Recent from talks
Nothing was collected or created yet.
Glenn Gordon Caron
View on WikipediaGlenn Gordon Caron (born April 3, 1954), sometimes credited as Glenn Caron, is an American writer, director, and producer, best known for the television series Moonlighting in the 1980s and Medium in the 2000s. He lives in Los Angeles, California.
Biography
[edit]This section of a biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification. (December 2017) |
Caron was born to a Jewish family[1] in Oceanside, New York. After graduating from the State University of New York at Geneseo in 1975, Caron studied with Del Close and The Second City in Chicago before working at an advertising agency.[2]
While at the ad agency he was invited by NBC to write a pilot for the network. The pilot did not receive a series order, but Caron's work impressed writer-producer James L. Brooks, who invited him to join the writing staff of Taxi, although he only worked on one episode.
Caron subsequently coproduced the first 12 episodes of Remington Steele (NBC, 1982-'87) before leaving to form his own company, Picturemaker Productions. Caron created Moonlighting (ABC, 1985-'89), a worldwide hit that revitalized the career of Cybill Shepherd and launched the career of Bruce Willis. Between its third and fourth seasons, Caron directed his first feature film, Clean and Sober (1988), starring Michael Keaton. He was fired by ABC from Moonlighting before the start of its fifth (and final) season, reportedly because Shepherd demanded it.[3] Caron then directed three more feature films — Wilder Napalm (1993), starring Dennis Quaid and Debra Winger, and written by Vince Gilligan, who later created the AMC series Breaking Bad; the Warren Beatty-Annette Bening vehicle Love Affair (1994), a remake of the 1939 film of the same name; and Picture Perfect (1997), starring Jennifer Aniston — before returning to television in 1999 as the creator of the short-lived series Now and Again (CBS, 1999-2000).[4]
In 2001 Fox ordered 13 episodes of the Caron-created romantic comedy Fling. Seven episodes were shot, but the network became unhappy with the direction of the series during production and canceled it before any of those episodes could be broadcast.[5] Four years later Caron created Medium for NBC. He also served as executive producer of the show, wrote several episodes and directed the series's pilot episode. It ran for seven seasons, with the last two airing on CBS.[6]
In 2008 Caron wrote a pilot for CBS titled The Meant to Be's,[7] about a woman who dies only to find herself sent back to Earth to help people get their life back on track. However, it wasn't given a series order.
In 2013 Caron wrote a pilot for a proposed Fox series titled The Middle Man. Set in the 1960s, a Boston FBI agent and his Irish-American informant take on the Italian-American mafia. Ben Affleck was attached to direct the pilot episode,[8] but it was never filmed. The following year Fox ordered a pilot for The Cure, a medical drama to be cowritten and coproduced by Caron and Canadian journalist Malcolm Gladwell,[9] but it too was never filmed. Caron was also attached to write a pilot for ITV Studios in 2016 based on Alan Glynn's novel Paradime.[10]
Caron wrote and produced episodes of the first and second seasons of the FX series Tyrant, and in the spring of 2017 he joined CBS's Bull as a consulting producer before becoming the series's showrunner at the beginning of season two.[11] In May 2021, it was announced that Caron would be departing Bull, as well as ending his deal with CBS Studios.[12][13][14]
Awards
[edit]Caron received the 2007 Outstanding Television Writer Award at the Austin Film Festival.[15] He also won a Writers Guild of America award for his 1985 pilot script for Moonlighting and was nominated for four Primetime Emmy Awards for Moonlighting between 1986 and 1987.[16]
Personal life
[edit]Caron has been married to his second wife, Tina DiJoseph, since 2006; they have one child. Caron has three children from his first marriage. He is the founder-owner of Picturemaker Productions.[17]
Sexual harassment controversy
