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Malcolm Spellman
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Malcolm Spellman is an American screenwriter and producer best known for his work on Empire (2015), The Falcon and the Winter Soldier (2021), and Captain America: Brave New World (2025).
Key Information
Career
[edit]In March 2010, Spellman started his career by writing the screenplay for the film Our Family Wedding (2010).[1] In February 2015, Spellman began writing for television by scripting several episodes of the television series Empire (2015).[2] In October 2015, Spellman and Carlito Rodriguez were hired by Warner Bros. to write the script for a Sylvia Robinson film biopic.[3] In October 2018, it was announced that Warner Bros. was still moving forward with the film and Spellman and Rodriguez had been joined by Tracy Oliver in completing the script.[4] In July 2017, Spellman was producing the HBO series Confederate.[5][6][7][8]
In December 2019, he served as a producer on the Apple TV+ series Truth Be Told (2019).[9] In February 2021, Spellman served as an executive producer on the FX series Hip Hop Uncovered (2021).[10] In March 2021, he gained notability from serving as showrunner on the Disney+ series The Falcon and the Winter Soldier (2021), set in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU).[11][12] In December 2021, he served as writer and executive producer on the 2022 revival series Bel-Air.[13] He co-wrote Captain America: Brave New World in the MCU, with Dalan Musson and Matthew Orton.[14] In October 2022, it was revealed that Spellman would write the upcoming film King Spawn alongside Scott Silver and Matthew Mixon.[15][16]
Filmography
[edit]Film
[edit]| Year | Title | Credited as | Notes / Ref(s) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Writer | Producer | |||
| 2010 | Our Family Wedding | Yes | No | [1] |
| 2019 | His, Hers and the Truth | No | Co-producer | [17] |
| 2025 | Captain America: Brave New World | Yes | No | Also story writer |
Television
[edit]| Year | Title | Credited as | Notes / Ref(s) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Writer | Producer | |||
| 2015–17 | Empire | Yes | Yes | Episodes: "Dangerous Bonds", "My Bad Parts", "More Than Kin", "Light in Darkness", "What We May Be", "Play On", and "Absent Child"[18] |
| 2019–20 | Truth Be Told | No | Yes | [9] |
| 2021 | Hip Hop Uncovered | No | Executive | [10] |
| The Falcon and the Winter Soldier | Yes | Executive | Episodes: "New World Order" and "One World, One People" | |
| 2022–present | Bel-Air | Yes | Executive | Episodes: "Dreams and Nightmares" and "Can't Knock The Hustle"[13] |
Accolades
[edit]For his work on The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, he was nominated at the Black Reel Awards of 2021 and the 53rd NAACP Image Awards for "Outstanding Writing, Drama Series" and "Outstanding Drama Series" for the former and "Outstanding Writing in a Dramatic Series" for the latter.[19][20] For his work on Bel-Air, he was nominated at the Black Reel Awards of 2022 for "Outstanding Writing, Drama Series".[21]
References
[edit]- ^ a b "Our Family Wedding". Entertainment Weekly. March 17, 2010. Archived from the original on March 31, 2022. Retrieved March 20, 2021.
- ^ Hatchett, Keisha (February 16, 2021). "The Falcon and the Winter Soldier's Malcolm Spellman Is Ready to Deliver an Undeniably Black Superhero Story". TVLine. Archived from the original on February 16, 2021. Retrieved March 19, 2021.
- ^ Rose, Lacey (October 21, 2015). "'Empire' Writers to Pen Movie About the "Mother of Hip-Hop" (Exclusive)". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved March 20, 2021.
- ^ McNary, Dave (October 24, 2018). "Justin Simien Directing Sylvia Robinson Biopic". Variety. Retrieved March 20, 2021.
- ^ Hibberd, James (July 19, 2017). "Game of Thrones showrunners reveal their next epic HBO series". Entertainment Weekly. Archived from the original on July 19, 2017. Retrieved March 20, 2021.
- ^ Adalian, Josef (July 20, 2017). "The Producers of HBO's Confederate Respond to the Backlash and Explain Why They Wanted to Tell This Story". Vulture. Archived from the original on July 21, 2017. Retrieved March 20, 2021.
- ^ Nevins, Jake (August 1, 2017). "Confederate: will a grassroots movement sink the controversial HBO series?". The Guardian. Archived from the original on August 9, 2017. Retrieved March 21, 2021.
