- Javier Grillo-Marxuach
Javier Grillo-Marxuach is a writer and also serves as a Producer on the Sci-Fi Channel series " The Chronicle ." Mr. Grillo- Marxauch was Primetime Series executive at NBC, where he was involved with current and development series including " Law & Order ," " The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air ," " SeaQuest DSV " and " Earth 2 ."
- Brannon Braga
Brannon Braga (born August 14 1965, in Bozeman, Montana) is an American television producer and screenwriter who is mostly known for his work on the Star Trek series since 1990. He is credited as one of the co-creators and executive producers of "Star Trek: Enterprise" and was a producer of the short-lived alien invasion drama "Threshold". Braga received the Distinguished Alumni Award from Kent State University Stark in 2005.
- Carol Mendelsohn
Carol Mendelsohn (born 1951) is an American TV writer, notable for her work on the crime drama "CSI: Crime Scene Investigation". Mendelsohn grew up in Chicago. She went to Smith College, but later transferred and in 1973 graduated from Cornell University. She then went to the George Washington University Law School and practiced at the Washington, D.C., office of the prominent Los Angeles-based firm Wyman, Bautzer, Rothman, & Kuchel.
- Jeph Loeb
Joseph "Jeph" Loeb III is an American comic book writer, screen and television writer as well as television and motion picture producer. A three-time Eisner Award Winner and five-time Wizard Award Winner, Loeb has found tremendous success at both Marvel and DC where he has written stories with such diverse characters as the X-Men and Superman as well as Batman and Spider-Man.
- Jane Espenson
Jane Espenson is an American writer who has worked on several television series and comic books, as well as on a variety of other projects. She is perhaps best known for her five-year stint (from 1998 to 2003) as a writer and producer on "Buffy the Vampire Slayer".
- Paul Mullie
Paul Mullie is a screen writer and producer who has worked on a number of projects. He is credited for writing episodes of "Stargate: Atlantis", "Largo Winch" and "Stargate SG-1" and has worked as executive producer on "Stargate Atlantis: Rising" and "Stargate: Atlantis".
- Marti Noxon
Marti Noxon (born 25 August 1964) is a television and film writer perhaps best known for her work as a writer and executive producer on "Buffy the Vampire Slayer". She is a graduate of Kresge College at the University of California, Santa Cruz. Besides her work on "Buffy", she co-wrote the 1999 movie "Just A Little Harmless Sex". When the WB television network accepted the "Buffy" spin-off series "Angel", Joss Whedon, …
- David Javerbaum
David Javerbaum is an American comedy writer and the Executive Producer of "The Daily Show with Jon Stewart". Javerbaum worked at "The Late Show with David Letterman" for about one year starting in 1998, then moved to "The Daily Show" in 1999 where he worked as a staff writer until being promoted to Head Writer in 2002. In that capacity he has won seven Emmy Awards, …
- Chuck Lorre
Chuck Lorre (born 18 October 1952) is a producer who has worked on many American sitcoms, including "Roseanne", "Cybill", "Grace Under Fire", "Dharma & Greg" and "Two and a Half Men". At the end of each episode of the latter two shows, Lorre features a vanity card consisting of a message that is usually an editorial. Since the card is shown only for a couple of seconds, …
- Patric Verrone
Patric Verrone (born Patric Miller Verrone on September 29, 1959 in Glendale, Queens, New York) is an American television writer. He served as a writer and producer for several animated television shows, most notably "Futurama".
- Greg Weisman
Greg Weisman (born September 28 1963 in Los Angeles, California) is an American animation writer and producer most famous as the creator of the animated television series "Gargoyles". Weisman is a former English composition and writing teacher and received degrees at Stanford University and USC. Of late, Weisman is notable for the question and answer forum he participates in with "Gargoyles" fans online, often revealing his intended plans for the show.
- Howard Gordon
Howard Gordon (born 31 March 1961, Queens, New York, New York, USA) is an American screenwriter and producer. After graduating from Princeton in 1984, Gordon came to Los Angeles with fellow filmmaker Alex Gansa to pursue a career in writing for television. Both broke into the industry with single episodes of ABC's "Spenser: For Hire".
- Peter Lauritson
Peter Lauritson is a long-time film producer and director and television producer and director involved with "Star Trek" since "Star Trek: The Next Generation".