[edit]On December 19, 2018, The Boston Globe published an op-ed by actress Eliza Dushku in which she claimed she was fired by Caron from the CBS series Bull in 2017 after she confronted its star, Michael Weatherly, about sexually charged remarks he had made to her while filming the final three episodes of the show's first season.[18] Caron had been hired as a consulting producer for those three episodes, prior to becoming Bull's showrunner and an executive producer for season two. Dushku had been expected to join the series full-time in season two. CBS paid her $9.5 million to settle her claims of wrongful dismissal and sexual harassment.[19] Dushku signed a nondisclosure agreement as part of her settlement, but after news of the settlement leaked and Weatherly and Caron gave statements to The New York Times — "The idea that our not exercising her option to join the series was in any way punitive just couldn't be further from the truth," said Caron — Dushku said she felt compelled to respond, writing, "The narrative propagated by CBS, actor Michael Weatherly, and writer-producer Glenn Gordon Caron is deceptive and in no way fits with how they treated me on the set of the television show Bull and retaliated against me for simply asking to do my job without relentless sexual harassment."[20] Prior to his exit from Bull in 2021, CBS launched an investigation regarding the departures of multiple writers from the show and whether or not Caron allegedly "fostered a disrespectful work environment during his four-year tenure."[21]
Filmography
[edit]Television
[edit]| Year | Title | Director | Writer | Creator | Executive Producer |
Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1979 | Taxi | No | Yes | No | No | Episode "The Great Race" |
| 1980 | Good Time Harry | No | Yes | No | No | Episode "Harry Kisses Death on the Mouth" |
| 1980–1981 | Breaking Away | No | Yes | No | No | Episodes "Knowing Her", "Grand Illusion" and "La Strada"; Also supervisor producer |
| 1982 | Fame | No | Yes | No | No | Episode "Alone in a Crowd" |
| 1982–1983 | Remington Steele | No | Yes | No | No | 4 episodes; Also supervisor producer |
| 1985–1988 | Moonlighting | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Wrote 7 episodes; Writers Guild of America Award for Episodic Comedy Nominated- Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Writing |
| 1999–2000 | Now and Again | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Directed episode "Origins"; Wrote episodes "Origins", "On the Town" and "Over Easy" |
| 2001 | Fling | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Unaired |
| 2008 | The Meant to Be's | No | Yes | No | Yes | Unaired pilot |
| 2005–2011 | Medium | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Directed "Pilot"; Wrote 10 episodes |
| 2014–2015 | Tyrant | No | Yes | No | Yes | 4 episodes |
| 2017–2021 | Bull | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Directed 4 episodes; Wrote 11 episodes; Also consulting producer on 3 episodes |
TV movies
| Year | Title | Writer | Executive Producer |
Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1984 | Concrete Beat | Yes | Yes | Unsold pilot |
| 1986 | Long Time Gone | Yes | Yes |
Film
[edit]Short film
| Year | Title | Director | Writer | Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1989 | The Making of Me | Yes | Yes | Created for Disney World's Epcot Center |
Feature film
| Year | Title | Director | Writer |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1988 | Clean and Sober | Yes | No |
| 1993 | Wilder Napalm | Yes | No |
| 1994 | Love Affair | Yes | No |
| 1997 | Picture Perfect | Yes | Yes |
References
[edit]- ^ Howowitz, Joy (March 30, 1986). "The Madcap Behind 'Moonlighting'". The New York Times. Archived from the original on June 27, 2019. Retrieved October 31, 2018.
- ^ Glenn Gordon Caron, Creator and Executive Producer Archived March 18, 2020, at the Wayback Machine, AllBusiness.com; accessed December 5, 2017.
- ^ Clark, Kenneth R. (May 21, 1989). "Why 'Moonlighting' Went Bust". Chicago Tribune. Tribune Publishing Company. Archived from the original on April 7, 2019. Retrieved December 22, 2018.
- ^ Tomashoff, Craig (December 12, 1999). "Just a Regular Guy, Who Can Outrun a Car". The New York Times. Archived from the original on August 15, 2016. Retrieved February 19, 2017.
