A digital on-screen graphic (DOG; also known as bug) is a watermark-like station logo that many television broadcasters overlay over a portion of the screen-area of their programs to assist viewers in identifying the channel. They are thus a form of permanent visual station identification, increasing brand recognition and asserting ownership of the video signal. In some cases, the graphic also shows the name of the current program. Some networks use an on-screen graphic to advertise later programs in the day's television schedule—this is generally displayed after the opening, during in-programme credits, and when returning from a commercial break.
The graphic identifies the source of programming even if it is time-shifted—that is, recorded to videotape, DVD, or via a digital personal video recorder such as TiVo. Many of these technologies allow viewers to skip or omit traditional between-programming station identification.
In Canada and the United States, they are known as bugs and are commonly displayed on the bottom right corner of the screen. However, on some stations such as Logo, the bug is displayed on the top right corner of the screen. The "bug" position in the United States has even made some shows change graphics. In the 2001-2003 US television series Weakest Link, the graphic for the clock was positioned on the top right corner, instead of the bottom right corner, as in other countries' version of the BBC-produced quiz show, as to permit station bugs to appear in the bottom right.
During televised sports events, a DOG may also display a few game-related statistics such as the current score. This has led many people in Canada and the United States to refer to it as a score bug.
On British digital systems such as Sky Digital and Freeview, where channels have a set EPG number and a name displayed across the bottom of the screen when changing channel, large or intrusive DOGs have been deemed unnecessary by most users. More recent additions are graphics which appear at the end of a program to tell the viewer what's up next; these have been classed as even more unnecessary, as most EPG systems give the same information, which is also announced over the end credits. BBC One and BBC Two dropped them after a short period in late 2004 after numerous complaints, and currently no station broadcasting on analogue terrestrial television has one. However, other channels have not taken this stance. UK Gold dropped them after a short period in August 2003, but they returned again across the UKTV network in June 2005. Graphics with moving video clips are due to be introduced in April 2006. Moving animated DOGs are already used by some channels such as MTV Dance.
FOX then debuted The Scoring Banner, which takes up the top of the screen, for its NASCAR Coverage in 2001. FOX then expanded the scoring banner to NFL and baseball coverage. Fox Sports Net also uses a scoring banner for basketball, hockey and soccer coverage, as do many other local broadcasters of sporting events. ABC introduced a Fox-like banner, but along the bottom of the screen, for Monday Night Football in 2005, its last year of the franchise, and introduced a revised version February 5, 2006, during an NBA game, as well as during that day's presentation of Super Bowl XL, which quickly became used for all sports on the network. NBC also began using a scoring banner, along the bottom like ABC's, in 2005 for its coverage of Notre Dame football, which also quickly became used for all sports on the network. CBS, ESPN, SNY and the networks of Turner Broadcasting System currently still use traditional score bugs, although ESPN used a banner for the 2006 FIFA World Cup and MLB Home Run Derby. The one exception among the networks is motor racing, as most of them will use the banner for these races. From its inception, cable network VH-1 commonly utlitzed a bug in the corner of the screen while broadcasting music videos for copyright purposes. MTV also did the same, beginning in 1993. MTV first began using a bug while videos were shown on the program Beavis and Butt-head.
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