- ^ McBride, Jessica (July 31, 2017). "Malcolm Spellman & Nichelle Tramble Spellman: 5 Fast Facts You Need to Know". Heavy. Archived from the original on July 23, 2019. Retrieved April 10, 2021.
- ^ a b Del Rosario, Alexandra (March 2, 2021). "'Truth Be Told' Creator & Showrunner Nichelle Tramble Spellman Signs With CAA". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved March 20, 2021.
- ^ a b White, Peter (February 12, 2021). "The Inside Story Of 'Hip Hop Uncovered': Malcolm Spellman & Rashidi Harper Dive Deep On FX Docuseries". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved March 20, 2021.
- ^ Anderson, Jenna (October 31, 2019). "The Falcon and The Winter Soldier Has Begun Filming". Comicbook.com. Archived from the original on November 1, 2019. Retrieved March 20, 2021.
- ^ Welch, Alex (March 16, 2021). "Falcon and the Winter Soldier Is the "Antithesis" of WandaVision, Writer Says". Inverse. Archived from the original on March 16, 2021. Retrieved March 20, 2021.
- ^ a b Petski, Denise (December 16, 2021). "'Bel-Air': Peacock's 'Fresh Prince' Drama Reboot Sets Super Bowl Sunday Premiere". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved February 13, 2022.
- ^ Kit, Borys; Couch, Aaron (April 23, 2021). "'Captain America 4' in the Works With 'Falcon and the Winter Soldier' Showrunner Malcolm Spellman (Exclusive)". The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on April 23, 2021. Retrieved April 23, 2021.
- ^ Couch, Aaron (October 5, 2022). "'Spawn' Movie Finds New Writers with 'Joker', 'Captain America 4' Scribes (Exclusive)". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved October 5, 2022.
- ^ Squires, John (July 22, 2024). "'King Spawn' – Jason Blum Teases New Screenplay for Long-Awaited 'Spawn' Movie". Bloody Disgusting. Retrieved July 23, 2024.
- ^ N'Duka, Amanda (June 21, 2019). "Vanishing Angle Ups Three Execs; UMC Picks Up 'His, Hers and the Truth' – Film Briefs". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved November 13, 2024.
- ^ Lawrence, Gregory (February 16, 2021). "'The Falcon and the Winter Soldier' Showrunner Malcolm Spellman Speaks on Its Black Representation". Collider. Archived from the original on February 17, 2021. Retrieved March 20, 2021.
- ^ "Plenty of "Love" in the Heart of the Country!". Black Reel Awards. June 17, 2021. Archived from the original on June 28, 2021. Retrieved October 27, 2024.
- ^ Lewis, Hilary (January 18, 2022). "NAACP Image Awards: Harder They Fall, Insecure Lead Nominations". The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on January 18, 2022. Retrieved October 27, 2024.
- ^ Complex, Valerie (February 17, 2022). "The Black Reel Awards Announces Partnership With Idobi Network And Unveils New Awards Statuette". Deadline Hollywood. Archived from the original on February 28, 2022. Retrieved October 27, 2024.
