Thursday 19 February 2015

30 Years on: The Sacred COW


As we saw in the previous post, the 1980s brought about a huge change in TV idents and presentation, as many broadcasters embraced computer graphics, leaving behind cell animation, mechanical models and sometimes, a static caption card, which had been the tried and trusted methods of on-screen branding since transmissions began.

In the 1980s, computer animation was starting to advance to a degree in which it was of a broadcast standard and although it still wasn't cheap, it was possible to produce short, high-quality pieces of animation for a reasonable price.

When Channel 4 burst onto UK screens in 1982, the highly impressive computer-animated idents had to be animated in the USA, as at the time, no computer animation company in the UK had the processing power to produce such smooth-flowing images with believable texture and lighting. Computer animation has always been a rapidly-evolving medium and this was especially true during these early days, as by 1983, the BBC had started work on creating a new ident for BBC 1 - their first computer-generated symbol.

The outcome of their research and hard work finally made it's debut at 7pm on the 18th February 1985 - 30 years ago this week, heralding a new era for the channel in more ways than one...

Monday 9 February 2015

HTV: Blocking Out


In 1987, HTV, introduced a new presentation package, which retained the 'aerial' logo design, but rendered it in 3D. At the centre of the redesign was a new ident, which used the latest in 3D computer animation techniques and was accompanied by a synth-based jingle. This replaced the original 'aerial' ident, which was a classic, but after roughly 17 years service, was starting to look quite dated...


The original HTV 'aerial' ident. Uploaded by YouTube user "BelfastGav"

The new ident had 3 versions, just like the previous design.
  • One with "HTV WALES" branding
  • One with "HTV WEST" branding
  • And one with just "HTV", for any occasion when both HTV regions shared their output.

HTV Wales' version of the 1987 ident, uploaded by YouTube user "jkmac1973".
As you can probably guess, the only difference with each version are the words
(or lack of) that fly in to join the logo at the end.

At the end of the day, it's quite a nice ident, even if the music isn't as good as the its predecessor. The only thing I have against this ident, is one small flaw in the animation. Actually, it's quite a big flaw. Did you spot it? Watch the video again, then read on...