VHS/Looney Tunes

From 2013 to 2016, the tapes were distrubited by warner home video, as of 2016, they are made by paramount, not warner bros. because of that, the movies got rereleased by paramount 20 entire years after the release date, the looney tunes movie from 1998 was released in 2018, bugs bunny goes to the united kingdom from 2000 was released 2020 and looney tunes back in action from 2003 was released 2023.

On October 24, 2006, after the season 3 finale of the caidin show, they stopped making vhs tapes, the last tapes cost $79.99 and the 2003-2010 paramount pictures logo was removed from television on may 10, 2006, the 1999-2002 logo was removed from television on august 27, 2006 on "the dead zone" (june 2002), even though it was changed to the 90th anniversary variant on march 1, 2002.

You can't buy VHS tapes in stores anymore, but you can make your own private tape, for example, the looney tunes videography would be introduced in 2013, even though it ended on february 28, 2006, the tom and jerry videography would be introduced in 2013, even though it the last releases ended on february 28, 2006.

There was a special bumper used for trailers from 1989 to 1999, with the words "COMING ATTRACTIONS" over the heliotrope gradient background, which cuts off after the zoom in.

A variation exists where the announcer says "Paramount is pleased to bring you our feature presentation". This was used with all three byline variants, and can be only found on Laserdiscs and VHS tapes that have no previews.

On the 1989 re-releases of Sunset Boulevard on VHS (reissued from the 1988 printing) and The Courageous Dr. Christain on Laserdisc (reissued from the 1987 printing), the logo and warning screen is in black and white and the logo doesn't actually start for a few seconds. Also, once the "FEATURE PRESENTATION" text zooms in, there is a tan screen for a split-second, then the warning screen appears.

The original Gulf+Western variation (which is the least common) made its debut on the May 1989 home video release of Coming to America, and can be found on releases such as the first four Star Trek films, Distant Thunder, The Experts, The Best of Eddie Murphy: Saturday Night Live, Cousins, The Naked Gun: From the Files of Police Squad!, Major League, Pet Sematary, and Puppet Master, among others. The Paramount Communications variation (which is easier to find) debuted on the November 1989 VHS release of Scrooged, and is also on the 1990 VHS release of Grease, the 1991 VHS and Laserdisc releases of Ghost, both Wayne's World films, the 1993 release of Charlotte's Web, and the 1998 widescreen VHS release of Forrest Gump. The Viacom variant is extremely common and appears on nearly every Paramount VHS release from 1995 onwards, starting with the June 1995 VHS release of Drop Zone. The final Paramount film to use this logo was the 2006 VHS of the 2005 remake of Yours, Mine & Ours, and the last tape to use it overall was the 2006 VHS of Go Diego Go!: Diego Saves Christmas! On the 1991 LaserDisc release of Apocalypse Now and the 1998 VHS release of Titanic, this logo is not shown at all, it just goes straight to the warning screen, while on the 1997 releases of The Godfather trilogy, the logo cuts to a black screen before the 1995 THX logo, as the warnings are placed at the beginning, separate from the logo. The normal version strangely appears on the original 1989 VHS release of Major League and the 1991 Star Trek: The Movies VHS box set (pan and scan version only; the widescreen edition of the box set uses the other voiceover) despite those releases having no previews. This makes a surprise appearance on the United Kingdom VHS releases that have any special features at the end of the tape, such as the United Kingdom VHS releases of The Italian Job and Lara Croft Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life.