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Josh Griffith
Josh Griffith
from Wikipedia

Joe Shelby "Josh" Griffith (born August 15, 19??)[citation needed] is an American soap opera writer and producer.

Personal life

[edit]

Born on August 15, in New York, Josh is the son of Joe (Rip) Griffith and Sue Estes Griffith, both teachers and artists.[citation needed]

Career

[edit]

Griffith began his writing career on Santa Barbara in 1988 and continued writing for the show until 1991 when he moved over to One Life to Live, where he began as an associate head writer under Michael Malone before being promoted to co-head writer in early 1992.[1] Under his and Malone's tenure at One Life to Live, the show won a Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Writing in 1994.[2] Griffith left the show in early 1995.

In 1997, Griffith was co-creator of the NBC Daytime soap opera Sunset Beach along with Robert Guza Jr.[3] The show ran for nearly three years before being cancelled in December 1999. In the spring of 2003, Griffith and Michael Malone returned to One Life to Live for a second stint as head writers, however they remained with the show for just a year. After leaving, Griffith became a script writer on CBS Daytime's As the World Turns under head writer Hogan Sheffer, who shortly afterwards stepped down as head writer. He would later return to the show briefly between 2009 and 2010.

In 2006, vice president of CBS Daytime, Barbara Bloom, brought Griffith over to The Young and the Restless as a creative consultant and breakdown writer under executive producer and head writer Lynn Marie Latham; within three months, he was promoted to co-executive producer to work alongside of Latham.

Griffith assumed full executive producer duties after Latham was fired for joining the 2007-2008 Writers Guild of America strike. During the strike, Griffith became a strikebreaker, adopting financial core status so that he could work while Guild members were on strike.[4]

In December 2007, Maria Arena Bell became his co-head writer.

In August 2008, Griffith was fired from his executive producer duties by Barbara Bloom and Steven Kent of Sony Pictures Television, leading to Bell becoming executive producer and head writer and later replacing him with Paul Rauch.[5] In 2009, Griffith briefly worked as a writer on General Hospital. In July 2012, it was announced that Griffith had been rehired on The Young and the Restless as the sole head writer following Bell's dismissal; he would work alongside new executive producer Jill Farren Phelps.[6] Episodes under their direction began airing on October 12, 2012.

In August 2013, speculation and reports indicated that Griffith had resigned as head writer, reportedly due to "creative differences" with Phelps.[7][8] Further speculation adds that Shelly Altman may take over as the new head writer, alongside Tracey Thomson or Jean Passanante may be brought aboard as a new co-head writer.[9][10] In February 2015, Griffith was hired as co-head writer of Days of Our Lives, alongside re-hired former head, Dena Higley. Griffith began his role as co-head scribe on February 16, 2015, with the material airing on August 19, 2015.[11][12]

In February 2016, it was reported that Griffith would be departing Days of Our Lives as co-head writer, with Ryan Quan serving as his replacement.[13] Griffith's last episode aired on September 2, 2016.[14]

In August 2018, it was reported that Griffith would be returning to The Young and the Restless this time as supervising producer.[15] Griffith's first episode as supervising producer aired on September 14, 2018.

In December 2018, Daytime Confidential reported that Griffith would once again act as The Young and the Restless's Head Writer following the departure of Mal Young.[16]

Griffith, formerly a member of Writers Guild of America, East, left and maintained financial core status during the 2007–08 Writers Guild of America strike.[17]

Positions held

[edit]

As the World Turns (hired by Hogan Sheffer)

  • Script Writer: April 12, 2005 – June 29, 2006; December 14, 2009 – September 17, 2010

Days of Our Lives

  • Co-Head Writer: August 19, 2015 – September 2, 2016

General Hospital (hired by Brian Frons; fired by Robert Guza, Jr.)

