Greggory Nations
Greggory "Gregg" Nations is an American television writer and script coordinator. He wrote several episodes for The District and Nash Bridges with Carlton Cuse. Nations is a co-producer of the television show Lost,[1] and created its Bible after re-reading the scripts and creating a timeline.
He was nominated for a Writers Guild of America Award for Best Dramatic Series at the February 2009 ceremony for his work on the fourth season of Lost.[2] The writing staff was nominated for the award again at the February 2010 ceremony for their work on the fifth season.[3]
Lost episodes
- "Eggtown" (Season 4, Episode 4) with Elizabeth Sarnoff
- "Some Like It Hoth" (Season 5, Episode 13) with Melinda Hsu Taylor
- "Ab Aeterno" (Season 6, Episode 9) with Melinda Hsu Taylor
gollark: Everyone loves vast quantities of highly dubiously useful data!
gollark: My laptop and any recent Intel iGPU-having thing has VP9 hardware encoding capability, but when I tried that the filesize was way bigger than with software encoding; it's likely I just needed to tune it somehow, but I couldn't be bothered.
gollark: VP9 did work and encoding happened at not *unusably* awful speeds (0.25x).
gollark: I tried compiling AV1 encoders for some reason (I think seeing how ridiculously small I could make some videos without terrible quality?) but one of the things I couldn't get working and the others were either bad somehow or horribly slow.
gollark: Kind of bad performance generally, though.
References
- Edward Wyatt (January 15, 2009). "The Man Who Makes Sense of 'Lost'". The New York Times. Retrieved July 28, 2015.
- "2009 Writers Guild Awards Television, Radio, News, Promotional Writing, and Graphic Animation Nominees Announced". WGA. 2008. Archived from the original on 2008-12-12. Retrieved 2008-12-12.
- "2010 Writers Guild Awards Television, Radio, News, Promotional Writing, and Graphic Animation Nominees Announced". WGA. 2009. Archived from the original on 2010-01-29. Retrieved 2010-04-15.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.