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Jeffrey Paul Rake[1] is an American television producer and writer. He is known for his work on Boston Legal and creating the NBC shows Manifest, The Mysteries of Laura and Miss Match.[2]

Key Information

Biography

[edit]

Rake was born in Philadelphia and grew up in Encino, Los Angeles.[3] He attended Harvard-Westlake School and graduated from Columbia University in 1990.[4][5] He was the president of Columbia College Student Council during his senior year.[6] At Columbia, he was also a classmate of television producer Gina Fattore and Academy Award-winning film producer Dede Gardner.[7]

He received a J.D. degree from UC Berkeley School of Law, where he was a finalist in the James Patterson McBaine Honors Moot Court Competition and an executive editor of the California Law Review.[8][9]

After graduating from law school, Rake clerked for two federal judges, Judge Stanley Brotman of the District of New Jersey and Judge Majorie Rendell of the Eastern District of Pennsylvania then joined one of L.A.'s top law firms, Irell & Manella. During his tenure as a lawyer, he took a leave of absence and wrote the musical Hound Dog: A hip hOpera, an alternative history of Elvis Presley starring Wayne Brady.[10] The play premiered in 1996 in Los Angeles.[10]

Rake then entered the television business and co-created the Fox series The Street in 2000. He then put his legal knowledge to work by writing and producing episodes of Boston Legal and The Practice.[3] He co-wrote the pilot for Boston Legal, co-created the series Miss Match and The Mysteries of Laura.[11]

In 2017, he created Manifest. The show was initially cancelled, but was picked up by Netflix and became the third show to reach 100 days in Netflix's Top 10 charts.[12] In August 2021, the show was renewed for a fourth season.[13][14]

Los Angeles Times called him a member of the "Ex-Lawyers Club," a group of television showrunners, producers, and writers who were once lawyers before switching careers and joining the entertainment industry. Other ex-lawyers named by the Times were David E. Kelley, Carol Mendelsohn, Richard Appel, and Stephen Engel.[15]

In June 2025, it was reported that he was co-authoring a science fiction novel that was also under consideration for development as a TV series.[16]

Personal life and family

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Rake is married to Paulette Light, executive director of the Charles Bronfman prize, who he met in college.[4][17] They have four children together. He is Jewish.[18] "As a Jewish writer, I’m inspired by Jewish themes of redemption, second chances and Tikkun olam,” he told the Jewish Journal. “We come to discover that the characters [on Manifest] are flawed human beings who’ve been given a second chance, an opportunity to redeem themselves."

Filmography

[edit]
Select film and television work by Jeff Rake
Year Title Screenwriter Executive producer Creator Notes
2000–2001 The Street Yes Yes Yes Rake's television debut, wrote 4 episodes
2003 Miss Match Yes Yes Yes Wrote 6 episodes
2004 Boston Legal Yes Yes No Co-wrote pilot episode
2008 Cashmere Mafia Yes Yes No Wrote 1 episode
2013–2014 The Tomorrow People Yes No No Wrote 6 episodes
2014–2016 The Mysteries of Laura Yes Yes Yes Wrote 9 episodes
2018–2023 Manifest Yes Yes Yes Wrote 10 episodes

