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Payne and McKay are originally from
McLean, Virginia.[3] The two met in 1997 on their high school debate team, and directed a short play that Payne wrote for their school's festival.[4][5] Payne attended
Yale University and studied English Literature, graduating with honors. McKay attended
Stonehill College and studied Theater Arts, and
American University, where he received an MFA in Creative Writing.[6]
Career
Their script Midas helped them get agency representation and management. In August 2010, they sold their first ever script Goliath to
Relativity Media.[5][4]Scott Derrickson was set to direct the project for Relativity.[7] In 2011, they were hired to write Deadliest Warrior for
Paramount based on the Deadliest WarriorSpike television series.[8]
After writing Deadliest Warrior, Payne and McKay went to work for
Bad Robot. There, they wrote Boilerplate, which is based on the novel of the same name, and Micronauts.[9][10] After, the duo wrote Law Zero for
Warner Bros.[5][4]
In July 2016, the duo were hired to write the
fourth Star Trek film after working on Beyond.[13] They later revealed that the plot was inspired by
2001: A Space Odyssey, and involved character
James Kirk meeting his father
George Kirk, but they were the same age because of a "cosmic quirk" in the Star Trek universe.[1] When the project fell apart after two and a half years, it pushed Payne and McKay to "start taking TV seriously. That led us to Rings of Power."[14][1]
Payne and McKay joined the Godzilla vs. Kong writers' room in March 2017.[15] Four months later, they were announced to have written the most recent draft of
Disney's Jungle Cruise.[16] In August, they were set to write A People's History Of The Vampire Uprising for Fox and
21 Laps.[17]
The two were hired to write Amazon's Lord of the Rings series in July 2018.[18] They were confirmed as showrunners in July 2019.[19] To develop the series, Payne and McKay believed
J. R. R. Tolkien's lesser-known
Second Age was the key. They worked together to map out five seasons of television that told the first five minutes of the prologue in The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring. After their first pitch to Amazon, they got a call to return, but they had to pitch all five seasons of the series. The two mapped out the series at Payne's assistant's apartment, and successfully pitched the show. Afterwards, they were called back for seven more pitches. In initial meetings with the
Tolkien Estate, Payne quoted Tolkien and greeted
Simon Tolkien in Elvish. Their idea for the series lined up with Simon Tolkien's vision, and their former boss
J. J. Abrams recommended them to Amazon.[2][20]
In February 2022, they set up their 2017
Black List script Escape with
The Hideaway Entertainment, with James Watkins to direct the film.[21] In February 2024, they signed a three-year exclusive overall deal with
Amazon MGM Studios with their production company 10:40 PM Productions.[22]