MGM Television/Summary

Background : MGM Television was established on June 30, 1956 by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer under Loews, Inc. It was initiated to have MGM to distribute 770 of its films, 900 shorts, produce network series, and acquire TV stations after its first program, the short-lived series The M-G-M Parade was canceled by ABC in the spring. The M-G-M Parade first used the 1953 version of Jackie at the beginning rather than the end of the program. The company did not use an end logo until 1957. Most of the pre-1986 library is owned by Warner Bros. Entertainment through Turner Entertainment Co., while MGM Holdings Inc. owns the rest of the library.

1st Logo (September 20, 1957-October 2, 1960)
Nickname : "MGM Lion Statue"

Logo : On a gray background, we see a drawn statue of the MGM logo, as seen on movies from 1924-1983, sitting on a pedestal. There is text seen over the statue saying "AN MGM-TV PRESENTATION". with the "MGM-TV" word shown in a bigger font.

Variants :
 * On season 2 of The Thin Man, the text is in a different font and the text is shifted up to make room for the name "RICHARD MAIBUM" and the words "Executive Producer" is shown below the logo.
 * On The Islanders, the text "MGM-TV" zooms in from the center.

FX/SFX : None.

Music/Sounds : The closing theme of the show.

Music/Sounds Variant : On The Islanders, a voice-over says, "An MGM television production".

Availability : This appeared only on the three short-lived series Northwest Passage, The Islanders, and The Thin Man. This logo was retained on recent airings of the latter on GetTV.

2nd Logo (September 14, 1958-March 13, 1959)
Nickname : "MGM Lion Statue II"

Logo : On a blue silk background, we see the same statue of the MGM logo from the previus logo, but only this time it was in realistic gold. Behind the statue was the text reading " AN MGM-TV PRODUCTION " and below it was the name "SAMUEL MARX" and the word "Executive Producer" is below everything else.

FX/SFX : None.

Music/Sounds : None.

Availability : Seen only on the 1958-59 NBC color series Northwest Passage.

3rd Logo (September 18, 1960-June 1, 1962)
Nicknames : "Leo the Lion", "Lion on Live-Action Background", "Trumpet Lion"

Logo : We see Leo, the (in)famous MGM lion from the movie logo of the era, but this time in black and white, inside a circle border, which reads "METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER TELEVISION" in a sans serif font and a white circular outline is surrounding the text and the lion. The lion roars twice. The whole thing is shot on a backdrop setting from the show, or on the same background as on the end credits.

Variants :
 * On National Velvet, the logo disappears in an iris out effect while the show's title (in quote marks) is appears in an iris in effect.
 * Some episodes of National Velvet had a smaller image of a lion's face, and the text and the outline is a bit bold like it was in the next logo.
 * On The Islanders, the logo disappears, while the title zooms in.
 * Starting in 1961, the logo is shortened, with Leo roaring only once. Plus the lion is a bit larger and the white circle outline surrounding the lion is dropped.
 * On a few episodes of Cain's Hundred, the lion's face is off-center.
 * On a rerun of The Asphalt Jungle, the logo simply fades in.

FX/SFX : Leo roaring.

Music/Sounds : Music/Sounds/Voice-over Variant : On a re-run of The Asphalt Jungle, a voice-over said: "The Asphalt Jungle, A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Television Production".
 * 1960-1961: A three note drum sound followed by dramatic fanfare played by a trumpet, synced to the animation of the lion roaring: the audio of the roar is replaced by a loud vibration of a muted trumpet as part of the fanfare. On National Velvet, this is followed by a 3-note loud trumpet theme when the show's title is wiped on-screen.
 * 1961-1962: The same lion roar as on the 1957 movie logo.

Availability : Rare, as the logo was only used for two years. It can be seen on The Islanders, The Asphalt Jungle, National Velvet, Cain's Hundred, the CBS sitcom The Father of the Bride and the first season of Dr. Kildare. On current prints of MGM's shows from the era, the B&W version of the Turner Globe follows the logo, or the B&W version of the WBTV shield follows the logo.

Editor's Note : As with other MGM logos, the lion's roar has frightened some young viewers, and the trumpet vibrations on the 1960-61 fanfare may have a similar effect. But other viewers who grew up seeing this logo on a '60s TV at the time may view it fondly. Generally, it's regarded as a memorably distinct variant of the famous MGM lion logo. The design would later go on to be used in subsquent logos.

