Entertainment One

Background
Entertainment One (also spelled as "eOne" and formerly Koch Entertainment and E1 Entertainment) began operations in 1973 as the music distributor ROW (Records on Wheels) in Canada. It was renamed to Entertainment One Fund in 2005. That June, it acquired Koch Entertainment, thus expanding their distribution network in Canada and the United States.

Throughout the years, eOne built regional home entertainment divisions in the United Kingdom (based on Contender Entertainment and Maximum Entertainment), Benelux (based on RCV Entertainment) and Canada (formerly Seville Pictures). In 2008, eOne also purchased the minor television companies Oasis International, Blueprint Entertainment and Barna-Alper Productions. Since 2007, eOne has been distributing films for cinemas. They later acquired Hopscotch Films and Alliance Films in 2013, and Phase 4 Films and Force Four in 2014.

From 2014 until 2016, eOne has distributed and released additional kids content made under the Kaboom! Entertainment label in Canada and the United States. In 2019, after the United States toy company Hasbro acquired Entertainment One, their future properties began using the eOne name, absorbing the Allspark name with it a year later.

1st Logo (2009-2010)
Nickname: "E1 Globe"

Logo: On a dark space background with a blue color scheme, we see the planet Earth, which is tinted in blue and rotates slowly. As we zoom in and the planet brightens up, we see a large structure on it. As the planet rotates more, we see that it is the large letters "E1", shone by dots of light in the letters. Several beams of light shine behind the planet, which becomes solid, and as "E1" gets to a comfortable position, the logo is compressed into a box and "ENTERTAINMENT" fades in below. The light lines continue to shine and move across the planet.

Variants:
 * There is a still version that can be found on TV shows and some trailers for E1-released movies. It is bigger and resembles the print version.
 * A short version exists.
 * Two in-credit versions exist. One is the standard logo, and the other is a variant where the word "KIDS" replaces "ENTERTAINMENT".

FX/SFX: The planet rotating and revealing "E1".

Music/Sounds: An ascending triumphant fanfare. Sometimes, it's the opening/closing theme of the movie.

Availability: Rare, as this logo was rather short-lived. It can be seen on DVD releases and films from the company during the era. It also appears on some TV series, such as Humf. Also appears on Peppa Pig Fun & Games for the Nintendo DS. The normal in-credit variant appears on The Dating Guy, while the "KIDS" one appears on series 3 of Peppa Pig.

Editor's Note: None.

2nd Logo (2010-2016)
Nicknames: "The Box", "eOne Box"

Logo: On a black background, we see a dark sphere surrounded by a blue light. An "e" then rises up from the sphere. Then the letter and sphere start to zoom out and shift to the left, while "ne" slide in from behind the sphere to the right. As the logo zooms out, the sphere becomes an "o", the letters become boxed, the box turns blue, and the word "entertainmentone" in blue wipes in to the right below the box.

Variants:
 * On TV shows, the logo appears sped-up.
 * An in-credit version exists with a green square sticking out with the word "family".
 * Two other short versions of this logo exist. The first one has the last part after the text wipes in, and the second one is an even shorter version of this.
 * There is also a still version.

FX/SFX: The letters coming, zooming and wiping out.

Music/Sounds:
 * 2010-2015: Same as the previous logo, but re-arranged to be a bit more majestic. Despite the next theme was used for movies, this theme was still used on TV shows until 2015.
 * 2013-2015: The 2004 Alliance Atlantis fanfare.
 * On some shows, it uses the end theme.

Availability: Common.
 * It was originally considered uncommon and could be seen on trailers for eOne shows/movies, TV shows like Rookie Blue and The Firm, and various DVDs distributed in the UK, Canada, the Netherlands and the US. Since eOne gained more distribution forces however, the logo became much more widespread.
 * Strangely, this appears on American Netflix and Hulu prints of Waste Land, despite that film being distributed in America through Arthouse Films and eOne only distributing it in Canada. What's even more strange is that the logo's audio is louder than the rest of the movie.
 * The logo also shows up on Crackle's print of Ace Ventura: Pet Detective, preceding the Warner Bros. Pictures logo.
 * The still version can be found on a few episodes of Rob the Robot and some other shows.
 * The short version can be also found on Rob the Robot, with the even shorter one appearing on The Magic Hockey Skates.
 * The in-credit "family" version appears on series 4 of Peppa Pig.

Editor's Note: A well-liked logo amongst logo fans in general.

