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Difference between revisions of "George Meyer"

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Revision as of 17:42, November 2, 2011

George Meyer
Crew Information
Gender: Male
Job: Executive producer
Co-executive producer
Producer
Co-producer
Supervising producer
Writer
Creative consultant
Birth date: 1956
Status:
Inactive
Number of episodes: 301
First episode: "Life on the Fast Lane"
Most recent episode: "Marge and Homer Turn a Couple Play"


This article is about George Meyer the writer. For the character, see George Meyer (character).

George Meyer (born 1956) is a producer and writer for The Simpsons, and arguably the writer who has contributed the most to the show over its long run. In 2000, Meyer was called the "the funniest man behind the funniest show on TV" by The New Yorker. He was born in 1956

Biography

Born in Pennsylvania in 1956 Meyer grew up in Arizona, the eldest child of eight in a Roman Catholic family of mostly German people descent. Meyer has made frequent jokes about his somewhat unhappy childhood, stating in an audio commentary that one of the frequent arguments in his household was "which family member ruined a holiday". He attended Doolen Junior High and Catalina High School in Tucson, Az. An excellent student, Meyer later went on to Harvard University, where he served as president of the Harvard Lampoon, a comedy magazine at Harvard University. Meyer graduated from Harvard in 1978 with a degree in biochemistry. After college, Meyer became a writer for Late Night with David Letterman, Not Necessarily The News, The New Show, and Saturday Night Live. In 1987, Meyer founded the legendary humor zine Army Man, which attained a cult following. One of its readers was Sam Simon, who was a producer on a new animated sitcom called The Simpsons. In 1989 Simon asked Meyer to join the writing staff, and he has remained there intermittently ever since. In 2005 he wrote for the TBS special Earth To America. He was one of the writers for The Simpsons Movie.

Trivia

  • Raised Roman Catholic, but later became an atheist.
  • Is a fan of the Grateful Dead
  • Was the editor of "The Harvard Lampoon Book of College Life" (Doubleday & Co., Inc. 1978).
  • His hobbies include gambling and collecting space travel-related memorabilia
  • Once won a little over 2,000 dollars on Jeopardy!
  • A strict vegetarian, as well as a practitioner of yoga
  • Has a daughter with author Maria Semple named Poppy Valentina after Valentina Tereshkova, the first woman in space.
  • According to David X. Cohen, Meyer once attempted to live on a "flavorless mush," believing it to be a moral victory if he succeeded. However, he did not last long in his attempt.
  • Has a cameo in the 2004 film I ♥ Huckabees. He appears near the end as the annoyed tuxedoed man in an elevator with Jude Law and Jason Schwartzman.
  • In 2005, a newly discovered species of frog from Sri Lanka was named Philautus Poppiae after Meyer's daughter, Poppy, for his and his girlfriend's dedication to the Global Amphibian Assessment.
  • Wrote a full length screenplay for David Letterman, which was never produced after Letterman's talk show really took off. It is considered a masterpiece by those who have seen it, and a copy remains in The Simpsons re-write room that the show's writers occasionally consult when they are in need of a joke.
  • Wrote an unproduced episode of The Simpsons which, although deemed hilarious, went unproduced as it would have led to serious legal ramifications and personally offended several staff/cast members.
  • Meyer can be seen in the audience of season 3 Mr. Show episode 310, "It's A No Brainer." He is visible in the first few minutes of the show as the long-haired, bespectacled man sitting behind the "protestors."

Credited episodes

Writer

Showrunner