NBA Entertainment

Background
NBA Entertainment was a production company that was owned by the National Basketball Association to produce films.

1st Logo (1983-1987)
Logo: On a black background, we see the NBA logo from the time. On the right is the blue text "ENTERTAINMENT, INC." that repeats five times, with a star behind the logo, and the inside parts of the star make the text.

Variant: On That Championship Feeling, the logo flips in.

FX/SFX: None.

Music/Sounds: None or the opening theme of the movie.

Availability: Seen on NBA documentaries from the era, like That Championship Feeling and Sweet Sixteen.

2nd Logo (1987-1996)
Logo: On a black background, the NBA logo appears by a trail effect, which then zooms out, revealing it was the NBA logo. The logo flashes and the logo zooms out to the left, where a white star rolls in, and the same duplicate "ENTERTAINMENT, INC." text from the last logo slides in, and the star settles to the center, with the inside part. The text stops sliding and the star then flashes.

FX/SFX: The zooming out, the star rolling and the flash.

Music/Sounds: A majestic triumphant theme.

Availability: Seen at the start of NBA Entertainment's documentaries from the era.

3rd Logo (1996-2001)
Logo: On a black background, we see duplicate copies of the CGI version of the NBA logo from the era, and the silver text "NBA Entertainment" zooms out. The duplicate copies then disappear and the logo flashes before fading out.

FX/SFX: The NBA logo zooming out, the text zooming and the flashing.

Music/Sounds: Same as the previous logo.

Availability: Seen at the start of NBA Entertainment's documentaries from the era, such as NBA at 50.

4th Logo (2001-2004)
Logo: On a background, we see the NBA Entertainment logo that was similar to the last logo, only this time it was solid and the NBA logo was smaller. A basketball appears on the bottom that rotates by a globe via a light effect.

FX/SFX: The basketball rotating.

Music/Sounds: Same as the previous logo.

Availability: Seen on NBA Entertainment's documentaries from the era, like Dunks!.