While in college, Smith got an internship at CineTel Films, an independent film company; after, she began working for CineTel, reading scripts and writing coverage for them. This led to a full-time job there as a Director of Development in 1995, and then she began pursuing screenwriting in earnest. One of the scripts she happened to read and cover was written by
Karen McCullah, an aspiring writer living in Denver, Colorado. The two women formed a friendship over the phone, and when McCullah came to Los Angeles, they met in person, and began writing their first script on cocktail napkins that night. That script never sold, but it inspired the women to write together again, and they embarked on a teen comedy called
10 Things I Hate About You, a twist on
William Shakespeare's
Taming of the Shrew partially inspired by the recent teen comedy
Clueless. The Spleenectomy, which starred
Anna Faris and was financed and produced by
Glamour magazine's Reel Moments. She also co-wrote and executive produced
The House Bunny, starring Anna Faris, and produced by
Adam Sandler’s
Happy Madison Productions. It grossed almost $50M domestically. In 2009, she co-wrote
The Ugly Truth, directed by
Legally Blonde collaborator
Robert Luketic and starring
Katherine Heigl and
Gerard Butler. Her first film as a non-writing producer,
Whip It!, starred
Elliot Page and was directed by
Drew Barrymore, and she also produced
American Virgin in 2009, starring
Jenna Dewan and
Rob Schneider. Her 2013 novel,
Trinkets, was adapted into a
streaming television series in 2019. The series has received several Daytime Emmy nominations and wins. It received the award in the Outstanding Writing for a Children's or Young Adult Program category in 2020, as well as the Outstanding Young Adult Drama category in 2020 and 2021. Smith has also created the graphic novel series
Misfit City alongside fellow writer Kurt Lustgarten and illustrator Naomi Franquiz
. The narrative follows a group of four small-town girls who set off on an adventure after they find an ancient pirate map. In October 2021, it was announced that HBO Max had started to develop an animated television series based on the comics. In September 2022, it was announced that Smith and longtime screenwriting partner McCullah were writing a new romantic comedy, titled
I Do... Not. The movie is being produced by
Mark Vahradian and
Lorenzo di Bonaventura for Amazon. The Smith-McCullah duo worked on a rewrite for
K-Pop: Lost in America. The movie will focus on a K-pop band who is about to do their US debut in New York's Madison Square Garden, but accidentally end up in Waco, Texas. Charles Melton and Rebel Wilson are reported to headline the film. ==Credits==