Standard Logos Logo Variations Print Son

Credits

Logo descriptions by
Matt Williams, James I Sir Henry Morton Stanley Barr, Nicholas Aczel, Eric S., and Logophile

Logotype captures by
Bob Fish, V of Day of reckoning, Eric S., mr3urious, Mr. Logotype Lord, WizardDuck, EnormousRat, Logoboy95, phasicblu, James Stanley Barr, Shadeed A. Kelly, Logophile, Stephen Cezar, Sagan Blob, Pygmalion X, originalsboy11, TrickyMario7654, ClosingLogosHD, TheEriccorpinc, and bdalbor

Editions by
V of Designate, mr3urious, Mister. Logo Lord, Logophile, Shadeed A. Kelly, Donny Pearson, KirbyGuy2001, DaBigLogoCollector, KramdenII, CNViewer2006, Unnepad, Mario9000seven, CrazySpruiker2001, and MJ2003

Video captures courtesy of
Pepsi9072, ClosingLogosHD, mcydodge919, Mike Stidham, BenIsRandom, and Eric S.

Background

20th Century Fox Telly was the television division of 20th Century Fox (now 20th Centred Studios). It was originally founded in 1949 (under the name of TCF Television Productions, Inc.) every bit strange studios were branching out into television set production as well. In 1955, the studio officially began television production. 20th 100 Fox also owned a stake in the NTA Film Network from 1956 to 1961, and has produced some of the just about popular television programs over the years. After Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation acquired TCF on March 6, 1986, TCF/News Corp acquired the tv set holdings of Metromedia (including its TV stations and television production fellowship). This accomplishment helped Newsworthiness Corporation plunge the Befuddle Broadcasting Ship's company, and TCFTV became the yield arm of FBC. Between 1997 and 1998, the party's library expanded aside acquiring Unaccustomed Worldwide Communication theory and MTM Enterprises. On August 10, 2022, TCFTV was renamed "20th Telecasting" (the appoint of the company's former syndication unit, which was folded into Disney Media Distribution), as part of a corporate restructuring, similar to the movie distribution siblings became 20th Century Studios and Searchlight Pictures on January 17, 2022, spell Blue Sky Studios ceased operations along April 10, 2022 with Disney owning their properties now. Nowadays, the former TCFTV subroutine library is owned by The Walt Disney Company. TCFTV also produced cable system shows under the Play a trick on 21 Television Studios (immediately known as the short-lived revival of Touchstone Television) name.

TCF Television Productions

1st Logo (1955-1959)

Nicknames: "TCF Tower", "TCF Sunburst"

Logo: A logo exchangeable to the 20th Century Trick logotype, except instead of "20th C FOX", it reads "TCF" and contains an explosion-like contour behind it. Underneath, in that location's a byline.

Bylines:

  • " FILMED AT THE Screenland STUDIOS OF TCF Television Productions, Inc. IRVING ASHER, Executive in Charge of TV Productions ".
  • FILMED AT THE Hollywood STUDIOS OF TCF Goggle bo PRODUCTIONS, INC.
  • Irving ASHER EXECUTIVE IN CHARGE OF Telly PRODUCTION

Variants:

  • In some cases, this logo is superimposed o'er the ending credits envision.
  • In colourize shows, the tower is yellow-orange and the background is blue.

FX/SFX: None.

Euphony/Sounds: The closure base of the show.

Availability: Extremely rare. It's seen on Broken Arrow, the opening season of How to Splice a Millionaire (the series), and My Friend Flicka in emblazon, besides available for viewing on the Museum of Disseminate Communications Archives web site.

Editor in chief's Bill: The logo contrive is a familiar albeit characteristic take on the standard Fox structure.

2nd Logo (October 7, 1958-August 20, 1959)

518B5050-13A6-4156-B882-06FA273D9DF0.png

Nicknames: "The Searchlights", "Still Searchlights"

Logotype: A motionless version of the standard version of the 1935 movie logo of the era. Over the tower is the following textual matter:

IRVING ASHER
Executive Producer

FX/SFX: None.

Music/Sounds: The end theme of the show.

Availability: Rare. Seen on the second temper of How to Marry a Millionaire and Man Without a Gun. It was preserved on the DVD release of the onetime.

Editor's Note: None.

3rd Logotype (September 29, 1959-June 5, 1963)

Nicknames: "Starry Sky", "Unsettled Anatomical structure"

Logo: We see a backdrop of a night sky covered with stars and clouds. Over this backdrop, we see the chase text fade in, not quasi to any of their movie logos:

20 TH
CENTURY-

FOX

This company name, in bold letters, fades in as if information technology were streaking from the bottom left of the sieve. The "20TH" seems to be more to the right of the different schoolbook, as displayed here.

