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We're back again with Nickelodeon edition of Logo Bunch! Today, we got a special treat for you and today's guest,
edoggity1998. As you can see, he not just picked a Nickelodeon shape that we will be excited about, but he picked a movie company that has the Nickelodeon name all around it. The answer to that question is Nickelodeon Movies. As most of you know, Nickelodeon Movies was the movie production arm of the first kids channel, Nickelodeon. Founded in 1996, their first ever movie that was produced was Harriet the Spy, based on the 1964 book of the same name by Louise Fitzhugh. The movie received mixed reviews from the critics, but it was a total box-office success. So much of a success that it started Nick's career in the movie industry. Ever since, they started to produce original projects, as well as adaptations from books and other TV shows, such as Charlotte's Web, The Spiderwick Chronicles, and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. But by far, the one thing that I love (and of course, everybody loves) about Nickelodeon Movies was, of course, the Nicktoons movies (Jimmy Neutron, Barnyard, Hey Arnold!, The Wild Thornberrys, and of course, Rugrats and SpongeBob SquarePants). If I have to pick my favorite theatrical movies from Nickelodeon, it will have to be Rango, Barnyard, Hey Arnold! The Movie, Rugrats Go Wild (a crossover between Rugrats and The Wild Thornberrys), Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius, The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie, Rugrats in Paris: The Movie, and The SpongeBob Movie 2: Sponge Out of Water. Now on to the episode itself, I'm gonna be doing the same aspect as I did with the first Nick Jr. episode. Yep, let's first talk about the 2000-2008 logo. I adored this cool design and the many different variants that go with it. They're exactly like the Pikachu the Movie logos from early 2000s Pokemon movies (which I get to that soon). The first movie to feature this logo was Snow Day and last used on Charlotte's Web (2006). After the short-lived splat logo, this is where the top logo was introduced in the movie, The Last Airbender (based on the animated series Avatar: The Last Airbender, which is pretty much disliked by Avatar fans) and I pretty much had the same reaction as all of the present Nick logos. In my opinion, maybe in the future, Nickelodeon Movies should go back to making Nicktoons movies again, just like they did with The SpongeBob Movie 2: Sponge Out of Water. And they should also come up with memorable variants just like they did in the early 2000s. If you like this episode, give a comment, give it a thumbs up, and keep thinking of memorable logos for Logo Bunch!
Requested by
edoggity1998
© Blue Macaw Productions, inc.
Nickelodeon Movies - © Viacom International, inc. & Nickelodeon
edoggity1998. As you can see, he not just picked a Nickelodeon shape that we will be excited about, but he picked a movie company that has the Nickelodeon name all around it. The answer to that question is Nickelodeon Movies. As most of you know, Nickelodeon Movies was the movie production arm of the first kids channel, Nickelodeon. Founded in 1996, their first ever movie that was produced was Harriet the Spy, based on the 1964 book of the same name by Louise Fitzhugh. The movie received mixed reviews from the critics, but it was a total box-office success. So much of a success that it started Nick's career in the movie industry. Ever since, they started to produce original projects, as well as adaptations from books and other TV shows, such as Charlotte's Web, The Spiderwick Chronicles, and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. But by far, the one thing that I love (and of course, everybody loves) about Nickelodeon Movies was, of course, the Nicktoons movies (Jimmy Neutron, Barnyard, Hey Arnold!, The Wild Thornberrys, and of course, Rugrats and SpongeBob SquarePants). If I have to pick my favorite theatrical movies from Nickelodeon, it will have to be Rango, Barnyard, Hey Arnold! The Movie, Rugrats Go Wild (a crossover between Rugrats and The Wild Thornberrys), Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius, The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie, Rugrats in Paris: The Movie, and The SpongeBob Movie 2: Sponge Out of Water. Now on to the episode itself, I'm gonna be doing the same aspect as I did with the first Nick Jr. episode. Yep, let's first talk about the 2000-2008 logo. I adored this cool design and the many different variants that go with it. They're exactly like the Pikachu the Movie logos from early 2000s Pokemon movies (which I get to that soon). The first movie to feature this logo was Snow Day and last used on Charlotte's Web (2006). After the short-lived splat logo, this is where the top logo was introduced in the movie, The Last Airbender (based on the animated series Avatar: The Last Airbender, which is pretty much disliked by Avatar fans) and I pretty much had the same reaction as all of the present Nick logos. In my opinion, maybe in the future, Nickelodeon Movies should go back to making Nicktoons movies again, just like they did with The SpongeBob Movie 2: Sponge Out of Water. And they should also come up with memorable variants just like they did in the early 2000s. If you like this episode, give a comment, give it a thumbs up, and keep thinking of memorable logos for Logo Bunch! Requested by
edoggity1998© Blue Macaw Productions, inc.
Nickelodeon Movies - © Viacom International, inc. & Nickelodeon
Category Artwork (Traditional) / All
Species Unspecified / Any
Size 739 x 960px
File Size 326.8 kB
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