- ^ Adalian, Josef (May 9, 2001). "Fox's 'Fling' flung". Variety. Archived from the original on September 9, 2018. Retrieved December 22, 2018.
- ^ Bitalac, Labelle (November 19, 2010). "CBS cancels Medium". The News Chronicle. Archived from the original on November 23, 2010. Retrieved June 4, 2014.
- ^ Andreeva, Nellie (October 11, 2007). "Caron, CBS Par into the future". The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on December 23, 2018. Retrieved December 22, 2018.
- ^ FOX Gives Pilot Order to Crime Drama 'The Middle Man' Executive Produced by Ben Affleck & Glenn Gordon Caron, tvbythenumbers.zap2it.com, September 13, 2013
- ^ Andreeva, Nellie (August 25, 2014). "Fox Takes 'The Cure,' Put Pilot From Malcolm Gladwell, Glenn Gordon Caron, Imagine". Deadline. Penske Business Media, LLC. Archived from the original on December 23, 2018. Retrieved December 22, 2018.
- ^ O'Connell, Michael (May 12, 2016). "'Moonlighting' Creator Adapting Alan Glynn Novel for ITV Studios America". The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on November 28, 2019. Retrieved November 28, 2019.
- ^ Andreeva, Nellie (March 20, 2017). "Glenn Gordon Caron Tapped As New 'Bull' Showrunner Under CBS TV Studios Deal". Deadline. Penske Business Media, LLC. Archived from the original on March 1, 2020. Retrieved December 21, 2018.
- ^ Petski, Denise; Patten, Dominic (May 21, 2021). "Glenn Gordon Caron Out As 'Bull' Showrunner, Deal With CBS Studios Ends". Deadline. Archived from the original on May 21, 2021. Retrieved May 22, 2021.
- ^ Nemetz, Dave (May 21, 2021). "Bull Boss, Co-Star Freddy Rodriguez Both Out After Workplace Investigation". TV Line. Archived from the original on May 22, 2021. Retrieved May 22, 2021.
- ^ Otterson, Joe (May 21, 2021). "'Bull' Showrunner Glenn Gordon Caron Exits Series". Variety. Archived from the original on May 22, 2021. Retrieved May 22, 2021.
- ^ "Honored Guests at 14th Annual Austin Film Festival". Austin Film Festival. October 2, 2007. Archived from the original on December 23, 2018. Retrieved December 22, 2018.
- ^ "Glenn Gordon Caron: Awards". IMDb. Amazon. Archived from the original on June 14, 2023. Retrieved December 22, 2018.
- ^ "Glenn Caron". Variety. December 5, 1948. Archived from the original on July 24, 2017. Retrieved December 20, 2017.
- ^ "Eliza Dushku: I worked at CBS. I didn't want to be sexually harassed. I was fired - the Boston Globe". The Boston Globe. Archived from the original on January 22, 2022. Retrieved December 20, 2018.
- ^ Abrams, Rachel, and Koblin, John (December 13, 2018). "CBS Paid the Actress Eliza Dushku $9.5 Million to Settle Harassment Claims". The New York Times. Archived from the original on December 14, 2018. Retrieved December 21, 2018.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Buell, Spencer (December 20, 2018). "Breaking Her Silence, Eliza Dushku Shares New Details of Harassment". Boston Magazine. Metro Corp. Archived from the original on December 23, 2018. Retrieved December 22, 2018.
- ^ Kiefer, Halle (May 21, 2021). "Showrunner Glenn Gordon Caron Out at CBS's Bull Following Internal Investigation". Vulture. New York Magazine. Archived from the original on May 22, 2021. Retrieved May 22, 2021.
External links
[edit]- Glenn Gordon Caron at IMDb
- Glenn Gordon Caron at The Interviews: An Oral History of Television
- "Glenn Goron Caron biographical data". DavidAnd Maddie.com. Archived from the original on August 29, 2005. Retrieved July 18, 2005.
