David Kendall, the writer, director and executive producer closely tied to Boy Meets World, died May 2, 2026, at age 68. Will Friedle, Rider Strong and Danielle Fishel announced the news on Instagram and said the man they worked with was “instrumental in the creation of Boy Meets World.”
The cast did not treat the loss as a routine tribute. “We have lost a vital piece of our family,” they wrote, urging viewers to think of Kendall the next time they watch the series, “especially Seasons 2 & 3 (when he served as showrunner),” a stretch the trio singled out as central to the show’s identity. Boy Meets World ran seven seasons from 1993 to 2000, and Kendall’s name is now being folded back into that history as the person behind some of its most durable creative choices.
That matters today because Kendall’s influence did not stop with Cory Matthews and his classroom. The hosts of Pod Meets World, the podcast built around the series, said Kendall “directed, wrote and executive produced our show, but also helped mold some of TV’s most memorable sitcoms, from Growing Pains to Hannah Montana.” The source says he collaborated on Growing Pains, mentored talent during the Hannah Montana years, helped launch Zendaya’s career in her early Disney days, gave creative guidance that benefited Miley Cyrus, worked with the Jonas Brothers and drew praise from Austin Butler for his influence during Butler’s formative years.
That broader record explains why the loss lands beyond one beloved sitcom. Kendall’s creative career spanned four decades, and the podcast hosts said he was a frequent guest on Pod Meets World, making him part of the show’s ongoing conversation long after production ended. The tension now sits in plain view: viewers are being asked to remember the man behind the series at the exact moment they are most likely to revisit the episodes he helped shape. The next time Boy Meets World airs, especially in Seasons 2 and 3, Kendall will be there in the credits and, for many fans, in the frame itself.