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  1. Apr 29, 2024 · Background. This is the production company of Chuck Lorre, founded in the 1990s, but incorporated on January 10, 2000 in Los Angeles, California, responsible for producing Lorre's television shows. Lorre's earliest shows were produced by The Carsey-Werner Company, which Lorre had an overall deal with from 1994 to 1995, while Dharma & Greg was ...

  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. 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).

  4. Apr 19, 2024 · Jon Cryer, Charlie Sheen, Ashton Kutcher. 491 votes. Two and a Half Men, the iconic series that catapulted Charlie Sheen to new heights of fame, remains one of Chuck Lorre's most popular productions. The show's unique blend of hedonistic humor and brotherly love between Sheen's Charlie and Jon Cryer's Alan struck gold with audiences and critics ...

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  6. Jun 6, 2019 · Show creator Chuck Lorre's hidden nuggets at the end of each episode came to a fitting close after the series finale. The theme from The Big Bang Theory was written by Ed Robertson of the ...

  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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