- TVWeek Archived June 1, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
Glenn Gordon Caron
View on GrokipediaEarly Life
Childhood and Family Background
Glenn Gordon Caron was born on April 3, 1954, in Brooklyn, New York, and raised in Oceanside on Long Island.[1][10] His parents both worked as salespeople.[2] Caron spent his early years in the suburban environment of Oceanside, where he developed a fascination with movies.[1] He attended Oceanside High School but was not a particularly motivated student during this period.[1]Education and Initial Career Aspirations
Glenn Gordon Caron attended the State University of New York at Geneseo, graduating in 1975.[9] In 2011, the university awarded him its inaugural Medal of Distinction, recognizing his achievements as an alumnus in television writing and production.[9] No specific details on his coursework or extracurricular activities at Geneseo are documented in available records. Following graduation, Caron pursued training in improvisational comedy, studying with instructor Del Close in New York City and at The Second City in Chicago, which provided foundational exposure to comedic performance and scripting techniques.[2] This training reflected his early interest in comedy as a pathway into creative writing, emphasizing practical, self-directed skill-building over formal academic programs in the arts. Caron's initial professional entry into creative fields occurred through an advertising agency position, where he developed core competencies in deadline-driven writing essential for scripting and production workflows.[11] These experiences honed his ability to produce content under pressure, aligning with his aspirations to transition into television comedy, where rapid iteration and narrative economy are paramount, without reliance on established industry connections.[11]Professional Career
Early Work in Advertising and Television
Glenn Gordon Caron's entry into professional writing began after college at an advertising agency, where he honed skills in crafting concise narratives under tight deadlines, a discipline that later shaped his approach to television episode structure.[11] While employed there, he received an invitation from NBC to develop a pilot script, though it did not advance to series production.[3] His television debut occurred in 1980 as a writer and story editor for the short-lived NBC sitcom Good Time Harry, starring Ted Bessell as a sportswriter, which aired for eight episodes before cancellation.[12] This role marked his initial foray into scripted series work, building on advertising-honed efficiency to contribute episodes amid the show's brief run.[3] In 1981, Caron co-wrote the screenplay for the Disney feature film Condorman, adapted from Robert Sheckley's novel The Game of X, providing an early bridge between his advertising brevity and expanding narrative ambitions in entertainment.[12] The project involved collaboration with writers Mickey Rose and Marc Stirdivant under director Charles Jarrott, emphasizing comedic spy elements in a live-action adaptation.[13] By 1982, Caron advanced to supervising producer on Remington Steele, an NBC detective series, where he oversaw writing and production for the first ten episodes, refining his oversight of episodic pacing and character-driven plots.[1] This position demonstrated his growing navigation of network television demands, transitioning from freelance writing to leadership in a procedural format that required consistent delivery under production constraints.[14]Breakthrough with Moonlighting
Glenn Gordon Caron created Moonlighting, serving as its executive producer, primary writer, and director for the pilot and numerous episodes, which premiered on ABC as a midseason replacement on March 3, 1985.[15][1] The series starred Cybill Shepherd as former model Maddie Hayes, who inherits and revitalizes a detective agency, and Bruce Willis as the wisecracking private investigator David Addison, blending noir procedural elements with rapid-fire banter.[16] Caron's script for the two-hour pilot earned him a Writers Guild of America Award in 1985, recognizing its inventive fusion of genres.[17] The show innovated within the 1980s television landscape, then dominated by formulaic sitcoms and melodramatic soaps, by reviving screwball comedy tropes—characterized by verbal sparring, romantic tension, and meta-humor—adapted to a detective framework, which distinguished it from contemporaries like Remington Steele.[18][19] Commercially, Moonlighting achieved strong viewership in its debut season, tying for 20th in Nielsen ratings, and peaked at 9th place in its third season (1986–1987), averaging a 22.4 household rating during its most successful year.