External links
[edit]Malcolm Spellman
View on GrokipediaEarly Life and Background
Childhood and Influences in Berkeley
Malcolm Spellman was raised in Berkeley, California, in the culturally diverse East Bay Area, where he developed an early fascination with comic books that ignited his interest in superhero narratives and storytelling.[5] As a child, he frequently visited local comic book shops with friends, immersing himself in the medium's blend of action, character arcs, and imaginative worlds, which laid the groundwork for his later creative pursuits.[5] This period in Berkeley's vibrant, multicultural environment exposed him to a mix of influences that emphasized resourcefulness and pop culture engagement.[12] The Bay Area's urban diversity, including its hip-hop scene, further shaped Spellman's perspective on grounded, character-driven tales rooted in real-world complexities rather than abstracted ideals.[13] Growing up amid Berkeley's eclectic neighborhoods fostered a "multi-culti" sensibility, as he has described it, blending everyday hustle with cultural fusion that informed his affinity for authentic, street-level narratives over polished escapism.[12] These formative experiences in the late 20th century Bay Area, prior to any formal creative endeavors, honed his instinct for weaving personal stakes into larger-than-life stories, drawing from the raw energy of local comics fandom and hip-hop's lyrical realism.[14]Initial Steps into Screenwriting
Spellman relocated to Los Angeles in the early 2000s to pursue screenwriting professionally, drawing on self-taught skills honed through personal observation of real-life dynamics rather than formal education.[15] His foundational efforts involved crafting spec scripts amid typical industry barriers for unestablished writers, including widespread rejections and the need for persistent networking via agencies.[16] In 2002, after years of persistence, Spellman sold his first screenplay, titled Core, through a blind submission to the agency ICM; the story centered on a young skateboarder aspiring to compete in the X Games, inspired by encounters with actual skateboarders.[16] Though unproduced, this sale represented his initial breakthrough into Hollywood, facilitated by slipping through industry cracks without conventional connections.[17] However, executives later advised altering the Black protagonist to a white character, reflecting early encounters with prejudice where producers explicitly rejected "Black projects."[18] Financial struggles defined these initial years, requiring side jobs to sustain himself for approximately the first decade post-sale, as subsequent scripts remained lesser-known or unproduced.[18] Spellman's approach emphasized grounded narratives from observed human behavior over speculative elements, distinguishing his early work from more fantastical genres despite childhood comic book influences.[16]Professional Career
Early Struggles and First Sales
Spellman broke into Hollywood in 2002 by selling his spec script Core—a sports drama likened to The Blind Side but centered on a skateboarder—through a blind submission to ICM, without any industry connections or representation.[16] The sale generated initial buzz as one of the few Black feature writers securing such a deal at the time, but the project went unproduced, and Spellman subsequently endured three to four years without paid writing assignments, having turned down offered roles due to inexperience, ego, and unfamiliarity with industry norms.[16] This early momentum faded amid broader challenges, including a lack of consistent gigs that forced Spellman to take non-writing jobs to cover expenses during the first decade-plus of his career.[15] He undertook uncredited rewrites on ensemble comedies akin to The Hangover and other unproduced features, while earning a credit on the 2006 video game adaptation The Sopranos: Road to Respect.[16] In 2009, under the pseudonym Robotard 8000 with collaborator Tim Talbott, he co-wrote Balls Out, an unproduced raunchy comedy that landed on the Black List but failed to advance to production.[16] Spellman's persistence involved reinventing his approach, pivoting from Black-centric stories to broader "white comedies" to secure opportunities in a market where executives explicitly cited racial factors—such as overseas sales risks for Black leads—as barriers to greenlighting diverse narratives.[16][15] These hurdles reflected empirical underrepresentation in Hollywood, where Black screenwriters faced niche categorization and limited access to mainstream projects, compelling Spellman to adapt while sustaining output amid financial precarity.[15] His first produced screenplay credit arrived in 2010 with Our Family Wedding, a romantic comedy directed by Rick Famuyiwa, where Spellman shared writing duties with Famuyiwa and Wayne Conley on a story of interracial family tensions leading to a wedding.[19] The film, released by Fox Searchlight, provided an early platform to refine dialogue and comedic timing within formulaic genre constraints, though it underscored the sporadic nature of his pre-breakthrough output.[19]Breakthrough on Empire
