Draft:Sistema Brasileiro de Televisão

Background: Known simply as SBT, it was one of two companies started by prolific Brazilian TV personality & producer Silvio Santos. In 1976, he began his own TV station in Rio known as TVS, which later expanded to stations in the northwest. In 1980, his production company bought the stations once owned by the doomed Rede Tupi. Those stations were relaunched as SBT a year later. By 1990, the TVS and SBT stations consolidated into one company and name. To this day, SBT's main programming have been imports either dubbed into Portuguese or adapted for Brazilians.

TVS

1st Logo (May 14, 1976-1981) TVS Rio (1976)

Nicknames: "Christ the Redeemer"

Logo: On a black background, a gold glowing laser flashes from the top going downward. The laser draws out an outlined and hollow (as if like a neon sign) version the Christ The Redeemer statue. The statue has random flashing lights throughout and has a whitish glow. When the laser completes the drawing, the statue zooms out and pans to the viewers left. Right of the statue, more flashing lights appear and a gold circle with a gold 11 fades in. After the statue settles and its lights stop flashing, the words TVS and RIO fly in, leaving a rainbow trail. The 11 circle shrinks and the words stop on the top and bottom (respectively) of the 11 before turning purple. The words flash and turn silver before lights flash all around it.

FX/SFX: Typical Scanimation for the time, but nothing bad at all. It looks like something Dolphin Productions would make and, in fact, is said to be the case.

Music/Sounds: The 1976 Washington Week in Review (now called Washington Week) theme (a deep, ominous, and arpeggiated (possibly analog and/or Moog) synth tune).

Availability: Long extinct.

Editor's Note: This is a memorable and favorite logo for many people in Rio de Janeiro.

2nd Logo (1977)

TBA

3rd Logo (1981-1984)

Logo: Against a black background, colored lines grow from the bottom left and top right corners of the screen. They meet together and then a black circle grows in the center of it. A bold outline of a silver circle zooms in to match the size of the black circle. "TVS" then zooms in, and switches to a "4". This cycle continues.

FX/SFX: Apart from a few differences, this design is based off the "Still The One" campaign bumper used by ABC in 1979.

Music/Sounds: Either a triumphant horn theme with Portuguese lyrics or the channel's jingle with an announcer.

Availability: Extinct from what we know.

Editor's Note: None.

4th Logo (1985-1989) TVS (1989) Logo: On a blue starfield, we see a spark emit orange rays, revealing "TVS", which flips up, and shines, then flips to the right. Then, green rays come from the right, "TVS" flips into view, and vice-versa. Then we see "TVS" go inside a circle. then again green rays wipe in and out.

Trivia: Before 1990, Brazil did not agree with international copyright laws. Silvio Santos, the founder of TVS/SBT would go to America every year and retrieve movies from Las Vegas. It is suspected this is how he got the HBO theme used in this logo.

FX/SFX: This still appears to be Scanimation, which started to become dated at the time. The color schemes are not professional either. On a separate note, this looks like a "copy" of the 1982 HBO Feature Presentation ID with the animation and the music.

Music/Sounds: The same music as the short version of the 1982 HBO Feature Presentation ID.

Availability: Extinct.

Editor's Note: This might surprise a few who did not expect the HBO theme to be playing

5th Logo (1989-1990)

Nicknames: "Prisms"

Logo: We see many objects like circles, triangles, etc. flying into different directions, as a prism appears. A block passes over the prisms, forming multicolored blocks shooting out to the viewer. As the prisms slowly rotates down, the letters T, V and S zooms quickly into the screen, as multi-colored blocks fly in to form a circle like SBT logo. The letters "TVS", zooms out, and fixes themselves into the circle.

FX/SFX: The animation isn't bad but is limited to basic shapes and movements. It doesn't appear to look professional.

Music/Sounds: Generally speaking, a rearrangement of the previous logo's music (or the HBO ident if you prefer).

Availability: Extinct.

Editor's Note: None.

SBT

1st Logo (1981-1984)

Logo: Same as TVS 3rd logo, but with sbt text in, and it doesn't switch to a 4.

FX/SFX: Same as TVS 3rd logo.

Music/Sounds: A triumphant fanfare.

Availability: Same as TVS 3rd logo.

Editor's Note: Same as TVS 3rd logo.

2nd Logo (1982)

TBA

3rd Logo (1983)

Logo: Against a background with lot of numbers (at upper and lower half) zooming at the viewer, the letters s,b and t'' fades-in appears and a greencircle appears under it. The logo sparkles before abruptly cuts to black.

FX/SFX: This is basically just the 1977 logo's animation with the SBT logo placed over it.

Music/Sounds: Music played by a string instrument, with a 3-note drum as the letters fade.

Availability: Extinct.

Editor's Note: None.

4th Logo (1984-1985)

Logo: As we see a green planet (like those of SBT's sign-on/off from the 90's), a satellite zooms and places on the left. The satellite shoots green lights to color the outlines of the Brazilian states. The lights also forms the SBT logo, which zooms up to the viewer as the background changes to black.

FX/SFX: This is most likely made with cel animation, and the glints and glows were starting to become old hat by this time period.

Music/Sounds: Heavily synthesized music.

Availability: Extinct from what we know.

Editor's Note: None.

5th Logo (1988-1989)

Logo: Some multi-colored blocks join themselves to form a circle, while the SBT letters zooms out to fit in the circle.

Variant:There's a variant where the animation would play in reverse.

FX/SFX: It looks exactly like the people who were making this used CGI for the first time.

Music/Sounds: More purely synthesized music.

Availability: Extinct on TV.

Editor's Note: None.

6th Logo (1990-1992)

SBT (1991)

Logo: On a black background, various colored blocks of different lengths fly in until eventually, they form a map of Brazil. Then the camera flies in and the blocks seem to move apart while staying stationary (a la Channel 4). We zoom in on one pink block, which then changes from rectangular to cylindrical. That block zooms away and a ring of different colored tube blocks spin and zoom out. As this happens, the letters sbt (in a font similar to the ABC logo in America) zoom out. Once it settles, all the blocks have joined together to make a large multicolored circle.

FX/SFX: Everything with the blocks is solid animation for its time. The zooming out of SBT looks rather cheap however.

Music/Sounds: Ferdinand J. Smith's score for the HBO Feature Presentation ident from 1982 (using the music for the short variant).

Availability: Extinct.

Editor's Note: None.

7th Logo (1992-1993)

Logo: Same as the campaign ident, but short.

FX/SFX: Same as the campaign ident.

Music/Sounds: Same as the campaign ident.

Availability: Extinct on TV.

Editor's Note: Same as the campaign ident.

8th Logo (1993-1994)

Logo: Same as the campaign ident, but short.

FX/SFX: Same as the campaign ident.

Music/Sounds: Same as the campaign ident.

Availability: Extinct on TV.

Editor's Note: Same as the campaign ident.

9th Logo (1994-1995)

Logo: Same as the campaign ident, but short.

FX/SFX: Same as the campaign ident.

Music/Sounds: Same as the campaign ident.

Availability: Extinct on TV.

Editor's Note: Same as the campaign ident.

10th Logo (1995-1996)

Logo: A black circle with the letters sbt in white.

FX/SFX: This logo looks almostexactly like the American Broadcasting Corporation logo. Also, the animation screams '90s.

Music/Sounds: Depending on the variant; one variant has a saxophone theme.

Availability: Extinct, as it was short-lived.

Editor's Note: None.