4th Logo (September 1962?-May 16, 1966)
Nicknames : "Lion Wallpaper", "Grey Lion Wallpaper", "Yellow Lion Wallpaper", "Leo the Lion II"

Logo : On a grey background, we see the image of a wallpaper of a lion's face. We see the same design from the previous logo, complete with the same image from Leo from the previous logo, except the circular border (which surrounds the text, which was still in white) was black, and the outlines are a bit bolder. The lion roars once.

Trivia : The same image was used as the print logo of MGM Records until 1968.

Variant : On the Dr. Kildare episode "The Burning Sky", the wallpaper and the Leo footage is tinted in gold, since it was shot and aired in color.

FX/SFX : Same as before.

Music/Sounds : The same roar seen on the 1961 version of the previous logo.

Availability : Was most commonly seen on black and white shows of the time period, like Dr. Kildare, The Eleventh Hour, The Lieutenant, Harry's Girls, The Travels of Jaimie McPheeters, Mr. Novak, season 1 of The Man from U.N.C.L.E., A Man Called Shenandoah and Many Happy Returns. This logo was last seen on The Man From U.N.C.L.E. on Heroes & Icons, which the network stopped airing in August 2017. Most MGM TV series from this era are now owned by Warner Bros. Television (via parent company Time Warner's acquisition of Turner Entertainment Co.), so many current prints of these shows have the Turner Entertainment Globe and the Warner Bros. Television "Shield" logos, following the MGM Television logo.

Editor's Note : Like the last logo, those who grew up watching '60s black and white TV may remember the logo. Also, the lion's roar frightened some viewers.

5th Logo (September 19, 1964-1973)
Nicknames : "Lion Wallpaper II", "Red Lion Wallpaper", "Leo the Lion III"

Logo : Same as the previous logo, except the lion wallpaper background is colored in red, the text and circle outlines are surrounding the lion are in yellow, and the Leo the Lion image was is in the normal color palette from the movie logo. Plus, Leo the Lion is zoomed out to show more of his body.

Variants :
 * On How the Grinch Stole Christmas!, the wallpaper is either brown or pink/butter yellow, depending on film detoration.
 * A black and white version exists on B&W kinescope prints of color shows, such as Hollywood: The Dream Factory.

FX/SFX : Same as the previous logo.

Music/Sounds : Same as the previous logo.

Availability : Common. It debuted on Flipper, and it was seen on every MGM show filmed in color since then, such as Daktari, The Man from U.N.C.L.E., The Courtship of Eddie's Father, Please Don't Eat the Daisies, Medical Center, the final season of Dr. Kildare, The Girl from U.N.C.L.E., Hondo, The Rounders, Jericho (the 1966 one, not the 2006 show), Off to See the Wizard, Maya, Then Came Bronson, Young Dr. Kildare and Assignment Vienna (which was aired as part of ABC's "The Men" wheel series), as well as early made for TV movies of the era. Like the last logo, most MGM TV series from this era are now owned by Warner Bros. Television (via parent company Time Warner's acquisition of Turner Entertainment Co.), so many current prints of these shows have the Turner Entertainment Globe and the Warner Bros. Television "Shield" logos, following the MGM Television logo, while series not owned by Time Warner (such as the original Flipper) may have it replaced with the 2001 or MGM Domestic Television Distribution logos. It survives on the Dr. Seuss cartoon specials How the Grinch Stole Christmas! (plastered by the Warner Bros. Pictures logo on NBC broadcasts) and Horton Hears a Who!, and was also seen on reruns of The Tom and Jerry Show on Boomerang during the 2000s. It is also preserved on Cartoon Network airings and the MGM/UA Home Video release of the former special. It is unknown if The Pogo Birthday Special used the logo.

Editor's Note : Those viewers who grew up seeing this logo at the time, or on repeats of How the Grinch Stole Christmas!, may view it fondly. But like the last logo, the lion's roar frightened some.

6th Logo (September 10, 1973?-January 1982?)
Nicknames : "Leo the Lion IV", "White Ribboning"

Logo : It's simply a shortened version of the theatrical logo of the era without any television indicator whatsoever.

FX/SFX : The lion roaring.

Music/Sounds : The same roar as the previous logo.

