Halo TV series titles by Goodbye Kansas | STASH MAGAZINE

“Halo” Series Opens with Ominous Titles by Will Adams and Goodbye Kansas

This intimate and carefully rendered opening sequence for the Paramount+ Halo series reflects the show’s narrative arc following Master Chief/John-117 on a quest to uncover his past while revealing intricate details of his Mjolnir armor. [Watch]

Method Studios Opens Swimming with Sharks TV Series | STASH MAGAZINE

Method Studios Opens “Swimming with Sharks” TV Series

Associate creative director Wesley Ebelhar at Method Studios in NY: “Set in the cutthroat world of Hollywood’s film industry, the Swimming with Sharks TV series follows Lou (Kiernan Shipka), a young female assistant as she schemes to get closer to the studio’s executive (Diane Kruger). [Watch]

Kevin Parry Recreates the Netflix Logo Animation with Yarn | STASH MAGAZINE

Kevin Parry Recreates the Netflix Logo Animation with Yarn

Although Canadian stop-motion animator Kevin Parry counts serious credits on animated features including Missing Link and Kubo and the Two Strings, he is far better known as a creator of visually witty and wildly popular YouTube videos. [Watch]

Star Trek Strange New Worlds Teaser by State | STASH MAGAZINE

“Star Trek: Strange New Worlds” Teaser by State

From the team at Paramount Plus: “To launch the latest Star Trek series on Paramount+, Star Trek: Strange New Worlds, we tasked the great minds at State to help us tease the worlds the viewers will be visiting.” [Watch]

UBS IDs on Sportsnet by Rogers Creative and Blirp Studio | STASH MAGAZINE

UBS IDs on Sportsnet by Rogers Creative and Blirp Studio

A fresh new set of fast and furious IDs designed to attract younger viewers to Canadian broadcaster Sportsnet just arrived courtesy of the Rogers Creative crew in Toronto and Argentinian animation studio Blirp. [Watch]

yU+Co Opens Tokyo Vice for HBO Max | STASH MAGAZINE

yU+Co Opens “Tokyo Vice” for HBO Max

Veteran creative director Garson Yu and his LA team at yU+Co twist together tattoo art and neon in this opening sequence for Michael Mann’s new HBO Max series based on Jake Adelstein’s non-fiction book Tokyo Vice: An American Reporter on the Police Beat in Japan. [Watch]