Ziv Television Programs was a television production company founded by Frederick W. Ziv in 1948 and was a subsidiary of his successful radio syndication business. In 1960 the company was purchased by United Artists and merged with UA's own television company to become Ziv-United Artists Television (or "Ziv-United Artists"). During its first two years after the merger, the company failed to sell pilots of television shows. In 1962, the name reverted back to United Artists Television after United Artists phased out Ziv Television. Today, most of Ziv's shows are owned by MGM Holdings Inc. The Cisco Kid was sold by Ziv to Chicago-based syndicator Walter Schwimmer in the 1960s, who eventually sold it on to Rhodes Productions; the rights to the show are currently handled by the Peter Rodgers Organization. The rest of Ziv's shows have fallen into the public domain.
Visuals: There are the words “A ZIV Television Production” superimposed on a show's opening or closing scene before or after the credits with "A" and "Television Production" in a script font. There is a stylized, Screen Gems-like TV tube around “ZIV”, which is in either a blocky font or a Times New Roman Bold font.
Variants:
Technique: It appears to be a cel-painted image.
Audio: The intro or the end of the show's theme.
Availability: It appears on Bat Masterson and The Cisco Kid by Alpha Home Video (though MGM Television owns the masters of the former title), as well as on Home Run Derby on ESPN Classic and DVD.
Visuals: Same as before, except “A” and “Television Production” were removed. Under “ZIV”, the words “United Artists” are written in the same font as the recent logo. The TV tube zooms-out and "ZIV-United Artists" zooms-in to meet in the center.
Variants:
Technique: Camera-controlled animation.
Audio: Same as before.
Availability: It is seen on Bat Masterson on ThisTV.
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