CB

Carl Binder

Based on his first industry project--as a production assistant and single-episode writer for the '80s sitcom "Punky Brewster"--predicting that Carl Binder would eventually wind up a TV sci-fi maven would have been quite a stretch, but 20 years later, that's exactly what transpired, as Binder became one of the main producers behind the "Stargate" franchise. Along the way, he had a big hand as a writer/producer in other decidedly-not-science-fiction productions, starting most prominently with the family Western "Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman," which starred Jane Seymour in the title role. Between 1995 and 1998, Binder executive-produced, was the lead contributing writer, and directed three episodes of the show, all coming on the heels of co-writing the screenplay for the Disney animated blockbuster "Pocahontas" in 1995. Binder stayed with a wilderness aesthetic for his first work as a creator, the 1998 drama "Little Men," which was shot and produced in his native Canada. After the series' two-season run, Binder began work on his legacy project, first writing an episode of "Stargate SG-1" in 1999, followed several years later by his writing and executive-producing on its spin-off, "Stargate Atlantis"--which was shot in Vancouver--from 2004 to 2009. In 2009, Binder began contributing to a hipper incarnation of the product, the New Mexico-filmed "SGU Stargate Universe," which cast the charismatic British veteran Robert Carlyle as its lead. Binder began producing yet another spinoff, "Stargate Extinction," for video, in 2011.
WIKIPEDIA

Writer

Director

Producer