3rd Logo (2015-)
Nicknames: "The Box II", "eOne Box II", "Zooming Squares", "Box of Annoyance", "Box of Plastering"

Logo: It starts in a similar fashion to the previous logo. Some rings zoom out and place themselves near the top of the O. The rings and the O turn and reveal the front of the square the O is in, the letters "ne" to the right of the O, and a background of zooming squares. The letters in "entertainment" zoom out and place themselves by the square the O is in. After a few seconds, a giant square turns, revealing a black background and one singular "e" and encasing the "One" in it. The final result reads "eOne".

Variants:
 * TV shows have the logo shortened.
 * In Happiest Season, the logo is shortened and it starts when the letters are nearly placed.
 * Two in-credit versions exist. One is the "eOne" logo in white, and the other is the full "entertainment one" logo with its original colors.
 * A still version exists.
 * An open-matte version exists.
 * There is a variant where the logo is redone to fit the 4:3 format, used for reprints of older films or TV shows originally made in said format. It also showed up on Nickelodeon airings of both Ricky Zoom and a few episodes of Peppa Pig, using the network's infamous last scene of the credits within the show.

FX/SFX: Amazing CGI!

Music/Sounds: Same as the 2004 Alliance Atlantis fanfare, but the drumroll is louder, and whooshes are added with the zoom outs, or the opening theme of the movie. It's shortened on television shows. In Happiest Season, it's shortened to the first 4 notes and the last 5 notes.

Music/Sounds Variant: On some prints of the movie Foolproof (2003), this logo was heard with the music for the 1999 Alliance Atlantis alternate logo due to poor editing.

Availability: Current.
 * It was first seen before trailers of movies made by them or, outside of the United States, studios such as Lionsgate, Focus Features, or The Weinstein Company.
 * The first TV show on which this logo appeared was PJ Masks on Disney Junior in the US and Kids' CBC in Canada. Also seen on the third season of Bitten.
 * The white in-credit version appears on Peppa Pig starting from series 5, while the full name version can be found on Alien TV and Ninja Express.
 * The still version of the logo began appearing on Grey's Anatomy since season 15 after Mark Gordon became the president of the company, as well as on episodes of Ransom on CBS.
 * On Hasbro shows, this can be currently seen on My Little Pony: Pony Life on Discovery Family in the US and Treehouse in Canada.
 * It also appears on some streaming prints of some movies; such as the first four Laika films, preceding their own logo, in addition to a Netflix print as well as a UK/Canadian print of Gnomeo and Juliet, preceding the Touchstone Pictures logo. It also appears at the start of Netflix prints as well as UK/Australian/Spanish/Dutch prints of The House with a Clock in Its Walls, plastering the custom Universal Pictures variant.
 * This logo is also used as a de-facto home video logo and appears on various DVDs and Blu-rays in the UK, Canada, Australia, Spain and the US.
 * As with the previous logo, since eOne gained more distribution forces, this logo became much more widespread.
 * With the next logo being recently introduced, this logo's days are numbered.

Editor's Note: Again, this is a well-liked logo, although it can be annoying to some such as plastering over the custom Universal Pictures variant on the aforementioned film above, hence the nicknames.

4th Logo (2020-)
Nicknames: "The Box III", "eOne Box III", "Zooming Squares II", "Hasbro Box"

Logo: It starts like the previous logo, but with a square that zooms out with other squares on a starry blue/black background. As the pillars zoom out into their positions, another square moves into the center of the screen and the eOne text, piece by piece, zooms into their usual position as the background fades to black. The logo shines while the Hasbro byline fades in below.

Variants:
 * An in-credit version exists, sometimes with Hasbro's own logo next to it.
 * Shortened and bylineless versions exist. The bylineless version is used on eOne's more adult-oriented non-Hasbro shows and movies.
 * On the TV adaptation of Candy Land, the in-credit logo is seen on top, with the Hasbro and Candy Land logos seen below it. The byline is intact here. This is seen with the other logos on the bottom left of the screen. like the rest of the credits.

FX/SFX: Some more nice CGI for the animated version, none for the in-credit variants.

Music/Sounds: A short version of the same music from the previous logo. The short version uses the same shortened theme from the previous logo. Sometimes the opening/closing theme plays over it or silence.

Music/Sounds Variant: On international Amazon prints of the first episode of Cruel Summer, the theme sounds a little distorted.

Availability: Brand new. The logo first appeared in-credit on the TV adaptation of Candy Land, and would later be used on select shows like Power Rangers: Dino Fury (along with the previous logo). The animated version first appeared on Snake Eyes: G.I. Joe Origins, and is also seen on the 4K UHD Blu-Ray release of Transformers: The Movie (the 1986 animated film). The bylineless version appears on international Amazon prints of Cruel Summer.

Editor's Note: A nice, well executed update that welcomes in a new era of Entertainment One.