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Background: Claster Television was founded as Romper Room, Inc. by Bert and Nancy Claster in 1953. It was sold to Hasbro Inc. in 1969 (who renamed the company for its founders). It still exists as a full-blown unit of Hasbro today.
Bert Claster Productions
(1958-1981)
Logo (c. 1970-1981 closing): In an orange box with red borders and the title
"Romper Room" in the front is a
jack-in-the-box (named "Happy Jack") with a similarly-colored clown
suit and a red derby. He bounces around, then bends towards the front
of the box to place, in Romper
Room font, the words "A Bert Claster Production."
Background/Romper Room
Notes:
SFX/Cheesy
Factor: Very simple,
1960s-1970s-style animation.
Music: The end theme to Romper Room ("Pop Goes
The Weasel")
Availability: All 185 episodes of Romper Room and
Friends do exist as well as a scattered number of episodes of the
pre-1980 syndicated Romper Room in Claster's library. TVparty.com
once said that tapes of Romper Room were erased for next day's
episode. This applies to the local editions of the show.
Scare Factor: High, the drawing of the clown was quite
creepy looking (especially for one that is named Happy Jack!!!!). The
presence of a synthesized version of "Pop Goes The Weasel" may not
help matters.
Claster Television Inc.
1st Logo
(1977-1985)
Other programs around the late 1970s-mid 1980s, other programs began their syndicated run thru Claster. They were at first identified as an in-credit disclaimer.
SFX: None. Only plain words.
Music: None.
Availability: Rare, should be retained on the Hasbro toy
line-related cartoons (such as the G.I. Joe mini-series, Transformers)
whenever re-aired.
Scare Factor: Low.
2nd Logo
(1985-2000)
Nicknames: "The Spinner", "The Star Propeller"
Logo: We start with a shot of this stylized text
on a blue background:
Distributed By (small, in white)
(the Claster logo) Claster
TELEVISION INCORPORATED (in white)
The Claster logo is in red with the text in a strange, bold, italic
font. There is a small line going above "laster" to represent an
extended "t." To the left of "Claster" is a red parallelogram with 4 small, transparent lines inside. Now, to the animation. A white star
moves in a horizontal direction from right-to-left and spins over all
the letters in "Claster" until it reaches the parallelogram symbol and
stays in place to spin there.
Variants:
There is also a well-known in-credit variation of this logo seen during its first two years in use. It was seen on shows like "G.I. Joe" and "Transformers." It's appearance is the same as the above, but in all-white and of course, no animation. "Distributed By" was above, and "A Division Of Hasbro, Inc." appears below.
SFX: The spinning star.
Cheesy
Factor: The star looks a
bit cheap, but if anything is cheesy, it would have to be the 1st
music used. That music is quite bizarre and borders on evil. One of
the most bizarre synth-creations since Embassy. Also, what is that parallelogram supposed to represent?
Music: 2 different themes were used. The 1st was
what was mentioned earlier in the Cheesy Factor. It was quite similar
to the jingle used for Embassy; a synth fanfare, sounding like circus
music. The 2nd jingle was quite tamer, using an electric piano
bridge.
Availability: Rare, should be retained on the Hasbro toy
line-related cartoons (such as G.I. Joe, Transformers, Jem, et al.)
whenever re-aired. Don't expect this on current prints of Muppet
Babies, The Lionhearts, All Dogs Go To Heaven: The Series (they
handled syndication for MGM Animation), Reboot (US rights licensed
from Alliance Atlantis) or anything else Claster handled distribution
for, though--in those cases it was a distribution logo only.
Scare Factor: Moderate for the 1st music, and low for the 2nd. The font wasn't the easiest to look at either.