Spellman joined the production of Fox's Empire in early 2015, shortly after its premiere on January 7, contributing as a writer who scripted six episodes and advanced to roles including co-executive producer across 30 episodes of the first three seasons (2015–2017).[1][20] The series chronicled the Lyon family's internal conflicts and external battles within the hip-hop empire founded by patriarch Lucious Lyon, a former drug dealer turned CEO, satirizing music industry machinations through arcs of betrayal, inheritance disputes, and criminal entanglements.[21] Empire emerged as a ratings juggernaut, averaging 17 million viewers per episode in its debut season and capturing over 33% of Black households by the fourth episode, while influencing music charts through integrated original tracks that propelled artists like Jussie Smollett to commercial success.[22][23] Spellman's writing emphasized unvarnished realism in portraying ambition-driven crime and fractured family loyalties, drawing subplots directly from hip-hop's documented history of rivalries, incarcerations, and power consolidations to lend causal depth beyond mere melodrama.[24] In a April 2015 NPR interview, he stressed sourcing from "the real" to authenticate character motivations rooted in socioeconomic pressures and industry precedents, such as real-life mogul feuds, which grounded the show's high-stakes dynamics in observable patterns of entrepreneurial risk and kinship erosion.[24] Despite acclaim for pioneering a Black-led primetime soap that integrated hip-hop aesthetics and elevated performers like Taraji P. Henson's Cookie Lyon, Empire drew critiques for amplifying sensational violence, intra-family predation, and aspirational excess that some viewed as reinforcing rather than subverting stereotypes of urban pathology.[25][26] Spellman's focus on empirical hip-hop precedents mitigated some hyperbolic tendencies, fostering narrative authenticity that propelled the series' cultural footprint and positioned him as a rising force in crafting prestige television centered on unidealized American strivings, marking this stint as the inflection point from freelance screenwriter to established showrunner.[24][14]Entry into Marvel Projects
Malcolm Spellman entered the Marvel Cinematic Universe in October 2018 when Marvel Studios hired him to develop and write the Disney+ limited series The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, for which he ultimately served as head writer and executive producer.[27][28] The six-episode series, which premiered on March 19, 2021, focused on Sam Wilson (Anthony Mackie) grappling with the legacy of the Captain America shield amid post-Blip societal disruptions, including refugee crises and ideological extremism embodied by the Flag Smashers.[2] Spellman emphasized a grounded examination of heroism's burdens, drawing on Wilson's background as a veteran counselor to explore real-world tensions in identity and national symbolism, though the narrative's integration of these elements prioritized character-driven causality over spectacle.[11] The series elevated supporting figures like Bucky Barnes (Sebastian Stan) through introspective arcs on redemption and trauma, and introduced Isaiah Bradley (Carl Lumbly) to highlight historical injustices faced by Black super-soldiers, contributing to its reputation for character depth in the MCU's Phase 4.[2] However, it faced criticism for pacing inconsistencies, with early episodes bogged down by exposition and later ones rushing resolutions, alongside repetitive action set pieces that diluted tension.[29] Commentators noted perceived forced messaging on race—such as Sam's reluctance to wield the shield framed through institutional distrust—and veteran experiences, which some viewed as preachy insertions that prioritized didacticism over organic storytelling, leading to mixed reception on thematic execution.[30][31] Building on the series' foundation, Spellman co-wrote the story for the feature film Captain America: Brave New World, released on February 14, 2025, collaborating with Dalan Musson to extend Sam Wilson's transition into the Captain America role amid global conspiracies.[32] Announced in development by April 2021, the project maintained a focus on causal progression in superhero succession, examining Wilson's heroism through practical leadership challenges rather than unearned empowerment. This marked Spellman's escalation to theatrical scale within the MCU, bridging television serialization with cinematic stakes while sustaining scrutiny over narrative efficiency and ideological undertones.[33]Post-Marvel Works and Expansions
Following his Marvel tenure, Spellman served as an executive producer on the Peacock drama series Bel-Air, a reimagining of The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air that premiered on February 13, 2022, and ran for three seasons through 2024, emphasizing dramatic explorations of class disparity, family tensions, and social mobility in a modern Los Angeles setting.[34][35][36] The series, developed alongside Morgan Cooper, TJ Brady, and Rasheed Newson, shifted the original sitcom's tone toward serialized storytelling with heightened stakes around wealth inequality and personal ambition, drawing on Spellman's prior experience in character-driven narratives.[37] In October 2022, Spellman was announced as one of the co-writers, alongside Scott Silver and Matt Mixon, for the screenplay adaptation of King Spawn, a Blumhouse Productions film based on Todd McFarlane's Image Comics character, portraying an anti-hero who wields hellish powers to corrupt souls on Earth in opposition to the original Spawn.