References

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from Grokipedia
Jeff Rake is an American television writer and producer best known for creating and serving as showrunner on the supernatural drama series Manifest, which aired on NBC from 2018 to 2023 before concluding on Netflix.[1][2] Born Jeffrey Rake in Los Angeles, California, on June 19, 1966, he initially pursued a career in law after attending college and law school before transitioning to entertainment.[3][4] Early in his writing career, Rake co-created the financial drama The $treet for Fox in 2000 and the romantic comedy Miss Match for NBC in 2003, both of which he executive produced.[1][2] He also contributed as a writer and co-wrote the pilot for the legal series Boston Legal on ABC, and worked as a consulting producer on shows including Bones (Fox), Beauty and the Beast (The CW), Franklin & Bash and Hawthorne (TNT).[1][2] Rake's breakthrough came with the development and executive production of the procedural comedy The Mysteries of Laura, starring Debra Messing, which ran for two seasons on NBC from 2014 to 2016 and was broadcast in over 100 countries.[1][2] His most prominent work, Manifest, conceived during a family flight delay, blends elements of mystery, science fiction, and family drama, following passengers of a flight that lands after disappearing for years, and became a major hit with a dedicated fanbase that influenced its revival on Netflix.[1][2] In addition to television, Rake has written screenplays for studios like MGM and Disney, and in 1996, he created the Elvis Presley-themed hip-hop musical Hound Dog: A Hip hOpera for the Hudson Avenue Theatre.[1][4] More recently, in June 2025, Rake announced his debut novel Detour, co-authored with Rob Hart and scheduled for publication by Penguin Random House on January 13, 2026, with plans for a potential TV adaptation.[1][5] Rake resides in Los Angeles with his wife and multiple children, and continues to develop projects for Warner Bros. Television.[1][4]

Early life and education

Early years

Jeffrey Paul Rake was born on June 19, 1966, in Los Angeles, California.[3][6] Rake was raised in Encino, a suburban neighborhood in Los Angeles, California, where he spent much of his childhood.[7] This environment immersed him in the culturally rich and entertainment-oriented setting of Southern California, shaping his early experiences amid a stable suburban backdrop.[8] Rake grew up in a traditional Jewish family, participating in milestones such as bar mitzvah and youth programs like United Synagogue Youth and Camp Hess Kramer.[8] His formative years fostered interests in storytelling and performance, influenced by Los Angeles' proximity to media and theater scenes; by high school, he actively engaged in speech, debate, and drama activities.[8]

Academic background

Rake, raised in Encino, California, pursued his undergraduate education on the East Coast, earning a Bachelor of Arts degree from Columbia University's Columbia College in 1990.[9] During his time at Columbia, he contributed opinion pieces to the student newspaper, the Columbia Daily Spectator, including a 1989 article critiquing campus phone systems.[10] Following his undergraduate studies, Rake returned to the West Coast to attend the University of California, Berkeley School of Law, where he earned a Juris Doctor degree in 1994.[11] At Berkeley Law, he distinguished himself academically as a finalist in the 1993 Charles T. McBaine Moot Court Competition.[12]

Professional career

After earning his J.D. from the University of California, Berkeley School of Law in 1993, Jeff Rake commenced his legal career with clerkships for two federal judges. These positions provided him with foundational experience in the judiciary shortly after graduation.[13][12] In the mid-1990s, Rake joined Irell & Manella LLP, a prominent Los Angeles-based law firm specializing in litigation, intellectual property, and entertainment law. During his tenure there, he engaged in general litigation practice, contributing to the firm's high-stakes cases in these areas. His time at the firm lasted several years, marking a period of professional development in a competitive legal environment.[13][11] Rake's decision to depart from the legal profession came after taking a leave of absence in 1996, which prompted a reevaluation of his career path and ultimately led him to pivot away from law entirely. This shift occurred in the late 1990s, closing a relatively brief but intensive chapter in his professional life.[13]