Music/Sounds Variants :
 * Sometimes, it combined with the closing theme of the show, as seen on The Tom and Jerry Comedy Show.
 * On 1970s reruns of Northwest Passage, it used the 1957 first two lion roars. On the 2nd lion roar, there is a male announcer's voice-over that says, "From the MGM Studios in Hollywood."

Availability : Uncommon. Seen intact on MGM shows of the era like Adam's Rib, Medical Center, Shaft: The Series, Logan's Run, Bronk, The Montefuscos, Hawkins, Executive Suite, Jigsaw John, the Danny Thomas sitcom The Practice, Lucan, The French Atlantic Affair, The Tom and Jerry Comedy Show, early episodes of McClain's Law, Beyond Westworld, How the West has Won, and pre-1982 episodes of CHiPs. This version also plastered over the previous logo on a reissue print of the Dr. Seuss cartoon special Horton Hears a Who!, as featured on home video and Cartoon Network.

Editor's Note : This logo and its successors are all variations of the well-known theatrical MGM lion logo, which despite occasionally frightening young viewers with its roaring, is overall regarded as one of the all-time classic logos. Those who watched on 1970s TV may remember the logo. By that point, this is a de-facto television logo.

7th Logo (January 1982-1990)
Nicknames : "Leo the Lion V", "White Ribboning II"

Logo : Same as the previous logo, except the red word "TELEVISION" is shown below the logo.

Variants :
 * A black and white version of the logo exists on the failed TV pilot Diner.
 * Starting with the 1983-84 season, the logo on top reads "MGM/UA Entertainment Co." just like with the theatrical logo, instead of "Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer". Plus "TELEVISION" is a bit smaller.
 * One episode of Thicke of the Night has a still of the logo superimposed on the background.

FX/SFX : Same as before.

Music/Sounds : Same as before.

Music/Sounds/Voice-over Variants :
 * On the TV movie The Fifth Missile, it used an abridged version of the 1982 lion roar.
 * On a few Hungarian TV prints of Daktari, the logo featured various roars from the 1964 logo, due to sloppy plastering.
 * On Thicke of the Night, Meatballs & Spaghetti and Pandamonium, the end theme plays over it instead of the roar.

Availability : Uncommon. The first version is seen on later episodes of McClain's Law, CHiPs, Chicago Story, Fame on nuvoTV, Seven Brides for Seven Brothers, Gavilian, earlier episodes of We Got It Made, and Cutter to Houston. The MGM/UA Entertainment Co. Television version is retained on mid-season 1 episodes of We Got It Made, Lady Blue, Hello Kitty's Furry Tale Theater on Amazon Video on Demand, Hulu and VHS releases, The Dirty Dozen: The Next Mission on VHS (and possibly the 2006 DVD and 2007 Blu-ray releases of the original Dirty Dozen, which include it as a bonus feature), and seasons 3 and 5 of Fame on nuvoTV. When VH1 did a Fame marathon in 2001, all MGM logos were retained. Kids Incorporated continued to use this until 1991.

Editor's Note : For the first time since 1973, MGM got a proper television logo. This is fondly remembered amongst viewers of shows from this era.

8th Logo (1982-June 15, 1984)
Nicknames : "Leo the Lion VI", "Gold Ribboning"

Logo : It's basically a still picture of MGM/UA's then-corporate logo. Below "Entertainment Co.", which is separated from the MGM/UA text using two lines, is "Television Distribution": it's in the same font and uses the same style as the "Entertainment Co." text, and it's spaced below the aforementioned text.

Variant : An in-credit version exists on Thicke of the Night.

FX/SFX : None.

Music/Sounds : A re-arranged version of the 1982 United Artists Television theme, followed by the 1957 roar. Otherwise, it has the show's closing music or it's silent.

Availability : Extremely rare.
 * It's preserved on Gilligan's Planet and The Tom and Jerry Comedy Show from Filmation. As for the latter, it plasters over the 5th logo.
 * It was also seen on the syndicated program Thicke of the Night.

9th Logo (January 1984-1985)
Nicknames : "Leo the Lion VII", "Gold Ribboning II", "Diamond Jubilee"

Logo : Same as the 1984 theatrical logo, but only shortened and the light blue word "TELEVISION" is shown below the logo.

FX/SFX : A shortened version of the 1984 theatrical logo.

Music/Sounds : Same as the previous logos.

