Sony Pictures Television

Background
On September 16, 2002, Sony Corporation decided to retire the Columbia TriStar Television name and logo from its television division, renaming it "Sony Pictures Television". For the first time since 1974, the Torch Lady or anything resembling Columbia's symbol is nowhere to be seen; instead, the corporate logo for Sony Pictures was introduced to television viewers for the first time. In late 2019, SPT announced a new in-production name called "Sony Pictures Television Studios", in order to further make use of production in the SPT library and rolls out for current and future titles throughout the rest of the year and 2020. The SPT name and logo will continue to be used in media sites and international broadcasts.

1st Logo (November 15, 2002- )
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Nicknames: "The Shining Bars", "The Bars of Boredom", "The Bars of Annoyance", "SPE Bars", "The Master of Plaster", "Sony Bars", "The SPE Parallelogram", "The Carmen Logo", "Light Beam in a Striped Parallelogram", "The Sony Parallelogram", "Light Beam in a Parallelogram", "Corporate Bars", "Boring Bars", "Boring Sony"

Logo: Against a lined background, the words " SONY PICTURES TELEVISION " (all in the Sony typeface and stacked word-by-word with " SONY " being largest) emerge and zoom away downwards from the screen. The three words aren't directly stacked at first, but as the animation progresses, they slide into place. A horizontal line is drawn between the " PICTURES " and " TELEVISION ". While this happens, a flash of light appears on the left side of the screen, and the lines in the background themselves back away as well, eventually moving back to the upper part of the screen and into a diagonal pattern to form the logo. The flash dissipates and we see an oblong orange-white glare surrounding the logo and words, which shrinks into the bars to give it a shine. The finished logo appears against a shaded navy blue background. The logo is a striped parallelogram.

Trivia: This logo first appeared as a print logo in Fall 1991 on broadcasting ads in magazines such as Variety, around the time when SPE was founded. This logo was animated by "Rick Scott" at Tigar Hare Studios, also known for their work on the Warner Films logo and the 2011 Technicolor logo.

Variants:
 * A rare filmed variant of the logo exists.
 * There is a longer version of this logo featuring an extreme close-up of the "stacked" names at the beginning of the animation. It starts off with a bright white light and later reveals the names as the light dies down. While the logo finishes, it shows a longer shot of the logo.
 * There is an even shorter version of this logo that starts from where the 3rd-to-last note of the theme plays. This version began appearing in July 2003.
 * In 2004, the phrase " DISTRIBUTED BY " appeared above the logo, it was still until it faded in above the logo on the 2006 version of Chain Reaction and season 4 of The Newlywed Game both on GSN, but the font is in Times New Roman on those said game shows. Early shorts on Crackle's C-Spot has the phrase above the name rather than the logo. For the rest, the phrase was placed on a black screen, which later fades to the SPT logo.
 * In 2005, an updated widescreen version was introduced. It consists of just a solid blue lighting effect in the lower right-hand corner of the screen, where the reflection of the Bars would usually be. Sometimes this version was squashed to fit a 4:3 TV, and has been featured on several movies, first-run production, and classic series on television and DVD.
 * There is also a black & white variant for classic shows by Screen Gems.
 * In 2008, there is a black screen that reads " DISTRIBUTED BY " before the SPT logo. This only appears on web shows on websites like Crackle, MySpace, YouTube, and Hulu, among others such as C-Spot or Penn Says.
 * Another variant has " DISTRIBUTED BY " in a small font above the SPT name rather than above the SPT logo. This appeared on early shows on Crackle.
 * On pre-2011 episodes of Watch What Happens: Live, the logo is a still shot on a gray-like background.
 * In 2010 on The Three Stooges short "The Sitter Downers", the 2005 logo is in black & white.
 * Starting on the 4th season of The Newlywed Game, the text reads as " DISTRIBUTED THROUGH " above the logo.
 * Sometimes, the logo can appear a little up-close.
 * There is also a version with extra brightness on both 2002 and 2005 versions in color.
 * On Robot Chicken since season 6, there is a still version of the logo.
 * A superimposed in-credit variant exists. This can be found on international shows like Niñas Mal.
 * Starting with the second season of Masters of Sex and newer episodes of Wheel of Fortune, The Dr. Oz Show, and Jeopardy!, the Sony Corporation logo is seen first. Then, the light flashes to reveal the short SPT logo. Some shows, such as The Young and the Restless, syndicated reruns of Seinfeld, and shows co-produced by SPT subsidiary Embassy Row still do not use this variant.
 * On a PAL release of The Real Ghostbusters, the long version is used but the normal music is heard.
 * On an April 16, 2017 HBO Signature Caribbean airing of Pixels, the logo was silent, but the music played 5-6 seconds after the logo cut to black.
 * A scoped version exists. This can be similar to 21:9, or letterboxed 4:3 being stretched in widescreen 16:9.

