RCA (trademark)

RCA is an American trademark brand owned by French multinational corporation Technicolor SA, which is used on products made by that company as well as Voxx International, ON Corporation and Sony Music Entertainment. RCA is an abbreviation for the Radio Corporation of America, founded in 1919. The company became known as the RCA Corporation in 1969. RCA was purchased by General Electric in 1986 and its various divisions and assets were then liquidated.

RCA
Technicolor and Sony Music Entertainment's RCA logo
The #98 RCA Ford Thunderbird, seen here driven by John Andretti at Pocono in 1997.
Product typeTrademark
OwnerTechnicolor SA
Sony Music Entertainment
CountryUnited States
Introduced1919 (1919)
Related brandsRCA Records
RCA Telephones
RCA Audio/Video
RCA Accessories
RCA Televisions
RCA Car Stereo
RCA Appliances
RCA Computers
RCA Computer Tablets
RCA Projectors
RCA Digital TV Box
MarketsWorldwide
Previous ownersGeneral Electric
Websitewww.rca.com

Current users

At present, the RCA trademark is owned by Technicolor SA (known as Thomson SA until January 2010) through RCA Trademark Management S.A. Though it generally no longer uses the brand directly (nor does General Electric, which sold off virtually all the businesses that used it), Technicolor SA licenses the RCA name to other companies for use on various products along 10 different product lines:

  • RCA Records (RCA Victor): now licensed to Sony Music Entertainment, which acquired the record label through their former joint venture Sony BMG (2004–08). BMG purchased the RCA and several associated record labels directly from GE in 1986, together with a perpetual license to use RCA's brands (including RCA's interest in the famous His Master's Voice trademark, also known as Nipper). As a perpetual license, it has survived both GE's sale of the brand to Thomson and BMG's transfer of the labels to Sony BMG and Sony Music.
  • RCA Telephones: Formerly manufactured by Thomson SA, sold in 2009 to Telefield North America[1][2]
  • RCA Audio/Video: Manufactured by Voxx, produces RCA DVD players, video cassette recorders, direct broadcast satellite decoders, camcorders, and audio equipment. (link on Voxx website)
  • RCA Accessories: Manufactured by Voxx, produces Audio and video connectors, remote controls, keyboards, mice and television antennas.
  • RCA Televisions: Manufactured by ON Corporation[3]
  • RCA Car Stereo: Also known as RCA Mobile
  • RCA Appliances: Produces RCA brand Microwaves, refrigerators, and ranges marketed by Curtis International Ltd. (Canada)[4]
  • RCA Computers: Produces RCA Computers marketed by American Future Technology Corporation[5]
  • RCA Computer Tablets: RCA tablets manufactured by Alco Electronics Ltd.[6]
  • RCA Projectors: Manufactured by Telefield
  • RCA Digital TV Box: Produces RCA Set-top Boxes marketed by Search Commercial Inc. (Philippines).[7]
  • RCA Communication Systems: Two-way radios produced by Discount Two-Way Radio[8][9].

BMG (for the record labels) and Thomson (for the remaining businesses) bought those assets from General Electric, which took over the RCA conglomerate in 1986 and kept RCA's NBC broadcast television interests (GE sold off the NBC Radio Network and the NBC-owned radio stations). Initially, GE continued to own the RCA trademarks (including the His Master's Voice/Nipper and Victor/Victrola trademarks which were then licensed to Thomson and Bertelsmann Music Group. Thomson eventually purchased the rights to the RCA trademarks in 2003[10] subject to the perpetual license GE had issued to BMG.

In December 2006, Thomson SA agreed to sell its consumer electronics accessory business, including rights to use the RCA name for consumer electronic accessories, to Audiovox[11]

On October 16, 2007, Thomson SA agreed to sell its consumer electronics audio video business outside Europe including the worldwide rights to the RCA Brand for consumer electronics audio video products[12]

In April 2010, ON Corporation took over distribution of RCA branded TVs.[13]

Bertelsmann AG was new to the RCA family (though the creation of Sony BMG is similar to that of EMI more than 70 years earlier). Sony took full ownership of Sony BMG in 2008 and the record company was renamed Sony Music. Thomson started as the French subsidiary of Thomson-Houston Electric, a company which later evolved into General Electric.

Sponsorship

RCA sponsored the Argentinian football club San Lorenzo de Almagro from 2005 until 2007, and the Argentinian football club Estudiantes de La Plata from 2008 to mid-2011. It currently sponsors Racing, another first division Argentinean football club.

In the mid-1990s, RCA bought the naming rights to the Hoosier Dome (the original home of the Indianapolis Colts). The stadium became the RCA Dome and was known as such until it was demolished in December 2008 when the Colts departed for the new Lucas Oil Stadium and the Indiana Convention Center was expanded onto the RCA Dome footprint.

RCA was the main sponsor for the #98 Cale Yarborough Racing NASCAR team between 1995 and 1997.

References

  1. "Contact Us | Telefield". rca4business.com. Retrieved 2013-10-18.
  2. "UPDATE 1-Thomson to shut North American retail telephone unit". Reuters. 2008-11-05. Retrieved 2013-10-18.
  3. "RCA Television". Tv.rca.com. 2009-06-01. Retrieved 2013-10-18.
  4. "Contact Us". RCA Microwaves. Retrieved 2017-02-24.
  5. "RCA Laptop". Rcacomputer.com. Retrieved 2013-10-18.
  6. "Alco Electronics' David Leung on making gadgets in China". phys.org. 26 June 2016. Retrieved 2018-10-28.
  7. "RCA Digital TV Box". Retrieved 2018-10-28.
  8. RCA Communication Systems
  9. About Discount Two-Way Radio
  10. "Intellectual Property Office - Our trade mark enquiry service has moved". Ipo.gov.uk. 2013-02-09. Retrieved 2013-10-18.
  11. "Audiovox to Acquire Thomson's Consumer Electronics Accessory Business". 22 December 2006. Archived from the original on May 26, 2008.
  12. "Audiovox to Acquire Thomson's Consumer Electronics Audio Video Business outside Europe Including the Worldwide Rights to the RCA Brand for Consumer Electronics Audio Video Products". Phx.corporate-ir.net. 2007-02-28. Retrieved 2013-10-18.
  13. "RCA Television". Rca4tv.com. Archived from the original on 2016-11-16. Retrieved 2013-10-18.
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