[38][39] The project, titled King Spawn and centered on darker, supernatural themes of redemption and damnation, remained in development as of July 2024, with Blumhouse seeking a director amid delays typical of comic adaptations.[40] Spellman pursued broader industry engagement by running as a candidate for the Writers Guild of America West Board of Directors in the 2025 election, held from September 3 to 17, highlighting his two-decade career in film and television writing and a desire to advocate for guild members amid ongoing challenges like labor disputes and emerging technologies such as AI in script generation.[17][41] Although unsuccessful in securing a board seat, his candidacy underscored a commitment to collective bargaining issues following the 2023 WGA strike, which addressed streaming residuals and protections against AI encroachment on creative labor.[42][43]Controversies and Creative Philosophy
Involvement in Confederate and Backlash
In July 2017, Malcolm Spellman joined as an executive producer and writer for Confederate, an unproduced HBO alternate-history drama series conceived by Game of Thrones showrunners David Benioff and D.B. Weiss, alongside co-executive producer Nichelle Tramble Spellman.[9] The project's premise depicted a modern United States divided into multiple nations following a Confederate victory in the Civil War, with slavery having persisted and evolved into a contemporary institution manifesting through underground markets and fragmented enforcement.[44] Spellman's involvement focused on script development to explore themes of racial division and abolitionist resistance in this speculative framework.[45] The series announcement on July 17, 2017, triggered immediate backlash primarily from progressive activists and media commentators, who condemned it as potentially exploitative or normalizing of slavery imagery amid heightened cultural sensitivities post-Charlottesville white nationalist rally.[46] Critics, including author Roxane Gay and journalist Pilot Viruet, framed the concept as "slavery fanfic" insensitive to Black trauma, arguing that white creators lacked the perspective to handle such material without reinforcing harmful tropes.[9] This reaction, amplified through mainstream outlets with documented left-leaning editorial biases, emphasized risks of "weapons-grade" content in a polarized climate rather than engaging the stated anti-slavery narrative intent.[47] Opposition coalesced into the #NoConfederate social media campaign, launched by activists including April Reign of #OscarsSoWhite fame, which trended nationwide on Twitter by July 31, 2017, urging HBO to scrap the project and garnering thousands of posts decrying it as tone-deaf.[48][49] Though no large-scale formal petition emerged, the digital outcry pressured HBO's pre-production phase, contributing to delays amid internal reevaluations of rollout strategy.[50] The series ultimately stalled, with HBO confirming on January 16, 2020, that it would not proceed, following Benioff and Weiss's departure for a Netflix deal that sidelined HBO commitments.[51]Responses to Criticisms and Storytelling Views
Spellman has consistently argued that fictional explorations of sensitive historical "what if" scenarios, such as the alternate history premise of Confederate, should not be preemptively censored or dismissed based on synopses alone, emphasizing that such works aim to provoke discourse rather than endorse atrocities like slavery. In a 2017 Vulture interview, he described the material as "weapons-grade" but defended its intent as dramatic inquiry into unresolved American tensions, countering accusations of glorification by noting the project's focus on conflict and stagnation in a divided society, not triumph.[9] He criticized premature judgments, stating that critics overlooked the creative team's intent to dissect power dynamics empirically, without romanticizing oppression.[52] In response to backlash portraying Confederate as insensitive, Spellman and co-executive producer Nichelle Tramble Spellman pushed back in a 2017 NPR interview, rejecting the notion that the series would celebrate slavery and insisting it would confront its horrors through narrative realism, drawing from the creators' track record in handling complex social themes.[45] This stance aligned with his broader advocacy against ideological conformity in storytelling, where he argued that avoiding "uncomfortable" premises stifles causal examination of history's contingencies, potentially limiting public engagement with empirical "what ifs" over sanitized alternatives. Subsequent reflections, including 2025 commentary questioning whether the outrage preempted substantive debate on racial legacies, have echoed Spellman's point that such preemptive resistance may hinder rather than foster truth-seeking discourse. On storytelling principles, Spellman prioritizes unvarnished realism as the foundation of compelling narratives, asserting in a 2015 NPR Microphone Check interview that "the real, you just can't beat it" for dramatic potency, particularly when drawing from America's foundational criminality and ambition without idealization or evasion.[24] He critiqued media tendencies toward sanitization, favoring stories rooted in macro-level empirical appeals—like the allure of rags-to-riches tales built on moral ambiguity—to engage audiences authentically, rather than prioritizing viewer comfort or ideological filters. This approach extends to his views on identity and resilience, where he advocates empirical, character-driven arcs over abstracted sensitivities, arguing that true narrative power emerges from causal chains of human behavior unburdened by conformity.[24] In Hollywood's risk-averse environment, Spellman has highlighted how such realism counters normalized pressures to soften truths for broader palatability, enabling deeper explorations of societal fractures.[7]Works and Credits