[20] Caron's hands-on creative control, including directing 28 of the 67 episodes, allowed for ambitious storytelling, such as fourth-wall breaks and elaborate set pieces, contributing to the series' four-season run through May 14, 1989.[1] Production faced significant challenges, including scheduling delays from complex, dialogue-heavy scripts that extended shoots beyond typical TV timelines, alongside reported tensions between Caron, Shepherd, and Willis over creative decisions and pacing.[21][22] Caron maintained oversight to push innovative episodes, earning a 1987 Primetime Emmy nomination for Outstanding Writing in a Drama Series, though these strains intensified in later seasons, testing the show's viability.[23] Despite such hurdles, Moonlighting's cultural impact endured, influencing subsequent hybrid comedy-dramas by demonstrating viable audience appetite for witty, character-driven narratives amid network constraints.[18]Film Directing Ventures
Caron transitioned from television to feature film directing following the success of Moonlighting, making his directorial debut with Clean and Sober in 1988.[24] The film, starring Michael Keaton as a real estate executive confronting cocaine and alcohol addiction during a 90-day rehabilitation program, earned praise for its unflinching portrayal of recovery challenges, with Roger Ebert awarding it 3.5 out of 4 stars for Keaton's compelling performance and the script's avoidance of clichés.[25] Critics noted its strong dramatic tension and realistic depiction of denial and relapse, though it received a mixed Rotten Tomatoes score of 61% based on contemporary reviews.[26] Commercially, it underperformed, grossing approximately $8.7 million domestically against an estimated mid-range budget for the era, signaling limited audience appeal for its heavy subject matter despite critical nods.[27] Subsequent projects included Wilder Napalm (1993), a black comedy about pyromaniac brothers starring Dennis Quaid and Arliss Howard, which received lukewarm reviews for its quirky premise but lack of cohesion, holding a 29% Rotten Tomatoes rating and 5.5/10 on IMDb.[28] The film bombed at the box office, earning just $84,859 domestically, far below viability thresholds and highlighting difficulties in marketing niche humor.[29] Caron then helmed the romantic drama Love Affair (1994), a remake of the 1939 classic featuring Warren Beatty and Annette Bening as affluent lovers navigating obstacles to reunion, bolstered by cameo appearances from Katharine Hepburn and others.[30] It garnered middling critical response, with a 6/10 IMDb average, critiqued for lacking the original's spark amid production interferences from Beatty.[30] Budgeted at around $40 million, it grossed $18.3 million domestically, marking a financial disappointment and contributing to Warner Bros.' mid-1990s slate challenges.[31][32] Caron's final feature, Picture Perfect (1997), starred Jennifer Aniston as an advertising executive faking an engagement to advance her career, blending rom-com elements with workplace satire.[33] Reviews were mixed, with a 44% Rotten Tomatoes score citing formulaic plotting despite Aniston's charm, and it achieved moderate box office returns of about $31 million domestically.[34] These efforts collectively demonstrated Caron's versatility in genres from drama to comedy but yielded inconsistent commercial results, often hampered by high expectations, niche appeals, or production hurdles relative to his television output. Empirical data on budgets versus earnings—such as Wilder Napalm's near-total loss and Love Affair's shortfall—underscore a pragmatic shift back to television by the late 1990s, where episodic production allowed greater volume and creative control, as evidenced by his subsequent series like Now and Again (1999).[35][1]Later Television Productions
Following the success of Moonlighting, Caron created and executive produced the supernatural procedural drama Medium, which premiered on NBC on January 3, 2005, and drew from the real-life experiences of psychic medium Allison DuBois.[36] The series, starring Patricia Arquette as DuBois' alter ego Allison Dubois—a mother who uses her abilities to assist a district attorney in solving crimes—ran for seven seasons, with the first five airing on NBC before moving to CBS in 2009 amid network scheduling shifts.[37] Caron directed the pilot episode and wrote multiple installments, adapting the format to blend family dynamics with episodic investigations, which sustained viewership averaging 10-12 million households per episode during its NBC run.