Harvard Crimson reporter, who exclaimed that “Meyer’s presence spurs other Simpsons writers to
be funnier,” extolling Meyer’s gift for “inspiring greatness in those around him.”
Meyer left The Simpsons in 2004 and is currently working on his first novel—tentatively titled
Kick Me 1,000,000 Times or I’ll Die—but his influence in the writers’ room persists. Today,
“George’s voice is strongly in the DNA of the show,” says Payne, “and he showed me that you don’t
have to be a jerk to get ahead.” Carolyn Omine adds that “We all picked up a lot of George’s comedic
sense. Even though he’s not here at The Simpsons anymore, we sometimes think in his way.” Years
later, Meyer is still working to lift his colleagues up. Despite winning five Emmy Awards, Tim Long
hadn’t achieved his lifelong dream: he wanted to be published in The New Yorker. In 2010, Long sent
Meyer a draft of a submission. Meyer responded swiftly with incisive feedback. “He just went
through it line by line, and he was incredibly generous. His notes helped me fix things that were
bugging me at the bottom of my soul, but I couldn’t articulate them.” Then, Meyer took his giving one
step further: he reached out to an editor at The New Yorker to help Long get his foot in the door. By
2011, Long’s dream was fulfilled—twice.
By the time Meyer released the second issue of Army Man, he had thirty contributors. They all
wrote jokes for free, and their careers soared along with Meyer’s. At least seven of those
contributors went on to write for The Simpsons. One contributor, Spike Feresten, wrote a single
Simpsons episode in 1995, and became an Emmy-nominated writer and producer on Seinfeld, where
he wrote the famous “Soup Nazi” episode. And the Army Man contributors who didn’t become
Simpsons writers achieved success elsewhere. For example, Bob Odenkirk is a well-known writer
and actor, Roz Chast is a staff cartoonist for The New Yorker, and Andy Borowitz became a
bestselling author and creator of “The Borowitz Report,” a satire column and website with millions
of fans. Before that, Borowitz coproduced the hit movie Pleasantville and created The Fresh Prince
of Bel-Air, which in turn launched Will Smith’s career. By inviting them to write for Army Man,
Meyer helped them soar. “I just asked the people who made me laugh to contribute,” Meyer told Mike
Sacks. “I didn’t realize they would become illustrious.”
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