Variant: On Adventures in Paradise, this appeared American Samoa an opening logotype with a fanfare, followed by the Martin Manulis Productions logo.

FX/SFX: The fading in of the company name.

Music/Sounds: The opening operating theatre closing theme of the show.

Availability: Extremely rare. Recently seen connected The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis connected MeTV and the Shout! Factory DVD set out. Also can be seen on Adventures in Paradise, which is presently purchasable for viewing happening the Museum of Broadcast Communications Archives website, as well as the short-lived NBC sitcom Five Fingers.

Editor in chief's Distinction: This logotype certainly deviated from the familiar Flim-flam tower social system. Nonetheless, IT's nothing too strange.

20th Centred Befuddle Television

1st Logo (November 6, 1957-1966)

Nicknames: "The Searchlights", "Zoom Out", "20th Television Slyboots", "The Tower of Doom"

Logotype: We catch the habitual 1935 film logo animating. We start hit with the logo close-upbound. The camera then backs away As the word " TELEVISION ", inclined at an angle, suddenly appears and rapidly zooms impermissible, plastering itself happening top of the " CENTURY " on the stack of words, filling the whole screen.

Variants:

  • The logo also appears in sepia-modulate.
  • Sometimes, the camera would backmost away tardily.
  • Sometimes, a sped-up variant of the logotype exists.
  • The movie logotype of the time opened the pilot to The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis, "Caper at the Bijou", with the Martin Manulis Productions logotype (the fanfare plays over the Martin Manulis logo).
  • On some variants, when the word "Television" zooms out, the searchlights abruptly jump back to where they began when the logotype began.

FX/SFX: The searchlights, and the text "TELEVISION" zooming out.

Medicine/Sounds:

  • 1959-1964: A rearrangement of the Alfred Paul Newman fanfare used along the movie sport.
  • 1961-1966: A short tune played on muted trumpets and string section that is a variation of the jingle, but does not reasonable exactly like a Fox jingle.
  • 1963-1964: A shortened variant of the 1959 theme.
  • 1965-1966: A sped-up/shortened reading of the 1961 idea.

Medicine/Sounds Variants:

  • On the TV serial Hong Kong, on that point are 3 different arrangements of the 1959 theme.
  • In some cases, it used only the end theme of the show, or no. This is the case for The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis.

Availability: Precise rare. It can be seen on season 1 reruns of Daniel Boone on World Harvest Television (also available on the Discharge/Goldhil DVD release) and on reruns of The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis and 12 O'Clock Shrill on MeTV, likewise every bit the Season 1 Blu-ray of Lost In Space. Fox updated this with a newer logo (most likely 20th Television) on most prints and DVD releases of shows from this era, but can still be seen on older prints. Initially seen on the last episodes of How to Marry a Millionaire and Man Without a Gun earlier the NTA logo. Also appeared connected the short lived Rod Serling western The Lone wolf, and appeared before the Martin Manulis logotype on after episodes of Adventures in Paradise.

Editor's Note: The finishing product of this logo (operating theater rather, its design conception) would not only represent old for the next 2 logos just would also be the inspiration for 20th Television's name (as the finishing product of this logotype has "TELEVISION" plastered over "CENTURY", making the logotype scan "20th Tv set Fox"). Too, the fanfares utilised on this logo, which often sound nothing like the standard TCF fanfare, could start a couple of viewers at first.

2nd Logotype (September 16, 1965-1984)

Nicknames: "The Searchlights II", "Zoom Out II", "20th Television Fox II", "The Hul of Designate II", "Slanted Zero", "The Slanted Towboa"

Logo: We consume the 1953 theatrical logotype. This time, the television camera doesn't back away from the tower structure and the " 0 " is sloped. The Wor " TELEVISION " appears again and information technology slowly plasters itself on pass of the word " One C ".

Variants:

  • A "grey scaled" variant appeared on B&W prints of classic color shows from the era, such as Batman.
  • The give-and-take " TELEVISION " would appear in either gold, orange, or dishonourable.
  • In 1966, the logo is shifted over to the socialist and the word " TELEVISION " zooms out quickly onto the structure. A peak of the letter " C " in " C " is seen.
  • In 1976, the qualified earmark "®" symbol was added to the 1965 logotype. Plus, the logotype is shifted to the left a little more from the 1966 version, merely " TELEVISION " stiff centralised and zooms out again slowly, consequently revealing the " C " in " Centred ".
  • There is a still version of the 1965 variant with the text "DISTRIBUTED BY" on the top left corner of the logo (this was seen at the close of the 1976-78 version of Liars' Club).
  • Happening the TV series The Starlost, uses a telescoped version of the 1953 movie logo.
  • A green-tinted variant exists.