Television Contributions
Spellman contributed as a writer and producer to the Fox musical drama series Empire, which aired from 2015 to 2017. He is credited with writing seven episodes and holding producing roles—including co-producer, producer, and co-executive producer—across 30 episodes of the series.[1][53] Episodes written for Empire include:- "Dangerous Bonds" (Season 1, Episode 5, aired February 25, 2015)[54]
- "My Bad Parts" (Season 2, Episode 3, aired October 7, 2015)
- "More Than Kin" (Season 2, Episode 9, aired November 18, 2015)
- "Light in Darkness" (Season 2, Episode 10, aired November 25, 2015)
- "What We May Be" (Season 3, Episode 9, aired December 14, 2016)
- "Play On" (Season 3, Episode 17, aired May 24, 2017)
- "Absent Child" (Season 3, Episode 18, aired June 21, 2017)
Film Contributions
Spellman's entry into feature films came with co-writing the screenplay for Our Family Wedding (2010), a romantic comedy directed by Rick Famuyiwa and starring Forest Whitaker and America Ferrera, which explored interracial family tensions ahead of a wedding.[57] The film, released on March 12, 2010, by Fox Searchlight Pictures, marked his initial produced credit in the medium, co-credited with Wayne Conley and Famuyiwa.[57] In the Marvel Cinematic Universe, Spellman co-wrote the story for Captain America: Brave New World (2025), directed by Julius Onah and starring Anthony Mackie as Sam Wilson/Captain America, with screenplay contributions shared alongside Dalan Musson, Rob Edwards, Peter Glanz, and Onah.[33] The film, released on February 14, 2025, by Marvel Studios and distributed by [Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures](/page/Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures), focused on international intrigue and Wilson's assumption of the Captain America mantle.[33] Spellman is credited as a writer on the upcoming King Spawn, a Blumhouse Productions adaptation of Todd McFarlane's Image Comics character, co-written with Scott Silver and Matt Mixon (also credited as Matthew Nixon in some reports).[38] Announced in October 2022 and retitled King Spawn by July 2024, the project remains in development without a confirmed director or release date as of mid-2024, emphasizing Spellman's expansion into horror-adjacent superhero adaptations distinct from his television episodic work.[38] These credits, spanning comedy, blockbuster action, and comic book origins, underscore Spellman's versatility in securing produced and in-development film scripts, including sales to major studios like Marvel and Blumhouse, beyond his primary television output.[1]Recognition and Industry Role
Awards and Nominations
Malcolm Spellman has earned nominations from organizations focused on recognizing Black excellence in media, including the NAACP Image Awards and Black Reel Awards, primarily for his work on The Falcon and the Winter Soldier (2021) and subsequent projects, though he has not won these honors.[58][59] In 2022, Spellman received an NAACP Image Award nomination for Outstanding Writing in a Drama Series for the The Falcon and the Winter Soldier episode "New World Order," highlighting his contributions to Marvel's exploration of racial themes in superhero narratives.[58] The series itself garnered additional NAACP recognition for Outstanding Drama Series.[60] The Black Reel Awards nominated Spellman in 2021 for Outstanding Drama Series and Outstanding Writing in a Drama Series for The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, reflecting peer acknowledgment within industry circles attuned to diverse storytelling.[59] A further 2022 Black Reel nomination came for Outstanding Writing in a Drama Series for Bel-Air.[59] These nods align with broader acclaim for the series' handling of identity and heroism, yet underscore the competitive landscape where empirical output metrics, such as viewership and critical reception, do not always translate to victories amid subjective judging criteria.[61] No Primetime Emmy nominations were extended to Spellman personally for The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, despite the series receiving nods in technical categories like visual effects and sound editing.[61] His earlier contributions to Empire (2015–2018) yielded no individual award recognition, despite the show's cultural impact and ensemble nominations.[62]| Year | Award | Category | Project | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | Black Reel Awards | Outstanding Drama Series | The Falcon and the Winter Soldier | Nominated[59] |
| 2021 | Black Reel Awards | Outstanding Writing in a Drama Series | The Falcon and the Winter Soldier | Nominated[59] |
| 2022 | NAACP Image Awards | Outstanding Writing in a Drama Series | The Falcon and the Winter Soldier ("New World Order") | Nominated[58] |
| 2022 | Black Reel Awards | Outstanding Writing in a Drama Series | Bel-Air | Nominated[59] |
