AVID:Logo Urban Legends

This page covers logos that are currently lost and contain no visual proof to their existence, with more to be added overtime.

AMC Theaters (2015) opener: "Sci-Fi"
The end snippet of an AMC Theaters opener from the Bricktown, NJ location was uploaded by Harry Quintero on Google Maps. It contains of a red arcade machine-like building with a screwdriver laid flat on its side. There are also red levers, buttons, and a computer screen with a green computerized winged object in it. At the bottom, there are textual code articles. The only known image is on the images tab of the AMC Theaters Brick page. It is known to be part of the "Sci-Fi" genre.

BBC Two "Gay Night" ident (1990s)
An unknown BBC Two ident has been reported to exist which featured a "2" in sequins. The only mention of this ident is on MHP's The Ident Zone.

Beacon Pictures (1997) with Beacon Communications Group byline
A variant of the logo with a byline reading "Times New Roman" has been alleged to appear on some prints of the movie Air Force One. However, the Ascent Entertainment Group byline has appeared instead on most available prints of the film.

Carlton "F1", "Gold Searchlight" and "Vortex" idents (1998?-1999)
Three Carlton idents from the 1996 ident package has been reported to exist. The F1 ident was mentioned on a Twitter post by UKPRES, and the Vortex and Gold Searchlight idents were mentioned on a post on TV Forum. It is unknown if these three idents were used on-air or not, and it's also unknown if the F1 ident animates/sounds the same as Central's version.

Cartoon Network on Demand bumper (Early 2010)
There is a lost on-demand bumper of Cartoon Network around early 2010, but in 2011, the original Cartoon Network logo was plastered by the 2010 logo. The plastered version can be seen here. The original version's video hasn't surfaced yet.

CBC Television Butterfly Logo (Wayne and Shuster Special Variant, 19??)
It had the butterfly logo playing as regular, but a fly swatter hits the logo. Its existence was mentioned by yoshitoshi98, although it's unconfirmed.

Central "Christmas Tree" ident (1998)
A variant of Central's Carlton Country ident has been reported on an airing of Home Alone in late 1998, where there's either snow on the trees, or there's snow falling throughout the ident. The only mention of this ident is on a post on TV Live Forum.

CPHS-6 Extended Variant (1997-2000?)
An extended variant of the 1997 logo has been reported to exist. Several seconds after the stick figures stop dancing, the lady's hair falls out. It is unknown what program had this variant.

Columbia Pictures Television "Pretzel -- reverse plaster" (1980s-1990s)
This was reported to have happened at the end of late '80s to early '90s reruns of Hart to Hart (replacing the 1982 logo).

Columbia Pictures Television "Cokeburst" ("1982")
Perhaps the queen mother of logo urban legends, and among the few that are actually fake. A handful of people claimed to have remembered seeing the standard CPT Sunburst at one point having a Coca-Cola byline like what the next CPT logo, the 80s Torch Lady, would have. Syndicated reruns of What's Happening!! were pointed to most often, particularly from the New York City and Philadelphia markets. Three examples were said to be found, but all of them wound up being elaborate mock-ups. It's possible this could have been a Mandela effect between the 1975 and 1982 CPT logos.

Columbia TriStar Film Distributors International (1995-2001)
This logo is described on the CLG Wiki as basically the same as the 1995 Columbia TriStar Television logo, except "DISTRIBUTED BY COLUMBIA PICTURES FILM DISTRIBUTORS INTERNATIONAL" appears in place of "TELEVISION". A variant was described on said website using the text "DISTRIBUTED BY COLUMBIA TRISTAR FILMS [country]" with the Sony byline, depending on the country and its native language.

Family Home Entertainment (Australia) "Presents" and "The End" (1985-1991)
The "Intermission" variant is claimed to have had two sub-variants, one reading "Presents" and the other reading "The End". These variations are claimed to have been used at the beginning and end of some releases respectively.

Kent Films (2015)
The name of an obscure Indonesian film distributor. A flash appeared at the beginning. Then, an orange gradient circle with a blue “kentfilms” in a round font with a white outline zoomed in from bottom to top. The Kentfilms logo is somewhat similar to the Ovaltine logo, especially the text. The logo was reportly seen on a currently unidentified documentary about Bogor. Aside from that, their YouTube channel uses a completely different logo with the same design.

King World Productions "Color Variant" (1977-1984)
It’s rumored that a color version exists where the background is Brown and the KWP logo and texts are Yellow. A version is also rumored to exist where the text just says the company’s name.