FX/SFX: The words flying down, the bars zooming back and tilting, a white flash and a glare shrinking into the bars.

Music/Sounds: A majestic 5-note orchestral theme composed by David Kurtz, which sounds vaguely similar to the Habanera section of Bizet's opera Carmen.

Music/Sounds Variants:
 * The long version has a descending piano tune before the main fanfare (which is a bit re-orchestrated), and the last note is held much longer.
 * Another music variation has only the last three notes of the theme re-arranged. This version began in July 2003.
 * In later years, the music has become a bit more orchestrated.
 * In 2005, there is another short version with the last half of the animation of the standard animation of the logo. Used on the ultra short-lived series Sit Down, Shut Up and several final season episodes of Jackie Chan Adventures.
 * Sometimes, when used along a co-production or co-distributor ID, the first few notes of the music for this logo will play over the last few seconds of said ID before going into this visual logo. This has happened on such syndicated shows as Jeopardy! and Wheel of Fortune, back when King World Productions (now "CBS Television Distribution") was still in operation. But now until October 2007, the CTD music plays on the CTD logo, and the SPT theme plays on the SPT logo.
 * Sometimes, the logo used the Columbia TriStar Television theme until 2014. The theme can still be heard on some syndicated airings of Good Times via TV One.
 * Two more versions exist by having a high and low tone starting in 2003.
 * Another version exists having a bell-type twinkle mixed into the standard theme.
 * A very high tone version of the music was used on some S4 episodes of Married... With Children on its DVD release. It could sometimes be used on certain TV airings of theatrical films, possibly due to the NTSC versions being in high tone. But this is not the case for some movies, a notable example being Matilda, wherein Fox Family Movies airings (which plaster the 1993 TriStar Pictures logo with the 1984 one, like on Freeform and TBS) play this in this tone while Starz airings play this in normal tone.
 * On some shows like The King of Queens (2004-2007 episodes) and other shows, the end theme plays over this logo.
 * Middle season local reruns of Good Times and Sanford and Son would have the first four notes of the standard theme playing first, followed by the finishing of the final notes from the SPT long version theme.
 * Up until 2012, the Sony Pictures Television International sounder was sometimes used, particularly on the Mill Creek DVD release of the Nickelodeon original movie The Last Day of Summer (the original DVD release from Sony Pictures Home Entertainment doesn't have it), DVD releases of shows like Married... With Children, on Antenna TV's print of the Sanford and Son episode "Sanford and Gong", and on DVDs of The Berenstain Bears (1985) that SPHE released.
 * There is also a silent version (sometimes on movie networks like Starz and Encore).
 * Another variation would have the 1993 CPT theme. This happened on several reruns of Just Shoot Me! on TV Land. R2 DVDs of T.J. Hooker and the 2nd season of Party of Five also have this variation if you select the French audio track.
 * A variant exists that has the 1993 CPT theme overlapping the SPT theme. This was spotted on an Antenna TV airing of the Good Times S4 episode "Michael's Great Romance".
 * A few episodes of The Jeffersons from the 1980-1981 season last aired on TV One have the SPT and the short CTTD themes playing at the same time.
 * On The Three Stooges short "Cash and Carry", there is a 2005 low tone version.
 * On Antenna TV's print of the All in the Family episode "The Jeffersons Move Up," the short Columbia TriStar Television theme is heard.
 * One S1 episode of That's My Mama! on DVD ("Clifton's Con") has the 1982 CPT music over this logo.
 * On the CTHE DVD print of the S3 Married... with Children episode "The Gypsy Cried", it has the first note of the 1988 CPT theme before going into the SPTI theme.
 * On several international prints of May-June 2013 episodes of Days of Our Lives and The Young and the Restless, the 1994 TriStar Television theme is heard.
 * On the Mill Creek S4 DVD of Married... with Children, the episode "Hot Off the Grill" has the 1988 CPT theme playing over this logo.
 * One 4:3 airing of the TV movie Breakaway has the Columbia TriStar Domestic Television music play over the logo.
 * On the Me-TV print of The Facts of Life S5 episode "Brave New World Part 2", a sloppy plaster job results in the theme playing before the logo itself appears.
 * On the NTSC DVD print of the mini-series Comanche Moon, the second CBS Paramount Television logo's music plays (and vice-versa), due to an editing error.
 * On current prints of the 1931 film Arizona, the movie's score finishes over the logo after the end title fades out, as the music originally ended over a black screen.

