Braniff

From Closing Logos
Revision as of 02:11, 3 November 2020 by Travis (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<div class="WPC-editableContent" id="WPC-area?cellId=Braniff&version=57&savePath=%2Fpage%2FBraniff&saveType=page"><div></div><blockquote><blockquote><blockquote><b...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search



<img align="bottom" alt="The Black Label" height="212" src="http://image.wikifoundry.com/image/3/d2e11c9b41fb74e9c769b70e0a9c9d08/GW330H212" title="The Black Label" width="330"/>

Logo descriptions by:Adam P., Nicholas Aczel, Matt Williams, Kris Starring, bmasters9, Donny Pearson, and others


Background: Named after the <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Braniff_International_Airways" target="_self">defunct airline company of the same name</a>, Braniff was the name of the production company that South Park creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone used to produce the show. The production name was dropped in 2006 and is now simply known as "Parker-Stone Studios".


1st Logo
(1997)


Nicknames: "Le Petit Package" Six Men

Logo: Shot in black and white, we see a group of six men with their pants down and a long black line covering all their private areas (the fourth is naked and holding some balloons, and the sixth is a clown). The men are dancing in a chorus line. The line displays the text "BRANIFF AIRLINES". "IN CONJUNCTION WITH..." then appears in place of the company name.

Trivia: The men are part of Le Petit Package, a short film creators Matt Stone and Trey Parker developed during the making of the first episode of South Park.

FX/SFX: All live-action, with the camera moving a bit.

Music/Sounds: Just the men singing "Braniff Airliiiines!" off-key.

Availability: Ultra rare. Only seen on the unaired pilot episode of South Park, which can be found on Best Buy editions of the Season 2 DVD boxset.

Editor's Note: The off-key singing can be unsettling and the subject matter can be disturbing to some. Others may find it hilarious.



2nd Logo
(August 13, 1997-March 29, 2006)
<img align="bottom" alt="Braniff (1997)" height="195" src="http://image.wikifoundry.com/image/3/NAUw-m-gr1PvGhIEZHfz-g122800/GW260H195" title="Braniff (1997)" width="260"/><iframe frameborder="0" height="193" src="http://wikifoundrytools.com/wiki/closinglogos/widget/unknown/a73f6a39513eaecc0f3f6d93f5304d58445349bf" width="264"></iframe>

Nicknames: "Braniff Airlines", "Braniff Airplane", "Believe it!"

Logo: On a sky background, we see a rather fake-looking Boeing airplane zooming in from the left, film footage from a Braniff Airlines commercial. Then, the red text "BRANIFF" zooms in from below, gets stretched across to the right as a white line is drawn through it, then snaps back to its original position. The text "BELIEVE IT!" appears under the "BRANIFF" text.

FX/SFX: The airplane and text forming.

Music/Sounds:
  • A happy 12-note xylophone ditty based on a song whose lyrics are "The skies are blue, and all the leaves are green...". This song is called "Shpadoinkle Day", and is heard in Trey Parker and Matt Stone's film Cannibal! The Musical.
  • Starting with season 3, the music is overridden by the South Park theme or the song that the episode ends on.

Music/Sounds Trivia: Strangely, at the end of episode previews of the Cantonese dub of South Park shown on Hong Kong cable TV during the late 90s-early 2000's, the 12-note jingle from pre-season 3 episodes plays. See <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ggV7khbzaQ8" target="_self">this example</a> from the preview for the S3E4 episode "Tweek Vs. Craig" (go to the end of the video).

Music/Sounds Variants:
  • On the S2E10 South Park episode "Chickenpox", the theme is played in a style similar to The Monkees song "I'm a Believer" (which played over the end credits).
  • On the Season 10 premiere, "The Return of Chef," the logo is silent.

Availability: Still seen on South Park reruns on Comedy Central, but is plastered on syndicated ones. It is still intact on the South Park DVD box sets. The version with the fanfare is much harder to find, as all early season Comedy Central reruns split-screen the credits with commercials, but prints of episodes on the DVDs, Hulu and a Thanksgiving 2017 airing of the episode "Starvin' Marvin" still have it, including the final version of the pilot, "Cartman Gets an Anal Probe". The logo's final appearance was on the S10E2 episode, "Smug Alert".

Editor's Note: It may surprise you at first, but it's pretty much harmless and a favorite among South Park fans.