Larry Brody has been profiled in such national magazines as Esquire, Entertainment Weekly, Starlog, People, Electronic Media, IndySlate, on websites such as TechTV, and of course in TV Guide.
Currently Creative Director of Cloud Creek Institute For The Arts, a not-for-profit corporation dedicated to giving new artists in all fields the leg up they deserve, Brody is also Executive Producer of a new lifestyle series, Extreme Vintage, and is writing a new non-fiction book, Turning Points in Television, scheduled to join Television Writing from the Inside Out: Your Channel to Success on bookshelves next Fall.
Before trading in his L.A. accoutrements for not-for-profit Benefit Programs, Brody kept busy developing and writing a new animated series, After The Fall, for Eruptor.Com, and the live-action sci-fi series Ace Lightning for the BBC.
He has written over 500 hours of network television, including episodes of The Huntress, Diagnosis Murder, Star Trek: Voyager, Walker Texas Ranger, Heaven Help Us, Star Trek: The Next Generation, The Bold Ones, Hawaii Five-0, Here Come The Brides, Partners In Crime, The Rookies, The Interns, The Streets Of San Francisco, Cannon, Ironside, Medical Story, Medical Center, The Six Million Dollar Man, Barnaby Jones, the old Star Trek animated TV series, the Superman animated TV series, and the not-so-animated Super Force.
Recently, Brody was Executive Creative Consultant on Spider-Man Unlimited, and the highly acclaimed Silver Surfer and Spawn animated series. Farrell For The People, one of the many MOWs Brody has written, won a Women In TV & Film Award For Best Drama.
Brody also produced Super Force, as well as Baretta, The Fall Guy, Automan, Partners In Crime, Mike Hammer, The New Rin Tin Tin, and Police Story (which won an Emmy as Best Drama Show 'way back when).
In addition to everything else, Brody writes a regular column for ScreenTalk magazine and runs TW Writer.com, the most successful television writing site on the web. When recuperating from his exhausting schedule he can be found on his mountaintop ranch in the Ozarks, talking to his horses and listening to the trees.