[36] In 2016, Caron transitioned to the legal procedural Bull, serving as showrunner and executive producer for CBS, where the series—loosely inspired by the trial consulting work of Phil McGraw—debuted on September 20 and quickly achieved top ratings in the 18-49 demographic, often ranking among the network's highest performers with episodes drawing over 13 million viewers in its first season.[38] He contributed as writer to 11 episodes and director for four, emphasizing jury psychology and case-of-the-week structures that evolved the procedural genre toward behavioral analytics.[7] Caron's involvement ended in May 2021 after four seasons, coinciding with the show's renewal for a fifth but prior to its network stability challenges.[39] Caron's later efforts included unconfirmed explorations tied to Moonlighting, such as a October 2022 tweet announcing a "plan" with Disney that fueled reboot speculation among fans, though he subsequently clarified it pertained solely to syndicating reruns rather than new production.[40] In October 2023, amid discussions of potential revivals, Caron publicly addressed Bruce Willis' frontotemporal dementia diagnosis, noting the actor's reduced verbal capacity and diminished "joie de vivre" as factors rendering any immediate reboot infeasible, while affirming Willis remained recognizably himself.[41] These statements highlighted Caron's preference for projects rooted in verifiable creative control, avoiding speculative ventures amid industry trends toward nostalgia-driven reboots.Recognition and Impact
Awards and Nominations
Glenn Gordon Caron earned four Primetime Emmy Award nominations for his contributions to Moonlighting, including Outstanding Drama Series in 1986 and 1987 (shared with producers), and Outstanding Writing in a Drama Series for episodes in 1986 and 1987.[23] These nominations reflected peer recognition within the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences for the series' innovative blend of comedy, drama, and stylistic experimentation, though Caron did not secure wins in these categories.[23] In 1986, Caron won the Writers Guild of America Award for Best Episodic Comedy for the Moonlighting pilot script, tying with another entry and highlighting the guild's acclaim for his original voice in adapting noir tropes to television.[5] He later received the Outstanding Television Writer Award at the 2007 Austin Film Festival, honoring his body of work in episodic scripting and production.[42] Caron's television-focused achievements contrasted with his film directing output, which garnered no major awards or nominations from bodies like the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, underscoring his specialization in the medium.[5] In 2011, as a 1975 alumnus, Caron was awarded the inaugural SUNY Geneseo Medal of Distinction for his professional contributions to television writing and production.[9]| Year | Award | Category | Result | Work |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1986 | Primetime Emmy | Outstanding Drama Series | Nomination (shared) | Moonlighting[23] |
| 1986 | Primetime Emmy | Outstanding Writing in a Drama Series | Nomination | Moonlighting[23] |
| 1986 | Writers Guild of America | Best Episodic Comedy | Win (tied) | Moonlighting (pilot)[5] |
| 1987 | Primetime Emmy | Outstanding Drama Series | Nomination (shared) | Moonlighting[23] |
| 1987 | Primetime Emmy | Outstanding Writing in a Drama Series | Nomination | Moonlighting[23] |
| 2007 | Austin Film Festival | Outstanding Television Writer | Win | Career achievement[42] |
| 2011 | SUNY Geneseo | Medal of Distinction | Win | Alumni contributions[9] |
Influence on Television and Industry Legacy
Glenn Gordon Caron's creation of Moonlighting (1985–1989), which ran for 67 episodes across five seasons on ABC, pioneered the "dramedy" format by blending procedural mystery with rapid-fire witty banter, romantic tension, and meta-narratives that frequently broke the fourth wall.[43][44] This innovative structure, drawing from screwball comedy traditions while subverting episodic TV conventions—such as parody episodes in black-and-white or Shakespearean style—challenged the era's formulaic dramas and influenced subsequent hybrid genres in television, enabling shows to incorporate self-referential humor and character-driven interruptions without sacrificing plot momentum.[45][15] The series' emphasis on cinematic production values, including specialized lighting and intricate camera work, elevated broadcast standards, demonstrating that network TV could rival film aesthetics and sustain viewer engagement through serialized romance amid standalone cases.