Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. The "A Bert Claster Television Production" (note the wording) ID was present on the various local editions as well (Claster licensed the format to 250+ stations over the years on top of producing and distributing the national show).

  2. The "A Bert Claster Television Production" (note the wording) ID was present on the various local editions as well (Claster licensed the format to 250+ stations over the years on top of producing and distributing the national show).

  3. The "A Bert Claster Television Production" (note the wording) ID was present on the various local editions as well (Claster licensed the format to 250+ stations over the years on top of producing and distributing the national show).

  4. Claster Television, Inc. was a Baltimore, Maryland –based television distributor founded in 1953 by Bertram H. (Bert) Claster and Nancy Claster (Goldman) as Romper Room Inc. [2] It was originally a producer of the children's show Romper Room, one of the first preschool children's programs.

    • Logos
    • Music/Sounds
    • Scare Factor

    1st logo

    In an orange box with red borders with a white line in between is a jack-in-the-box (a la the Harveytoons logos, but named "Happy Jack") with a similarly-colored clown suit and a red derby. He bounces around, then bends towards the front of the box to place, in Romper Room font, the words "A BERT CLASTER PRODUCTION".

    2nd logo

    Just in-credit text that was used in this format: Distributed by: CLASTER TV PRODUCTIONS A Division of Hasbro Industries

    3rd logo

    We start with a shot of this stylized text on a blue background: Distributed by (the Claster logo) Claster TELEVISION INCORPORATED The Claster logo is in red with the text in a strange, bold, italic font. There is a small line going above "laster" to represent an extended "t." To the left of "Claster" is a red parallelogram with the extremely-thin 8-pointed star inside. Now, to the animation. A white star moves in a horizontal direction from right-to-left and spins over all the letters in "Cl...

    1st logo

    The opening/ending theme of Romper Room (a synthesized version of "Pop Goes The Weasel", sounding almost like video game music) accompanied by an announcer spiel. E.g., Mrs."Unknown" says, "Pop Goes The Weasel, and the Jack-In-The-Box jumps out of his house and that means it's time for Romper Room school."

    2nd logo

    The closing theme of the show.

    3rd logo

    3 different themes were used: 1. 1987-1989: Two synth notes, then an odd, rapid synth tune that sounds similar to cliche cartoon outer-space music. 2. 1989-1999: An 8-note synthesized fanfare ending with an ascending flourish. 3. 1997-1999: A dreamy electric piano bridge with a synth orchestral backing.

    1st logo

    1. Low to high for the 1-2-3 variant. The jack may be frightening, but the animation shouldn't be too horrifying. 2. Medium to high for the zooming variant, as the jack is still visible, and the zooming may put some people off. 3. Medium to nightmare for the still variant, as the lack of animation and creepiness of the jack will unsettle many, especially that it's visible for the whole time.

    2nd logo

    None, it's tamer than the last logo(s) we looked at.

    3rd logo

    Depends 1. Low to medium for the original versions, mainly due to the music. 2. Minimal to low for the later variant, as the music is a lot tamer than before. 3. None for the in-credit variant.

  5. Claster Television, Inc. was a Baltimore, Maryland–based television distributor founded in 1953 by Bertram H. (Bert) Claster and Nancy Claster (Goldman) as Romper Room Inc. It was originally a producer of the children's show Romper Room, one of the first preschool children's programs.

  6. People also ask

  7. Claster Television, Inc. was a Baltimore, Maryland–based television distributor founded in 1953 by Bertram H. (Bert) Claster and Nancy Claster (Goldman) as Romper Room Inc. It was originally a producer of the children's show Romper Room, one of the first preschool children's programs.