Pink Video (Australia): Difference between revisions

From the Audiovisual Identity Database, the motion graphics museum

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m Text replacement - "Australian logos" to "Australia"
m Text replacement - "FX/SFX:" to "Technique:"
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'''Logo:''' We pan down from a starry sky. Then, this cuts to the same animation from the King of Video logo,except with "Pink Video" in pink zooming forth.
'''Logo:''' We pan down from a starry sky. Then, this cuts to the same animation from the King of Video logo,except with "Pink Video" in pink zooming forth.


'''FX/SFX:''' Same as the King of Video logo.
'''Technique:''' Same as the King of Video logo.


'''Music/Sounds:''' An energetic horn and string fanfare, which is apparently an abridged version of a piece of stock music made in the '70s by Scott Pearson, "Contact".
'''Music/Sounds:''' An energetic horn and string fanfare, which is apparently an abridged version of a piece of stock music made in the '70s by Scott Pearson, "Contact".

Revision as of 00:46, 6 December 2022

Logo description by mr3urious Logo capture courtesy of PalaceRoadshow

Background: When adult films were officially legalized in Australia in 1983, Pink Video, a subsidiary of 14th Mandolin Productions, became one of the first distributors of such material, starting in 1984 and continuing on throughout the '80s.


(1984-Late 1980s)


Logo: We pan down from a starry sky. Then, this cuts to the same animation from the King of Video logo,except with "Pink Video" in pink zooming forth.

Technique: Same as the King of Video logo.

Music/Sounds: An energetic horn and string fanfare, which is apparently an abridged version of a piece of stock music made in the '70s by Scott Pearson, "Contact".

Availability: Rare; seen on pornographic tapes released in Australia.

Legacy: Same as the King of Video logo.

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