Chris Carter

       Chris Carter is the man behind the mythology who, based on a short-lived series called "Kolchak; the Night Stalker," created a pop-cultural phenomenon in 1993. Since then, Carter has written 67 episodes and one feature film of over the first eight seasons of his pet-show, The X-Files; "Pilot," "Deep Throat," "The Jersey Devil," "Space," "Fire," "Young at Heart," "Miracle Man," "Darkness Falls," "The Erlenmeyer Flask," "The Host," "Duane Barry," "Red Museum," "Irresistible," "Colony," "F. Emasculata," "Anasazi," "The Blessing Way," "Paper Clip," "The List," "Nisei," "Syzygy," "Piper Maru," "Apocrypha," "Talitha Cumi," "Herrenvolk," "Tunguska," "Terma," "Memento Mori," "Unrequited," "Tempus Fugit," "Max," "Gethsemane," "Redux," "Redux II," "Post-Modern Prometheus," "Chinga," "Patient X," "The Red and the Black," "The End," "Fight the Future," "The Beginning," "Triangle," "How the Ghosts Stole Christmas," "Two Fathers," "One Son," "Milagro," "Biogenesis," "The Sixth Extinction," "Amor Fati," "Sein Und Zeit," "Closure," "Fight Club," "Requiem," "Within," "Without," "Patience," "Per Manum," "This is Not Happening," "DeadAlive," "Three Words," "Essence," "Existence," "Nothing Important Happened Today," "Nothing Important Happened Today II," "Trust No 1," "Provenance," "Providence," "Improbable," "William" and "The Truth."
       In 1996, Carter created his second television series for the Fox Network, the horror-thriller Millennium, surrounding ex-FBI profiler Frank Black and his ability to see into the mind of a killer. For that, he wrote 7 episodes over its three seasons; "Pilot," "Gehenna," "The Well Worn Lock," "Lamentation," "TEOTWAWKI," "Antipas," and "Seven and One."
       In 1999, Carter created his third series for Fox, an extremely short-lived virtual reality opus entitled Harsh Realm surrounding the tribulations of Army lieutenant Thomas F. Hobbes. Of the nine produced shows, he wrote 4; "Pilot," "Leviathan," "Inga Fossa," and "Reunion."
       In 2001, Carter created his fourth series for Fox, a spin-off of The X-Files based on the quirky trio of conspiracy theorists, The Lone Gunmen. For that show, he has written 1 episode; "Three Men and a Smoking Diaper."