Fremantle International

Background
The Fremantle Corporation was a British-based production company founded in 1952 by Paul Talbot. It also set up a subsidiary Fremantle International Inc. to handle overseas sales of its programs, as well as acquiring formats of various top television producers such as Goodson-Todman, Bob Stewart Productions, Chuck Barris Productions, Kine & Friends, Barry & Enright Productions and Hatos-Hall Productions. It even operated a production company owned by themselves, Talbot Television. In 1989, half of its Fremantle International unit was sold to Interpublic Group of Companies, while its Australian office was acquired by R.A. Becker & Company (later Becker Entertainment). In 1994, the international unit was sold by Interpublic to All American Communications, while Talbot had retained the Fremantle Corporation, which had international distribution rights to Baywatch, Loving and Grace Under Fire. After Paul Talbot's death in 2005, it was sold to Kaleidoscope Entertainment. The rights to the library are now held by FilmRise.

1st Logo (1964-1972)
Logo: We see a closeup of the filmreel. The filmreel spins and then zooms out over a gray background. A circle with the black word "F" appears. The black word "A" in a Claredron font appears. A black filmstrip wipes over and we see the white word "FREMANTLE". Another filmstrip wipes over below and we see the white word "INTERNATIONAL". The word "RELEASE" appears below the filmstrips.

Technique: Traditional cel animation.

Music/Sounds: Various drumroll sounds.

Availability: Seen at the end of The Magic Boomerang.

2nd Logo (1972-1991)
Logo:
 * Opening: We zoom-out on a black background with white sparkles meant to represent outer space, as two copies of the word "Times New Roman" (one yellow and the other ) fly from the right and left sides of the screen. As we stop zooming, the copies converge forming an "Times New Roman", which shines, and the yellow word "Times New Roman" fades in at the bottom and flashes. After two seconds, the word "presents" fades in at the bottom. The stars in the continue twinkling for the logo's duration.
 * Closing: On this variant, it features the text: "A Times New Roman presentation" on a plain black background. Spinning reflective lights begin to appear at random places on the text. a light crawls across "presentation" and disappears.

Technique: Typical 70s Scanimate effects.

Music/Sounds:
 * The opening version features a synth tune that begins with a slow, descending "UFO" sound, followed by a calm sweep at the end.
 * The closing version features only a 3-note synth chime fanfare, much in the manner of the sweep in the opening version.
 * Otherwise, it uses the closing theme of the show (such as Baywatch).

Availability: Ultra rare. Can be found on the Prism Entertainment VHS of Manhunt for Claude Dallas. This could also still appear on a few Fremantle-produced shows during the '70s in Canada, as well on syndicated and international prints of S1 episodes of Baywatch (which is also on German DVD releases). It was also seen on international VHS releases of Loving. This is surprisingly retained on Hallmark Movies Now's print of Can You Feel Me Dancing? before the early 90s All American Television logo.

3rd Logo (1991-1994)
Logo: On a CGI space background, we see the planet Earth, where a satellite swerves around the globe. We zoom past the earth and the satellite comes up from behind it. The satellite shoots lasers from its antenna, forming the text "Times New Roman" in 3D and gold. The text shines.

Technique: CGI effects.

Music/Sounds: A triumphant majestic sci-fi fanfare accompanied with the satellite whooshing and making beeping noises as it forms the company name, and an echoing voice-over saying "FREMANTLE!" at the end.

Music/Sounds Variant: On the original UK broadcast of Penn & Teller: Don't Try This at Home!, the voiceover is cut out and it trails off into the ITV Night Time logo.

Availability: Extremely rare. Was seen on non-U.S. and non-UK airings of Baywatch episodes from the era. It has been preserved on some Russian and German broadcasts of said episodes.

4th Logo (1994-2012?)
Logo: In space, we see the Hubble Space Telescope. We fade to a shot of two astronauts on a mechanical arm; what exactly they are doing is not easy to make out, but it kind of looks like they are unplugging something. We fade to another astronaut letting go of a metal panel, and the satellite fades away except for the metal panel, which remains on the screen in front of the Earth. The panel flips around to reveal a rectangle with "Times New Roman" in a white Trajan Pro font on it. A shining effect occurs and freezes on the "R".

Trivia: The footage is from the first repair mission for the HST on December 2, 1993. You can view the video here.

Variant: There is also a short version, beginning with the panel flipping, plus the words "International Distribution by the Fremantle Corporation" are seen below.

Technique: Mostly live action, but with some CGI mixed in.

Music/Sounds: Same as before, except in the later days, the voice-over echo was omitted.

Availability: Very rare. The logo can be seen on current airings of the Home Movies episode "I Don't Do Well In Parent-Teacher Conferences" on Adult Swim since April 30, 2021, due to the fact that the current prints of the episode were sourced from an international print. The episode can also be found on HBO Max. Prior to this, it was last seen in the U.S. on reruns of The Adventures of Black Beauty on FamilyNet (now The Cowboy Channel). The logo also appeared on international prints of Ryan's Hope, Grace Under Fire, Loving, All My Children, 1994-2001 episodes of Baywatch, and a international Fox Crime airing of Oxygen's Snapped. Can be found on the UK VHS release of Penn & Teller: Don't Try This at Home!. The short/International Distribution version is extremely rare, as it's only seen on some older international prints of early Big Wolf on Campus episodes. Most current international prints of the show, nowadays, would have the Saban International/Fox Kids combo instead or remove it completely.