21 Laps Entertainment

Background
21 Laps Entertainment (stylized onscreen as twenty-one laps entertainment) is the production company of Canadian producer/actor Shawn Levy, formed in 1999. It was formerly known as Wunjo, Inc. until 2005, where it signed a non-exclusive deal with 20th Century Fox to produce their films. The company derives its name from the number of laps Levy's oldest daughter ran in a jogathon when she was 5 years old.

1st Logo (December 21, 2005)
Logo: On a black background, we see a 2 rotated 90 degrees, a line, and a capital L, with an the lowercase text “aps” next to it. All of this is white.

Technique: None.

Music/Sounds: None.

Availability: Only appeared on Cheaper by the Dozen 2.

2nd Logo (April 4-July 4, 2006)
Logo: On a dark blue background, we see an aurora with a light. We zoom in quickly while the light glows into an abstract "21L". Under it is the stacked company name in purple.

Technique: CGI animation.

Music/Sounds: Some whoosh-like sounds. The WB airings used a generic theme and voiceover.

Availability: Very rare. Only appeared on Pepper Dennis.

3rd Logo (May 22, 2009-)
Logo: We see a bright flash, which appears to be the front end of a moving line of light, accompanied by five more lines. We then pan over to see them creating glowing pathways, emitting sparkles. Finally they create an abstract "21L" (same as the previous logo, but slightly thinner) and two lines collide in the very center, creating a flash. The result reads "21L", with "21" rotated 90 degrees left and a segment at the bottom of the "1" (which is supposed to represent a starting/finish line). The name below appears in dark blue underneath. Dots of light appear and float in the background until the logo fades out.

Variants:
 * Shortened and still versions exist.
 * Starting in 2015, the "21" is no longer rotated.

Technique: CGI animation done by Picturemill.

Music/Sounds: An uprising synth tune with twinkling sounds and buzzing of the lines. This was composed by Christophe Beck.

Music/Sounds Variants:
 * Sometimes, the opening theme of the film plays over or none.
 * An alternate version exists, in which the fanfare is re-arranged and a cheering sound is heard when the logo flashes at the end.

Availability: Common. It debuted on Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian and has been seen on films and TV series from the company since. This logo does not appear on Real Steel, This Is Where I Leave You or Rosaline.