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Ken Keeler

 
Wikipedia: Ken Keeler

Kenneth Keeler (Born 1961) is an American comic writer and producer. He has written for numerous TV series, most notably The Simpsons and Futurama.

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Biography

After graduating from St. John's School in Houston, Texas, he studied applied mathematics at Harvard University, graduating summa cum laude in 1983. He earned a Ph.D. in applied mathematics in 1990; his doctoral thesis was on Map Representations and Optimal Encoding for Image Segmentation.

After earning his doctorate, Keeler joined the Performance Analysis Department at AT&T Bell Laboratories. He soon left Bell Labs to write for David Letterman and subsequently for various sitcoms, including several episodes of Wings, News Radio, The Simpsons (where he caught harsh criticism from fans for writing the season nine episode "The Principal and the Pauper"), Futurama, and The Critic, as well as the short-lived Fox claymation show The PJs.

Keeler was instrumental in the creation of Futurama, and served as a co-executive producer in its first three years, and as an executive producer in its fourth year. He was one of the show's most prolific writers, with nine episodes to his name (including the original series finale, "The Devil's Hands Are Idle Playthings", and the Writers Guild Award-winning episode "Godfellas"). Keeler wrote many of the original songs on both The Simpsons and Futurama during his time with the shows. He also wrote the direct-to-DVD Futurama movies Bender's Big Score and Into the Wild Green Yonder.

Keeler is also a fan of (but of no relation to) Harry Stephen Keeler and won the 2001 Fifth and 2008 TwelfthAnnual Imitate Keeler Competitions. His Futurama episode "Time Keeps on Slippin'" was partly inspired by the (Harry Stephen) Keeler story "Strange Romance" from the novel Y. Cheung, Business Detective.

Having cowritten a paper[1] with Jeff Westbrook, Keeler has an Erdős number of 4.

Writing credits

The Simpsons episodes

Futurama episodes

References

  1. ^ Keeler, K. and Westbrook, J., "Short Encodings of Planar Graphs and Maps", Discrete Applied Mathematics 58, No. 3 (April 1995), pp. 239-252.

External links


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