Television show creator
A Television show creator is a screenwriter who creates a Television show.
WGA Rules
changeAccording to the Writers Guild of America, the Creator is either the writer who creates the TV format of the show or the writer who writes the Pilot episode. If no one wrote a TV format then the person who wrote the first episode is the Creator of the show. If one person wrote the TV format and another person wrote the first episode then three people who weren’t involved yet try to figure out if the first episode were different enough from the TV format that the person who wrote it counts as the Creator. [1]
The WGA says its different enough from the TV format if it changed one (or more) of these things[1]
1) The setting
2) The theme or point of view
3) The premise or general storyline
4) The central running characters
5) The interplay among the characters
6) The flavour, style, or attitude
WGGB Rules
changeAccording to the Writer’s Guild of Great Britain, the person whose name follows “created by” on British television is the person who wrote the pilot screenplay, the series pitch document and the Series Bible. If different people wrote them then the show has more than one creator. [2]
The “series pitch document” is a five to ten page document explaining what a show will be about. [3]
Co-Creators
changeSometimes both writers get the credit and are called co-creators. [4]
Examples
changeCraig Bartlett created Hey Arnold!
Gene Roddenberry created Star Trek and Star Trek: The Next Generation.
Marc Brown created Arthur
John A. Davis created The Adventures of Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius.
Chris Gifford created Dora the Explorer
Matt Groening created The Simpsons, Futurama and Disenchantment.
Stephen Hillenburg created SpongeBob SquarePants
Butch Hartman created The Fairly OddParents, Danny Phantom, Tuff Puppy and Bunsen is a Beast.
References
change- ↑ "Determining Separated Rights on a Television Series". www.wga.org. Retrieved 2024-06-24.