Paramount Movie Network


 * Not to be confused with the Paramount Channel.

1983–1988
The wordmark is set in Handel Gothic.

1988–1997
The 1983 "guitar head" logo was kept, but Lubalin Graph became the typeface used.

2000–2003
After its parent company CBS Corporation was acquired by Viacom in 2000, TNN was renamed as The National Network (also known as the New TNN), as it adopted a general entertainment schedule similar to that of USA Network, TBS, and TNT in order to distinguish it from its sister network CMT.

2003–2005
TNN was renamed as Spike TV in August 2003. With the new relaunch, which was aimed to target young adult males between ages of 18-34, Spike TV adopted the slogan "The First Network for Men" that was used earlier from the lawsuit of film director Spike Lee. This logo would be used on the stage set of WWE Monday Night Raw from March 2004 until September 2005 before WWE Raw returned to USA Network on October 3, 2005.

2006–2015
In May 2006, Spike removed the word "TV" from its name and adopted a new logo.

2015–2018, 2019–present (Pluto TV)
On March 3, 2015, Spike unveiled a new logo and on-air identity, as Viacom repositioned it as a general entertainment network with more women-oriented programming for the first time since its TNN days.

In May 2019, the Spike brand was relaunched in the U.S. as two streaming channels on Pluto TV, which was acquired by Viacom in March 2019. The relaunch consisted of a main Spike-branded channel and a second channel called "Spike Outdoors".

2018–2021
On February 8, 2017, The Hollywood Reporter reported that Viacom would rename Spike as the Paramount Network, a move that was completed on January 18, 2018. The change was made in order to give the network a closer association with Viacom (later ViacomCBS)'s film division Paramount Pictures, and to refocus the majority of its media business around six flagship brands (Paramount, MTV, BET, TV Land, Comedy Central and Nickelodeon). This logo was used earlier in 2017 for its streaming service Paramount+. This name was originally proposed by Viacom to be the new name for UPN (which, up to that point, had previously stood for "United Paramount Network") in 2000.
 * The Hollywood Reporter
 * Variety

2021 (tentative)


On September 22, 2020, a week following the announcement of Paramount+, the network announced it will rebrand itself as Paramount Movie Network.