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James A. Bethea Jr. (born January 14, 1965) is an American writer, producer and occasional performer, primarily in the field of television. As the former Head of Current Programming for UPN, he is among a handful of African Americans to head a programming department at a broadcast network. Series overseen by him at UPN include Star Trek: Voyager, Dilbert, Clueless, and Moesha. As an actor, his work has included 2008's Iron Man and the 2010 sequel, Iron Man 2.

James Bethea
Bethea in Los Angeles, September 2008
Born
James A. Bethea Jr.

(1965-01-14) January 14, 1965 (age 57)
Harlem, New York, U.S.
Education
  • The Bronx High School of Science
  • Hunter College
OccupationWriter, producer
Years active1982–present

Early life and education


Bethea was born in New York City's Harlem, the son of Constance, a social worker, and James Sr., a hospital laboratory technician. Following the Bronx High School of Science, he attended Hunter College, majoring in Film and Communications with a minor in Computer Science.


Career


Bethea began his career in 1982 while a Bronx Science student, as a cast member of the Nickelodeon series Livewire. Finding the behind-the-camera aspects of television equally appealing, he obtained work as a production assistant, first at the Children's Television Workshop, then back at Nickelodeon as a Segment Producer for the 3-hour weekly variety show Total Panic. With high school classmate Karim Miteff, Bethea co-created and produced Nick Arcade, a groundbreaking virtual reality game show whose bluescreen process received an Ultimatte Award for Technical Achievement from the National Association of Broadcasters, as well as a Cable Ace nomination.[1] The series format was licensed and produced worldwide, including as Zona De Juego in Spain for TVE. Bethea also co-created and produced the original Slime Time Live.

In 1997, Bethea was hired by Viacom's UPN as Director of Programming[2] and promoted shortly after to Head of Current Programming.[3] In this capacity, he supervised the production of the network's entire primetime slate, including comedy, drama and alternative series. He also appeared as a D&D Dungeon Master in high school classmate Jon Favreau's 1999 pilot Smog. Eventually, Bethea sold the network a pilot script of his own, The Gibsons and in 2000, returned to freelance producing.[4] The script was not ordered to series.

Tapped again by Nickeodeon in 2003, Bethea developed and produced the TEENick Spin The Bottle franchise, in addition to composing its theme music. In 2005, Bethea began executive producing live television events. They include E!'s Live From the Red Carpet franchise and the 12th Critics' Choice Awards.

He is also the producer of two plays written by actor Mike O'Malley: Three Years From Thirty and Searching For Certainty.

Bethea donned a military uniform to portray an analyst for Jon Favreau in his 2008 Iron Man and its sequel, Iron Man 2; a nod to their days in high school as avid comic book fans.


Filmography



Actor



Executive producer



Executive in charge



Creator (developed)



References


  1. Pendleton, Jennifer (November 18, 1992). "Rivals for CableAces not even close to HBO". Variety. Retrieved June 27, 2022.
  2. UPN taps Bethea for programming, by Ray Richmond, Variety, May 20, 1997
  3. "UPN's inside moves". Variety. November 14, 1997. Retrieved June 27, 2022.
  4. Adalian, Josef (December 9, 1999). "Bethea inks Viacom deal". Variety. Retrieved June 27, 2022.





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