MTM Enterprises "Upside Down Mimsie" (1975)
There is a variant that was supposedly used at the end of the finale of Paul Sand's Friends and Lovers, where Mimsie's circle turns upside down. Here is a reconstruction. This was said to also be on the series Three For The Road.

MTM Enterprises "various Texas Wheelers" (1974)
Perhaps the most mysterious MTM stories come out of the short-lived series The Texas Wheelers. Typically, a black-and-white kitten by a house's water pipe was shown with the company's name (in-credit) over the scene. But some people have claimed that a more typical style MTM logo appeared on the show, where an (animated) cat acts as a gunslinger. More infamously, the series finale supposedly had a variant on this where the cat is shot dead, which is backed up in a 1985 Chicago Tribune article: "In the final episode...an animated version of the kitten staggered from behind a wagon wheel and dropped dead".

According to Jacob Dennis-Oehling (and several others) on YouTube, there was another version where Mimsie, dressed as a cowboy, shoots some guns in the circle. This may have been mixed up with a fan-edit of the Remington Steele variant where Mimsie drops a gun that shoots a hole in the first "M", which can be found on YouTube. He also describes another version of the finale variant, in which Mimsie is instead shot to death. The last aired episode exists/existed on YouTube, but only had the typical credits. It is in the Paley Center as well, but the end credits are cut off before any logo can appear.

Nick Jr. Productions "Snowflake" variant (2006)
There is allegedly a variant of the 2005 Nick Jr. Productions logo where the blue child makes a snowflake appear out of the puddle. It was apparently seen on November 25-December 31, 2006 airings of Go, Diego, Go!.

Oxford Films "Closet Killer" (1970s)
This is essentially an edited version of the September 1968 Paramount Television logo but with Oxford Films' notice in place of said company's. It is unknown where this logo has been alleged to appear or whether it has the same audio as the "Closet Killer" logo or not.

The myth originated from the former WikiFoundry page, with the nickname being "Split Rectangle" and no other information. Later on, the description was changed to "It's basically an edited version of the Paramount Television "Closet Killer" Logo". Other than the above, there is no decisive evidence of its existence.

Paramount Home Video "Alternate Variant" (1979-1982)
The Wikifoundry site claimed that there was a variant on some tapes where stars the roll and fly away. There is no known video/photographic footage of this variant.

PBS "And On" and "Yellow Text" (1984-1989)
Two variants of this logo are claimed to exist with supposed video proof, but they are up for debate as to whether or not they're official.

One is claimed to have appeared on pre-1989 airings of the very first episode of Square One TV, where the logo plays as normal, but then multiplies, with the trail of P-heads extending into the top right-hand corner of the screen, with a chorus singing "And on, and on, and on..." (a snippet of the song "That's Infinity", which was featured in said episode). The only upload of this variant appears to be a recreation, judging by the lack of screen artifacts when the P-head multiplies, as well as no audio (such as buzzing or crackling) before that happens (contrary to the very beginning of the upload) as discussed on [https://web.archive.org/web/20190620065339/http://closinglogos.com/thread/5371350/I+have+a+bad+feeling+about+the+%22And+on+and+on%22+video. this thread]. It is likely that it might even be a mockup or a parody.

Another has the "PBS" text in yellow. Currently it is not known as to what programs used it.

PolyGram Television (1981)
This logo claims to have a metallic blue background, with the initials "P.G.T.V" spreading apart to reveal the rest of the company name "PolyGram TeleVision" just before a group of stars zip under the name. The music used is either the end theme of the show or no music at all.

PolyGram Television (1993-1997)
CLG Wiki describes this logo as the same as the PolyGram Video logo, except with "Television" replacing "Video".

Radical Sheep Productions "Molly" variant (1992-1999)
A variant featuring the Molly doll from The Big Comfy Couch has been alleged to appear on an unknown airing of said series. The logo plays normally until the "Baa!" sound effect, in which Molly is seen raising and spreading her head and arms respectively in the bottom right corner.

Roblox "Reel Face" Logo (December 2011)
Around December 2011, a reel was made showcasing new developers and games, with Avicii - Levels playing in the background. The video was taken off the forums a month later after controversy of stolen games being featured in the video, and lack of popularity of the video, and the video was privated around that time. At the end of the video, the gameplay video currently playing desaturates and brightens up, zooming out to reveal dozens of gameplay videos White and Red, which they fade out and create the Roblox logo. The only screenshot found is a low quality copyright logo.

