Draft:Panamericana Televisión

Background
The family of Genaro Delgado Brandt had owned radio stations in Peru since 1937. In 1953, Delgado Brandt founded Empresa Radiodifusora Panamericana S.A. ("Panamerican Radio Broadcasting Company"), whose primary station was Radio Panamericana. Three of Delgado Brandt's kids—Genaro, Héctor and Manuel—became part of the family business. In 1956, Genaro Delgado Parker began to study the possibility of starting a television station to cover Lima, traveling to the United States, Mexico and Cuba to see the latest in television technology, and to bring it to his home country, Delgado Parker enlisted the help of Don Isaac Lindley, owner of the Inca Kola bottling plant and financial backer for the new station, Cuban television magnate Goar Mestre, who offered him technical expertise as well as a relationship with CBS in the United States. On July 21, 1957, Panamericana Televisión, S.A., a television station operator, and Producciones Panamericana S.A., a production company, were formed.

You can see most of it's logos here.

1st Logo (1970-1978)
Logo: We see a red white-outlined squared circle with five yellow stars under the bottom. On the center, we see two lines, and the text "Panamericana Televisión" which is on a weird, ugly but understandable font, sandwiched in-between.

Variant: An in-credit variant also exists, which is the image you're seeing right now.

Technique: None for the in-credit variant, and Unknown for the standard version.

Audio: Unknown or the opening theme of any program.

Availability: Unknown.

2nd Logo (1979-1989)


Logo: Unknown

Variant: Unknown

Technique: The screenshots appearing, the zoom in to the last screenshot and the psychedelic motion of the revealment of the whole logo. For the variant, the text sliding and the circled square sliding.

Audio: Moon Moods - Les Baxter, either full or abridged, sometimes following an announcer saying either:
 * "El Perú, en comunicación directa, por Panamericana!"
 * "Televisión Estelar, En Panamericana!" (only aired late at night)
 * or "Nos estamos viendo, por la señal del Perú, por Panamericana!".

Availability: This was only seen as a station ID.

3rd Logo (1989-1991)
Unknown.