FX/SFX: Same as the 1st TCFTV logotype.

Euphony/Sounds:

  • 1965-1969: The same 1961 theme from 1st TCFTV logo.
  • 1966-1984: The Sami 1965 theme from 1st TCFTV logo.

Music/Sounds Variants:

  • Same as before, it exploited only the closing base of the show or none. On some co-produced shows from the era, a generic theme was used. Stake-1986 prints of the 1974 television system movie Hurricane employment the Metromedia Producers Corporation jangle instead of the classical doggerel verse.
  • Connected the DVD and Blu-shaft print of the S1 Batman sequence "How-do-you-do Diddle Riddle", it uses the 1989 base from the next logo, due to the HD surmoun on this sequence exploitation a different source for the audio (in this display case, the 1990s video masters). The Portuguese track from this episode, nonetheless, uses the 1995 theme from the last logo instead.
  • Hulu prints of M*A*S*H from the first cardinal seasons have this logotype with the 1989 TCFTV jingle, imputable a reverse plaster error.
  • A translation of the TCFTV fanfare is incorporated into and appears at the end of, the subject for the 1976-1982 syndicated documentary series That's Hollywood, which TCFTV produced and distributed. At the end of that show's closing credits, the TCFTV logo is timed to look as the That's Hollywood radical segues into the logo fanfare as the song ends.

Availability: Rare, due to frequent plastering by later Fox Word.

  • The 1965 version is retained on the 2nd through the final season of Daniel Boone last aired happening Retro TV and World Reap Video, arsenic well as the DVD sets of these seasons from Liberation/Goldhill and DVD/Blu-ray releases of the 1960s Batman series from Warner Home Television.
  • The 1976 interpretation is available happening the low two episodes of The Fall Guy on the season 1 DVD set, while the next logotype is intact connected the remainder of the season.
  • The Magnetic Video print of The Qualification of Star Wars from 1979 also has this logotype (it was omitted from its 1981 reissue as a double have with SPFX: The Empire Strikes Back, and replaced by the 20th Television logotype in the 1995 reissue and bonus disc 3 of the Star Wars saga Blu-beam of light hardened).
  • It is also seen on the infamous Star Wars Vacation Special from 1978. Copies of the special wealthy person been current for decades.
  • Also appears on the VHS expiration of Tomorrow's Child. It's Good to Constitute Alive (1974), aired on Atlanta's WATC 57, June 27, 2009, preserved the 1976 variant at the beginning. It's likewise seen on the Season 2 Blu-ray of Hopeless in Place.
  • Beginning in 2022, this logo has been restored along Hulu prints of the first two seasons of M*A*S*H, marking the first time since 1992 that this logotype has been restored to that series. It was also spotted on FOX Classics' broadcasts of the episodes "The Price of Tomato Succus", "In Love and War", "Hepatitis", "C*A*V*E", "Tell It to the Marines", "Bottleful Fatigue" and "Bless You, Hawkeye" in Australia, as well as GREAT! TV's print of "Fade Out, Melt In (Part 2)" in the Tied Kingdom. It has also recently begun appearance once again along Season Three episodes of Lost in Space happening MeTV, replacing old prints of those episodes which had the 1995 20th Boob tube logo with the News Bay window byline.

Editor's Note: The 1976 variant with the shifted text certainly doesn't look very paid. Differently that, IT's a becoming logotype for its time, though again the fanfares whitethorn startle some.

3rd Logo (October 19, 1981-1993)

Nicknames: "The Searchlights III", "Zoom Out III", "20th Television Fox III", "The Tower of End of the world III"

Logotype: Aforementioned as the 1981 theatrical logo, with the word " TELEVISION " zooming out and daubing over the word " 100 ".

Variants:

  • This exists as some a filmed and a videotaped/telecine version. Originally presented on film throughout its whole run, it also appeared in telecine format starting in 1986.
  • The word " TELEVISION " would look in either golden, yellow, orange, or ivory.
  • Around 1984, the pitch background knowledge looks a bite darker.
  • On the short-lived series Working Girl, the stuffy TV pilot of Revenge of the Nerds, and The Simpsons S3 episodes: "Bart the Liquidator", "Homer Defined", "Treehouse of Horror II", "Lisa's Pony", "Flaming Moe's", "I Matrimonial Marge", "Radio Bart", "Separate Vocations", "Colonel Homer", "Black Widower", and "Baronet's Friend Waterfall taken with", you can see more structure happening the logo American Samoa it appears further KO'd.
  • On some previous syndie prints of S1 Gnomish Wonder episodes, the logo freezes after " TELEVISION " plasters " CENTURY " in front cutting to black.
  • In that respect exists a "matted" 1.78:1 widescreen version.
  • On few episodes of Bobby's World, it has a greenish background.
  • On A&E airings of a few season 2 episodes of L.A. Law, the logo animation was strangely in slow motion, but the jingle remained unaffected.
  • On a Channel 4 airing of The Simpsons episode "Homer vs. Lisa and the 8th Teaching", the logo cuts out before the final Federal Reserve note ends.

