Donick Cary

Donick Cary is an American writer and producer.

Early life

Cary grew up on Nantucket Island, graduating from Nantucket High School in 1986.

Personal life

He is the son of actors Richard and Mara Cary and the brother of actress Martha Cary, the latter two of whom have done voices for his show Lil' Bush.

Career

He got his start writing for Late Night with David Letterman. He continued working with the show through its move to CBS, serving as both head writer and the "guy in the bear suit".

After five years in Late Night, Cary moved to The Simpsons, where he served as a co-executive producer for four seasons (Seasons 7-11).

He then served in the same capacity on NBC’s Just Shoot Me and Parks and Recreation, HBO’s Bored to Death and Fox’s New Girl. Cary has produced pilots for and developed with: Brillstein Grey, Sony Television, Happy Madison, Conaco, ABC, NBC, CBS, FOX, FX, HBO, the WB and Nickelodeon.

In 2004, Donick created the animated series Lil' Bush for Ampd mobile cell phones. The show was then picked up by Comedy Central and became the first mobi/web-series ever to move from cell phones to television. To handle the animation, Cary founded Sugarshack Animation with offices in Los Angeles, Miami, and Sofia, Bulgaria.

Currently, Cary is writing and producing Silicon Valley for HBO and directing a feature documentary entitled Have a Good Trip (a comic exploration of tripping) for Ben Stiller’s Red Hour Films.

Writing credits

The Simpsons episodes

He has written the following episodes:

Complete Savages episodes

He has written the following episodes:

  • "Bad Reception"
  • "My Two Sons"
  • "The Man Without a Ball"

Projects

gollark: For example, you can buy your partner additional RAM to express your love.
gollark: What if marriage 2?
gollark: But we can't marry 5-6 *at once*; this is a travesty.
gollark: If we are to use normal graphs, they should at least allow applying arbitrary data to the edges.
gollark: Directed hypergraphs might be nontrivial, but I'm sure something can be worked out.

References



    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.