Ron Hauge

American screenwriter
Ron Hauge
Born
Santa Clarita, California, U.S.
Occupation(s)Screenwriter, producer
Years active1991–present

Ron Hauge is an American television writer and executive producer.

Early in his career, Hauge was a contributor to National Lampoon. In 1989 he created a graphic for Spy Magazine captioned "The World Championship," with wars between countries organized in the form of a tournament bracket; more than 20 years later, it was still being lauded, in The Atlantic, in a political scientist's blog, and on Twitter.[1][2][3]

He then wrote for Seinfeld, In Living Color, The Ren & Stimpy Show, Rocko's Modern Life, The Mouse and the Monster, and a short lived reincarnation of The Carol Burnett Show. In 1994, an episode of Ren and Stimpy that he co-wrote was nominated for an Emmy Award for Outstanding Animated Program (for Programming One Hour Or Less).[4]

Hauge joined The Simpsons staff in its eighth season. He won an Emmy for writing the season eight episode "Homer's Phobia", which was his first episode. The Fox censor objected to the episode's exploration of the theme of homosexuality and stated that it was "unsuitable for broadcast". The censors were later fired and their replacements did not have any objections to the episode.[5]

Writing credits

The Simpsons episodes

He has written the following episodes:

Ren and Stimpy episodes

As sole writer:

  • "Road Apples"
  • "Eat My Cookies"
  • "Hair of the Cat"
  • "Dog Tags"
  • "Pen Pals"

As co-writer:

  • "Circus Midgets"
  • "An Abe Divided"
  • "Jimminy Lummox"
  • "Ren's Retirement"
  • "Ren's Bitter Half"
  • "House of Next Tuesday"
  • "Lumber Jerks"
  • "Prehistoric Stimpy"
  • "Farm Hands"
  • "Pixie King"
  • "My Shiny Friend"
  • "Wiener Barons"
  • "Galoot Wranglers"
  • "Superstitious Stimpy"
  • "Ol' Blue Nose"
  • "Feud For Sale"
  • "Bellhops"
  • "Big Flakes"

Rocko's Modern Life

  • Rocko's Happy Sack (along with Joe Murray)
  • Who's For Dinner? (along with Vince Calandra)
  • Clean Lovin' (along with Joe Murray, Vince Calandra, Nick Jennings and George Maestri)

Seinfeld episodes

References

  1. ^ Fallows, James (12 March 2012). "And I Also Shouldn't Just Embed Charts From 'Spy'". The Atlantic.
  2. ^ Saideman, Steve (13 October 2014). "Tournament of War: The Original". Saideman's Semi-Spew.
  3. ^ Schwartz, Stephen (27 March 2019). "Tweet: This will always be my favorite bracket". Twitter. Retrieved 25 June 2020.
  4. ^ Emmy award listing
  5. ^ Oakley, Bill (2006). The Simpsons The Complete Eighth Season DVD commentary for the episode "Homer's Phobia" (DVD). 20th Century Fox.

External links

  • Ron Hauge at IMDb
Authority control databases Edit this at Wikidata
  • SNAC


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