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Dan Guterman

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Dan Guterman (born February 23, 1978) is a Brazilian-born television writer and producer who has lived in Canada and the United States. He was a writer for the satirical website The Onion between 1999 and 2010. He has also worked on The Colbert Report, Community, and Rick and Morty. Guterman has won two Emmy Awards: one in 2013 for his work on The Colbert Report[1] and one in 2018 for his work on season three of Rick and Morty.[2] He also won an Annie Award in 2018 for co-writing the Rick and Morty episode "The Ricklantis Mixup".[3]

Key Information

Life and career

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Born in Brazil on February 23, 1978, Guterman became interested in comedy after watching Saturday Night Live and The Kids in the Hall when he moved to Montreal at age 7—shows that, he said, "genuinely frightened me", as comedy in Brazil was mostly lighthearted in tone.[4]

Having become a writer himself, Guterman later described his profession in writing comedy by saying, "You’re doing this very creative, often very personal thing, but you’re expected to produce it in this totally noncreative way. My job is to churn out comedy, which is this intangible and temperamental thing, but at the rate and consistency of an assembly-line worker."[5] After establishing his television writing presence as a writer on The Colbert Report and receiving an Emmy, Guterman began work with Dan Harmon on Community for its fifth season. This relationship continued, and in 2015 Guterman went on to write for both the sixth and second seasons of Community and Rick and Morty, respectively. He then continued work writing for Rick and Morty's third season, writing the episode "The Ricklantis Mixup" and assisting on several others. Guterman co-wrote "Morty's Mind Blowers", which is referenced within the episode as the replacement to "Interdimensional Cable".[6]

In 2018, Guterman was brought in as a consultant to work on Inside Job, an animated show for Netflix.[7]

Guterman has also worked on At Home With Amy Sedaris and Another Period, as well as various films.[8]

In addition to his television writing career, Guterman penned a short piece for The New Yorker called "New Optical Illusions" .[9]

Credits

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Print
Television

References

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from Grokipedia
Dan Guterman is an American television writer, producer, and showrunner known for his work on satirical news programs and animated series, including head writer roles at The Onion, contributions to The Colbert Report and Community, co-executive producing on Rick and Morty, and creating the Netflix animated miniseries Carol & the End of the World.[1][2][3] Guterman began his career in comedy writing at the satirical news organization The Onion, where he served as head writer from 1999 to 2010, contributing to articles, horoscopes, and the 2007 book Our Dumb World: The Onion's Atlas of Global Ignorance.[2][4][5] He later joined The Colbert Report as a writer from 2010 to 2013, earning recognition for sharp political satire.[3][6] His animation credits include writing and producing for the NBC sitcom Community and serving as a story editor and co-executive producer on Adult Swim's Rick and Morty, where he contributed to acclaimed episodes like "Pickle Rick" and "The Ricklantis Mixup."[3][7] In 2023, Guterman created, wrote, and executive produced Carol & the End of the World, an adult animated dramedy exploring routine and existential themes amid an apocalypse.[8][9] Guterman's work has garnered multiple awards, including two Primetime Emmy Awards—for Outstanding Writing for a Variety Series in 2013 for The Colbert Report and Outstanding Animated Program in 2018 for Rick and Morty—along with a Peabody Award for The Colbert Report's Super PAC segments and an Annie Award for writing on Rick and Morty.[10][11][6] He has also received three Writers Guild of America Awards for Comedy/Variety Series for his contributions to The Colbert Report in 2011, 2013, and 2014.[12][13][14]

Early life and influences

Childhood and relocation

Limited public information is available regarding Dan Guterman's early life and family background.

Introduction to comedy

Guterman developed an interest in comedy without formal training or academic pursuits in the field. He honed his sensibilities through immersion in satirical and sketch-based formats, laying the groundwork for his later comedic style.

Career at The Onion

Entry and roles

Dan Guterman was hired as a writer for the satirical news organization The Onion in December 1999, launching his career in professional comedy writing based on prior informal pursuits in humor and satire.[1][15] Over the course of his employment, Guterman progressed to the role of head writer, a position he shared with Mike DiCenzo by 2007 and continued to hold through the late 2000s, during which he oversaw the production of The Onion's weekly satirical content, including headlines, articles, and special projects.[2][5] Guterman's decade-long tenure at The Onion, spanning from 1999 to June 2010, represented a foundational era in his development as a satirist, coinciding with the organization's expansion into books and video content while solidifying its reputation for absurd, incisive parody.[15]

Contributions to publications

During his tenure at The Onion, Dan Guterman contributed to several print publications that extended the organization's satirical style into book form. One notable project was his co-editing and writing role in Our Dumb World: The Onion's Atlas of the Planet Earth, 73rd Edition (2007), a parody atlas that lampooned global geography, cultures, and politics through faux encyclopedic entries, maps, and infographics. As head writer, Guterman helped oversee the compilation of absurd "facts" about nations.[5] Guterman also contributed to Fanfare for the Area Man: The Onion Ad Nauseam Complete News Archives, Vol. 15 (2004), a collection of satirical headlines and short pieces centered on the archetypal "Area Man" as a self-important everyman. The volume assembled hundreds of Onion articles poking fun at mundane American life, with Guterman's input emphasizing concise, headline-driven humor that amplified the site's signature deadpan tone.[16] Throughout his time at The Onion, Guterman authored hundreds of horoscopes and short satirical pieces, often distilling complex social absurdities into pithy, single-sentence predictions.[1] These contributions exemplified the precision required for the publication's bite-sized formats, influencing its enduring appeal in print compilations.