- Paul Lieberstein
Paul Bevan Lieberstein (born February 22, 1967) is an Emmy Award-winning American screenwriter and television producer who is most widely known as a supporting cast member on the NBC sitcom "The Office".
- Darren Star
Darren Star (born 1961) is an American television and film producer and screenwriter best known for the hugely successful television series "Beverly Hills 90210", "Melrose Place" (both of which were co-produced with Aaron Spelling), and "Sex and the City" which was based on a book of the same name by Candace Bushnell. As well as creating these series, he personally wrote a number of scripts and directed some episodes.
- Adam Horowitz
Adam Horowitz is the writer of the television shows "Felicity", "Black Sash", "One Tree Hill", "Popular", "Fantasy Island", "Birds of Prey", "Life As We Know It", and "Lost". Currently in the 2006-2007 season, he's co-executive producer for Lost. He also wrote "Confessions of an American Bride", a made for television movie.
- Bill Odenkirk
Bill Odenkirk (born October 13, 1965 in Naperville, Illinois), is an American comedy writer. He is the brother of American comedian Bob Odenkirk, who is best known for his work on the sketch comedy TV show "Mr. Show with Bob and David", which Bill also worked on as a writer, producer and actor. He went on to write for "Tenacious D", "Futurama" and most recently "The Simpsons".
- Jack Burditt
Jack Burditt is an Emmy Award-winning American producer and screenwriter who has worked on many successful television shows.
- Ben Karlin
Ben Karlin is an American television producer. He is an eight time Emmy-winning American writer and executive producer best known for his work in "The Daily Show with Jon Stewart" and "The Colbert Report". He is one of three co-creators of "The Colbert Report" (along with Stephen Colbert and Jon Stewart). Karlin left Comedy Central in December 2006. He is currently working on a collection of essays, that he and others wrote, …
- Dan Greaney
Dan Greaney is an American television writer. He has written for "The Michael Richards Show", and, most famously, "The Simpsons". He was hired during the show's seventh season, but left after season eleven to try to make it big writing pilots. When that venture failed, he returned to the "Simpsons" staff during the thirteenth season. According to the DVD commentaries, prior to writing for the Simpsons, …
- Terence Winter
Terence Winter (born in Brooklyn, New York) is an Emmy award-winning American screenwriter and television producer most notable for his work on the HBO television series "The Sopranos", for which he began writing during the show's second season.
- Peter Deluise
Peter DeLuise is an American actor and director, born November 6,1966 in New York, New York. Peter DeLuise is the son of actor/comedian Dom DeLuise and actress Carol DeLuise, and the brother of actors David DeLuise and Michael DeLuise.
- Ben Edlund
Ben Edlund is a comic book artist and writer and television screenwriter. He created his signature character The Tick when he was 17, and was given the chance to do a full comic based on the character by New England Comics, when the publisher needed a new title fast, based on a production mix-up. Edlund drew the popular character while majoring in film at Massachusetts College of Art. The Tick has since been featured in animation on Fox TV and Comedy Central, …
- Carol Leifer
Carol Leifer (born July 27, 1956 in Long Island, New York) is an American comedian best known as Jerry Seinfeld's ex-girlfriend, as well as the basis for the character Elaine Benes on the television show, "Seinfeld". Leifer is an accomplished stand-up comedian, writer, producer and actor and has been involved in such television shows as "Seinfeld", "It's Like, You Know...", "Alright Already", and "The Larry Sanders Show".
- Steve Skrovan
Steve Skrovan works in the entertainment industry, notably as producer and writer for the television show Everybody Loves Raymond. Previously, he was the host for the first season of the game show "That's My Dog!" on the Family Channel, and had written for Seinfeld and The Home Court. More recently, he wrote, produced, and directed "An Unreasonable Man", a documentary about Ralph Nader, and Earth to America.
- Ron Hauge
Ron Hauge is an American television writer. In his earlier career Hauge was a contributor to "National Lampoon". After this he wrote for "Seinfeld", "The Ren & Stimpy Show", and a short lived reincarnation of "The Carol Burnett Show". While on the Ren & Stimpy Show he personally animated Stimpy's cartoon in the episode Stimpy's Cartoon Show. Hauge joined "The Simpsons" staff in the eighth season.
- Louis C.K.