Availability: Ultra common. In fact, it might be the most common logo to ever exist.
 * Seen on new series and a tremendous amount of new prints of classic shows, off-net syndication series, TV movies and theatrical films on television. It's quite infamous and annoying for removing and replacing old logos on many pre-2002 Sony TV programs and movies. The only four pre-2002 shows that do not have this logo are Walker, Texas Ranger on the former network Cloo and USA Network, All in the Family on Get TV and Sony Crackle, the original One Day at a Time on Antenna TV and The Jeffersons on Me-TV. However, this may or may not appear at the end of of movies, notably the recent ones.
 * It appears on shows produced by Adelaide Productions, Sony's television animation studio, as they do not have their own logo.
 * The long version is not as common as the standard version, but it was seen on every episode of Jeopardy! from 2002-2007, The Nate Berkus Show, the DVD release of All in the Family: The Complete 3rd Season, and the DVD release and Crackle prints of Odyssey 5 (except for "Astronaut Dreams", which uses the normal version instead), but it may appear on some classic and off-network shows. It also appears at the end of every episode of The Three Stooges DVD Collection volume sets, beginning in the second volume, and can also be found on many other TV on DVD releases from 2002-04 (from 2005 onward it went to the standard version).
 * The low tone theme is uncommon and was last seen on early episodes of Stuart Little: The Animated Series on HBO Family and the 1976 TV movie Banjo Hackett on DVD, while the high tone (both 2002 and 2005 versions) appears on The Boondocks on Adult Swim and Netflix, many Three Stooges shorts on IFC, among other shows and certain films on television.
 * The scoped version can be seen on CBS airings of S.W.A.T. and some theatrical films on TV.
 * As for the short version, it's fairly common and it appeared on The Shield on local syndication and Spike, the ultra short-lived series Sit Down, Shut Up on FOX, and reruns of Joan of Arcadia including Stephen King's Kingdom Hospital.
 * The version with the SPTI theme was spotted on the 1971 film The Anderson Tapes on TCM.
 * It can also be seen on Sony Movie Channel in widescreen.
 * For series outside the US, it's seen on the series incarnation of the 2007 movie Niñas Mal (translated as Bad Girls) on MTV Latin America and nuvoTV, and Bienvenida Realidad (translated as Welcome Reality).
 * This was oddly seen at the end of an episode of The Jeffersons on Antenna TV before the show's credits, with the CTT logo after the credits.
 * This also appears at the end of a Roku Channel print (and Sony Movie Channel and ThisTV airings) of Lake Placid.
 * As of 2020, this is used in tandem with the third logo, as it still appears on Dr. Oz and also on international prints of Sony films and shows they didn't produce.
 * It was spotted at the end of a HBO Asia airing of Darrow & Darrow: In the Key of Murder with the ending theme playing over it.

Editor's Note: This logo has earned the dubious honor of being one of the most hated closing logos of all time. It's wildly infamous for not only its omnipresence, but also how often it plasters logos from previous Sony-owned companies on newer prints of old shows (about 99% of the time - the times where older logos are preserved are usually flukes). The animation, whilst being decent and clean, is mainly dull and boring, and the version often used when plastering or appearing is usually NOT the full version, thus is seen as a cheap and uninspired logo since the most common version uses the technically simplest portion of the animation/overall logo is the one that is normally by logo enthusiasts. This has been said to be the most common logo when it comes to plastering on television (hence the nickname "The Master of Plaster"). In fact, it even plasters the Columbia TriStar Television logo, which also plastered other logos, but not as much as this. While it does get a lot of hate, the longer variant is more liked (due to not plastering) and the logo wasn't nearly as hated when it debuted in 2002.