  • Story Consultant: July 2009 – August 21, 2009
  • Breakdown Writer: August 7 & 17, 2009
  • Script Writer: August 21, 2009

One Life to Live

  • Associate Head Writer: 1991–1994, March 23, 2004 – September 28, 2004
  • Co-Head Writer: October 1, 1992 – September 1995, March 10, 2003 – March 21, 2004
  • Head Writer: February 3, 2003 – March 7, 2003

Santa Barbara

  • Breakdown Writer: 1988–1991
  • Script Writer: 1988–1991

Sunset Beach

The Young and the Restless (hired by Barbara Bloom)

  • Breakdown Writer: July 13, 2006 – October 2006
  • Creative Consultant: July 7, 2006 – September 2006
  • Co-Executive Producer: October 25, 2006 – December 24, 2007; February 6, 2019 – February 6, 2023
  • Head writer: December 26, 2007 – April 21, 2008; October 12, 2012 – November 1, 2013; March 20, 2019 – present
  • Executive Producer: October 25, 2006 – October 2, 2008; February 7, 2023 – present
  • Supervising Producer: September 14, 2018 – February 5, 2019

Awards and nominations

[edit]
Year Award Category Nominated work Result
1989 Daytime Emmy Award Best Writing Santa Barbara Nominated
Daytime Emmy Award Best Writing Santa Barbara Won
1990 Daytime Emmy Award Best Writing Santa Barbara Nominated
Writers Guild of America Daytime Serial Santa Barbara Won
Writers Guild of America Daytime Serial Santa Barbara Nominated
1991 Daytime Emmy Award Best Writing Santa Barbara Won
Writers Guild of America Daytime Serial One Life to Live Nominated
Writers Guild of America Daytime Serial One Life to Live Won
Writers Guild of America Daytime Serial Santa Barbara Won
1992 Daytime Emmy Award Best Writing One Life to Live Nominated
Writers Guild of America Daytime Serial One Life to Live Nominated
1994 Daytime Emmy Award Best Writing One Life to Live Won
Writers Guild of America Daytime Serial One Life to Live Nominated
1995 Daytime Emmy Award Best Writing One Life to Live Nominated
1996 Daytime Emmy Award Best Writing One Life to Live Nominated
1997 Writers Guild of America Daytime Serial Sunset Beach Nominated
2003 Writers Guild of America Daytime Serial One Life to Live Nominated
2005 Writers Guild of America Daytime Serial As the World Turns Nominated
2006 Daytime Emmy Award Best Writing As the World Turns Nominated
Writers Guild of America Daytime Serial The Young and the Restless Won
[edit]

References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Josh Griffith is an American television , , and specializing in operas and suspense thrillers. He has held key roles as executive and head on major series including The Young and the Restless, One Life to Live, and Days of Our Lives, contributing to storylines that have sustained long-running narratives in the genre. Griffith's television work has earned him multiple , including for outstanding writing teams and drama series production, along with honors. Beyond broadcasting, he co-created the Sunset Beach and has authored novels such as This Lonely Town and The Lost Man in the Jason Chance mystery series. His career highlights include associate production on Francis Ford Coppola's Twixt and development for projects.

Personal Life

Early Life and Background

Josh Griffith's early life and personal background prior to his professional career in remain largely private and undocumented in available public records. No verifiable details regarding his birth date, family origins, or formative education have been disclosed in interviews or industry profiles. Griffith's entry into writing stemmed from a personal passion for soap operas; he became an avid viewer of Santa Barbara and, inspired by the show, prepared a sample script with assistance from established writer Lynda Myles. This initiative led him to submit outline samples to producers Chuck Pratt and Anne Howard Bailey, marking the transition from fandom to professional involvement.

Early Career

Entry into Daytime Television

Josh Griffith entered in 1988 as a breakdown and script writer for the Santa Barbara, marking his first professional writing job in the genre. He secured the position after submitting a sample script co-prepared with producer Lynda Myles, followed by an invitation to to provide outline samples, which were approved by Anne Howard Bailey and Chuck Pratt. Initially serving as an outline writer—responsible for breaking down head writer scripts into detailed scene breakdowns—Griffith quickly contributed to the show's storylines during his tenure from 1988 to 1991. His work encompassed scripting dialogue and participating in the collaborative process unique to daytime soaps, where episodes are produced at a rapid pace to air five days a week. By 1991, he had advanced to associate head writer on Santa Barbara, overseeing aspects of story development before departing for similar roles on ABC's One Life to Live. This early experience established Griffith's foundation in the high-volume, character-driven format of daytime serials, where writers balance ongoing arcs with daily script deadlines.

