Aaron Shure

American television writer, director, and producer


title: "Aaron Shure" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["year-of-birth-missing-(living-people)", "living-people", "american-television-writers", "american-male-television-writers", "american-television-producers", "filmmakers-from-colorado", "colorado-college-alumni", "screenwriters-from-colorado"] description: "American television writer, director, and producer" topic_path: "arts" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aaron_Shure" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary American television writer, director, and producer ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox person"]

FieldValue
nameAaron Shure
occupationWriter, director, producer
yearsactive1997–present
credits
known_forComedy series
awardsPrimetime Emmy Award (3)
::

|image= |caption= |name=Aaron Shure |birth_date= |birth_place= |occupation=Writer, director, producer |yearsactive= 1997–present | credits = | known_for = Comedy series | awards = Primetime Emmy Award (3) |spouse= Aaron Shure is an American television writer, director, and producer. He is known for his work on several comedy series, including The Office, Everybody Loves Raymond, Lucky Louie, George and Leo, and The New Adventures of Old Christine.

Shure was showrunner and executive producer for season 3 of the TBS comedy People of Earth, but that season was cancelled prior to production.

Career

Television

Born in Colorado, Shure regularly performed as an underage regular at Comedy Works in Denver. He graduated from Colorado College with a degree in philosophy and later worked as a karaoke host, street performer, radio commentator and circus clown. After moving to Florida, Shure performed on the streets as a member of Streetmosphere, a character-based improv troupe at Disney-MGM Studios. He also developed skills in improvisational comedy at SAK Comedy Lab.

Shure began his career as a writer for the CBS series George and Leo, and then as a writer and executive producer for the classic CBS sitcom Everybody Loves Raymond for the next seven years. In that time, Shure received two Emmy Awards for Outstanding Comedy Series and five Emmy nominations. The show was named 30-Minute TV Program of the Year by the American Film Institute and recognized, along with The Office, as one of the 101 best written television series of all time by the Writers Guild of America, West.

He then moved on to writing and producing for Louis C.K.'s HBO series Lucky Louie, followed by The New Adventures of Old Christine. From 2008 to 2012, Shure was a writer and producer for the hit NBC sitcom The Office, where he earned three consecutive Emmy nominations and three consecutive WGA nominations for TV Comedy Series, plus an additional WGA TV Episodic Comedy nomination for his episode "WUPHF.com." He worked on 99 episodes of the series, but not all his ideas made it into the show: an episode about Michael Scott coming back to the office in a messianic mood after spending the night accidentally crucified to a garage door was never filmed, even though Shure pitched it repeatedly.

Following The Office, Shure wrote and produced for TV Land's Hot in Cleveland. He also created and directed the transmedia series Dirty Work, which won the Emmy Award for Outstanding Creative Achievement in Interactive Media, the first time ever the Television Academy had awarded a property created solely for an online audience.

Since 2016, he has written and produced for the TBS comedy series, People of Earth, whose executive producers also include Conan O'Brien and Greg Daniels.

Shure and Norman Lear co-wrote en episode of "Notes on Love" for Shondaland and Netflix.

Commentary

Shure's radio commentary has aired on WBEZ and NPR and he once appeared on the Late Show with David Letterman during a "Stupid Human Tricks" segment. He has written political commentaries for The Huffington Post and mused about the trials of being an expectant father for Salon.

Personal life

He lives in Los Angeles with his two children and actively supports Public Citizen, a non-partisan foundation which says it serves as the people's voice in the nation's capital.

Filmography

As producer

::data[format=table]

YearTitleRole
2017People of EarthExecutive Producer
2017Showrunner
2011–2012The OfficeConsulting Producer
2008–2011Co-Executive Producer
2008The New Adventures of Old ChristineConsulting Producer
2006–2007Lucky LouieConsulting Producer
2002–2005Everybody Loves RaymondCo-Executive Producer
2001–2002Supervising Producer
2000–2001Producer
2005Everybody Loves Raymond: The Last LaughExecutive Producer
::

As writer

::data[format=table]

YearTitleRole
2017People of EarthWriter and Executive Producer
2012Dirty WorkWriter and co-Creator
2008–2012The OfficeWriter
2008The New Adventures of Old ChristineWriter
2006Lucky LouieWriter
1999–2005Everybody Loves RaymondWriter
1999–2000Executive Story Editor
1998–1999Story Editor
1997–1998George and LeoTeleplay
::

Awards

Primetime Emmy Awards

::data[format=table]

YearCategoryFilmResult
2011–2012Outstanding Creative Achievement in Interactive Media

Writers Guild of America Awards

::data[format=table]

YearCategoryTVResult
2010Television: Comedy SeriesThe Office
Television: Episodic ComedyThe Office – "WUPHF.com"
2009Television: Comedy SeriesThe Office
2008Television: Comedy SeriesThe Office
::

References

References

  1. "People of Earth' Canceled: TBS Reverses Course on Season 3 Renewal".
  2. "Aaron Shure – Biography". IMDb.
  3. "Aaron Shure – Awards". IMDb.
  4. "AFI picks pix, TV for '03". Variety.
  5. "Writers Choose the 101 Best Written TV Series of All Time". Writers Guild of America, West.
  6. Canfield, David. (11 March 2020). "The wildest Office ideas that almost happened".
  7. "Dirty Work". Television Academy.
  8. "People of Earth (2016–2017) - Gerry's Return".
  9. Stanhope, Kate. (14 November 2016). "'People of Earth' Exec Producer Greg Daniels on Reuniting With Conan O'Brien, Peak TV and an 'Office' Follow-Up".
  10. White, Peter. (24 September 2019). "Shondaland Teams With Norman Lear, Steve Martin & ‘Shrill’ Creator Lindy West On Neflix Anthology Series ‘Notes On Love’".
  11. "Aaron Shure". Huffington Post.
  12. Shure, Aaron. "The fainter". Salon.
  13. "Aaron Shure filmography".
  14. "emmys: Aaron Shure".

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year-of-birth-missing-(living-people)living-peopleamerican-television-writersamerican-male-television-writersamerican-television-producersfilmmakers-from-coloradocolorado-college-alumniscreenwriters-from-colorado