Transition to entertainment

After practicing entertainment law at the firm Irell & Manella in Los Angeles, which exposed him to the creative side of the industry, Jeff Rake sought opportunities to explore his writing ambitions beyond legal work.[13] In 1996, Rake took a leave of absence from his legal position to write and produce his first major creative project, the musical Hound Dog: A Hip hOpera, a satirical blend of hip-hop and rock 'n' roll that reimagined the life of Elvis Presley.[13] The concept centered on two modern-day "posse" members who time-travel back to the 1950s to teach a young Elvis (played by Lance Zitron) the art of rap, sparking his iconic musical style and career, while incorporating elements like a Rasta-influenced number and an imagined duet with Barbra Streisand.[14] Directed by Richard Hochberg and featuring rising performer Wayne Brady alongside Kevin Williams, the production ran for limited performances at the Hudson Avenue Theatre in Hollywood from late November through December 20, 1996, with shows on Wednesdays through Fridays at 8 p.m. and tickets priced at $20.[14][13] The musical's reception was mixed, praised for its energetic performances and humorous moments but criticized as disjointed and overly ambitious in fusing musical genres, ultimately described as a "theatrical black hole" that failed to fully coalesce despite its lively execution.[14] This endeavor marked a pivotal epiphany for Rake, confirming his desire to transition fully into entertainment rather than return to law, though he initially balanced the career shift by leveraging his legal expertise in early Hollywood networking.[13] Following the production, Rake pursued writing gigs, including spec scripts, and secured agent representation, which facilitated his entry into television development while he continued part-time legal duties to support the change.[13] The challenges of this pivot included the financial and professional risks of leaving a stable legal career for the uncertain creative field, compounded by the need to build connections in a competitive industry without traditional entry-level writing experience.[13]

Television production and writing

Rake entered television production in the early 2000s, co-creating the Fox drama series The $treet with Darren Star, where he served as executive producer and writer for multiple episodes across its single season of 12 produced installments, with seven airing between 2000 and 2001.[15] His collaboration with Star highlighted Rake's ability to blend financial intrigue with character-driven storytelling in a Wall Street setting.[16] Building on this foundation, Rake co-wrote the pilot episode "Head Cases" for ABC's Boston Legal in 2004, partnering with Scott Kaufer and creator David E. Kelley, and contributed as an executive producer for the show's first season, drawing on his legal background to shape courtroom narratives.[2] This role marked his deeper involvement in legal procedurals, emphasizing ensemble dynamics and moral dilemmas under Kelley's guidance.[3] In the ensuing years, Rake worked as a consulting producer on several series, including Bones (Fox, 2005–2017), Hawthorne (TNT, 2009–2011), Franklin & Bash (TNT, 2011–2014), and Beauty and the Beast (The CW, 2012–2016).[1][2] Rake's career evolved toward developing and showrunning procedural dramas, often infusing them with serialized mystery elements. He created and executive produced NBC's Miss Match in 2003, a romantic comedy procedural centered on matchmaking and legal cases, followed by The Mysteries of Laura (2014–2016), where he led as showrunner for the procedural comedy-drama starring Debra Messing as a detective balancing motherhood and investigations.[6] His most notable contribution in this vein is Manifest (2018–2023), co-developed with Robert Zemeckis, for which Rake served as creator, showrunner, and executive producer, guiding the supernatural procedural through intricate plotlines involving time anomalies and family secrets across four seasons.[17] The streaming era significantly impacted Rake's work, particularly with Manifest, which transitioned from NBC to Netflix after its 2021 cancellation, allowing for a revived fourth season in 2023 that concluded the series.[18] This move underscored the platform's role in extending broadcast series, as Manifest amassed over 78 million viewing hours in its final week's debut and became the third show in Netflix history to accumulate 100 days in the Top 10 English TV list, demonstrating Rake's adaptability to data-driven audience engagement.[19] As of 2025, Rake remains active in television development, pitching concepts for new series and actively working on a potential Manifest spinoff to explore expanded universe narratives.[20]

Personal life

Family

Jeff Rake is married to Paulette Light, the executive director of the Charles Bronfman Prize, a nonprofit recognizing humanitarian achievements in the Jewish community.[21][22] The couple met during their time at Columbia University, where both graduated in 1990.[23][24] Rake and Light are the parents of four children.[25] They have emphasized the importance of family in their lives, with Rake noting how raising children influenced his personal priorities alongside his professional commitments.[26] The family resides in the Los Angeles area, where Rake grew up and has maintained strong ties for stability and community involvement.[1][4] This Jewish heritage shapes aspects of their family life, including philanthropic efforts.[8]

