On February 9, 2001, Washington Week in Review rebrands as Washington Week, with the introduction of new graphics package, a new set in the orange background, and music. The wordmark, "in Review" retired after the rebrand.[1]
Website Background
White variant
2006–2010[]
On February 17, 2006, Washington Week introduced a temporary logo (after shared an agreement of program to produce, and associate with the National Journal).
White variant
"with Gwen Ifill" variant
White "with Gwen Ifill" variant
without slogan variant
White without slogan variant
2010–2016[]
After converting to HD on January 8, 2010, the 2001 logo of Washington Week returned on January 29, 2010 with new graphics.
2016–2018[]
On November 25, 2016 (shortly after Gwen Ifill's death), Washington Week introduced new graphics with the background of the U.S. capitol at night.
2018–2023[]
Designer:
Unknown
Typography:
Abril Display
Launched:
July 20, 2018
On July 20, 2018, Washington Week introduced new graphics package with a new set, and music by Stephen Arnold.
Symbol
White horizontal variant (earlier prototype)
White print horizontal variant (earlier prototype)
White horizontal variant
Wordmark
White wordmark
Wordmark (centered)
White wordmark (centered)
Wordmark (right-positioned; earlier prototype)
White wordmark (right-positioned; earlier prototype)
White print wordmark (right-positioned; earlier prototype)
Wordmark (right-positioned)
White wordmark (right-positioned)
Stacked variant (earlier prototype)
White stacked variant (earlier prototype)
White print stacked (earlier prototype)
Stacked variant
White stacked variant
2020 stacked variant
2020 white stacked variant
Alternate stacked variant
White alternate stacked variant
On screen bug (2018–2020)
On screen bug (2020–2023)
2018–2020 title card
2020–2023 title card
Social media profile logo (with moderator Yamiche Alcindor)
Washington Week with The Atlantic[]
2023–present[]
Designer:
Unknown
Typography:
Abril Display ("Washington Week" wordmark)
Launched:
August 11, 2023
On August 11, 2023, editor-in-chief of The Atlantic Jefferey Goldberg became the moderator of the program and a partnership with a new title, Washington Week with The Atlantic. This logo retires the U.S. capitol symbol.