Writing Contributions

Script and Breakdown Writing Roles

Griffith entered daytime television as a breakdown writer and script writer for the NBC soap opera Santa Barbara in 1988. He contributed in breakdown and script writing capacities for As the World Turns from 2009 to 2011. For Days of Our Lives, Griffith served as both a breakdown writer and script writer prior to his promotion to head writer roles. In 2006, while The Young and the Restless was under head writer Lynn Latham, Griffith worked as a breakdown writer for the series. In February 2023, as head writer and executive producer of The Young and the Restless, Griffith terminated the contracts of the show's five breakdown writers and took over their duties himself, citing a desire for enhanced creative consistency in mapping storylines into scenes. He later clarified the move as a deliberate creative strategy, not driven by budget constraints.

Head Writer Positions

Josh Griffith served as head writer for One Life to Live from February 3 to March 7, 2003. During this brief tenure, he oversaw story development amid the soap's ongoing narrative arcs involving Llanview's core families. Griffith held head writer positions on The Young and the Restless on three occasions: from 2007 to 2008, 2012 to 2013, and beginning in December 2018, continuing into 2025 as both head writer and executive producer. In these roles, he directed the writing team responsible for scripting over 250 episodes annually, focusing on Genoa City intrigues such as corporate rivalries and family secrets. His 2019 return marked the longest continuous head writer stint for the series in recent decades, emphasizing character-driven plots and legacy storylines. As co-head writer for from February 2015 to September 2016, alongside Dena Higley, Griffith contributed to Salem-based narratives including romantic entanglements and supernatural elements. This collaboration followed the departure of prior writers Gary Tomlin and , aiming to revitalize viewer engagement through heightened drama. Griffith's exit in 2016 preceded Ryan Quan's appointment, reflecting typical turnover in daytime serial production.

Producing Roles

Executive Producer Appointments

Josh Griffith first served as co-executive producer on alongside from 2012 to 2016, during which the maintained its position as daytime's top-rated drama. Following Phelps' departure in 2016, Griffith stepped away briefly before returning to the production team in August 2018 as an . By late 2020, Griffith had assumed the dual roles of and for , a position he held solo for several years while overseeing creative and operational aspects of the series. In this capacity, he managed daily production workflows, casting decisions, and storyline integration, contributing to the show's continued dominance in Nielsen ratings among daytime serials. On September 24, 2025, announced Sally McDonald as co-executive producer, partnering with Griffith to share leadership responsibilities amid expanding production demands; McDonald, an Emmy winner with prior credits on the series, was promoted internally to alleviate Griffith's workload while he retained duties. This adjustment marked the first shared structure since Phelps' tenure, reflecting strategic efforts to sustain the program's longevity. No executive producer appointments for Griffith on other daytime series, such as or , are documented in production records.

Key Production Decisions

In February 2023, Josh Griffith, as and of , terminated the contracts of the show's four to five breakdown writers, assuming most of their responsibilities himself alongside co-head writer Amanda Beall. He described the move as a "creative decision" intended "to streamline the process and give us more efficiency," emphasizing operational improvements rather than cost reductions, though industry observers noted it occurred amid broader budget constraints. This overhaul aligned with preparations for the soap's 50th anniversary in March 2023, during which Griffith aimed to enhance script consistency by centralizing breakdown duties—tasks involving dividing head writer outlines into daily scene assignments for scriptwriters. The decision drew immediate backlash from soap industry professionals and fans, who viewed it as a risky consolidation of creative control that could strain production quality and workload; anonymous sources cited in reports highlighted concerns over Griffith's dual role overburdening the process, potentially leading to repetitive storytelling. No episodes fully attributable to the new solo-led breakdown process had aired by late March 2023, delaying public assessment of its effects on output. Griffith maintained that the change would yield tighter narratives, as evidenced by subsequent sweeps events like a "bunker sex" storyline plotted with Beall for May 2023. In August 2025, Griffith collaborated on staffing expansions, including the return of veteran producer —who had previously co-produced with him from 2012 to 2016—to a senior role, signaling a push for experienced oversight amid ongoing production demands. This was followed on September 25, 2025, by the promotion of Emmy-winning producer Sally McDonald to co-executive producer, a move designed to offload administrative duties from Griffith and enable greater focus on writing, as the show navigated casting integrations for arcs like a "major L.A. Noir" mystery. These adjustments reflect Griffith's pattern of adapting production hierarchies to balance creative and operational priorities in a contracting TV landscape.