Television writing career

The Colbert Report

Dan Guterman joined The Colbert Report as a writer in 2010, shortly after leaving his position as head writer at The Onion, where he had honed skills in rapid, concise satirical writing.[3] His prior experience at The Onion provided essential preparation for the show's demanding, fast-paced production environment, requiring daily output of sharp, topical humor.[1] On the program, Guterman contributed to the creation of daily segments and sketches, focusing on tightly constructed jokes that emphasized literal interpretations and brevity to amplify comedic impact.[1] He played a key role in developing the show's character-driven satire, which mimicked the overconfident, right-wing pundit style of Fox News hosts through Stephen Colbert's persona, blending absurdity with pointed political commentary.[1] This approach allowed writers like Guterman to balance multiple variables—setup, punchline, and character consistency—in service of the parody. Guterman remained with The Colbert Report through its final season, departing in 2014 upon the show's conclusion after nine years on air.[17] His tenure represented a significant bridge from print-based satire at The Onion to the visual and performative demands of television comedy.[18]

Community and early animated work

Guterman joined the writing staff of the NBC/Yahoo! sitcom Community for its fifth and sixth seasons (2014–2015), where he focused on crafting ensemble-driven scripts that amplified the series' meta-humor and character interplay at the fictional Greendale Community College. His contributions drew from the sharp satirical timing honed during his tenure on The Colbert Report.[3][19] Notable episodes co-written by Guterman include season 5's "Bondage and Beta Male Sexuality,"[20] which explored interpersonal tensions within the study group, and season 6's "Basic RV Repair and Palmistry,"[21] featuring Abed's cinematic reinterpretation of a road trip mishap. He also co-wrote season 6's "Advanced Safety Features,"[22] blending robotics themes with the group's chaotic dynamics. These scripts emphasized conceptual comedy over plot-heavy narratives, contributing to the show's cult appeal in its later years. After Community, Guterman took on producing roles in live-action comedy, serving as a consulting producer for 10 episodes of the truTV sketch series At Home with Amy Sedaris in 2019. The show, hosted by Amy Sedaris, featured absurd homemaking segments and celebrity guests, where Guterman helped refine its offbeat, improvisational format.[23] Guterman's early steps into animation came in 2017 with his writing credit on the Adult Swim infomercial parody Innovation Makers: The Coyote Suit, a short mockumentary directed by Danny Jelinek that satirized American ingenuity through a fictional wildlife protection gadget. Co-written with John Harris, the special highlighted Guterman's versatility in blending live-action parody with animated elements, signaling his impending shift to full animation projects.[24]

Major animated projects

Rick and Morty

Dan Guterman joined the writing and production team for Rick and Morty starting with its second season in 2015, serving as a co-executive producer and writer through the third season in 2017.[25] In this capacity, he contributed to over 10 episodes, helping shape the series' narrative structure and production during a pivotal period of its growth on Adult Swim. His involvement marked a shift from live-action television writing to full immersion in animated storytelling, leveraging his prior experience in satirical comedy.[3] Guterman's writing credits include the season 2 episode "The Ricks Must Be Crazy," which explores Rick's god-like control over his spaceship's battery through a microverse subplot, blending absurd sci-fi concepts with themes of creation and destruction. He co-wrote "Interdimensional Cable 2: Tempting Fate" with Ryan Ridley and Justin Roiland, featuring a chaotic array of interdimensional TV parodies that highlight the show's penchant for meta-humor and random absurdity.[26] In season 3, Guterman co-wrote "The Ricklantis Mixup" with Ridley, a standout episode delving into the Citadel of Ricks' political intrigue and class divides, emphasizing character-driven satire on bureaucracy and identity.[27] He also co-wrote "Morty's Mind Blowers," an anthology-style installment that examines erased memories and psychological trauma through vignettes, reinforcing the series' exploration of family dynamics and existential dread.[28] Throughout his tenure, Guterman's work emphasized the show's signature absurd sci-fi humor, such as microscopic worlds and memory manipulation, while advancing character arcs for Rick and Morty, particularly their codependent relationship amid multiversal chaos.[29] As producer, he oversaw episodes like "A Rickle in Time," "Mortynight Run," and "Total Rickall," ensuring cohesive storytelling that balanced high-concept adventures with emotional depth. Guterman departed the series after season 3 to pursue other projects, but his contributions left a lasting influence on Rick and Morty's satirical tone, particularly its sharp critique of power structures and human frailty.[30]

