CNN correspondent-turned-screenwriter Bryce Zabel has been the creator
and show runner of prime time series, written produced feature films,
run the TV Academy, taught at USC, won the WGA award, authored a book
and introduced on-air such celebrities as Walter Cronkite and Tom
Hanks.
Every pilot ever written by Zabel that has been produced has also gone
on to series. He has received the Writers Guild on-screen "created by"
or "developed by" credit on five TV drama series including: NBC's
Emmy-winning (main titles) science fiction series
Dark Skies (1996), FOX's
African-American superhero show
M.A.N.T.I.S. (1994); the
syndicated comic/film adaptation
The Crow: Stairway to Heaven (1998),
CTV's newsroom drama
E.N.G. (1989) and
CBS's medical franchise
Kay O'Brien (1986). His other
series work includes
L.A. Law (1986);
Life Goes On (1989) and
Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman (1993).
Three of his series have been major DVD box set releases.
In 2008, Zabel received the Writers Guild of America (WGA) award for
writing his third four-hour Hallmark mini-series, _Pandemic
(2007)(mini)_, the story of a killer influenza which forces the
quarantine of Los Angeles. HIs other mini-series work includes the
Hallmark pirate adventure
_"Blackbeard" (2006) (mini)_, and NBC's
The Poseidon Adventure (2005).
From 2001 to 2003, Zabel served as Chairman/CEO of the Academy of
Television Arts and Sciences, the first writer/producer elected to this
position since his boyhood idol,
Rod Serling. He presided over the most
tumultuous and transformational time in Academy history, taking office
at a time when 9/11 forced the cancellation of the prime time Emmys not
once, but twice. He also led the negotiations which resulted in a 250%
increase in the Emmy telecast license fee. Previously, he served on the
Writers Guild Board of Directors.
In the world of features and long-form, he has received writing credit
on two produced films,
Mortal Kombat: Annihilation (1997)
(which opened as #1 at the box office) and the Disney animated film,
Atlantis: The Lost Empire (2001).
His spec script
Official Denial (1993)
became the first original movie produced by the SyFy Channel. He also
launched the "Unsolved Mysteries" movie franchise with an NBC film,
Victim of Love: The Shannon Mohr Story (1993).
Prolific as a writer on his own, Zabel has also worked in collaboration
with other writers over the years, including Marvel Comics legend
Stan Lee, multi-award winning TV
writer/producer
David E. Kelley,
Babylon 5 (1993) creator
J. Michael Straczynski, his own
wife
Jackie Zabel and feature writer
Brent Friedman.
He became a book author in 2010 with the publication of A.D. After
Disclosure: The People's Guide to Life After Contact, written in
collaboration with UFO historian Richard M. Dolan.
Twice nominated by the WGA for outstanding screen-writing, Zabel's work
has also been nominated by the Mystery Writers of America,
Environmental Media Association and LA Area Emmy Awards. His nominated
work includes the fan-favorite
L.A. Law (1986) where
Jimmy Smits' character defends baby-killers
who get away with murder and the
Dark Skies (1996) pilot about the
Kennedy assassination which launched the NBC Saturday night programming
concept.
Zabel began his career as a television news reporter in both Oregon and
Arizona. He came to Los Angeles as an on-air correspondent for CNN
where he covered presidential campaigns and space shuttle landings,
among other stories. He met his wife in the office of the LA mayor
during a news conference. As an on-air PBS reporter, he won several
awards of his own for investigative journalism. He was one of the
original group of producer/directors on ABC's cutting edge reality
magazine series, "Eye on LA".
Zabel started his screen-writing career by combining that passion for
journalism and television into his first script,
E.N.G. (1989) and it changed his life.
The spec pilot about "electronic news gathering" (TV news) launched 108
episodes of the hour drama for the CTV network, led to an overall
development deal as a writer/producer for Orion TV.
Zabel is an accomplished public speaker, appearing on each of the three
Emmy shows in which he served as the TV Academy leader. He has also
been a guest on The Today Show,
Good Morning America (1975),
Politically Incorrect (1993),
Entertainment Tonight (1981),
Access Hollywood (1996),
etc. and been quoted in Time, USA Today, The New York Times, The Los
Angeles Times and The Washington Post. As an essayist, he has written
for Daily Variety, Television Week, The Los Angeles Times, the WGA's
Written By and Emmy Magazine.
Aside from his Emmy activities, in the world of "live" production, he
recently produced a three-hour comedy/musical stage show hosted by
Fred Willard before 1100 dinner guests to
launch the University of Oregon's $600-million fund-raising campaign.
He also served as an adjunct professor at the USC School of Cinematic
Arts, teaching a graduate level producing class, "Produce or Perish."
He is a member of the DGA, WGA, AFTRA and ATAS.
Zabel attended high school in Hillsboro, Oregon and college at the
University of Oregon in Eugene where he graduated with a BA degree in
Broadcast Journalism.