Max Kliman
- Producer
- Director
- Actor
Max Kliman is a writer/producer who works as a Ratings Researcher at Jimmy Kimmel Live. At Kimmel, he works with one of the Executive Producers to strategize ideal guests, bits, segments, and formats based on data from Jimmy Kimmel Live and other late night programs.
Outside of work, he is a writer/actor for the online sketch comedy groups "Scary Horse" and "Tuesday Nites" and a producer on the short film "Everybody Wins." He previously produced the web-series, "Chill Girl," which screened at the Indie Series Awards and NYC Web Fest, and co-created the web series "Big Squad," which screened at the Los Angeles Lift-Off Festival and Hollywood Reel Independent Film Festival. He has previously written a half-hour pilot, "Showbiz," which placed in the quarterfinals of the WeScreenplay TV Lab competition, and a feature "Goodnight," which received an award from producer Brad Krevoy. He's currently developing a musical based on the 2006 movie "Accepted."
He is a graduate of Northwestern University, where he won a College Emmy Award for "The Blackout - Northwestern's Late Night Show," participated in The Second City's Improv Conservatory Program, and interned at The Late Show with Stephen Colbert.
Outside of work, he is a writer/actor for the online sketch comedy groups "Scary Horse" and "Tuesday Nites" and a producer on the short film "Everybody Wins." He previously produced the web-series, "Chill Girl," which screened at the Indie Series Awards and NYC Web Fest, and co-created the web series "Big Squad," which screened at the Los Angeles Lift-Off Festival and Hollywood Reel Independent Film Festival. He has previously written a half-hour pilot, "Showbiz," which placed in the quarterfinals of the WeScreenplay TV Lab competition, and a feature "Goodnight," which received an award from producer Brad Krevoy. He's currently developing a musical based on the 2006 movie "Accepted."
He is a graduate of Northwestern University, where he won a College Emmy Award for "The Blackout - Northwestern's Late Night Show," participated in The Second City's Improv Conservatory Program, and interned at The Late Show with Stephen Colbert.