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  1. Early incarnation of Paramount's in-house TV production division which originated from then-owned KTLA Los Angeles. During this time, Paramount Television began using the generic logo for Paramount Pictures in trade ads and stationary print materials.

    • (January 12-September 1968) Regular version. Later version. Bylineless version. Bylineless B&W version. Later bylineless version. Paramount-Norway version.
    • (September 1968-1975) Visuals: On a red background, there is a larger blue rectangle, which contains the following text: PARAMOUNT TELEVISION A DIVISION OF PARAMOUNT PICTURES CORPORATION.
    • (September 23, 1969-1976) Alternate 1969 fanfare (higher pitch) 1971 fanfare. 1972 fanfare. Visuals: Same as the theatrical 1968 logo, but either matted or cropped to fit TV screens.
    • (September 9, 1975-1988) Visuals: There is the finished product of the 1975 movie logo, but more defined this time; the mountain has been compressed by about one inch with the indentations (or impressions) also reduced from five to four.
  2. Feb 26, 2012 · Years of use: 1987-2006 (6th Logo)Featured in: Cheers, Friday the 13th:The Series, Fraiser, Star Trek:The Next GenerationScare Factor: 1/10Hall of Fame: 8/10...

    • Feb 26, 2012
    • 252.7K
    • LateNightLogoTV
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  4. Mar 13, 2024 · The logo history of Paramount Television (along with CBS Studios and CBS Media Ventures) essentially began in 1966 with an American television production com...

    • Mar 13, 2024
    • 9.8K
    • ITB ITB
  5. This logo is strangely replaced by the Desilu logo and the first CBS Paramount Domestic Television logo on the Star Trek Season 2 Blu-Ray set. Editor's Note: This is the first animated Paramount Television logo. This also might be a prototype of the Paramount print logo that made its debut in the same year.

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  6. Another early logo that was used on some of Paramount's network TV specials and unsold pilots during the late '50s and early '60s. Theatrical opening logos, as seen on some made-for-TV movies. Variation without the ® registered mark. This logo is the short version of its theatrical counterpart. Seen mostly on off-net and first run syndicated programs. Although this logo was retired in ...

  7. Then, the stars encircle the mountain, as the words " Paramount Television " (later replaced with the much smaller text " TELEVISION STUDIOS " set in the Avenir font starting in January 2020) zooms out to the top of the mountain one-by-one, as the byline fades in below the mountain. The logo zooms in very slowly during all of this.

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