Hearst Entertainment

Background
Hearst Entertainment was founded in 1980 and later became the parent company of King Features Entertainment. Most of the Hearst catalog, with some exceptions, is held by Lionsgate.

1st Logo (October 25, 1987-2005)
mdCC5LxYSBU Nicknames: "The Eagle", "The Sliding Eagle"

Logo: On a grainy white background, two wings (one from the left side with five feathers, and one on the right with three feathers) comes sliding toward each other. As it gets closer, the wings make up a head of an eagle. after the wings stop sliding, the ends of the feathers come sliding in. Halfway, the ends reverse itself with the tips reversed sliding and then stops in place. The words "serif" in a italic serif font zoom in from the bottom.

Variants:
 * A version with a light blue background and a dark blue eagle also exists.
 * A version with a yellow background exists.
 * A version with an background exists.
 * A black & white version exists.
 * There are videotaped and filmed variants of this logo.
 * The logo may be sped up warp speed for time.
 * The videotaped variant may have the word "serif" zooming in along with the company name.
 * A still variant with "A Presentation of" above the logo can be seen on A&E Biography.
 * On the TV specials The World's Greatest Magic IV and V, "in association with" from the The Gary L. Pudney Company logo is seen below the logo. It fades away once the text starts zooming in.
 * Sometimes, only the zooming text part of the animation is shown.
 * The word "serif" is sometimes replaced with "serif". The eagle logo is smaller, but the name is bigger than usual. The animation is also different; the finished eagle logo appears and zooms in to its spot, while the text "PRODUCED IN ASSOCIATION WITH" fades in above the logo and the name "serif" comes from below and slides up to its place below the eagle. The background is more of a lit, slanted double gradient background.
 * A version also exists where the background is and the eagle and text are in yellow. This was seen on The Rendering and Deadly Betrayal.

Technique: The normal variants have the wings slide and the text zoom. The "Hearst Broadcasting" variant has the eagle zoom in, the name slide up, and the "Produced IAW" text fade in. None for the still variant.

Music/Sounds: None or the closing theme of the show, but, on some King Features distributed films, thanks to sloppy editing, the 1981 King Features Entertainment "Crown Trail" music plays over this logo, and the animation plays much slower and choppier in a poor attempt to make the music blend in better.

Availability: Uncommon.
 * This appears on a few TV movies/specials from time to time.
 * It also might appear on some Popeye specials.
 * It also appears at the the end of Popular Mechanics for Kids, currently available on DVD, Amazon Prime and Tubi.
 * It can often be seen on all the Lifetime networks, as well as Eerie, Indiana on the now-defunct FEARnet network and The Magical Adventures of Quasimodo, which hasn't been reran for years, although it is on DVD from Mill Creek Entertainment.
 * It's also seen on Beetle Bailey shorts on DVD releases of Animated All-Stars and DVD releases of Snuffy Smith. The logo is preserved on Phantom 2040 and the 1996 Flash Gordon animated series, both of which have been uploaded for free on YouTube by the Comics Kingdom channel.
 * This was also believed to be seen on the 1998 Live Entertainment DVD of An American Werewolf in London.
 * The "Hearst Broadcasting" variant is probably extinct and was only sighted in the short-lived talk show The Les Brown Show.
 * Nowadays, Hearst's library is mostly owned by Lionsgate, so expect any of their logos following or plastering it (in the case of FXM's and Amazon Prime's print of Wildflower).

Legacy: The logo has some rather rough animation, as the sliding seems to move like construction paper.

2nd Logo (2005- )
Logo: On a black background, we see the letters "HEARST" unfold as it zooms out in place. While that's happening, "entertainment" writes itself in.

Technique: The folding of the letters and the drawing of "entertainment".

Music/Sounds: None.

Availability: The only known sighting of this logo is at the end of streaming prints (as well as some TV airings, like on Epix's print) of An American Werewolf in London, such as on VUDU, Amazon Prime, and Tubi, among others. It might also be seen internationally on any original programming.