[46] Caron's executive producing and showrunning on later series like Medium (2005–2011, 130 episodes over seven seasons, shifting from NBC to CBS) and Bull (showrunner from season 2 in 2017 through 2021, contributing to its 155-episode run across six seasons on CBS) showcased adaptive strategies for longevity in evolving network landscapes.[11] Medium sustained audiences by integrating supernatural elements with family drama, maintaining consistent viewership despite format tweaks and network migration, while Bull averaged 11.85–14.5 million viewers in early seasons as a top-10 procedural, leveraging jury-consulting realism to blend legal thriller with character interplay amid broadcast competition from cable and streaming.[47][48] These productions highlight Caron's causal approach to narrative resilience: prioritizing core hooks like interpersonal dynamics and empirical case resolutions to weather production delays or cast changes, resulting in commercially viable runs that outlasted many contemporaries. Caron's overall legacy resides in his television-centric versatility as a writer-director-producer, with Moonlighting's 2023 Hulu streaming debut—and continued availability on platforms like Prime Video into 2025—reviving interest in its rule-breaking style amid modern serialized formats.[15][49] While his film directing efforts, including Wilder Napalm (1993), Clean Slate (1994), and Love Affair (1994), achieved modest box office but lacked the cultural permeation of his TV work, they underscored a preference for broadcast innovation over cinematic spectacle.[50] This TV footprint, rooted in first-principles script discipline from advertising roots, fostered an industry shift toward genre-blending procedurals, though critiques note its peak influence waned with 1990s sitcom fragmentation.[11][51]Controversies
Workplace Investigations on Bull
In late 2017, actress Eliza Dushku was cast as a series regular on the CBS procedural drama Bull but was written off the show after reporting alleged sexual harassment by lead actor Michael Weatherly, including comments about "shipping her off to the fantasy island" for a threesome and other suggestive remarks.[52] [53] An internal investigation followed her complaint, after which CBS terminated her contract; the network settled with Dushku for $9.5 million in January 2018, an amount approximating her projected earnings for three seasons, though the agreement included a nondisclosure provision and did not admit liability or wrongdoing.[52] [54] Glenn Gordon Caron, who had served as executive producer and showrunner on Bull during this period, continued in that role following the Dushku incident.[39] On November 16, 2021, Dushku testified before the U.S. House Judiciary Committee, critiquing forced arbitration clauses in employment contracts that she argued silenced victims and limited public accountability in cases like hers, while highlighting broader industry challenges in addressing workplace harassment.[55] [56] In May 2021, amid ongoing #MeToo-era scrutiny of television workplaces, CBS conducted an internal investigation into complaints on the Bull set, leading to Caron's abrupt departure as showrunner and the termination of his overall deal with CBS Studios.[39] [38] The studio confirmed the exits but provided no public details on the investigation's findings, specific allegations against Caron, or any disciplinary actions beyond his removal; no criminal charges were filed, and no evidence of proven misconduct by Caron has been disclosed.[38] [57] Concurrently, actor Freddy Rodriguez was also written off the series following a related probe, yet Bull proceeded to its sixth and final season, with CBS citing the show's strong ratings as justification for continuation despite the changes.[57] [58]Broader Context and Responses
No civil lawsuits or criminal charges have been filed against Glenn Gordon Caron personally in connection with the Bull workplace investigations.[59][39] The 2018 settlement between CBS and Eliza Dushku, totaling $9.5 million, addressed her claims of harassment on set but targeted the network and involved parties like actor Michael Weatherly, not Caron directly; such settlements commonly serve as pragmatic measures to resolve disputes and avoid prolonged litigation, without constituting admissions of legal liability under standard corporate practice.[52][60] Critics of the #MeToo movement have pointed to instances of perceived overreach in Hollywood, where allegations prompted swift professional consequences absent formal due process or judicial findings, potentially amplifying power imbalances in favor of accusers in high-stakes production environments.