A television show creator or television program creator or television show maker is the person who developed a significant part of a television show's format, concept, characters, and pilot script. They have sequel rights to the material as well.
"Creator" is a specific credit given explicitly in many shows. However, it has not always been a prominent, explicit credit. For example, Sydney Newman, the accepted creator of The Avengers (1961–69), was never given an explicit credit as creator; Newman never thought to ask for one.[5]
The creator of a television show may retain rights to participate in profits, often to be paid by the production company as a percentage of fees that it receives from networks and distributors.[6] In 2014, for prime-time network television shows, the WGA-required royalty to be paid to a writer with "created by" credit was approximately $1,000 per episode or higher.[7]
Who merits creator credit is sometimes a matter of contention. In a 2013 legal case, a director sued a former writing partner for co-creator credit.[8]
↑In Newman's memoir, The Avengers and Me, Patrick Macnee interviewed Newman about his never receiving on-screen credit as creator of the series. Newman explained that he never sought on-screen credit on the series because during his previous tenure at the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, such credits were not given, and he never thought to get one for The Avengers. Per: Patrick Macnee and Dave Rogers, The Avengers and Me (TV Books, 1998, ISBN1575000598); republished in 2008 as The Avengers: The Inside Story (Titan Books, ISBN1845766431)