Tenure on The Young and the Restless

Leadership as Head Writer and Executive Producer

Griffith assumed the positions of and for The Young and the Restless on March 20, 2019, marking his return to the soap after previous stints and initiating a period of creative consolidation following executive turnover. In this dual role, he oversees both the narrative vision—developing major story arcs and character developments—and production operations, including casting and episode structuring, which has allowed for centralized decision-making amid the demands of daily serialization. His approach emphasizes endurance in long-form storytelling, drawing on decades of experience to maintain continuity while adapting to audience feedback gathered rapidly through platforms. A pivotal decision occurred in 2023, when Griffith dismissed the show's entire breakdown writing team of four writers, absorbing many of their responsibilities himself alongside co-head writer Amanda Beall to enhance efficiency. He described the move as "a creative decision that we felt would streamline the process and give us more efficiency," aiming to reduce layers in the script development pipeline where head writers outline arcs, breakdown writers detail episodes, and dialogue writers finalize scripts. This restructuring reflected his strategy to tighten control over narrative execution, prioritizing direct oversight to align output with his established vision for character-driven plots and family dynamics central to the series. By September 2025, Griffith adjusted his production leadership by promoting longtime director and production supervisor Sally McDonald to co-executive producer, enabling him to shift focus toward writing duties while she handled expanded operational responsibilities; McDonald, with the show since , had contributed to eight directing Emmy wins. This change supported ongoing initiatives under his guidance, such as fall 2025 cast refreshers—including recasts like Billy Flynn as and returns of legacy figures—and story previews emphasizing relational tensions and business intrigues, underscoring his continued influence on the program's direction.

Major Storylines and Innovations

Griffith's storylines on have emphasized suspenseful mystery arcs, often drawing from classic to drive multi-character conflicts. A prominent example during his head writing tenure since 2019 is the 2025 murder mystery revolving around Cane Ashby's schemes, which compels rival powerhouses , , Jack Abbott, and to form a tenuous alliance amid escalating threats of corporate sabotage and personal peril. This plot, explicitly modeled after Agatha Christie's , features interconnected suspects and revelations to sustain viewer engagement through layered deception and high-tension confrontations. Another key development in fall 2025 involves a self-described "major L.A. Noir" storyline, incorporating film-noir tropes like shadowy intrigue and moral ambiguity, with new arrivals portrayed by Tamara Braun and Roger Howarth linking directly to Noah Newman's Los Angeles-based narrative, expanding Genoa City's reach into external mysteries while tying back to core family dynamics. In terms of innovations, Griffith has integrated crossover casting from other soaps to inject fresh suspense, as seen with and Howarth's roles amplifying elements, and previewed broader 2025 arcs including a "" forbidden romance amid life-or-death stakes and epic Newman-Abbott showdowns, aiming to blend traditional family sagas with cinematic plotting for renewed narrative momentum. These approaches prioritize causal chains of betrayal and redemption, though fan reception varies on execution.