Carol & the End of the World

Carol & the End of the World is an American adult animated comedy-drama miniseries created and showrun by Dan Guterman, consisting of 10 episodes that premiered on Netflix on December 15, 2023.[31] Produced by Netflix Animation, the series marks Guterman's major independent project in animation, shifting from staff writing roles to full creative control.[19] As executive producer, Guterman oversaw the production, drawing on his prior experience in animated comedy to craft a narrative that balances existential themes with subtle wit.[8] The premise follows Carol, a reserved office worker voiced by Martha Kelly, who clings to her mundane daily routines—such as filing paperwork at her office supply job—even as a massive rogue planet, Keppler, approaches Earth, triggering global societal breakdown and widespread hedonism.[31] Guterman's story explores Carol's quiet quest for meaning and connection in her final days, contrasting her aversion to chaos with the uninhibited behaviors of those around her, including family and newfound friends at her workplace.[32] This setup blends dark humor with empathetic depth, portraying the apocalypse not as a catalyst for adventure but as a backdrop that illuminates the comforts of normalcy and human bonds.[9] Guterman received full writing credits for the series' overall story and all 10 episodes, collaborating with writers such as Kevin Arrieta and Noah Prestwich on teleplays.[33] His scripts emphasize character-driven vignettes that build emotional resonance, with episodes like "Feeling Adrift..." introducing Carol's isolation and later ones delving into interpersonal dynamics amid escalating end-times absurdity.[34] Critics praised the series for its innovative handling of themes like routine versus chaos, highlighting Guterman's ability to evoke empathy through understated animation and dialogue. In 2025, it received a nomination for the GLAAD Media Award for Outstanding Limited or Anthology Series.[35] The show earned a 100% Tomatometer score on Rotten Tomatoes from 18 reviews, with outlets commending its "love letter to routine" and fresh take on apocalyptic tropes.[36] Building on his work as a writer for Rick and Morty, Guterman incorporated a distinctive animated style that prioritizes psychological nuance over high-energy antics.[19]

Awards and recognition

Emmy and Annie Awards

Dan Guterman received the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Writing for a Variety Series in 2013 for his contributions to The Colbert Report, a satirical news program on Comedy Central known for its sharp political commentary and humor.[14][37] The award was shared with the writing team, including head writer Opus Moreschi, Paul Dinello, Nate Charny, and Bobby Mort, recognizing episodes from the 2012-2013 season that exemplified excellence in scripted variety television.[38] In 2018, Guterman earned a Primetime Emmy for Outstanding Animated Program as co-executive producer for the third season of Rick and Morty, an Adult Swim series blending science fiction adventure with dark comedy.[7][14] The win, shared with producers including Dan Harmon, Justin Roiland, Mike McMahan, and others, highlighted the season's innovative storytelling, particularly in episodes like "Pickle Rick," which pushed boundaries in adult animation.[39] That same year, Guterman won an Annie Award for Outstanding Achievement for Writing in an Animated Television/Broadcast Production for co-writing the Rick and Morty episode "The Ricklantis Mixup," shared with Ryan Ridley.[40][41] The episode, a political allegory set in a citadel of Ricks, was praised for its layered narrative and satirical depth, contributing to Rick and Morty's dominance in television animation accolades.[42]

Writers Guild and Peabody Awards

Dan Guterman earned three Writers Guild of America (WGA) Awards for Outstanding Writing for a Comedy/Variety Series (Including Talk) for his contributions to The Colbert Report, winning in 2011 alongside writers Barry Julien, Eric Drysdale, Frank Lesser, Glenn Eichler, Jay Katsir, Max Werner, and Meredith Scardino; in 2012 with Michael Brumm, Stephen Colbert, Rich Dahm, Paul Dinello, Eric Drysdale, Rob Dubbin, Glenn Eichler, Peter Gwinn, Barry Julien, Jay Katsir, Frank Lesser, Opus Moreschi, Tom Purcell, Meredith Scardino, Scott Sherman, and Max Werner; and in 2014 with Stephen Colbert, Rich Dahm, Paul Dinello, Eric Drysdale, Rob Dubbin, Glenn Eichler, Peter Gwinn, Barry Julien, Jay Katsir, Frank Lesser, Opus Moreschi, Tom Purcell, Meredith Scardino, Scott Sherman, and Max Werner.[12][43][44] He was also nominated for the same category in 2013.[14] These honors recognized the sharp satirical writing that defined Guterman's early television career, building on his foundational experience at The Onion. In 2012, Guterman shared in a Peabody Award for the Colbert Report's "Super PAC" segments, which satirized political fundraising through fictional advocacy groups and earned acclaim for blending humor with journalistic insight into campaign finance.[45] The award highlighted the writing team's role, including Guterman, in producing content that influenced public discourse on election integrity.[45] Extending his recognition into animated projects, Guterman's series Carol & the End of the World received a 2025 GLAAD Media Award nomination for Outstanding Limited or Anthology Series, acknowledging its sensitive portrayal of queer relationships amid apocalyptic themes.

References

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