Phil Baker and Drew Vaupen
Phil Baker and Drew Vaupen are an American television writing and producing team. They created the children's sitcom Good Luck Charlie for Disney Channel.[1] Some of their other television credits include Pig Sty, Suddenly Susan, Almost Perfect, Common Law, Rodney and Sonny with a Chance.[2] The writing team has been honored with two Kids' BAFTA awards and three Emmy nominations for Outstanding Children's Series.
Credits
- Pig Sty (1995, writers, 8 episodes)
- Almost Perfect (1995, creative consultant for 8 episodes, writers for 1 episode)
- Common Law (1996, writers, 1 episode)
- George and Leo (1997, writers, 1 episode)
- Suddenly Susan (1997–1999, producers and writers)
- Love & Money (1999, writers)
- The Weber Show (2000, writers)
- Men, Women & Dogs (2001, writers)
- Maybe It's Me (2001–2002, consulting producers, writers for 1 episode)
- What I Like About You (2002–2003, executive producers for 13 episodes, writers for 1 episode)
- Rodney (2004–2006, co-executive producers, supervising producers and writers)
- Sonny with a Chance (2009, supervising producers for 11 episodes, writers for 2 episodes)
- Good Luck Charlie (2010–2014, creators, executive producers and writers)
- Best of Luck Nikki (2011-2016, creators and writers)
- Good Luck Charlie, It's Christmas! (2011, executive producers)
gollark: There was that interesting paper where someone used genetic algorithms to automatically design a circuit of some kind on a FPGA, and it came up with an incomprehensible but very effective design which used weird properties of the hardware a human wouldn't consider.
gollark: You throw big piles of training data and computing power at a neural network and it "learns" to do some task or other, but a human looking at the net might have no clue how it's managing it.
gollark: Actually, with lots of modern AI stuff people *don't* understand exactly how they work.
gollark: I mean, what are paper signatures actually verifying? That you... can print/write, somehow, a vaguely correct-looking squiggle on the page?
gollark: cryptographic signatures > paper signatures
References
- Good Luck Charlie description at disneychannelmedianet.com Archived 2011-01-22 at the Wayback Machine
- Owen, Rob (4 April 2010). "Tuned In: Disney Channel hopes "Good Luck Charlie" will appeal to both kids and parents". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Retrieved 25 January 2011.
External links
- Phil Baker on IMDb
- Drew Vaupen on IMDb
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.