Cartoon Pizza

Background
Cartoon Pizza was the second production company of Jim Jinkins, formed in 2001 in partnership with David Campbell after Jinkins' former production company Jumbo Pictures (sold to Disney in 1996) was folded into Walt Disney Television Animation with the cancellation of the Playhouse Disney Originals cartoon show PB&J Otter the same year. In 2015, the company went dormant. As of December 2016, Cartoon Pizza was brought back by Jim Jinkins, but in Nashville. The company also has two imaginary subsidiaries called Cartoon Cola and Cartoon Candy.

(September 15, 2001-January 9, 2010)
Logo: On a space background, we see a pizza with a face (sporting a dog's nose),  crust, and a meek smile, which is displayed on Earth. Below him is the text "Cartoon Pizza"; both words are stacked on top of each other. "Cartoon Cola, a Cartoon Pizza Company" and "Worldwide Delivery" (both in Stanton ICG) fade in above and below the logo. The pizza winks, moving slightly.

Trivia: As stated above, Cartoon Cola (and Cartoon Candy on Pinky Dinky Doo) is an imaginary company. It’s unknown why the byline is there.

Variants:
 * A still variant exists: the background is and the text above the globe is absent, except the text below the globe is also in black and in caps.
 * A long version existed on Cartoon Pizza's now-defunct website and on the HoopDogz VHS "God Good, Idols Bad": the globe zooms in, engulfing the screen before bouncing back to its normal position, and the pizza and company name then slide into position.
 * A short variant was exclusively seen on Pinky Dinky Doo: "Cartoon Cola" is replaced by "Cartoon Candy" and the font is also changed to Comic Sans.
 * On HoopDogz, Pinky Dinky Doo's "Cartoon Candy" text is used in the regular version.

Technique: Flash animation.

Music/Sounds: A hip-hop breakbeat with beatboxing and with a "ding" when the pizza winks.

Music/Sounds Variants:


 * The "ding" is rarely different, as also seen on the website variant.
 * On the aforementioned website variant, a monster truck sound is heard at the end.
 * On Pinky Dinky Doo, the closing theme of the show plays over it.

Availability: It was common years ago, but nowadays it's rare to uncommon starting when Pinky Dinky Doo ended airing on Noggin (now Nick Jr., which in turn is part of Nickelodeon, itself owned by Paramount Global).


 * Seen on shows from the company (the first show to use this logo being Stanley). It makes its final appearance on the final episode of Pinky Dinky Doo.
 * The still version was seen on the company site's loading page.