The writer gained notoriety in the summer of 2011, when he joined the ABCfantasy/dramaOnce Upon a Time,[1][2] writing and co-producing the show, which ran for seven years.
Episodes Goldberg contributed to Once Upon a Time include:
In 2014, Goldberg and David S. Goyer, wrote a pilot script for a Superman-origin story called Krypton. The Warner Horizon Television and DC Comics television show, premiered on March 21, 2018 and ran for two seasons on the Syfy network.[3]
Goldberg, along with Edward Kitsis and Adam Horowitz, also created Dead of Summer, a 10-episode thriller about a haunted summer camp that debuted on Freeform on June 28, 2016.[4]
On April 14, 2017, Goldberg and Andrew Chambliss were announced as joint showrunners for the 4th season of Fear the Walking Dead. He continued in that position for Season 5.[5]
"The Beginning" (6.16) (co-written with Chambliss)
Season 7
"The Beacon" (7.01) (co-written with Chambliss)
"Six Hours" (7.02) (co-written with Chambliss)
"PADRE" (7.08) (co-written with Chambliss)
"Follow Me" (7.09) (co-written with Chambliss)
"Amina" (7.15) (co-written with Chambliss)
"Gone" (7.16) (co-written with Chambliss)
Film
In December 2013, Goldberg and Richard Naing's screenplay, The Autopsy of Jane Doe, landed on the 2013 Black List, an annual list compiling Hollywood's Hottest Unproduced Scripts.[6]
In October 2015, New Line Cinema tapped Goldberg and his The Autopsy of Jane Doe writing partner Richard Naing, to write the film The Boy Who Drew Monsters. The film is based on the 2014 book by Keith Donohue.[7]
Author Stephen King said of The Autopsy of Jane Doe that as "visceral horror, this terror tale rivals Alien and early Cronenberg. Watch it, but not alone."[11]
In October 2019, Netflix began streaming the Paramount Players film Eli, directed by Ciaran Foy with a script by Goldberg, Naing, and David Chirchirillo.[12][13]