KPBS

Background: KPBS is a PBS affiliate located in San Diego, California. KPBS was founded in 1960 by San Diego State College (now San Diego State University), as a radio station that went under the name KEBS; in 1967 KEBS began broadcasting on television as an NET affiliate. In 1970, after NET folded in to New York City/Newark station WNDT (Now WNET), PBS absorbed NET's operations and KEBS changed its name to KPBS.

1st Logo (1977-1984) KPBS (1977)

Nicknames: "Glass KPBS", "Virtual Boy KPBS", "Spinning Glass Panels"

Logo: We fade into a red glass rectangle, with a lot of pink sparkling on it, on a black background. It turns into place, and we see "KPBS" on it. "SAN DIEGO", in CG Omega font, fades in below. Once the logo's in place, the pink seems to die down.

FX/SFX: The turning logo, and the pink sparkling all over...

Music/Sounds: An outer-spacey synthesized twinkle sound, which sounds like the opening notes to Street Fighter II on the SNES.

Availability: Very rare. Possibly seen on KPBS shows from the era, such as Newsthink episodes.

Editor's Note: The music and dark atmosphere may get to some, but this is a futuristic logo with an interesting concept, even though it looks like it was made using aVirtual Boy

2nd Logo (1984-1991)

Logo: On a black background, we see a light blue "KPBS" in the standard PBS typeface with a blue glow around it. The "KPBS" shines throughout the logo. A yellow cursive stylized "San Diego" is written out (a la the ALMI logo) as the outline of the letters flashes at the viewer, at sort of a tilted position (a la the Celebrity Home Entertainment logo). Once the "San Diego" is completed, the outline flashing goes back into the words.

FX/SFX: The shining, "writing" and flashing. All typical '80s computer effects. Not too bad for the time, though.

Music/Sounds: An ascending, and then descending, synthesized piano crescendo. It ends with what sounds like a synthesized French horn note.

Availability: Can be seen if your station has older prints of programs produced by KPBS, otherwise it's extinct. Can be seen on a PBS logo demo VHS.

Editor's Note: The music may rattle you, but it's mostly harmless and a fan favorite.

3rd Logo (1991-200?)

Logo: On a black background, various copies of KPBS' new logo, which is consisted of this "KPBS" clumped together, in various sizes overlapping each other zoom in slowly as "A PRODUCTION OF" zooms in with them. A normal sized copy slowly moves up to the middle. A copyright in Roman numerals appears as the text zooms in and fades out and the background darkens. "S A N D I E G O" moves down quickly from the top of the screen and meets up with the logo as the background darkens to a point that the copies are barely visible and a picture of a shell casting a shadow over a concrete surface fades in below.

Variant: A later version has the logo much cheaper looking (the copies don't zoom in, the logo and text are smaller), with "A PRODUCTION OF" and a normal copyright date appearing in a different font.

FX/SFX: The copies dimming, the logo sliding in.

Music/Sounds: A somber 4-note trumpet and xylophone theme.

Availability: Rare. It appeared on San Diego Above All while the later version is seen on Nature's Classic: San Diego.

Editor's Note: None.

4th Logo (c. December 1993)

Logo: TBA

FX/SFX: None.

Music/Sounds: TBA

Availability: Extinct. Only used as a local ID.

Editor's Note: None.

5th Logo (c. December 1993)

Logo: Against a clip from Nature, we see the Nature logo in the bottom-left corner and a white square with the KPBS logo inside, with SAN DIEGO below in black, in the top-right corner.

FX/SFX: The Nature footage.

Music/Sounds: TBA

Availability: Extinct. Only used as a local ID.

Editor's Note: A local advertisement for Nature that also doubles as a secondary station ID.

6th Logo (c. December 1993)

Logo: Against local footage, we see a white square with the KPBS logo inside, with SAN DIEGO below in black, in the bottom-right corner.

FX/SFX: TBA

Music/Sounds: An easy listening tune with a voiceover that says, "From San Diego State University, this is KPBS San Diego."

Availability: Extinct. Only used as a local ID.

Editor's Note: A station ID of a decidedly more local flavor than other local IDs KPBS used at the time.

7th Logo (1996-200?)

Logo: On a grey background, "A CO-PRODUCTION OF" slides down below as the KPBS logo slides down to position. "S A N D I E G O" slides up from the bottom.

FX/SFX: The sliding in of the logo.

Music/Sounds: The ending theme of the show or a strange piano tune heard throughout the logos.

Availability: Rare. It's intact on VHS tapes of Bloopy's Buddies.

Editor's Note: None. It's boring and pointless.

8th Logo (199?-Present)

Logo: We see the letters KPBS, like how it was in the 3rd logo, on the screen. The words "San Diego" are also found usually next to the logo.

FX/SFX: Usually none or the the text shines.

Variants: Usually the PBS P-head is next to the logo and the background of the logo can vary depending on the show.

Music/Sounds: Usually none or the end theme of the show.

Availability: Common; seen on new programs produced by KPBS.

Editor's Note: None.