Trivia: If you wait closely, you hindquarters see that thither are cardinal searchlights behind the logo alternatively of three care the movie logo. There is, still, a rare variant with trinity searchlights.

FX/SFX: Almost the same as 2nd TCFTV logo.

Euphony/Sounds:

  • October 19, 1981-Aug 22, 1991: The selfsame 1965 theme from the 3rd and 5th Logos. Justified though IT chiefly stopped existence used in past 1989, or s shows have used information technology into the 1990-1991 season, such as S1 and betimes S2 episodes of In Living Color, the first two S5 episodes of L.A. Law (pretty odd, considering aforementioned evince used the next topic on November 1989-May 1990 episodes of the 4th season), the L.A. Law 100th Instalment Festivity, a few supranational prints of S1 Bobby's Human race episodes, and most of season 1 episodes and the first season 2 episode of True Colors.
  • November 1989-1993: A short adaptation of the 1979 Fox jingle, which was later used for the early variant of the standard 20th TV logo from 1992-1993.

Euphony/Sounds Variants:

  • There are abridged variants of the 1965 theme, such Eastern Samoa the case for Hooperman that the closing motif ends abruptly with the last note of the 1965 theme, and Charlie & Centennial State., which used the last 5 notes of the flourish.
  • On some co-produced shows from the era, a generic theme was used.
  • Two versions of the 1989 theme live: one where the last note echoes for a bit after fading out and other without the echo. The latter reading was seen on In Living Color, the unaired Revenge of the Nerds pilot, and the 1991 M*A*S*H retrospective Memories of M*A*S*H.
  • On some episodes of Mr. Belvedere and the short-lived series Sis Kate, the first greenbac is cut-off (via melt transition).

Accessibility: Uncommon, due to plastering with the 20th TV logo.

  • The Simpsons episodes "In that respect's No Disgrace Like Plate", "Krusty Gets Busted", "Mister. Lisa Goes to Washington", "Treehouse of Repugnance II", "Saturdays of Thunder", "Colonel Homer", and "Black Widower" preserve this logotype on their respective season DVD releases.
  • It has strangely been spotted on Comedy Central's prints of Agency Space and French Kiss, but has been plastered concluded with the 20th Television receiver logo in recent airings due to split screen credits. A similar state of affairs happened along a few episodes of The Fake when reran on Trinitrotoluene, just has now been slicked away the 2013 20th Television logo on H&I (Heroes and Icons).
  • On VHS, it ass be seen on The Simpsons Christmas limited, L.A. Law, and, in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Irelan, on The Simpsons episode "Homer vs. Lisa and the 8th Commandment". It was also spotted at the end of a Simpsons short titled "Family Therapy" that was enclosed happening the UK rental VHS of The War of the Roses. The Australian rental VHS release of the aforementioned cinema also includes this short, though the TCFTV logo is absent from this release.
  • More recently, the logo has been sighted on several 1970s-'80s TV movies on Fox Movie Channel. IT can also personify seen on some beforehand season one and most season two and three episodes of In People Color happening DVD.
  • The 1981-1991 and 1989-1993 variants can follow found on the Alien Nation serial publication DVD set, along with original airings of Capitol Critters on ABC.
  • The 1981-1991 rendering of this logotype can follow seen on Fox Movie Channel's prints of The Hurricane.
  • The 1980s variants are also seen on the Hollo! Factory DVDs of Mr. Kochia scoparia, although FamNET reruns of said show plaster it with the 2008 20th Telecasting logotype on almost wholly episodes, and the 1995 20th Television set logotype on several episodes while Antenna TV reruns plaster it with the bylineless 2013 20th Television system logo on entirely episodes.
  • The 1981 variant appeared on the 1985-1988 syndicated discharge of The $100,000 Pyramid and was preserved on USA reruns. Since 1997 reruns, the logotype was plastered past the 1997 Columbia University TriStar Telecasting logo.
  • This can also be found connected the unaired TV pilot of Revenge of the Nerds, which keister be found on the "Step-in Raid Edition" DVD release of Revenge of the Nerds (the moving picture).
  • On Netflix, it can be found on several episodes of the first cardinal seasons of Bobby's World (while others have either the 20th Television or 1996 Saban Foreign logos).
  • Made a eery coming into court connected the 10th episode of S4 of In Aliveness Color (that episode existence produced during flavor 3 (1991-92), but not dissemination until the quaternary season).
  • The 1989 variant can be seen on a handful of early Simpsons episodes on FXNOW, FX's streaming service, in 4:3 way only.
  • The 1981 variation appeared happening the first some episodes of the Fox TV serial The Adventures of Beans Baxter before Fox Square Productions took over (which ne'er ill-used a proper logo; vindicatory a copyright observation).
  • Scorn general use stopping around 1992, the news serial publication Not Just News (co-produced with Fox Television Stations) utilized this into 1993.
  • The widescreen logotype is usable on M*A*S*H reruns on Hulu start in 2022, with the 1989 jingle. Additionally, the 1981 version was seen plastering the premature logo on FOX Classics' prints of "Carry Along, Hawkeye", "The Late Cpt. Pierce", "The Bus" and "Dear Ma", and Truthful Entertainment's print of "Fade Dead, Fade In (Part 1)". However, the early logo is restored connected Disney+ prints of these episodes.
  • Turned up on MeTV's print of the seldom seen M*A*S*H series finale, "Goodbye, Farewell and Amen".
  • It makes a surprise appearing on Sony Movie Convey's prints of the TV movies Highjack! and The Death Team (all before the SPT logotype), both being Spelling-Goldberg Productions.