Ratings Performance and Industry Impact

During Josh Griffith's tenure as head writer starting in 2012 and subsequent roles as and from 2018 onward, The Young and the Restless (Y&R) maintained its position as the highest-rated daytime in total viewers and key demographics such as women 18-49 and women 25-54, a streak exceeding 25 years as of 2013. For the 2023-24 season, Y&R averaged 3.11 million total viewers and a 0.30 rating in the women 18-49 demographic, outperforming competitors like and . However, absolute viewership declined from highs above 4 million in the early to around 3.2-3.3 million in weekly averages by 2025, reflecting broader industry contraction rather than isolated underperformance. This relative stability occurred amid a secular decline in daytime soap viewership, driven by , streaming competition, and an aging audience skewing over 50, with sharp drops in younger cohorts like 35-49. From the early to the 2020s, household ratings for soaps fell from around 3.7 for Y&R to sub-3.0 levels industry-wide, accompanied by cancellations of shows like (2011) and One Life to Live (2012). Under Griffith, Y&R avoided such fate by prioritizing core family narratives and veteran actors, which critics attributed to short-term rating retention but long-term stagnation. Recent weeks in 2025 showed seasonal lows, with fans and analysts linking dips to repetitive plotting, though Y&R still led competitors. Griffith's leadership influenced the daytime genre by reinforcing Y&R's model of serialized family drama as a benchmark for viability, enabling to sustain the format amid network shifts toward unscripted content. Production choices, such as streamlining the writing staff in 2023 to centralize control, aimed to enhance efficiency but drew backlash for potentially homogenizing content, mirroring cost-cutting trends across soaps facing 10-20% annual viewership erosion. While Y&R's dominance under Griffith preserved the genre's flagship, it highlighted challenges in attracting new viewers, with industry observers noting insufficient adaptation to digital metrics over traditional Nielsen overnights. This approach sustained profitability for —evidenced by consistent top-three daytime rankings—but underscored the format's vulnerability to fragmented .

Awards and Recognition

Daytime Emmy Achievements

Griffith served as for when the series won the Daytime Emmy for Outstanding Writing Team for a Series at the 50th Annual on December 15, 2023. The victory recognized the show's scripts covering the 2022 broadcast year, with Griffith accepting the award and crediting the collaborative writing process in post-ceremony remarks. Under Griffith's leadership as and , The Young and the Restless earned a nomination for Outstanding Writing Team for a Daytime Drama Series at the 47th in 2020, though it did not win. The series again received a nomination in this category for the 52nd in 2025, reflecting strong submission performance amid 25 total nominations for the show, but lost to . Prior to his primary tenure on The Young and the Restless, Griffith received Daytime Emmy nominations for writing contributions to As the World Turns in 2006 and One Life to Live in earlier years, highlighting his established role in daytime serial scripting without confirmed individual wins in those periods.

Other Honors

Griffith contributed to the Santa Barbara writing team that received the Writers Guild of America Award for Daytime Serial in 1991, recognizing exceptional writing in the category. As head writer for , Griffith led the team that won the 2025 Writers Guild of America Award for Daytime Drama, honoring the serial's scripts from the eligibility period. His overall body of work in has earned multiple Writers Guild of America nominations and wins across various series, though specific additional individual honors beyond team-based daytime serial recognitions are not prominently documented in industry records.

Controversies and Criticisms

History of Firings and Departures

Griffith first departed from his role as of The Young and the Restless in 2008 amid reports of internal conflicts, including a dispute over script alterations, though show representatives initially denied his ouster. He was rehired by Y&R in 2012 but left again on August 15, 2013, citing irreconcilable differences in an email to his writing team; some industry sources described the exit as a firing over creative and ratings issues. After exiting Y&R, Griffith joined Days of Our Lives as co-head writer alongside Dena Higley in February 2015. His stint ended on September 2, 2016, when he departed to pursue other projects, with Ryan Quan replacing him; executive producer Ken Corday described the split as amicable, and no major on-air changes resulted immediately. Earlier in his career, Griffith left One Life to Live as co-head writer in early 1995 after a three-year run, and his head writing tenure at All My Children lasted only from February to March 2003, ending abruptly amid reported network dissatisfaction. These shorter departures preceded his more extended Y&R involvement, which resumed in December 2019 when he returned as both head writer and executive producer.

