Stone Stanley Entertainment

Background
In 1991, Scott A. Stone joined David G. Stanley and renamed Stone Television to Stone Stanley Productions. After Shop 'Til You Drop ended in 2005, David Stanley left the company and Stone renamed the company as Stone & Company Entertainment.

(September 10, 1990-February 24, 2000)
Logo: On a green, marbled, stone background, we see "STONE STANLEY" in the same font as the 2nd Stone Television logo (albeit much thinner) with two lines, one above it and one below it, engraved in the background. The text then fills with yellow coloring, then after it colorizes, "PRODUCTIONS" fades in. The text now reads:

STONE STANLEY PRODUCTIONS

The yellow color sets in as shiny gold.

Variants:
 * A still variant exists.
 * There is an early variant where "STONE STANLEY" is in a bolder font, with the "S" in "STONE" and "STANLEY" larger than the rest of the name. It is not in gold and doesn't fill-in. "PRODUCTIONS" simply fades in underneath.
 * Sometimes, the text "in association with" appears underneath the logo. This was used during the end of Wavelength.

Technique: CGI.

Audio: A mellow synth tune ending with a "ping" sound, with an announcer or host saying "(name of show) is a Stone Stanley Production".

Audio Variants:
 * On Wavelength, we hear Jennifer Spears saying "Wavelength is a Stone Stanley production!"
 * On Legends of the Hidden Temple, the end of the show's theme plays with Olmec (the talking stone head in the show, voiced by Dee Bradley Baker) saying "Hmmmmm..."
 * For The Man Show, the closing theme would also be used, with Jimmy Kimmel saying "The Man Show is a Stone-Stanley production in association with Jackhole Productions" (the second part of the spiel included after Jackhole's logo came up).
 * One funny v/o came from FX's Bobcat's Big A** Show (hosted by Bobcat Goldthwait), as said by announcer Eric Waddell, "Bobcat's Big A** Show is a Stone Stanley Production! (a farting sound is heard) Ugh! What was that?".
 * The music was also low-pitched on USA's Quicksilver and Free 4 All, respectively. For the Quicksilver variant, the music was also played in the key of A rather than B.
 * There is also a slightly extended variant of the music seen on some episodes of the Family Channel run of Shop Til' You Drop.
 * The VHS release Jane Fonda's Lower Body Solution uses an announcer-free version of the music.

Availability:
 * Seen on VHS tapes of Jane Fonda's Lower Body Solution and DVD releases of The Man Show.
 * Seen at the end of the short-lived 1992-1993 game show Wavelength, followed by the 1992 Rysher TPE logo.
 * It was also seen on Legends of the Hidden Temple during it's original run on Nickelodeon and reruns of the show on Nick GAS and NickRewind on TeenNick, as well as '90s episodes of Shop 'Til You Drop when they were last seen on GSN.
 * Quicksilver, Free 4 All, and Born Lucky also carried this logo.
 * The early variant was also seen on the final season of Fun House and Teen Win, Lose, or Draw.
 * The early variant was also seen at the end of Fun House Fitness tapes from Warner Home Video released at the end of the show's run.
 * The short-lived 1996 Fox game show Big Deal (based off Let's Make a Deal) also had this logo, followed by the 1995 New World Entertainment logo.
 * The still variant was only seen on the short-lived I Can't Believe You Said That! which aired on Fox Family in 1998 (to fit in with their generic credits).

(June 18, 2000-May 27, 2005)
Logo: On a white background, several shapes come together to form a stylized person holding 5 stars. In sync with the person being put together, "ST NE ST NLEY" (in a futuristic font) slide in, left and right. The person's body forms the "O" in "STONE", while its legs form the "A" in "STANLEY". Once "STONE STANLEY" is complete, the word "ENTERTAINMENT" fades in.

Technique: 2D CGI.

Audio: A downward woodwind tune combined with a fast techno beat and the sound of applause.

Availability:
 * Seen on the PAX run of Shop 'Til You Drop (both the mall-era and "megastore" episodes) when it was last seen on GSN, albeit subject to credit-crunching.
 * It was also seen on Popstars, The Mole, The Man Show, and the U.S. version of Winning Lines, respectively.