The company itself is not copyrightable, but their videos would be protected.
Same as copyright notice for anything else: Copyright, or copr. or circle-C, the date of copyright and the author or other copyright owner's name. E.g., "Copyright 2012 Walt Disney Productions, Inc."
Banksia Productions Pty Ltd, of Adelaide.
"Tandem Productions" : Jerry Perenchio and Bud Yorkin .
Copyright 1956,1957,by William Gibson. Copyright 1959,1960 by Trademark Productions, Ltd., and George S. Klein and Leo Garel.
1949-1954: Apex Film Corp. 1954-1957: Wrather Productions
Leonard Freeman's copyrights are administered by L/F Productions LLC; see the link below for corporate information.
For information on Streetbeater, contact Quincy Jones Music Productions at the address linked below.
Lol I hope not :S but I think coz its a natural thing you actually can't do that :P
You would have to do some research to find out who owns the "rights" to the show and then request permission. Many/Most old TV productions and movies ARE still under copyright protection and you will need permission (or pay a royalty) to produce them.
You would cite the date by reproducing the copyright notice. In the United States, a copyright notice consists of three elements:: 1. the © symbol (in some cases (c) is substituted), the word "Copyright" or abbreviation "Copr."; 2. the first year of publication; and 3. the owner of the copyright, either by name, abbreviation, or other designation. A practical example would be... © 2009 EndTrans Netwide Productions Inc. I don't know... That's why I went to this site...
Copyright is controlled by Universal Pictures. Trademark is much more interesting. In 1963, it was registered by Walter Lantz Productions, but that trademark was cancelled in 2004. In 2010, an individual in Florida registered it for t-shirts, but that mark was abandoned in 2011 (which usually means it was never used).
les productions