Nickelodeon

1977–1979
Nickelodeon first began transmissions on December 1, 1977 under the name Pinwheel. Its original name was derived from the preschool-oriented program that aired on the network from its launch until 1990.

1979–1980


In 1979, Pinwheel was renamed as Nickelodeon; the name was derived from a type of movie theatre which charged 5 cents for admission. This concept is represented in their first logo and on-air package, which depicts a man looking into a kinetoscope within the letter "N" of the wordmark.

1980–1981
In 1980, Nickelodeon slightly updated their logo, utilizing a typeface similar to the ITC Souvenir font. Their identification logos at the time featured a mime doing things on a black background with an instrumental cover of the song "Put That Little Nickel In" as background music. The font may be the same as Pinwheel's logo and slightly modified.

1980–1985
A new logo designed by Lou Dorfsman was introduced in 1981. It consists of the network's name spelled in rainbow letters (stylized as "NiCKELODEON") set in the Frankfurter font, with a pinball illustrated by Bob Klein placed behind it. The pinball theme was used in the network's IDs during the period, including one that used early 1980s-era computer graphics.

1985–2009, 2011/2015-present (90s Are All That!/NickSplat block)


On October 8, 1984, Nickelodeon began utilizing a new theme with their multitude of logos: orange silhouettes with the word "Nickelodeon" (written in the Balloon Extra Bold font) on them. Eventually, the "splat" design would be the most used, representing the slime Nickelodeon has been known for since it began broadcasting the Canadian series You Can't Do That on Television in 1981; Nickelodeon would later adopt the trademark as part of its own programming. Designed by Fred/Alan, Inc., originally with just a star in mind, it has grown to be the most well-known and recognized Nickelodeon logo. The wordmark was rarely, if ever, seen isolated from a shape of some kind. This logo is still used on the TeenNick nightime block, "NickSplat" for classic bumpers.

2009–present


A new logo and on-air look for Nickelodeon were unveiled in February 2009 and began use in the United States on September 28. The design is credited to Eric Zim, and the on-air brand identity was produced at Trollbäck & Company. Also, during this time, Nickelodeon's sister networks The N, Noggin, and Nicktoons Network rebranded as TeenNick, Nick Jr. and Nicktoons, respectively, with their logos also in the style of this one. The typeface used on this logo is a custom font which resembles Bauhaus (now known as Litebulb). This logo was placed 3rd in Part 2 (the best) of the 2009 Brand New Awards. In April 2011, Nickelodeon unveiled new variations of the background that interact with the logo's color.

The new Nickelodeon logo was rolled out internationally during 2010 accordingly:
 * January 29: France
 * February 15: United Kingdom / Ireland
 * March 1: Poland
 * March 31: Germany/Austria/Switzerland
 * April 5: Latin America
 * June 25: India