After graduating from Northwestern, Hodge was an assistant at the
William Morris Agency. He quit after three weeks when he realized he had no time to write. He got a job as a waiter and wrote whenever he could. In 2001, he was hired by NBC to write a television pilot for their Saturday morning teen block as a vehicle for rising country music star
Alecia Elliott. The show,
All About Us, started airing in late 2001. In 2003, Hodge segued to writing for primetime television drama, and wrote for several series including
Veritas: The Quest (ABC) and
Tru Calling (FOX). He also wrote the movie
This Time Around for ABC Family. In 2004, Hodge wrote the movie
I Want to Marry Ryan Banks, starring
Bradley Cooper, for ABC Family. The film is now available under the title
The Reality of Love. In 2006, Hodge created his first primetime drama series,
Runaway (CW), starring
Donnie Wahlberg,
Leslie Hope,
Dustin Milligan, and
Sarah Ramos. It was the first drama series launched by The CW. In 2011, Hodge created
The Playboy Club (NBC) about the first Playboy Club in Chicago in the 1960s. The pilot was directed by
Alan Taylor. The show starred
Laura Benanti,
Amber Heard,
Jenna Dewan,
Leah Renee,
Naturi Naughton,
Eddie Cibrian,
David Krumholtz, and
Jenifer Lewis. Also in 2011,
Out Magazine named Hodge one of the "Out 100" in their annual list of the most influential LGBTQ public figures. In 2015, Hodge created
Wayward Pines (FOX) based on the best-selling novel by
Blake Crouch. The event series starred
Matt Dillon,
Terrence Howard, and
Melissa Leo. The series was meant to be just ten episodes, but it performed very well and FOX ordered a second season. Hodge, however, had moved on to create another series with Blake Crouch,
Good Behavior, based on Crouch's short story "The Pain of Others." In 2016, Hodge created
Good Behavior (TNT) starring
Michelle Dockery and
Juan Diego Botto. The show was critically well-received and aired for two seasons. Hodge was nominated for the 2018 Writers Guild of America Award for Best Dramatic Writing for the episode "The Heart Attack is the Best Way." In 2017, Hodge returned to his theatrical roots as co-book writer for the musical stage adaptation of
Holiday Inn, the 1942 Universal film starring
Bing Crosby and
Fred Astaire. The musical had its first production at the Goodspeed Opera House in Connecticut before opening on Broadway at the Roundabout Theatre. In 2018, Hodge wrote the screenplay for feature film
The Darkest Minds (20th Century Fox) based on the
New York Times bestselling novel by
Alexandra Bracken. The film starred
Amandla Stenberg and
Harris Dickinson. Hodge wrote and executive-produced Netflix's first gay holiday rom-com,
Single All the Way, which premiered on the platform in December 2021. The plot follows Peter who, desperate to avoid his family's judgment about his perpetual single status, convinces his best friend Nick to join him for the holidays and pretend they're now in a relationship. But their plan goes awry when his family decides to play matchmaker. The film was directed by
Michael Mayer with principal photography taking place in
Montreal, Canada. The cast includes
Michael Urie, Philemon Chambers,
Luke Macfarlane,
Jennifer Coolidge,
Jennifer Robertson, and
Kathy Najimy. ==Filmography==