Louis C.K. (born Louis Szekely on September 12, 1967 in Washington, D.C.) is an American stand-up comedian, writer, actor, producer and director. C.K. was born in Washington, D.C. to a Harvard educated father descended from Hungarian Jews and Mexican Catholics, and a Harvard educated mother of Irish Catholic descent. After six years in Mexico, he grew up in Massachusetts, in Framingham and, mostly, Newton.
- Stephen Cragg
Stephen Cragg is an American television producer and director. Cragg has directed for several present-day network television series. More recently Cragg has directed episodes of "Desperate Housewives", "Boston Legal" and "Third Watch". Cragg was also a producer on "MDs", "Doogie Howser, M.D.", "The American Embassy" and "The Byrds of Paradise".
- Jeff Judah
Jeff Judah is one of the creators of ABC's tv series "Life As We Know It" along with Gabe Sachs.
- Nick Santora
Nick Santora is a writer and producer born in Queens, New York. Santora graduated from Columbia Law School and practiced law for five years before giving up full-time practice to write and produce television. He won the Best Screenplay of the Competition in the New York Independent International Film Festival. He has also written and/or produced "The Sopranos", "The Guardian", "Law & Order", …
- Paris Barclay
Paris KC Barclay (born June 30, 1956 in Chicago, Illinois) is an African-American television director and producer. Since the early 1990s, he has been a noted director of television drama programs. He won two Emmy Awards as well as a Directors Guild of America award for directing episodes of "NYPD Blue", among numerous nominations.
- Mark Verheiden
Mark Verheiden is an American television, movie, and comic book writer. He currently writes for the "Battlestar Galactica "TV-series, as well as a new project with Bruce Campbell called "My Name is Bruce". Verheiden has also contributed to scripts for "The Mask", "Timecop" and the "Smallville" television-show. He is also the executive producer of the latter. He is also a well-respected comic book writer, …
- Tim Minear
Tim Minear (born October 29, 1963) is an American screenwriter and director. He was born in New York, grew up in Whittier, California, and studied film at California State University, Long Beach. Minear was an assistant director on the film "Platoon", and wrote episodes for several television series including "The X-Files" and "Lois and Clark". He later wrote, executive-produced, and directed episodes of "Strange World", "Angel", …
- Genndy Tartakovsky
Genndy Tartakovsky (Russian: Геннадий Тартаковский (Gyennadiy Tartakovskiy), born January 17, 1970) is an Emmy Award-winning Russian-born American animator. His work is influenced heavily by American comic books, pop culture, and Japanese anime. He is best known for the television series "Dexter's Laboratory", "Samurai Jack" and "Star Wars: Clone Wars".
- Jay Kogen
Jay Kogen is an American comedy writer. He has co-written several episodes of "The Simpsons" along with former writing partner Wallace Wolodarsky. Since then, he has written for several shows, including an Emmy Award winning stint at "Frasier". He is the son of "Mad" writer Arnie Kogen. Kogen also made an appearance in "The Aristocrats".
- Matt Witten
Matthew Witten (birth date unknown) is the brother of Edward Witten, a string theorist and the founder of M-Theory. He is a screenwriter for "House" and other shows. He is also a writer of several mystery books, the first of which was "Breakfast at Madeline's". He currently resides in Los Angeles with his wife and two sons. He is credited as the writer for the Supernatural episode No Exit which centres on the ghost of H. H. Holmes.
- Alexa Junge
Alexa Junge is an Emmy-nominated screenwriter and television producer. She is best known for her work with the series "Friends", for which she worked as writer, story editor, and co-executive producer. Junge also worked with the shows "Sex and the City", "The West Wing", "Once and Again", and "Big Love". Early in her career, she worked as a writer for the children's series "Clarissa Explains It All".
- Rodney Rothman
Rodney Rothman is an Emmy-nominated American screenwriter, television producer, and author. In 2005, he wrote the book "Early Bird: A Memoir of Premature Retirement".
- Jon Beckerman
Jon Beckerman is a producer, director and writer best known for his projects with Rob Burnett. He was born in 1969.
- Damian Kindler
Damian Kindler (born in Melbourne, Australia) is an Australian-born Canadian writer and producer. He immigrated to Toronto, Canada, when he was very young He is most noted for his contributions to the Stargate SG-1 and Stargate: Atlantis television series. He joined the Stargate production team at the start of the SG-1's Sixth season in 2002. Since then he has been both writer and producer for the series. He is also the creator and co-writer of the upcoming web-series, …