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  1. Throughout the 1990s, Family Home Entertainment Theatre was used as a banner for full-length, family-friendly movies Live had the rights to; certain FHE titles were also reprinted by Live's budget video brand Avid Home Entertainment.

    • (June 1981-1985, 1987) Visuals: On a zooming space background, a large pink/purple "sun" appears a few seconds in and slowly moves towards the screen while sizzling.
    • (November 1? , 1984-April 1991) Normal variant. Transformers trailer variant. Visuals: On a black background, a yellow-orange screen "flips" in by crawling the very back, the "top" and then down the front..
    • (May 9, 1991-1998) This section contains dead video embeds. This can happen if a video becomes removed from the original site and/or the user who uploaded it was terminated.
    • (May 15, 1998-2001) Visuals: Against a black background, a green "F" flips toward the screen, followed by a vermilion "H" and a lavender "E". A triangular vermilion "roof" lands on the "H" shortly after.
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  3. Family Home Entertainment was a home video distribution company, releasing all kids and family releases (although prior to 1982, the company released such titles as Tom Jones: Live in Las Vegas) and was established by Noel C. Bloom in 1981.

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    Family Home Entertainment (commonly referred to as F.H.E.) was a home video distribution company established by Noel C. Bloom in early 1981 that, like its name suggests, released mostly family-oriented content. In its first year, it would also release content geared more towards older viewers, such as Tom Jones: Live in Las Vegas. A year later, F.H.E. would launch their U.S.A. Home Video sub-label for more general releases, leaving the F.H.E. name exclusively for family-oriented and kids content. Throughout the next two decades, F.H.E. would be the main distributor of many popular '80s cartoon shows such as Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Transformers, G.I. Joe, as well as Rankin-Bass specials, Tom & Jerry, and other cartoons produced by famed animator Chuck Jones.

    In 1984, Bloom formed International Video Entertainment, and grouped all his existing brands, including F.H.E., together under one conglamorate. After IVE merged with Lieberman to form LIVE Entertainment, F.H.E. became a main subsidiary of that company. LIVE would later rebrand itself to Artisan Entertainment in 1998, with F.H.E. also creating its Family Home Entertainment Kids sub-label to further distinguish releases that are either geared toward kids or general family-oriented content. It eventually became a division of Lionsgate Home Entertainment after they acquired and folded Artisan Entertainment in 2003. F.H.E.'s own folding would follow in 2005.

    •For other related logos and images see: Family Home Entertainment/Other

  4. On Golden Pond (1993 VHS) The Point (1993 VHS) The Eyes of the Amaryllis (1993 VHS) The Wild Pony (1993 VHS) Where The Red Fern Grows (1993 VHS) Christmas Comes to Willow Creek (1993 VHS) Against The Crooked Sky (1993 VHS) Hoosiers (1993 VHS) Dark Horse (VHS) The Return of the Pink Panther (1993 VHS) The Last Unicorn (1994 VHS) Goldy: The Last of the Golden Bears (1994 VHS) Goldy II: The Saga ...

  5. Nov 27, 2023 · The ribbon reads "FAMILY HOME ENTERTAINMENT" in white, and at the bottom of the gold box is "THEATRE" in spaced-out letters. Trivia: This logo is stylized after the print logo used on video releases in Family Home Entertainment's "Christmas Classics Series", which used a red ribbon and black text on the box, but nevertheless carried the same ...

  6. Background: Family Home Entertainment was a home video distribution company e stablished by Noel C. Bloom in 1981 to distribute family/kids releases. A year later, FHE launched a non-kids sub-division known as U.S.A. Home Video, which would eventually evolve into Artisan Entertainment.

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