Availability : Rare. Can be seen on 1984 episodes of Fame on Ovation TV, a few made for TV movies produced by MGM aired in 1984, the very short-lived sitcom Empire, season 1 of Kids Incorporated, the miniseries George Washington, Paper Dolls, Jessie and The Mighty Orbots. Most shows starting in January 1985 revert this to the 7th logo.

Editor's Note : Like the studio logo, it was designed to honor MGM's 60th anniversary.

10th Logo (May 10, 1986-April 20, 1987)
Nicknames : "Leo the Lion VIII", "White Ribboning III"

Logo : A short version of the 1957 film logo of the era, except "TELEVISION" is in white, and it was chyroned in below the logo.

FX/SFX : Same as the previous logos.

Music/Sounds : Same as the previous logos.

Availability : Rare. Seen only on the final season of Fame on nuvoTV.

Editor's Note : A wasted logo, since it was only seen on one show.

11th Logo (1986-Spring 1987)
Nicknames : "Leo the Lion IX", "Gold Ribboning III"

Logo : A shortened version of the movie counterpart's logo from the era, but only this time the word "TELEVISION" is shown below, in the same font as the 1982 logo, but in gold.

FX/SFX : Same as the movie counterpart.

Music/Sounds : Same as the previous logos.

Availability : Rare. Seen on shows from MGM from the 1986-1987 season, such as Jack and Mike, USA Network broadcasts of Love Me, Love Me Not, 1986-87 episodes of Kids Incorporated and a few TV movies of the era like The Dirty Dozen: The Deadly Mission. In later years, this logo was plastered over with future ones.

12th Logo (Spring 1987-1993)
Nicknames : "Leo the Lion X", "Gold Ribboning IV"

Logo : We see the then-current movie logo of the era, only shortened. The words "MGM/UA Television Productions" appear above the logo instead of the usual "Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer" text and below it is the byline reading "An MGM/UA Communications company" in the usual MGM typeface.

Variants :
 * For syndication, the text reads above the logo "MGM/UA Telecommunications" in its usual font, and the words "Distributed by" is above the logo.
 * A later version exists where the text just reads "MGM/UA" and no byline below.
 * At least one episode of thirtysomething has a freeze of the logo.
 * On the unsold pilot Changing Patterns, the logo cuts in rather than fading in.

FX/SFX : Same as the previous logos.

Music/Sounds : Same as the previous logos.

Music/Sounds Variants :
 * On the freeze variant, a shortened version of the 1957 roar is used.
 * On the pilot Microcops, aired as part of CBS Summer Playhouse in 1989, the lion makes a "Whoop, whoop, whoop!" sound.

Availability : Uncommon. Recently seen on Moving Target on Encore Mystery and Netflix, season 6 of In the Heat of the Night on WGN America and GetTV, and appears on the '90s revival of Dark Shadows on VHS from MPI Home Video. The "MGM/UA" version is seen on the short-lived series Baby Boom, the final season of The Young Riders, the short-lived show Against the Law and several network made-for-TV movies like Fatal Memories. The "MGM/UA Telecommunications" version is seen on the 1985 version of The Twilight Zone on MeTV (right before the CBS Television Distribution logo). Was also seen on the final episodes of Fame, as well as the short-lived series Karen's Song, Knightwatch, Dream Street, Nightmare Cafe, the CBS Summer Playhouse, and the Police Story TV movie The Freeway Killings. Like before, it was later plastered with the next logo.

13th Logo (1991-2009)
Nicknames : "Leo the Lion XI", "Gold Ribboning V"

Logo : It's the same as the movie logo, except without any modifications whatsoever.

Variants :
 * The logo was shifted up starting in 1996.
 * A B&W version exists for old shows.
 * In 2001, the logo has the URL "www.mgm.com" below the logo.

FX/SFX : Leo roaring, as usual.

Music/Sounds : Either the first lion roar sound from the 1982 or 1995 lion roar or the last lion roar sound from the 1985 lion roar or the 1957 lion roar.

Music/Sounds Variant : On some prints, it plasters the previous logos, keeping the 1957 roar intact.

