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  1. vanity card (noun): A full-screen production company credit that airs for one second at the end of a TV show.So named because the credit is bullshit. The actual producer of every network TV show is a large corporation that risks capital in development costs and deficit financing so that, in success, it can steal money from profit participants (i.e., schmucks with vanity cards).

  2. vanity card (noun): A full-screen production company credit that airs for one second at the end of a TV show.So named because the credit is bullshit. The actual producer of every network TV show is a large corporation that risks capital in development costs and deficit financing so that, in success, it can steal money from profit participants (i.e., schmucks with vanity cards).

  3. Oct 15, 2012 · Chuck Lorre wrote the book on vanity cards. Want to know what prolific TV writer Chuck Lorre is thinking? It's all in the cards. For 15 years, Lorre, 59, a co-creator of Two and a Half Men, The ...

  4. Feb 20, 2019 · In #354 he even talked about giving up working in “this business” altogether. Lorre’s geeky side also comes through many times in the vanity cards as well. One of the best displays of this is in vanity card #468: Or in vanity card #237 where he explains what a linear asymptote is. Another great example is when he shows his to-do list and ...

  5. Sep 28, 2012 · When Chuck Lorre created Dharma & Greg in 1997, he (like all showrunners) was given a second at the end of each episode to flash a vanity card — usually a logo of the writer's production company.

  6. vanity card (noun): A full-screen production company credit that airs for one second at the end of a TV show.So named because the credit is bullshit. The actual producer of every network TV show is a large corporation that risks capital in development costs and deficit financing so that, in success, it can steal money from profit participants (i.e., schmucks with vanity cards).

  7. vanity card (noun): A full-screen production company credit that airs for one second at the end of a TV show.So named because the credit is bullshit. The actual producer of every network TV show is a large corporation that risks capital in development costs and deficit financing so that, in success, it can steal money from profit participants (i.e., schmucks with vanity cards).

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