2nd Logo (October 11, 2019- )
Dn_ut3ZfQB8 Logo: On a blue gradient background, a purple flash appears onscreen, covering it. When the flash dies down, the print version of the Sony Pictures Television logo appears. The logo zooms back for a few seconds before stopping completely.

FX/SFX: The flash and the SPT logo zooming back.

Music/Sounds: None so far.

Availability: Brand new. It made its debut on El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie, and it's unknown if this logo will replace the 1st logo on new SPT series and newer episodes of existing SPT shows in the near future. It's likely this is simply a custom logo produced for the film.

Editor's Note: Even though the logo can be seen as bland, it's a breath of fresh air from the previous logo.

3rd Logo (January 7, 2020- )
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Logo: On a black background, we see the Sony logo. It fades out, and the text:

 SONY PICTURES TELEVISION STUDIOS

flashing in the same vein as the 2014 Sony logo at the end of TV commercials.

Opening Variants:
 * August 28, 2020: The logo is zooming in, and even the text says "A SONY PICTURES TELEVISION STUDIOS PRODUCTION" (in the same font from the Sony logo) while it flashes. The Sony logo does not appear in the beginning.
 * January 1, 2021-present: The logo is updated which is similar to the regular logo, but without the flash.

FX/SFX: Only the flashing. Zooming in for the opening variant.

Music/Sounds: The same "ding" sound in G major used in the logo in the Sony logo or none. The ending theme may also plays over it.

Music/Sounds Variant: Starting with a December 28, 2020 rerun of the November 23, 2009 episode of Jeopardy! and the same day's episode of Wheel of Fortune, a swish followed by a dreamy synth fanfare after the ding sound, sounding more like a deep sounder of the ABC Entertainment logos from 2007-2018 or the last note of the CBS Television Distribution logo. It was also used as a longer version.

Availability: Brand new. Debuted on One Day at a Time: Promo Special. It started appearing on Sony series later in 2020, such as the 37th season of Jeopardy!, the 38th season of Wheel of Fortune, the 12th season of Shark Tank, and the 4th seasons of The Good Doctor and S.W.A.T. (the 2017 TV series). The opening variant is debuted on the Netflix prints of Cobra Kai, then later in the updated version for the show's third season. Recently, it appeared on the Lifetime TV movies Chris Watts: Confessions of a Killer and Salt-N-Pepa.

Editor's Note: Say what you will about the Bars of Boredom, but at least that one had some semblance of creativity. This one (including the early version of the opening variant), on the other hand, is one of the worst of its kind, representing everything wrong with the 21st century trend of simplistic logos. It doesn't even transition correctly from the Sony Corporation logo. In fact, it’s so bland, it was actually once thought to be a placeholder when the logo first debuted. However, at least the later version (which has a fanfare on it) is an improvement (just barely) than the original one, but still not good enough for television viewers.

Copyright stamps

 * 2002-: Copyright © [YEAR] Sony Pictures Television (Inc.) All Rights Reserved.
 * 2002-: Copyright © [YEAR] Califon Productions, Inc. All Rights Reserved. (Used on Wheel of Fortune)
 * 2002-: Copyright © [YEAR] Jeopardy Productions, Inc. All Rights Reserved. (Used on Jeopardy!)
 * 2002-: Copyright © [YEAR] CPT Holdings, Inc. (Used on The Young & the Restless and international series)
 * 2002-2007: Copyright © [YEAR] Columbia TriStar Television, Inc. and CBS Worldwide, Inc. All Rights Reserved. (Used on The King of Queens)
 * 2002-2003: © [YEAR] Columbia TriStar Television Distribution. All Rights Reserved. (Used on Judge Hatchett)
 * 2002-2004: Copyright © [YEAR] Columbia TriStar Domestic Television. All Rights Reserved. (Used on Pyramid)
 * 2002-2009: Copyright © [YEAR] Adelaide Productions, Inc. All Rights Reserved.