The Secret Lab
An animation/visual effects studio owned by Disney called "The Secret Lab" is vaguely remembered to have a logo. The logo was a mix of live-action (a scientist was testing his experiment) and the 1st logo of Gearbox-like film animation, all the parts of the logo were green-tinted. This was vividly last seen at the end of a 2008 Indonesian GlobalTV airing of Lilo & Stitch. However it might be a false memory since none of the home video releases or other airings had the logo; the only known logo of this company so far is an in-credit seen at the end of Dinosaur (2000).

Sega Master System "PAL" variant
A version of the Sega Master System logo had slightly slowed sequence and pitched down due to PAL formatting differences. The copyright notice also reads "1987" instead of "1986" as well. This was claimed to have been spotted on the PAL-region consoles.

Sesame Workshop "Purple House and Green Roof" variant (2000-2007)
It was speculated on this wiki to have appeared on Noggin/Sesame Workshop co-productions such as The Upside Down Show, but all episodes of that show use a still version of the red house-blue roof variant instead.

Super Video (2004)
This was the name of a bootleg video store from Venezuela. Its logo consisted of a rainbow circle with the black text "SUPER VIDEO" with a white outline, which later exploded. Aside from that, the only thing known about the logo is a reconstruction.

Taito (1996) with the "Catch the Heart" jingle
A variant that used the "Catch the Heart" jingle has been alleged to appear at least one game. It's unknown which game was it, however.

THX "People" (1990s?)
Allegedly, an undocumented THX trailer is known to exist.

It has been said to start similarly to Cimarron, with a conductor's baton, but instead of a wormhole, it shows random photographs of people (likely stills from movies) zooming in, and ends with the THX logo zooming in at a downward angle.

The only mention of this trailer online is on this webpage.

TriStar Television (1992) with the "Take Hollywood Home" jingle
Some people have claimed that, in the late 1990s-early 2000s, they saw the TriStar Television logo with the "Take Hollywood Home" music from the Columbia TriStar Home Video logo followed by the Columbia Pictures Television logo with their 1993 music, at the end of an episode of a television series (likely JAG, which was actually produced by Belisarius Productions and Paramount Television).

Universal International Television (1963?)
This is essentially an edited version of the 1946-1964 Universal International logo with "Television" added below.

Vestron Video "Early Variant" (1982-1986)
Some early Vestron releases allegedly had a variant where the words are not spelled out by the light and the logo fades out earlier than usual. This was claimed to have been spotted on the 1984 Canadian VHS of Mr. Mom.

VID "Smoke" (1999-2000)
A variant is claimed to exist where the mask is formed from the smoke of a lit match. According to an old edit on the company's Russian Wikipedia page, this variant was seen on Угадай Мелодию, the Russian version of Name That Tune.

Warner Bros. Cartoons "Sinkin' in the Bathtub" Variant (1930)
The very first Looney Tunes cartoon, Sinkin' in the Bathtub, is said to have the original Looney Tunes card animated (in fact due to the sound effects accompanying A Hot Time in the Old Town Tonight), but without the WB/Vitaphone text above. Under "LOONEY TUNES", it reads "A HUGH HARMAN & RUDOLPH ISING SOUND CARTOON". It was also said to have been originally preceded by the standard Vitaphone Varieties opening logo, which reads "Presented by VITAPHONE, a subsidiary of WARNER BROTHERS PICTURES, INC." with the 1923-1929 WB shield logo under it. Below the WB shield are the words "Produced with WESTERN ELECTRIC apparatus". A 35mm print has the standard still variant of the logo following a BBFC card, and on Disc 3 of the Looney Tunes Platinum Collection: Volume 2, it is replaced with said variant with a different production number chyroned in.

WGBH "Flash of Doom" Japanese Variant (1987)
A rare Japanese variant had appeared on a localized dub of NOVA. It consisted of a few Japanese characters in yellow on a background. Shortly afterwards, an glow expands behind the text. There is no music in this logo. It is possible that this may have not actually been a WGBH logo, but rather one for the television channel that had broadcast said dub.

WGBH "The 2" (September 1977-January 1982)
The CLG Wiki describes it like so: "We see a large number "2" (in the style of the WGBH logo) in a different situation. Next to the "2", is the name of the show coming up next." Three variations are claimed to exist: one for About the House where the "2" is made of wood, one for The Ascent of Man where the white "2" is tilting on a black background, and one for The Way It Was, where the "2" is wearing a football uniform with the number "2" on it.