[61][62] For Bull, CBS elected to renew the series multiple times following the 2018 revelations, with Season 4 averaging 6.71 million viewers and a 0.75 rating in the 18-49 demographic, and subsequent seasons maintaining solid performance into 2022 despite executive producer shifts and public scrutiny—suggesting network prioritization of commercial viability over unproven claims.[63][64] Caron has not issued public statements responding to the allegations or his 2021 departure from Bull and CBS Studios, maintaining a low profile amid the controversy.[59] Industry responses, including CBS's continued support for key talent like Weatherly post-settlement, underscore a pattern in competitive television where networks balance internal probes against talent retention and ratings, though skeptics argue this reflects selective enforcement amid broader #MeToo pressures rather than uniform accountability.[65][66] In high-pressure creative fields, such dynamics can incentivize complaints as leverage in contract negotiations or amid job competition, absent corroborating legal evidence.[67]Personal Life
Family and Relationships
Glenn Gordon Caron was first married to Mary Martin, though the dates of the marriage and subsequent divorce are not publicly detailed.[6] He married actress Tina DiJoseph on November 24, 2006; DiJoseph, who guest-starred as Deputy Mayor Lynn DiNovi in Caron's NBC series Medium, has maintained a low-profile acting career alongside family life.[6] [68] Caron and DiJoseph have one child together.[6] In total, Caron is father to four children—two sons and two daughters—reflecting a blended family structure sustained through his demanding television production schedule.[69] He has emphasized the role of family stability in his creative process, noting in interviews that his current marriage provided inspiration for Medium's portrayal of domestic dynamics amid professional pressures.[70] Born in Oceanside, New York, on April 3, 1954, Caron relocated to Los Angeles early in his career to pursue directing and producing opportunities, a move that aligned his professional base with family residence in the region.[2] Public details on his relationships remain limited, prioritizing privacy over extensive disclosure.Associations and Recent Public Commentary
Glenn Gordon Caron maintains a longstanding friendship with Bruce Willis, stemming from their collaboration on the 1980s series Moonlighting, where Caron served as creator and Willis starred as David Addison.[71] In October 2023, Caron provided an update on Willis's health following the actor's diagnoses of aphasia in 2022 and frontotemporal dementia in 2023, stating that Willis is now "incommunicative" and "not totally verbal," attributing this to the progressive nature of the disease which has altered how Willis perceives and engages with the world, likening it to viewing life "through a screen door."[72] [73] Caron emphasized that despite these changes, Willis remains "still Bruce" at his core, expressing confidence in Willis's contentment based on earlier communications and family reports of positive reactions to Moonlighting's streaming debut on Hulu, without speculating on the actor's inner emotional state beyond these observations.[74] [75] In October 2022, Caron engaged publicly on social media regarding Moonlighting, posting a cryptic tweet stating, "Disney And I Have Put Our Heads Together And Come Up With A Plan," which sparked speculation about a potential reboot.[76] He subsequently clarified that no reboot was in development, but rather efforts to license the show's reruns to a streaming service, reflecting pragmatic optimism about revitalizing access to the series amid ongoing music rights negotiations, without committing to new production.[40] These statements underscore Caron's continued involvement in discussions about the show's legacy and his straightforward approach to industry challenges like content distribution in the streaming era.Filmography
Television
- Remington Steele (1982): Supervising producer for the first season (12 episodes).[4]
- Moonlighting (1985–1989): Creator, writer (including episodes awarded by the Writers Guild of America), and producer for the series spanning 67 episodes.[16][3]
- Now and Again (1999–2000): Creator and producer for the series running 22 episodes.[77]
- Medium (2005–2011): Creator and executive producer for the series across 130 episodes; also directed the pilot episode.[78][36]
- The Meant to Be's (2008): Creator, writer, director, and executive producer for the unsold TV pilot.[8]
- Bull (2016–2021): Showrunner starting from the second season through season 5 (101 episodes total in series).[38][59]
