ProSieben

Background
ProSieben (formerly known as Pro7 from 1989-1994) is a German private television station, launched on 1 January 1989 after the original station, Eureka TV, was shut down the night earlier, although the company was founded in October 1988. Having it struggle as a local channel around Munich, it opened a channel named Der Kabelkanel (The Cable Channel) in 1992 with Deutsche Bundespost Telekom and, in 1994, it changed its name and logo to their current incarnations and, in 2000, was merged with Sat.1 to create ProSiebenSat.1 Media. Them, along with Kabel Eins (what became of Der Kabelkanal in 1995 after ProSieben bought them out), remain some of the most-viewed German television stations to this day.

1st ID (prototype logo) (January 1, 1989-1990)
Visuals: On a black background, a white 7 shape with a glow effect and various streaks of shines from top to bottom. After it disappears, a glossy 3D bar rises up and zooms out as it reveals a "7" on the right side, and the background changes to a bluish y/white gradient. As the logo zooms out, it reveals itself to be a 7-shaped box and, with the thick portion of the "7" drawing in, "Serif" flies in one-by-one from top to bottom. The "7" then shines all over.

Variants:
 * A still variant was used at the end of programming, with a differently-oriented background and white text on the logo's side. It may read "IM AUFTRAG VON" or "EINE SENDUNG VON".
 * As used for finishing a promo, the logo zooms out with the clip playing inside of it as "MORGEN" is seen next to the logo. A more blue-hued background is used here as the time it was scheduled to premiere appears below.
 * An alternate ident used has a clip of a show or movie playing in the background, coted out and chroma-coloured to match it. After a while, the "7" bulges out and forms in as the rest of the background disappears. At the same time, the "Serif" text and a slogan, "FERNSEHEN MIT SPANNUNG" fade in as the clip freezes inside of the logo. The music is remixed for the 2 known variants of this ident.

Technique: CGI.

Audio: A synthesized eleven-note theme, consisting of two four-note sections, and a three-note flourish. Percussion can also be heard throughout, and bass accompanies the three-note end.

Availability: This seems to be merely a prototype for the next logo, and it appeared at startup.

2nd ID (1990-1992?)
Visuals: On a dark grey gradient background, a large -tinted crystalized structure passes by the camera, turning as it does. As it zooms out, it reveals itself to be a 3D version of the Pro7 logo, shining all over as the background inverts in colour. The logo rotates into place, the logo shining and deepening in colour as it does, and the "Serif" text fades into the background, leaving bevelled versions of themselves.

Variants:
 * Usually, the "7" structure would have a different image of something in it before it fades away, like flower petals or water.
 * A variant of the logo has a different background and the "PRO" text not changing.
 * An in-credit variant appeared on some German prints of shows, showing black text and a filled white inside. It can be seen at least on later German prints of Inspector Gadget.

Technique: CGI. Sometimes it's combined with live-action.

Audio: A fully synthesized version of the fanfare from the 1st logo, though deeper in tone. This tune is usually remixed in different styles.

ID (October 24, 1994-1997)
Visuals: On a black background, an square is seen with the new ProSieben logo in it, consisting of a shiny  block on top and 1/4th of a rotating globe below it in the lower right corner. The square-shaped hole then zooms in as the logo fades to a square-shaped alcove in the middle of rolling hills. In the centre of a elaborate device sits the globe and a large block rotating above it, adorned in square-shaped ornaments and rods. The camera moves about the device and cross-fades over different shots of it, sometimes with square-shaped keyhole effects and all the white the text "Helvetica" scrolls across the footage at different perspectives. On one final shot, the black background and rectangle zoom back out to fill the screen, but with the text "Helvetica" below it in a bold Helvetica font compressing below it. The footage inside of the square then changes to the globe in the corner as an box expands over "Helvetica" to turn it black.

Technique: CGI. This logo was designed by Pittard Sullivan.

Audio: A pleasant-sounding tune of different stylings, but always ending with the same three-note tune in the sequence of F-G-C notes.