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Nicknames: "The Roof", "The NET Logo", "Tri-Colored Roof Of Doom", "The NET House II" Logo: First, the left section of the screen fills with red from the bottom, the middle section fills with yellow from the top, and the right section fills with blue from the bottom. One by one, each colored section flips to form the letters "NET" on a black background. Then either one of two things would happen: *1968-1969: The text "NATIONAL EDUCATIONAL TELEVISION" appears above the NET logo and morph into a line, which bends to form a gable roof with an aerial antenna on top, which is connected to the T. You can see 4th logo for see about the style of this logo. *1969-1970: A blue line is drawn above the letters, which bends to form the aforementioned gable roof with the aerial antenna on top (still connected to the T) from the 1968 variant. FX/SFX: The flipping effects. Cheesy Factor: The flipping effects are a very cheesy '60s and early '70s FX standard. The alternative closing logo is also very basic and could easily be mistaken for a placeholder logo, just like PBS's first logo. Music/Sounds/Voice-over: A low-tone violin-like synth fanfare edited from "Plenipoteniary" by Eric Siday, similar in style to his Screen Gems “S from Hell” and CBS “In Color” jingles, and an announcer saying his part below depending on the variant: *1968-1969: The announcer says “The following program is from N-E-T, the National Educational Television network.” (opening) or “This is N-E-T, the National Educational Television network.” (closing). *1969-1970: The announcer says “The following program is from N-E-T, the public television network.” (opening) or “This is N-E-T, the public television network.” (closing). Availability: Extremely rare. The B&W 1968 logo made an appearance on the VHS release of Our Neighbor, Fred Rogers, but was cut from TV rebroadcasts of the documentary since 2003. It can be seen on several shows available for viewing at The Paley Center for Media, including the series premiere episodes of Mister Rogers' Neighborhood (1968 version, B&W), Black Journal (1968 version, color), and Sesame Street (1969 version, color). Though the videocassette release of the Mister Rogers' Neighborhood episode "Death of a Goldfish" plasters the standard version of the 1969 logo with the 1971 PBS logo, the show's in-credit variant remains. The 1969 opening and closing versions can also be seen on the Sesame Street: Old School Volume 2 DVD set on the test pilot episode, and the 1969 closing version can be found on a handful of 1969-70 Mister Rogers' Neighborhood episodes on Twitch (most plaster it with the 1971 PBS logo). The 1968 closing version can be found on all 1968 black and white episodes of Mister Rogers' Neighborhood, including episodes streaming on Twitch as well as episodes 1-5 on Amazon. The 1968 alternative closing logo is quite rare, it can be seen on Black Journal (1968 version, color). The rotating antenna variant could possibly be fake. Scare Factor: Medium to high. The creepy synth fanfare that makes you feel about the "S from Hell", the announcer, the dark background, and the poor audio and grainy film may be quite scary for those who aren't used to seeing it. High if the logo is deteriorated, such as in Right of Privacy, as the warped audio would definitely catch those that were expecting the normal logo off-guard.