Availability : Common. This plasters all of the logos, including the UATV logos on newer prints of old shows like The Rat Patrol. The warped version of the 2001 logo is very rare and was only ever seen on a Chiller airing of the pilot for Dark Shadows: The Revival. Its earlier appearance was on the cartoon James Bond Jr. It was also seen at the end of the closing credits on pre-national Me-TV reruns of Cagney & Lacey, plastering both the Filmways logo (Season 1) and the Orion Television logo (Season 2-onward), although a few episodes retain the latter logo, followed by this logo. The logo also appeared at the end of It's About Time on Antenna TV. It was also seen on the 1998 ABC TV movie Creature.

14th Logo (1993-1999)


Nicknames : "Leo the Lion XII", "Gold Ribboning VI"

Logo : Same as the usual movie logo from the time period, except the text is shown below the logo, reading "MGM/UA T ELECOMMUNICATIONS G ROUP " in a metallic gold Copperplate font.

Variants :
 * Starting in 1996, the text now simply reads "MGM T ELECOMMUNICATIONS G ROUP "
 * A black and white version of the logo exists.

FX/SFX : Same as the previous logos.

Music/Sounds : The first or last lion roar sound from the 1957, 1982, 1985 or 1995 lion roars.

Availability : Uncommon. Seen on 1995-1998 episodes of The Outer Limits, LAPD: Life on the Beat, the first season of Stargate SG-1 and at the end of old movies from the era on local TV. This also makes a surprise appearance at the end of the 2001 Special Edition DVD of Bull Durham.

15th Logo (September 16, 1993-May 16, 1995)
Nicknames : "Leo the Lion XIII", "Gold Ribboning VII"

Logo : Same as the usual movie logo from the time period, except the text reads underneath the logo, "MGM Worldwide Television Group" in yellow and below it is the text in smaller print "In The Heat Of The Night" Property Of United Artists" in the same font.

FX/SFX : Same as the previous logos.

Music/Sounds : Like the previous logos, we hear the last lion roar of the 1957 roar. CBS airings of its made for TV movies used a generic theme.

Availability : Seen only on the final season of In the Heat of the Night, as well as the follow-up TV movies A Matter of Justice, Who Was Geli Bendi?, By Duty Bound, and Grow Old Along with Me.

16th Logo (1996-2005)
Nicknames : "Leo the Lion XIV", "Gold Ribboning VIII"

Logo : We see the usual movie logo from the era, like the previous logos, except we see the words reading either "MGM Domestic Television Distribution", "MGM Worldwide Television Inc.", "MGM Worldwide Television Group", "MGM Television Entertainment" or "MGM International Television Distribution", shown below the logo in a bronze metallic font.

Variants :
 * A black and white version of the logo exists.
 * A long version of the logo exists.

FX/SFX : Same as the previous logos.

Music/Sounds : Same as the 13th logo.

Music/Sounds Variants :
 * There is also a silent version on Soul Plane.
 * NBC airings of the first three episodes of She Spies and the 2002 TV movie remake of Carrie and CBS airings of The Magnificent Seven used a generic theme.
 * A long version exists on cable broadcasts of Holiday Heart, Rocky V, The Terminator, At Close Range and Delirious.

Availability : Common. Found on The Outer Limits, Fame L.A., The Magnificent Seven, National Enquirer TV, Jeremiah, Sex Wars, Stargate: Infinity, Dead Like Me, Animal Atlas, Stargate SG-1, the first season of Stargate: Atlantis, She Spies, various TV movies of the era, and at the end of recent prints of various feature films of the era. It's also global wise on all MGM and NBC series.

17th Logo (2005-2009, January 10, 2011-2012)
Nicknames : "Leo the Lion XV", "Gold Ribboning IX"

Logo : Same as the previous logos, but only this time the text reads "MGM Domestic Television Distribution", "MGM Worldwide Television Distribution" or "MGM International Television Distribution" in a orange-white gradient version of the font found on the previous logos.

Variant : On Spaceballs: The Animated Series, the copyright stamp is shown below the logo.

FX/SFX : Same as the previous logos.

Music/Sounds : The same first half of the 1995 roar from the previous logos. NBC airings of American Gladiators used a generic theme and a voiceover.

Availability : Common. It can be found on then-current shows like the 2008 revival of American Gladiators on NBC, the short-lived Spaceballs: The Animated Series on G4, and syndicated shows like Stargate: SG-1, Stargate Atlantis, The Outer Limits, Reno 911!, and Chappelle's Show, among others. The logo is also seen on First Business and off-net reruns of Cash Cab. It was also found at the end of movies in syndication. It is also seen on international prints of shows that were copyrighted by NBC Studios for Universal Television.

