Gerald Gardner (scriptwriter)

Gerald Gardner (born (1929-07-22)July 22, 1929) is an American author, scriptwriter, screenwriter, comics writer, story editor and producer who was active in the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s. Gardner frequently teamed with his longtime writing partner, Dee Caruso, for their work.[1][2]

Career

He wrote 22 episodes of The Monkees and 11 of Get Smart, including "The Amazing Harry Hoo", "Washington 4, Indians 3", and "Diplomat's Daughter" (featuring The Craw). Get Smart episodes he worked on were nominated for Primetime Emmy Awards.

Gardner was a senior writer on the live broadcasts of That Was The Week That Was (TW3), the pioneering NBC-TV series of topical satire.

His producing credits include The Red Skelton Show (19701971). Gardner and Caruso co-wrote the Walt Disney motion picture The World's Greatest Athlete starring Jan-Michael Vincent and John Amos. He is also the author of more than 30 books, including the popular political satire series "Who's In Charge Here?"

In 1963 he also wrote gags for the daily comic strip Miss Caroline: The Little Girl in the Big White House by Frank B. Johnson, about the supposed daughter of the U.S. President. When President Kennedy was murdered later that year the comic strip was instantly cancelled.[3]

Gardner is the father of media executive Lindsay Gardner.

gollark: Yes, I am aware of its desktop-ish nature.
gollark: I have a nice Mandelbrot set renderer which is GPU-accelerated.
gollark: GPUs are mostly useful for parallel computing tasks of some kind. Of course, yours is probably worse than the CPU in your... laptop or whatever, I assume you have one.
gollark: Roughly.
gollark: The unusedosmarksGPU™ can do 2TFLOP/s of compute and probably cause some kind of power supply issue because it's PCIe-powered, and thus shares its electricity with the HDD controller card.

References

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