JLG
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Apr 18, 2006
- Messages
- 256
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- 37
That is to say, what was the original purpose of prominently displaying them on screen the way they always have? I've been curious about that.
As far as I know, the only television shows that do this are the older CTW shows up through Square One TV, and also one outlier--- Mister Rogers' Neighborhood. If any other shows have done it, I've never seen it. It's unusual, to say the least. I love the numbers, personally (especially in the old days when the font used to be so huge) but I still wonder what their original reason for it was.
On that note, that leads to two other obvious questions----why did they temporarily stop doing it in the 1975 season, and then when they picked it up again, this time without the titles, why did they decide to go for the next 27 years without having any title on screen at all? Now that really WAS strange. Literally the only other show I've ever heard of that had no onscreen title was the original run of Batman: The Animated Series.
Having no title may be odd, but it kind of also created a weird familiarity. It's almost like SS was saying to the kids, "Eh. You know what show this is."
As far as I know, the only television shows that do this are the older CTW shows up through Square One TV, and also one outlier--- Mister Rogers' Neighborhood. If any other shows have done it, I've never seen it. It's unusual, to say the least. I love the numbers, personally (especially in the old days when the font used to be so huge) but I still wonder what their original reason for it was.
On that note, that leads to two other obvious questions----why did they temporarily stop doing it in the 1975 season, and then when they picked it up again, this time without the titles, why did they decide to go for the next 27 years without having any title on screen at all? Now that really WAS strange. Literally the only other show I've ever heard of that had no onscreen title was the original run of Batman: The Animated Series.
Having no title may be odd, but it kind of also created a weird familiarity. It's almost like SS was saying to the kids, "Eh. You know what show this is."
