User blog:Baranosdragon/The most well known lost media of Neon District/Neonia and NRTN in its whole

Nicknames : "The Logo That Just... Dissapeared, I Guess.", "Canal 3 Rosario's Older Brother" "So Scary, It's Not Funny"

From somewhere in early - mid - late 1963 to March 16th, 1964(?), NRTN (as the time known as NDRB) decided that they needed to warn children at 7:59pm that the following programs on NDRB TV (now NRTN 1) were not made for them. So, they decided to make a logo for it. The broadcasting company's artist team made something that would look like it came from a childrens program. In reality, though, it would become one of the most terrifying things that children would've saw on television, and one of the most infamous "scary logos" in the country's history.

Logo : On a purple sky, we see a semi-transparent narrow box, with on it we see a dark orange-bright yellow circle with a white smiley face on it, with barely readable transparent text in serif text saying "CHILDREN'S PROTECTION HOUR" on it.

FX/SFX : None. As it was just a camera pointing at the logo, making it effectively a still image, also called a telop or a slide.

Music/Sounds : Some weird-sounding, strange and unsettling early synthesizer droning combined with some night time ambience and most infamous of all, a creepy laugh, which ends in a cough. Then, after (presumably) 9 seconds, it cuts short and the sound of an English/Japanese/Chinese/Spanish/Portuguese/Korean announcer announcing that it is the end of the Children's Protection Hour and that the following programs may or may not be suitable for children.

Availability : Read the title. Otherwise, extinct.

Children, who had tuned in between 1 hour - just a few moments before, saw this, and were unsettled, creeped out, and most occasionally, terrified. For some reason, not a single parent even bothered to file a complaint to the state-owned broadcasting network, and it stayed on television up until the rebrand of NDRB (yet again, now known as NRTN.) on March 16th, 1964, when it was automatically pulled from television. Eventually, in about around 2008 - late 2009, some television fanatics who had grown up in the late 1950s - early 1960s and saw this, discussed about it on the forums. Some people said that they had strange memories of a bumper, trying to warn children watching at the time to turn off their TV or face the consequences, with creepy visuals and that freaking laugh. Eventually, some people tried to contact NRTN about it. They said that they looked through their entire archives for that year of 1963 and the first 3 months of 1964, but couldn't even find anything closely related to it. Eventually, it started to dawn on them on what had happened. Something was missing.

One Station in Rosario (1963 - 1993)
This Children's Protection Hour bumper proceeded to broadcast every single day from somewhere in 1963 at the exact same time, right when the clock hit 7:59pm. But on March 16th, 1964, when NDRB rebranded into something more friendlier, the Director of Art for NDRB on the open studio day that day said that "he didn't want to ever see that f*cking face ever again [sic]" and requested all of the copies of airings of it to be destroyed, except two, a reel of tape and a 16mm film reel, in which he both kept. The physical slide itself, however, was stored deep down into a basement in the television broadcaster's basement. It only resurfaced in 1992, during an anniversary tape that showcased it. Except, it was a camera recording of a black and white airing (color television in Neon District (also more commonly known as Neonia) only arrived in 1965), and it only showed the part where the announcer was talking, and not the infamous part with the creepy audio. Eventually, though, they wanted to get rid of it. It was sold to a television worker in Rosario, Santa Fe, Argentina in late 1992 and he used it for something that recieved similar reception. And then, we enter the only case of where a modified version of lost media that was lost media for years was showcased.

Canal 3 (1993 - 1994)
The slide, with the exact same audio (the audio tape of the bumper/telop/slide (i have absolutely no idea on what word to use here) was also sold over to Rosario. The worker, named [REDACTED], worked at the station of Canal 3 Rosario, now El Tres TV. TBA

Sanlorencio (2010)
TBA

The hunt (2010 - 2022)
TBA

Footage has been found? (December 18th, 2022)
TBA

The official recovery (Janurary 18th, 2023)
TBA