Editor's Eminence: It's more of the same like the last cardinal logos, but with the 1981 film logo and a smoother zoom-out on the word "Idiot box". This logotype marks the first time that the familiar short TCF base was used for Fox's television logos subsequently just about three decades of unconventional fanfares.

Note: 20th Hundred Fox Television was supplanted by Twentieth Television Corporation from 1989 to 1994. From September 18, 1992-March 19, 1995, the standard 20th TV logo of these years was used. Determine 20th Television set for details on that logo.

4th Logo (Dance Fever variant) (1983-1984)

TCFTV (Dance Fever variant, 1983).jpeg

Nicknames: "The Searchlights IV", "The Chyron Searchlights", "Print Searchlights"

Logo: Connected a black background, we see the '80s TCF print logo. Thereunder is the word "Goggle bo" and a copyright stamp.

FX/SFX: None.

Music/Sounds: The theme song of Dance Febrility.

Availableness: Extinct. It was only seen happening season 5 episodes of Trip the light fantastic Fever on local syndication.

Editor's Eminence: None.

5th Logo (Apr 28, 1995-December 22, 2022)

Nicknames: "The Searchlights V", "CGI Searchlights", "Zooming Tug", "The Tower of Tepidity", "The 20th Tower"

Logo: It's just the said as the standard 20th Television logo, but now the stack of words has been modified to resemble the standard Fuddle stack, with "Telly" added to the bottom and the whole thing looking rather taller, reading " 20th CENTURY FOX Television system". When the logotype is up zooming retired, the documented hallmark "®" symbol and the Tidings Pot byline (on pre-2013 episodes) fade in concurrently.

Variants:

  • An early variant from 1995-1997 featured a slightly darker tower.
  • Along Futurama, the logo and the more past syndie prints' 20th Telecasting logo read " 30th C FOX TELEVISION", as that reveal is coif in the 31st Century. Beforehand episodes originally the registered trademark "®" symbolization, however it is replaced with the trademark "Atomic number 69" symbol in later episodes. This was likewise seen at the end of The Simpsons episode "Simpsorama". Connected a recent Channel 4 airing of the episode, there was an extremely bad editing mistake revealed, every bit just the ostentation finishes, the "3" changes plump for to a "2"!
  • On the scant-lived situation comedy Andy Richter Controls the Universe, the text " IN ASSOCIATION WITH " below the News Corporation byline fades in at the same time as the News Corporation byline and even thither's a fatal banner at the bottom. This would be followed aside the 1995, 2002 operating theatre 2003 Paramount Television logos. On the region 1 DVD release of the series from CBS Home Entertainment and Paramount Home Entertainment, this logo and the Paramount Television logos are plastered away the CBS Television system Distribution logo, although both the Fox and Paramount logos were preserved when the show aired on Universal HD and HDNet a couple of years ago. IT is presumed that international releases of the serial publication connected DVD leave retain the original end logos since Fox owns the international rights.
  • September 26, 1998-2007: On shows faced/produced in widescreen/high definition, the sky background knowledge is more dreary, with less realistic searchlights. Debuted on Martial Law with the already formed logo squished to 4:3, then cropped to 4:3 in season 2, while just about shows began using the widescreen variant in 1999. Besides, the registered trademark "®" symbolisation is already there and the Tidings Corporation byline fades in once the logotype completely finishes zooming extinct.
    • On 24: The Computer game, Family Guy Video recording Game!, the Nintendo DS port of The Simpsons Game, and the unawares-lived series The Winner the trademark "TM" symbol is seen instead of the registered trademark "®" symbolisation.
  • On seasons 3-5 of Someone Food, on that point is a still version of this logotype. On The Simpsons Arcade Mettlesome, downloadable on Xbox Live and PSN, a still version of the increased logo is misused.
  • On April 13, 2007, starting with Get, the logo was given a more "enhanced" look with more lifelike effects. Like the 1998 variant, the registered trademark "®" symbol is already at that place and the News Corporation. byline fades in later. However, some shows still misused the 1995 or 1998 variants, such as King of the Hill (until November 18, 2007), American Dad! (until May 4, 2008), The Simpsons (until January 25, 2009), Family Guy (until May 17, 2009), and 24 (until its serial closing curtain connected May 24, 2010).
  • Happening the 2009 animated sitcom Sit Down, Quieten, in that location was a shortened version of the 2007 logo.
  • Beginning with the 9th season of Finger cymbals connected September 16, 2013 and ending with the season clos of NeXt on December 22, 2022 (the final examination visual aspect of this logo), the logo is bylineless. This was collect to the split of News Corporation which occurred back at the end of June (with Throw and all of the former company's entertainment divisions going to the then-newly-formed 21st Century Fox). Strangely, The Simpsons, Bob's Burgers, Family Guy, and American Daddy! still used the byline until November 10, 2013. The Simpsons and Family Guy started using the byline-to a lesser extent version on November 17, 2013, while Bob's Burgers and American Pappa! started using it connected November 24, 2013.
  • The short-lived Sci-Fi Transport (now Syfy) serial The Story: Tidings from the Edge had a very rare and interesting "International" variation. The first one operating theatre two seconds shows a cloudy background signal similar to what was victimised along the Television logo of the time, with the actor's line "Distributed Past" appearing number one. After that, it cuts to the 1995 logo placed in the middle of the screen, with the life slowed down, but more operating theatre less complete with the News Corporation. byline, and low-level that is the words "International Television". This replaces the 1995 20th Television logo utilized happening original American prints.
  • Along The Simpsons S9 episode "The Last Temptation of Krust", nearing the close of a musical number, the 1995 logo with the '97 fanfare appears, but is pushed departed by the rest of the episode. This variant is preserved along syndication prints.
  • On the pre-broadcast pilot of the transitory series A.US GovernmentA., the logotype is slightly extended, starting off with a nestled-up of the structure, past easing into the normal animation. The standard version was used when it hit circularise.
  • On old AMC broadcasts of Young Frankenstein's monster and The Longest Day, a B&ere;W version of the 1998 logotype appears.
  • On the 4th harden of The Simple Life, the logo cuts off when the byline fades in.

FX/SFX: The logo zooming exterior, the moving searchlights, and the byline and recorded stylemark "®" symbol attenuation in.

Music/Sounds: Here are the main versions:

  • Apr 28, 1995-April 18, 1999: A re-ordered and Ra-recorded variant of the 1989 doggerel verse by Bruce Broughton. Information technology is slightly different from the 1994/1995 20th Telecasting ostentation. Information technology's the 2nd alternate theme that was first used for 20th Television in 1994.
  • 1995-April 17, 2022: The 1994/1995 20th Television fanfare. Besides ill-used on the "World-wide" variant.
  • Oct 19, 1997-September 14, 2022: A re-ordered, re-recorded, faster stochastic variable of the 1961 jingle conducted by David Newman.
  • August 29, 2005-Oct 4, 2012: A truncated chance variabl of the 1997 film jingle, much shorter than the above. Used happening the first harden of Prison Break, the number 1 four seasons of Mirth and the first season of American Horror Story.
  • April 13, 2007-July 24, 2022: A ray-orchestrated and another truncated/altered interpretation of the 1997 moving-picture show jingle, albeit edited to resemble the 1995-1999 jingle.
  • September 4, 2012-August 21, 2022: The 2008 20th Television tucket.
  • August 26, 2022-December 22, 2022: The last 4 notes of the 1997 20th C Fox flourish; the last note is truncate. Used only along the short variant. A heave-hie version of it also exists.

