Craig Carlson

Craig Carlson is an American soap opera (Daytime television) writer.

Positions held

All My Children

  • Breakdown Writer (October 1997 - April 2002)

Another World

  • Co-Head Writer (August 1995 - May 1996; January 1997 - April 1997)
  • Breakdown Writer (1993 - August 1995; May 1996 - January 1997; April 1997 - October 1997)

Capitol

Guiding Light

  • Breakdown Writer (1995)

Loving

  • Script Writer (1992-1993)

One Life to Live

  • Co-Head Writer (1990-1991)
  • Breakdown Writer (1985-1990)
  • Script Writer (1982-1985)

Awards and nominations

Daytime Emmy Awards

WINS

  • (1987; Best Writing; One Life to Live)
  • (1998; Best Writing; All My Children)

NOMINATIONS

  • (1983, 1990 & 1992; Best Writing; One Life to Live)
  • (1994 & 1996; Best Writing; Another World)
  • (1999, 2001, 2002 & 2003; Best Writing; All My Children)

Writers Guild of America Award

WINS

  • (1994 season; Loving)
  • (1999, 2001 & 2002 seasons; All My Children)

NOMINATIONS

  • (1984 season; Capitol)
  • (1987 season; One Life to Live)
  • (1994, 1995 & 1998 seasons; Another World)
  • (1996 season; Guiding Light)
  • (2000 season; All My Children)

Head Writing Tenure

Preceded by
S. Michael Schnessel
Head Writer of One Life to Live (with Leah Laiman: September 1990 — May 1991)
September 1990-August 1991
Succeeded by
Michael Malone
Preceded by
Carolyn Culliton
Head Writer of Another World (with Tom King)
August 1995-May 1996
Succeeded by
Margaret DePriest
Preceded by
Margaret DePriest
Head Writer of Another World (with Tom King)
(with Elizabeth Page: January 1997 - March 1997)

January 1997-April 1997
Succeeded by
Michael Malone
gollark: You may only ask dishonest questions.
gollark: VPNs prevent ISPs from seeing all this except possibly to some extent #3, but the VPN provider can still see it, and obviously whatever service you connect to has any information sent to it.
gollark: Anyway, with HTTPS being a thing basically everywhere and DNS over HTTPS existing, ISPs can only see:- unencrypted traffic from programs/services which don't use HTTPS or TLS- the *domains* you visit (*not* pages, and definitely not their contents, just domains) - DNS over HTTPS doesn't prevent this because as far as I know it's still in plaintext in HTTPS requestts- metadata about your connection/packets/whatever- also the IPs you visit, but the domains are arguably more useful anyway
gollark: On my (GNU/)Linux computing devices, which is all of my non-portable ones, I run dnscrypt-proxy, which acts as a local DNS server which runs my queries through DNS over HTTPS/DNS over TLS/DNSCrypt servers.
gollark: In other news, the first rule of tautology club is the first rule of tautology club.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.