Joel Hodgson started in show business as a stand-up comedian during college, headlining in comedy clubs in
Minneapolis. After graduation in 1982, Joel moved to LA and became a regular at The Comedy Store on the Sunset
Strip.
In 1983, Joel was booked for his first network television appearance on “Late Night with David Letterman,” and
HBO’s “Young Comedians Special with John Candy.” The following year, Joel became a series regular on both
“Letterman” and NBC’s “Saturday Night Live,” with four appearances on each. When he wasn’t on television, Joel
was performing his act in comedy clubs and theaters across the country.
In 1987, Joel was invited by Jerry Seinfeld to co-write Seinfeld’s first HBO special, “Stand-Up Confidential,” where
Joel began to take an interest in other aspects of production. In the period after this, Joel began doing ensemble
work in the Minneapolis area producing two stage productions, Heavy Levity and Spookfest 87, while continuing to
invent and design props, toys, and robots.
It was in 1988 that Joel created “Mystery Science Theater 3000,” the ground-breaking movie riffing series, which
premiered on St. Paul’s local UHF station, KTMA, in Minnesota. The show migrated to cable on the Comedy
Channel, then to Comedy Central, then Sci-Fi and ran for a total of eleven years, producing nearly 200 episodes and
a feature film. It also collected several Emmy® nominations and a Peabody Award along the way.
In 1995, Joel explored more work in Hollywood, including creative development for The Jim Henson Company and
Walt Disney Television. As a writer, Joel co-wrote the Disney feature “Honey We Shrunk Ourselves” with Nell
Scovell, as well as Cartoon Network’s “Space Ghost Coast to Coast.” Joel also was a magic consultant for the series
“Sabrina the Teenage Witch” and for Penn and Teller’s Sin City Spectacular. HBO also commissioned Hodgson’s
experimental comedy special “The TV Wheel,” which premiered on Comedy Central.
With the background and experience Joel’s career had provided, he developed and began performing his one man
show Riffing Myself at theaters and comi-cons. He also started performing again with the original cast of “Mystery
Science Theater 3000” in a show called “Cinematic Titanic,” which Joel refers to as a “readers’ theater” version of
MST3K. The group’s run spanned nearly seven years with over 100 live performances.
In November of 2015, Joel created the #BringBackMST3K Kickstarter campaign, and along with the show's
“backers,” raised over six million dollars to fund new episodes of MST3K while setting a world record for the most
successful crowdfunding campaign for a film and video project ever.
The first new season after the Kickstarter was titled “MST3K: The Return” and featured an all-new cast as well as
cameos by the original MST3K cast and writers. It launched on Netflix in April 2016 and received critical acclaim,
including “100% Fresh” on Rotten Tomatoes.
Netflix commissioned a second order for the series, which was called “MST3K: The Gauntlet,” and it also met with
critical praise, including another coveted Rotten Tomatoes “100% Fresh” review.
Joel is currently the Chief Creative Officer of his company, Alternaversal, which is the company responsible for the
creating the new IP for MST3K. This includes the #BringBackMST3K Kickstarter campaign, 20 feature-length
episodes for Netflix, two national tours of Mystery Science Theater 3000 Live, and a six-comic mini-series on Dark
Horse Comics.