Music/Sounds Variants:

  • Starting during the 1997-1998 TV season, Fox commonly uses their ain fanfare over logos, before the cut screen prove promo/credits; due to the fact that much Pull a fast one on programming is produced by Fox, these fanfares go symptomless with this logo. From 1997-2001, a simple Fox roll was used; the 2001-2002 harden introduced the first batch of different "remixes" of the Fox fanfare (fundamentally the remixes using a sample distribution of John the Evangelist Williams' Fox fanfare from Star Wars: Instalment V - The Empire Strikes Back), usually alone using the final four notes; the 2003-2004 harden introduced the second plenty of remixes which had more and plain themes (replacing the previous ones from 2001, exclude for a coxa-skip over/rock remix of the 1980 St. John Theodore Samuel Williams Play a trick on fanfare), simply they also had a divers-sounding Flim-flam drum roll with the last four notes in G major. Many of them were done aside a Calif.-based caller named Furrow Addicts. However in the 2022-2020 season, due to Disney's acquisition of 21st Century Fox, a parvenue motif is heard, retiring the 2001 and 2003 ones in practice for 18 years. Sometimes, an announcer at the time would play over this theme.
    • Interestingly, some series such A The Simpsons had out victimisation these generic themes as inchoate equally 2009 (probably due to the HD format for the display's twentieth season), spell these generic themes much as Family Guy kept using them. Some serial publication such as Bob's Burgers, Allen Gregory, Hallow the Harts and Duncanville never used these generic themes at completely.
    • Funnily, on the CTV Regressive prints of the Seat, Quieten episodes "Archetype" and "Miracles Are Tangible", this generic stem variant of this logo is unbroken.
  • In exceptional cases, it used the shutting theme of the show, the generic network root happening Trick, ABC, CBS, NBC operating room The Wb (later The CW), or silence.
  • A warp belt along adaptation of the 1995-1999 theme exists, which was still used on 24, CHAOS, and S1 episodes of Prevarication to Me.
  • Sometimes, only the second half of the theme will play.
  • There are many abridged variations of the 1997 jingle such as American Dad! and The Cleveland Show that used it.
  • There is also a long-handled version of the theme.
  • On 1995-1997 and some post-1997 episodes of The Simpsons, such as the S9 episode "Simpson Lunar time period", the S11 sequence "Treehouse of Horror X", the S15 episode "Treehouse of Repulsion XIV", the S16 installment "Treehouse of Horror XV", the S18 episode "Treehouse of Horror 17", the S19 episode "Treehouse of Horror XVIII", and the S21 episode "Treehouse of Repugnance XX", the 1989 TCFTV logo theme is played.
  • On Seth & Alex's Almost Live Comedy Show and the first two episodes of Bob's Burgers, the same 1989 TCFTV logo theme is played, leave out the pitch is a trifle higher.
  • Along the Family Rib episode "Blue Harvest", the 1997 fanfare is low-inclined to fit in with the show's closing theme.
  • On the Net X and Sky One airings of 24: Live Another Day in Commonwealth of Australi and the United Kingdom, a warping speed version of the 1994/1995 20th Television flourish was strangely used on the 2013 bylineless variant.
  • On experient Sky One airings of The Simpsons season 10 episode "Monty Can't Buy Me Love", the 1995 fanfare is used.
  • Happening Quintuplets, the 1998 increased TCFTV tower features the 1994/1995 20th Television fanfare.
  • HITS airing of The X-Files has the 2007 revision with the 1994/1995 20th Television flash.
  • Connected The Simpsons season 7 instalment "The Simpsons 138th Episode Spectacular", the fanfare comes in roughly half a bit to one second after the logo starts animating. For the reason, given Pitch One's prints of older episodes freeze at the end transitioning into commercial breaks, the last note of the fanfare is short mown off.
  • The Solid ground Dada! season 9 episode "District attorney Flippity Flop" uses the 2012 TCFTV fanfare, rather than the common abridged version of the '97 fanfare. Eastern Samoa a resultant of this, given how short this variant of the logotype normally is, the last fewer notes of the fanfare play over a black block out. ITV2's broadcast of the episode fixes this in some respects past freeze the logo before the unsexed to black, thus the fanfare finishes terminated the static image.
  • The American Dad! season 9 sequence "The Chockful Cognitive Redaction of Avery Bullock by the Coward Stan Smith" uses an potted version of the 2012 TCFTV fanfare, consisting of the first deuce notes and the senior four notes of the standard ostentation. Strangely, this tucket isn't ever-present connected whatsoever other episode, despite fitting the length of the logo as opposed to the example straight above.
  • On world-wide PAL prints of The Simpsons instalment "Marge Gamer", a double pitched interpretation of the logo appears. Select dubbings of the said episode along Disney+, however, have the logo in a usual PAL peddle.
  • On select St. Elsewhere episodes on Hulu, the end theme plays as the logo appears (credits were adjusted to fit in the logo as the signature tune ends). However, at any rate one case forgets to cut out and thusly you can see the meow sound effect from the MTM Enterprises logo even though it is plastered with this unity.
  • On the US DVD release of season 5 of Ally McBeal, if you prime the French audio track, the logo (alongside the David E. Kelley Productions logo before information technology and the episodes as easily) plays in a low pitch. This is too the case happening select dubbings of seasons 12-20 episodes of The Simpsons on Disney+.
  • On Over There, a unique cut interlingual rendition of the 1997 TCF theme (heard on Anastasia) is exploited, which begins with the first 10 notes and ends with the concluding helding note, which would continue all over the 2005 FX Networks logo.
  • Connected the Modern Folk episode "Fizbo", the sound channel changes occur in the 1997 TCFTV fanfare.

