MeTV, so I wondered if there's a technique where they somehow stick the new logo in front of the old one, then chop the old one off?
Hulu theme kinda fits the newer Sony television logo
2:38 HOW DO YOU PASS THAT
3:10 The CBS Productions logo plastered with the Columbia TriStar Television logo gets plastered by the Columbia TriStar Television logo that plastered the TriStar logo. (I don’t remember making this comment)
Yeah you hear a bit of C-T music before the Boxes w/TriStar music comes up.
0:00-0:03 GET READY
serious. Fun!
Make more top bad logo plasters please
2:29 fits well and i dont know why
3:00 fits well
1:57
3:38
Wth???????
Where's that awful WB Pictures logo plaster for the 2011 re-issue of Lethal Weapon 4 (1998)? It's quite puzzling to describe, so here's the link to the plaster: ua-cam.com/video/Bd1BciCEZTI/v-deo.html, and a separate link to the original opening of the movie: ua-cam.com/video/09MXLo3eS-o/v-deo.html. In case you don't know about this it's to be noted that in both the original opening and the plaster, there's an explosion at around 0:15, which can scare you.
30😅😅😅😂😅😅😅😂😅😂😅❤😅ue. AYou ❤you ❤can ❤do that ❤❤❤
3:07 sony pictures television but colex
It has nothing to do with you, but it has something to do with Colex and its jingle. But of them didn't work well & fit perfectly.
That's one of the reasons why nobody wants to be involved with this. In December 1987, Colex is no more.
It has now folded into Sony Pictures Television from June 24, 1985 thru today.
"The sound of the racetrack, the thing with the hand, and the BARS OF BOREDOM, that'll work!"
Not to mention
C-TS '96 "I'm about to ruin CPT '82's whole career!"
CPT '82 "HOLD MY BEER"