Writer
Alex Epstein, in his book and blog
Crafty Screenwriting, defines a showrunner as follows: The contract gained by the Writers Guild of America in the
2023 strike now explicitly defines "showrunner" as writers and people responsible for making hiring decisions regarding a project's other staff writers. In a January 1990 submission to the United States Congress House Committee on the Judiciary Subcommittee on Courts, Intellectual Property, and the Administration of Justice,
Barney Rosenzweig (Executive Vice President and Chairman, Television Division of
Weintraub Entertainment Group) wrote:
Los Angeles Times columnist Scott Collins describes showrunners as: In a 2011 article in
The Australian,
Shane Brennan, the showrunner for
NCIS and
NCIS: Los Angeles, described the position thus: In June 2023,
Andy Greenwald of
Briarpatch said of the title of showrunner, "It's a made-up title, and it's not a paid position". Without an
overall deal, he said, a showrunner could be paid less than a co-executive producer "because everything else that I do — from hiring the writers, to being on set and producing, to being in
post for months, then doing press — is not compensated". With the end of the
streaming wars and Hollywood emphasizing profitability, overall deals became much rarer. Reduced compensation for showrunners and others in the writers' room helped cause the
2023 Writers Guild of America strike. In an interview that same month with
Vox, writer
Erica Saleh, who developed the series
One of Us Is Lying, listed the function and structure of the personnel in WGA
writers' rooms, explaining that showrunners determine the tone and genre of the show, and break down the structure of a season, its episodes, and storylines, prior to actual production of the program. Saleh listed the hierarchy of the staff on WGA shows, in order of authority: ==Canada==