Fan and Media Backlash

Fans of have increasingly criticized Josh Griffith's leadership as head writer and executive producer, pointing to perceived declines in storyline quality, pacing issues, and character arcs that fail to engage long-term viewers. Common complaints include "insane plots" that drag on excessively with logical inconsistencies, contributing to viewer frustration expressed on and fan forums since at least 2024. Media outlets and commentators have amplified these sentiments, with articles detailing top reasons for a , such as mishandled returns of key characters and failure to capitalize on cast strengths, as outlined in analyses from March 2024 and August 2025. critic Alan, in his "Soap Box" column, argued that Griffith's handling of the show has led to a lack of and emotional depth, predicting minimal backlash if Griffith were replaced. This intensified amid reports of falling ratings, with fans attributing stagnation to Griffith's vision in online discussions and petitions calling for his dismissal by late 2024. In response to mounting pressure, production changes occurred in August 2025, including the return of veteran producer in a consulting role, which some fans viewed as an indirect acknowledgment of dissatisfaction with Griffith's solo oversight. Public reactions to stunt casting announcements in September 2025 further highlighted ire, with viewers decrying Griffith's writing as inadequate for integrating high-profile hires, exemplified by demands like "FIRE HIM! #yr." These backlashes reflect broader concerns over the show's direction under Griffith, though no official concessions from or Griffith have addressed the calls for his exit as of October 2025.

Specific Writing and Production Critiques

Critics of Josh Griffith's tenure as head writer for have highlighted inconsistencies with the show's established canon, such as disregarding as Nina Webster's son and omitting references to Cane Ashby's son Sam, which undermine character histories and create plot holes. analyst Alan J. Keatts has argued that these lapses reflect a broader ignorance of the series' lore, leading to disjointed narratives that prioritize contrived plot twists over coherent character development. For instance, the handling of Tessa Porter's storyline, forcing the established character into a romantic pairing with lacking chemistry, has been cited as disrespectful to her identity and emblematic of forced, inorganic relationships. Storylines under Griffith have been faulted for repetition and lack of emotional depth, with business arcs reduced to rote mergers, job reshuffles, or underdeveloped ventures like Billy Abbott's podcasting without meaningful stakes or fallout. Keatts described events like Nikki Newman's birthday party—featuring a rare full cast assembly—as devoid of drama, labeling it "the party where nothing happened," and critiqued the absence of repercussions from major deaths, such as Chance Chancellor's, which failed to elicit grief from family members like Jill or Nina. Absurd elements, including Cane's fixation on trains (extending implausibly to ) and convoluted plots like ' fake death or dinosaur bone schemes, have been deemed "dumb" and emblematic of a reliance on gimmicks over substantive drama. On the production side, Griffith's decision to fire the entire team of five breakdown writers on February 23, 2023, amid cost-cutting ahead of WGA negotiations, drew backlash for potentially homogenizing scripts, as he assumed the role himself. Insiders described the move as a "slap in the face" to the staff, which included four women and one African-American writer hired for diversity, raising concerns about reduced creative input and the show's ability to maintain varied perspectives during its 50th anniversary preparations. This shift has been linked to increased use of production crutches like dream sequences—two in early 2024 alone—and underutilization of veteran actors, such as Sharon Case's character appearing in only two episodes in February 2024, contributing to perceptions of stagnation.

Recent Developments

2024-2025 Storyline Previews and Changes

In late December 2024, Josh Griffith, and of , previewed the 2025 storylines as surpassing those of 2024, describing them as "a whirlpool of romance, suspense, and family conflict." He highlighted key arcs including a massive showdown among major characters, a modern Romeo and Juliet-style forbidden romance, and high-stakes life-and-death situations involving core families in Genoa City. For fall 2025 episodes airing from September onward, Griffith teased a "major L.A. Noir" mystery storyline centered on newly introduced characters portrayed by actors Roger Howarth and Tamara Braun, integrating elements of suspense, reinvention, and darker intrigue tied to returning figures like Cane Ashby and an edgier Noah Newman. This arc specifically features Nick Newman and Sharon Collins navigating shadowy Los Angeles-based plots, described by Griffith as a "nuclear bomb" of escalating tension that could force unlikely alliances, such as between Victor Newman, Nikki Newman, Jack Abbott, and Diane Jenkins, amid Cane's evolving role. Production changes in 2024 included the addition of senior support for Griffith, with Sally McDonald joining to assist in managing his dual roles, aiming to streamline writing and execution without altering his leadership or core creative direction. These adjustments followed internal workload concerns but preserved Griffith's oversight of the 2024-2025 narratives, focusing on refreshed dynamics rather than wholesale overhauls. No major storyline pivots or writer team replacements were announced by October 2025, with emphasis remaining on Griffith's vision for intensified family rivalries and mystery-driven plots.

References

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