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After the [[Title Sequence]], but before the first act, many shows will put in an intertitle displaying the episode's title. For some shows, the title will be animated and a character from the series will read the title to the audience (mostly prevalent in anime, while western cartoons that use this are usually aimed at preschoolers). On the other hand, some shows might have the title be on-screen text displayed with the opening credits over the beginning of the first act. It is also common for the title to [[Title Please|never be shown]] and the name of the episodes only found from episode guides.
These days, one tends to see episode titles only on non-primetime animated programming, although even then there are many exceptions to this. (For example, [[4Kids! Entertainment|4Kids]]' Saturday morning block doesn't use episode titles on screen at all, regardless of whether the original versions of the shows had them.) Most other kinds of programming eschew from explicitly titling the episode on screen, with most exceptions being [[Dramatic Hour Long|hourlong]] sci-fi (''[[Heroes (TV series)|Heroes]]'', ''[[
{{examples}}
* ''[[Police Camera Action]]'', a co-production of [[ITV]] and [[Optomen]], had no title cards for the first two episodes ''Danger Drivers Ahead!'' (mid-1994) and the generically titled ''Police Camera Action'' (late 1994/early 1995), then a background of thermal-imaging camera footage with the episode title in BLOCK CAPITALS between 1995 and 1996. No episode title cards were used for the 1996 special ''The Man Who Shot O.J'' about the OJ Simpson trial. From 1997, the title cards were a blue background and white text, with text Like This (capitalised beginning of sentence).
** From 1999 onwards, a stylized background with BLOCK CAPITALS was used. The title cards were not used for the 2000 special episodes ''Crash Test Racers'' or ''Highway of Tomorrow''. The background was changed in 2002 to police footage, and then again in 2007 for the new series presented by Alastair Stewart and Adrian Simpson. The 2008 special episode, listed as "Drink Driving Special" had no title card, but the new 2009-2010 season is likely to have them again.
* A subversion of the character reading it is usually done in ''[[Tokusatsu]]'' with the narrator reading it usually in a menacing voice. Toru Ohira is especially fond of this, being the voice of Darth Vader in the Japanese dub of ''[[Star Wars]]'', he sometimes likes to read titles in a villain-like manner.
* ''[[The Simpsons (
** The ''Treehouse of Horror'' specials as well. Each special's constituent shorts also have its own title card as well.
*** [[The Movie]] also does this.
* ''[[Pokémon (
** ...as does ''[[
** A lot of anime shows in general have that.
* ''[[
* ''[[
* The first two ''[[Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha]]'' series have her reading the episode title while it's shown on a red sphere (ostensibly her Raising Heart pearl), with the same music bed used in both seasons. ''Strikers'' has a more dramatic music bed and no title read, presumably to reflect its more serious nature, with the title put over an i-ching pattern.
* All [[Nicktoons]] use this: ''[[
** In fact, ''[[Ka Blam!
*** Likewise for ''[[Fairly Oddparents]]'', ''[[Danny Phantom]]'', and ''[[
* Parodied in ''[[Police Squad!]]'', where the Episode Title Card never agrees with the spoken episode title.
* ''[[Batman: The Animated Series
* ''[[Batman:
* ''[[Arthur (
* [[Filmation]] had a number of series with title cards, including ''[[He
** Similarly, [[Ruby
* ''[[Heroes (TV series)|Heroes]]'' is well known for working in the titles in creative and sometimes bizarre ways.
** e.g. Sylar slicing the words 'I AM SYLAR' into his own arm.
* ''[[It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia
{{quote| '''Charlie:''' We're gonna go America all over their asses!!<br />
'''Title card:''' ''[[Captain Obvious|Charlie Goes America All Over Everybody's Ass]]'' }}
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'''Title card:''' ''[[Foregone Conclusion|Dennis and Dee Go On Welfare]]'' }}
* ''[[Kamichama Karin]]'' has the episode title cards read by [[Talking Animal|Shii-chan]], complete with her [[Verbal Tic|Verbal Tics]] added to the title.
* In ''[[
* ''[[
* The Australian drama ''love is a four letter word'' played with this as part of its style: we would begin with a cold open, which ended with a [[Whip Pan]] and fast zoom over to the word, [[Idiosyncratic Episode Naming|which was (usually) four letters long]]. Other such pans in the series would have captions telling us that the word either was or was not a four-letter word.
* ''[[Ghost in
** In the first season, these title cards also mention whether the episode is "Stand Alone" or "Complex" (aka, part of the [[Myth Arc]])
* ''[[
* Unusually for a [[Talk Show
* In ''[[The Beiderbecke Trilogy]]'' the episode title is always the first line of dialogue, and appears on screen when the line is spoken.
* All ''[[Skins]]'' episodes are named after [[Rotating Protagonist|their featured character(s)]]; the character featured in any given episode is always the very last person highlighted in the title sequence.
* Each episode of ''[[
* ''[[
* ''[[Krypto the Superdog (
* ''[[Dan Vs
* Every episode of ''[[
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