18th Logo (2009-May 9, 2011)
Nicknames : "Leo the Lion XVI", "Metallic Ribboning"

Logo : It's only the short version of the 2008 closing theatrical logo, reading below has, "MGM Worldwide Television Distribution" for United States, "MGM International Television Distribution" for global distribution, the MGM website, or none, just like the last logo except the company name below the logo is in a different font. Again, Leo roars once.

FX/SFX : Leo roaring.

Music/Sounds : The same first half of the 1995 lion roar or the 2008 roar.

Availability : Uncommon. It was first seen on First Business, before they apparently reverted back to the previous logo soon after. This can also be seen at the end of several classic new prints of MGM movies on local networks and cable broadcasts, especially on James Bond movies (mainly the Roger Moore era) as aired on Sleuth, WGN America, USA, and G4, among other networks, several Rocky films on the Encore networks, and on international prints of non-MGM shows and movies (such as those copyrighted by NBC Studios for Universal Television). Don't expect to see this logo at the end of Stargate Universe on Syfy, though it does appear on local TV airings and streaming prints. This was also seen on The Pink Panther and Pals on Boomerang, and reruns of In the Heat of the Night on WGN America, while the credits are compressed on the right. Most shows only used this for roughly one year before it was replaced by the next, although Stargate Universe continued to use this until the show's cancellation in 2011.

19th Logo (2010-2012)
Nicknames : "Leo the Lion XVII", "Metallic Ribboning II"

Logo : Same as the regular version of the theatrical logo, but only it was shortened, and the text reads "MGM WORLDWIDE TELEVISION DISTRIBUTION" or "DISTRIBUTED BY MGM DISTRIBUTION CO.", both in a metallic gold Times New Roman font. Leo roars once.

FX/SFX : Same as the previous logos.

Music/Sounds : Same as the previous logo.

Music/Sounds Variant : S1 episodes of Teen Wolf have the first half of the first roar of the 1995 roar track.

Availability : Like before, it was seen on classic prints of MGM films from the era on local networks and cable broadcasts, as well as on international prints of non-MGM shows and movies (such as those copyrighted by NBC Studios for Universal Television). It also appears on season 1 of the MTV show Teen Wolf.

20th Logo (November 19, 2012-2021?)
Nicknames : "Leo the Lion XVIII", "Zooming Ribboning", "Metallic Ribboning III", "MGM 2012", "Animated Ribbon"

Logo : We start with the MGM logo fully revealed and zooming out, but with the words "MGM T ELEVISION " in Trajan Pro, zooming out below along with the logo. The whole animation zooms out fast. Sometimes the words below are exempt.

Variant : A still version exists on some shows such as the Netflix show Messiah.

FX/SFX : The logo and words zooming out, and Leo roaring.

Music/Sounds : The same first half of the 1995 lion roar. A Light airing of The Pink Panther 2 has the 2008 roar track. The still version is silent.

Availability : Common.
 * This was first seen on a Spike airing of Red Dawn (1984).
 * This also seen on broadcast TV airings on some episodes of Cash Cab and films part of the Showcase Theater package.
 * This can also be found on Vikings and Fargo.
 * The version without the words below was seen (from June 2013 to 2016) on Right This Minute.
 * It is currently seen on former productions from United Artists Media Group, such as Shark Tank, The Voice, 500 Questions, and Survivor.
 * This logo can also be spotted on Beat Shazam.
 * New prints of the original American Gladiators have this too, as seen on Charge! and Pluto TV.

21st Logo (May 6, 2021- )


Nicknames : "Leo the Lion VII", "Zooming Ribboning II", "Metallic Ribboning III", "MGM 2021", "Animated Ribbon II", "CGI Leo"

Logo : A shortened version of MGM's 2021 logo, starting when Leo the Lion appears, and with the golden text "TELEVISION" in a font similar to the third logo appearing below the logo. Leo roars once.

FX/SFX: Same as the 2021 MGM logo, animated by Baked Studios. This logo has a much different form-up animation compared to its theatrical counterpart.

Music/Sounds: Same as the previous logo.

Availlabity: Current. Appears on The Big Shot with Bethanny, and started appearing on Clarice beginning with the episode "Add-a-Bead."