Religious influences

Jeff Rake was raised in a traditional Jewish home in Los Angeles, where he participated in key milestones of Jewish life, including his bar mitzvah, involvement in United Synagogue Youth, and attendance at Camp Hess Kramer both as a camper and later as a counselor.[8] Rake identifies strongly with his Jewish heritage and continues to practice it within his family; he and his wife, Paulette Light, are founding members of IKAR, a progressive Jewish congregation in Los Angeles, and their four children attend Camp Ramah, a Jewish summer camp, with their youngest son's bar mitzvah occurring in February 2019.[8][27] Rake has publicly discussed how his Jewish faith shapes his worldview, particularly through concepts like redemption and tikkun olam, the Jewish principle of repairing the world, which inspire his storytelling by emphasizing themes of second chances and personal growth.[8][28] In an interview, Rake stated, “As a Jewish writer, I’m inspired by Jewish themes of redemption, second chances and tikkun olam. The characters are flawed human beings who’ve been given a second chance.”[8] He has attributed these influences to his creative choices in projects like Manifest, where the narrative framework allows exploration of moral redemption without adhering to specific religious doctrines, reflecting his broader philosophical approach to faith.[29]

Creative works

Television series

Jeff Rake has created several notable television series, primarily for NBC, blending elements of drama, mystery, and procedural storytelling. His debut as a creator came with Miss Match, a comedy-drama that premiered on September 26, 2003, on NBC and was co-created with Darren Star; 18 episodes were produced, though only 11 aired in the U.S. before its cancellation.[30] The series followed a matchmaker navigating her professional and personal life, showcasing Rake's early interest in character-driven narratives. Rake's subsequent creation, The Mysteries of Laura, premiered on September 17, 2014, on NBC as a police procedural comedy-drama adapted from a Spanish series; it ran for two seasons and 38 episodes until March 2, 2016.[31] In this show, Rake served as executive producer alongside Greg Berlanti and McG, focusing on a homicide detective balancing her career with single motherhood. His most prominent project as creator is Manifest, a supernatural drama that premiered on September 24, 2018, on NBC and concluded its fourth season on Netflix in 2023, totaling 62 episodes across four seasons.[32] Rake developed the series, which centers on passengers of a flight experiencing mysterious phenomena after a turbulent disappearance, and he also wrote and executive produced multiple episodes.[5] In addition to creating series, Rake contributed as a writer and producer on other projects. He co-created and executive produced The $treet, a Wall Street drama that aired on Fox from November 1, 2000, to December 13, 2000, with 12 episodes produced but only seven aired.[33] The series explored the high-stakes world of finance through the lens of a brokerage firm. Rake also co-wrote the pilot episode of Boston Legal, which debuted on October 3, 2004, on ABC, marking an early collaboration with David E. Kelley on the legal dramedy.[2] Among his other television credits, Rake served as co-executive producer on The Tomorrow People, a science fiction series that aired on The CW from October 9, 2013, to May 5, 2014, for 22 episodes; he also wrote five episodes during its single season.[34]

Other projects

In 2025, Rake co-authored his debut novel, Detour, with bestselling author Rob Hart, marking his entry into literary science fiction.[5] The book, published by Random House on January 13, 2026, in hardcover format with 320 pages, follows a mismatched six-person crew—including a New Jersey graffiti artist and a devoted family man named Ryan Crane—embarking on a high-stakes space shuttle mission.[35][36] Their journey veers off course due to sabotage, leading to a return to an Earth that has drastically changed from the one they departed, unraveling a mind-bending time-travel thriller centered on themes of displacement, family, and the fragility of reality.[37][38] Rake has expressed interest in adapting Detour into a television series, leveraging his experience in serialized storytelling to explore its potential as a multi-season narrative.[5] This project builds on his early non-television creative pursuits, such as the 1996 musical Hound Dog: A Hip hOpera, a satirical examination of Elvis Presley's life blending hip-hop elements, which premiered at the Hudson Avenue Theatre in Los Angeles.[14]

References

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