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Aseem Batra
Aseem Batra
from Wikipedia

Aseem Batra is an American television director, producer and actress.

Key Information

Biography

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Born in Ohio to Punjabi immigrants from India, she moved to rural Georgia at the age of three and Orange County, California at twelve. She was a communications and theater double major at the University of California, San Diego before going to graduate school for communications management at the University of Southern California.[1]

Batra was a producer and writer on Scrubs, where she also played the character Josephine.[2] In 2009, she began writing and producing on The Cleveland Show. Mike Henry, commenting on being a white man voicing the African American Cleveland Brown, noted how the character's stereotypical redneck neighbors were voiced by black actor Kevin Michael Richardson and Batra.[3] As a producer, Batra was part of the nomination of the episode "Murray Christmas" for Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Animated Program at the 63rd Primetime Emmy Awards.[4]

In February 2015, it was announced that Batra would write a "politically incorrect" sitcom pilot for NBC alongside the Russo brothers, with whom she had previously worked on Animal Practice and an unfinished semi-autobiographical comedy.[5] Three years later, the same network picked up an untitled project written by Batra and executive produced alongside Amy Poehler;[6] it aired in September as I Feel Bad, which ran for a single, 13-episode season.[7]

References

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from Grokipedia
Aseem Batra is an American television writer and producer known for his work on sitcoms including Scrubs, Cougar Town, Happy Endings, Better Off Ted, Mixology, and Superstore. He began his career as a writer on Scrubs during its later seasons and has credits as writer, supervising producer, co-executive producer, and executive producer on multiple comedy series. In 2022, Batra co-created the NBC sitcom Lopez vs. Lopez with comedian George Lopez, serving as executive producer and writer on the series that centers on the comedic tensions and reconciliations within a multigenerational Mexican-American family running a business together.

Early life and education

Aseem Batra was born on December 28, 1975, in Ohio, USA. She grew up in Georgia and moved to Orange County, California, at age twelve. Batra earned a double major in communications and theater from the University of California, San Diego. She subsequently completed graduate studies in communications management at the University of Southern California.

Career

Work on Scrubs

Aseem Batra joined the ABC comedy series Scrubs as a writer beginning in its fifth season. He received writing credits on six episodes across seasons 5 to 8. His involvement extended to production roles, where he served as story editor in season 6, executive story editor in season 7, and co-producer in season 8. He won the Humanitas Prize for writing the season 5 episode "My Last Words". His contributions to Scrubs provided foundational experience that later transitioned to his work in animated series.

Work on The Cleveland Show

Aseem Batra joined the animated Fox series The Cleveland Show in 2009, transitioning from his writing work on the live-action sitcom Scrubs to contribute to the Family Guy spinoff. He advanced through escalating producer roles on the series, serving as co-producer on 22 episodes, producer on 22 episodes, and supervising producer on 21 episodes across its four-season run. Batra wrote four episodes of The Cleveland Show, provided the teleplay for two additional episodes, and contributed the story to one episode. He also performed extensive voice work, voicing the recurring character Kendra Krinklesac in 40 episodes while providing numerous guest and one-off voices—including various named and unnamed characters—across seasons 1 through 4. Batra contributed to the season 2 episode "Murray Christmas" as both a producer and the voice of Kendra Krinklesac; the episode received a nomination for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Animated Program at the 63rd Primetime Emmy Awards in 2011.

Creation and production of I Feel Bad

Aseem Batra created the NBC sitcom I Feel Bad, drawing from his own experiences as a working parent to craft a series about a woman struggling with the pressures of modern life. The project originated as the untitled Aseem Batra comedy, with Amy Poehler attached as executive producer through her Paper Kite Productions. NBC gave the single-camera half-hour a series order in May 2018, with Batra writing the pilot and serving as executive producer alongside Poehler, Julie Anne Robinson, Dave Becky, and Josh Maurer. Batra served as the series' creator and executive producer on all 13 episodes. He also contributed as a writer on four episodes, including the pilot. I Feel Bad premiered on NBC on September 19, 2018, and aired a single season consisting of 13 episodes before concluding on December 27, 2018. The series was produced by Universal Television, Paper Kite Productions, CannyLads Productions, and 3 Arts Entertainment.

Other television credits

Aseem Batra has taken on a variety of supporting roles as a writer, producer, consulting producer, and voice actress across several television series beyond his primary long-term projects. These contributions include short-term or guest positions that have sustained his involvement in comedy and animation throughout his career. In 2012, Batra served as co-executive producer and writer for one episode of the NBC sitcom Animal Practice, and he also wrote one episode of the short-lived series Bent. In 2014, he acted as consulting producer and writer for one episode of Bad Judge. He later wrote one episode of Marlon in 2017, and in 2018 he was consulting producer while writing one episode of A.P. Bio. Batra wrote one episode of Sunnyside in 2019. He has provided guest voice work, including the role of Naiya in a 2015 episode of black-ish. Batra's most extensive involvement in this category came with the animated series Duncanville (2020–2022), where he wrote teleplays for three episodes, contributed stories to two episodes, and voiced multiple characters including Carrie Heffernan and Brendell. These diverse credits have helped bridge gaps between his more prominent showrunning and long-term positions.

Role in the Scrubs revival

Aseem Batra is set to serve as executive producer and solo showrunner for the upcoming revival of Scrubs on ABC. Following creative differences, co-showrunner Tim Hobert stepped down from the project, leaving Batra as the sole showrunner. Prior to Hobert's departure, the two had co-written the revival's opening episode. The revival, which continues the story of the original series' characters, is currently in pre-production as of 2025. This position represents Batra's return to the Scrubs franchise, building on his earlier contributions to the series.

Awards and recognition

Awards and nominations

Aseem Batra has received recognition for her contributions to television comedy writing and production through awards and nominations. She won the Humanitas Prize in 2009 for her script for the Scrubs episode "My Last Words". Batra shared a Primetime Emmy Award nomination for Outstanding Animated Program for the The Cleveland Show episode "Murray Christmas" at the 63rd Primetime Emmy Awards in 2011, credited as a producer alongside the show's executive and production team.
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