- Designed logos for New York City Off-Track Betting and National Urban League.
- First African-American graphic artist to work at a television network.
- Became the first artist to design news graphics at CBS and supervised the vote-tallying graphics of the first live presidential election coverage in 1952. In 1956, he received the New York Art Directors Club medal. As television grew more popular, Olden was responsible for the graphics of some of its main shows of the era including The Ed Sullivan Show, Lassie, Gunsmoke and The Late Show. According to 250 Years of Afro-American Art: An Annotated Bibliography, his work appeared 108 times between 1951 and 1960.
- The decline of his career caused his estrangement from Terri Baker Olden prompting him to move in with his new girlfriend, Irene "Maya" Mikolajczyk. On January 25, 1975 Maya shot and killed Georg in possible self-defense. Having a strong case, she pleaded not guilty, was released on $1,000 bail and acquitted of the charge on May 14, 1975.
- In 1945, his supervisor recommended him to the vice president of the CBS TV division and the agency's communications director, Colonel Lawrence W. Lowman. Soon afterwards, Olden, at 24, became the head art director for CBS's new television division. He remained with CBS until 1960.
- As his reputation grew in the publishing business, Olden removed the last letter from his first name in order to get himself noticed by magazine editors.
- In 1963, he became the first African American to design a commemorative postage stamp for the U.S. Post Office. His stamp was a tribute to the Emancipation Proclamation at its 100th anniversary.
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