Availability: No longer current, but still very common.

  • Typically found on mesh programming provided by Fox. Too seen on some CBS (Yes, Good, Martial Police force, and Still Lasting, etc), NBC (The Pretender, 1997-2000 seasons and the two TV movies), or ABC (The Practice and Boston Legal, etc.) shows.
  • May or May non be present in syndicated repeats of network programs, as the 20th Television logotype May follow or plaster it.
  • On Laff airings of How I Met Your Mother, the logo is uninjured, not plastered and not followed by 20th TV's logo.
  • The still shot version of this logo can be launch on Soul Food: The Series, starting with S3, DVD's (released by CBS) retain it.
  • The version with the altered 1997 radical can be seen on reruns of American Dad! and Family Guy reruns on Grownup Swim, among others.
  • Numerous DVD releases of The Simpsons, starting with the 15th season, plaster the 1995 logo with the 2007 logo. Sky 1 in the UK has lately been airing upscaled HD 'remasters' of The Simpsons season 8 episodes, plastering the 1995 logo with the 2007 logo.
  • Also seen on some world-wide prints of FX shows such as Information technology's Always Gay in Philadelphia.
  • It can be also sometimes besmirched on some movie airings on channels like AMC, Disney Channel, Freeform, and FX.
  • The bylineless 2013 variant plasters the George Fox Television Studios logo on nearly current prints of Malcolm in the Intervening.
  • After its Disney attainment, this was used on shows during the 2022-2020 season, like for an example, the first seasons of Bless the Harts and Duncanville.
  • Despite the rebranding to its current name (20th Television receiver) happening August 10, 2022, this logo was unmoving in use until the end of the year. Disney had besides stated that episodes produced prior to the rebranding testament not be plastered, with the exception of the shows on the Animation Domination stymy, as they use the 20th Television logo on by the showtime of the 2022-2021 Idiot box flavor, then switched to the new 20th Television Animation logo in 2022 for the new seasons of the animated shows. The logo had successful its final appearance on the series finale of the short-lived series NeXt which aired on December 22, 2022.
  • This is strangely cut-away from Hallmark Channel airings of Reba. However, CMT and UP airings silent keep on information technology.
  • Interestingly, most TV airings of Fox shows in French territories (France, Switzerland, Belgium) from the late 90s up until the middle-2000s commonly opened with the 1995 logo, albeit with a somewhat Stygian/brownish cloud and a computer generatized fade-in/fade-out. 90s shows used the 1995 theme, while later shows/airings in the 2000s geological era used the 1997 theme. Airings of widescreen/letterboxed/HD shows the likes of Bones besides secondhand this practice back off in the day, but with the 1998 enhanced logotype (and no melt-in/fade-out). Recent shows no thirster economic consumption this pattern nowadays.
  • Strangely, the 1995 logo was seen at the originate in of a late 90s French TV airing of Asterix in America (Asterix et les Indiens).
  • When the Sci-Fi Channel (now Syfy) reran Batman in the late 90s/early 2000s, the 1998 version loaded the 2nd logo.

Editor's Note: While both the 1995 and 2007 versions have held raised well enough, this logotype and its 20th Television vis-a-vis were strangely never updated to match the 2009 and 2022 theatrical logos. This reading of the tower purpose has been utilized since 1992 (albeit in a adapted form) which even predates the 1994 take version.

Final Note: Despite aft Walt Disney rebranded 20th Century Play a trick on Television to 20th Telly, the name ease existed as the closed captioning sponsored with the text reading atomic number 3 "Captioning sponsored by 20th CENTURY FOX TELEVISION".

Right of first publication Stamps

Here is some information about the copyright stamps connected TCFTV serial publication:

  • 1960-1985: Copyright © [YEAR] Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corporation. All Rights Reserved.
  • 1985-2020: Copyright © [Yr] Twentieth Century Bedevil Film Corporation. All Rights Reserved. (the hyphen was dropped in 1985)

Brass Gargoyle Fan Fireplace Screen Griffin Peacock Folding Fan, Mid 20th Century

Source: https://closinglogosgroup.miraheze.org/wiki/20th_Century_Fox_Television