Harris Wittels, an executive producer on the popular NBC sitcom “Parks and Recreation” and a rising star on the alternative comedy scene died at his home Thursday at the age of 30.
According to NBC News, drug paraphernalia was found by police on the premises, but authorities will have to wait for the results of a toxicology report to determine whether illegal substances were the cause of Wittels’ death. It will take six to eight weeks for that report to be completed.
Such heartbreaking news about Harris Wittels. A really funny guy.
— Seth Meyers (@sethmeyers) February 20, 2015
Meanwhile, comedy fans and performers expressed shock over the loss of the writer behind several cult favorites, including “The Sarah Silverman Program,” “Eastbound and Down” and “Secret Girlfriend.” Wittels also made occasional cameo appearances on camera, memorably playing a pot-smoking employee for Animal Control, also named Harris on “Parks and Recreation.”
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Wittels is also credited for coining the phrase “humblebrag,” which has become so popular on social media it even inspired a 2012 coffee table book. Wittels spoke publicly in graphic detail about past troubles with drug addiction. During a “You Made It Weird“ podcast interview last November with comedian Pete Holmes, Wittels admitted to several stints in rehab, one as recently as a month before the interview, to combat his heroin abuse.
Don't know what to say. Harris Wittels was a fantastic writer I had the pleasure to work with at Parks and Rec. So so sad. RIP Harris.
— billy eichner (@billyeichner) February 20, 2015
“I just really stopped caring about my life. I just really started to think like ‘well, if I’m only here for 80 years then who cares if I spend it high or not,’” Wittels told Holmes. In that same interview, Wittels claimed he had been using recreational drugs since he was 12 years old.









