Raised in the Los Angeles suburb of Pasadena, White attended Wesleyan University in Connecticut and planned on writing plays in New York upon graduation, but when a fellow Wesleyan alumnus offered him a job in Hollywood, White moved back West instead. Although his first official Hollywood job was as an actor in a bit part in director Miguel Arteta's indie comedy "Star Maps" (1997), White found initial writing success in television when he was hired as a writer on the young adult drama series, "Dawson's Creek" (the WB, 1998-2003), eventually becoming a supervising producer. That led to script doctoring work on the teen comedy "Dead Man on Campus" (1998), in which two college roommates attempt to milk the faked suicide of their roommate for automatic straight As. White next joined the writing team behind creators Judd Apatow and Paul Feig's much-admired but short-lived dramedy "Freaks & Geeks" (NBC, 1999-2000), about two radically different but equally downtrodden peer groups growing up in suburban Michigan in the 1980s.
White's major foray into feature films as both actor and screenwriter came with the low-budget, highly heralded "Chuck&Buck" (2000), directed by his friend Arteta, in which White played a bizarre man-child who suddenly shows up, stalker-like, in the life of his childhood friend (played by another screenwriter-actor, Chris Weitz) seeking to reestablish their youthful bond and perhaps something more secretive. White was appropriately creepy and sympathetic in the role, which earned him the top acting honor at the Deauville Film Festival, Independent Spirit Award nominations for Best Debut Performance and Best Screenplay and the ISA trophy for Best Feature Under $500,000 and the New American Cinema Award for Best Writer at the Seattle International Film Festival. It was also deemed the "Best Film of 2000" by Entertainment Weekly. Returning briefly to television, White collaboarted with Arteta again to create the sudsy television series "Pasadena" (Fox, 2001), part homage and part satire of the prime time soap operas of the 1980s, focusing the Greeleys, a wealthy publishing family based in Los Angeles suburb, and starring Dana Delaney and future star Alison Lohman.
Two feature films penned by White debuted in 2002: The first was the Arteta-directed drama "The Good Girl," starring Jennifer Aniston, Jake Gyllenhaal and John C. Reilly. Opening to notable acclaim at the 2002 Sundance Film Festival, the film garnered White the Independent Spirit Award for Best Screenplay and earned a fresh round of critical accalim for the acting skills of Aniston, who--after a long and fruitless search for the right actress--was suggested by White for the lead role of Justine Last, a dissatisfied, married discount store clerk in the South's Bible Belt who embarks on an ill-advised affair with a decade-younger co-worker (Gyllenhaal) who fancies himself a tortured, misunderstood soul. White also had an entertaining on-screen turn in the film as Corny, the disapproving, church-obsessed security guard who tries to spark Aniston's interest in the Bible. The second film written by White that was released in 2002 was the second-generation themed comedy "Orange County," starring Jack Black, Colin Hanks (son of Tom), Schyler Fisk (daughter of Sissy Spacek) and directed by Jake Kasdan (son of Lawrence), which had the trappings of aNational Lampoon-syle comedy but operated on a more introspective level, with Hanks as an aspiring young writer looking to escape his upscale but dysfunctional Southern California trappings by gaining entrance into Stanford, only to have his inept guidance counsellor submit the wrong transcripts. The film performed modestly and was championed by several critics.
While White's film had been primarily admired in indie circles and best known for quirky (rather than laugh-out-loud) humor, his next screenwriting venture would prove to be both his most accessible and funniest effort. The writer tailored the script for "School of Rock" (2003) specifically to suit the skills and persona of his friend Jack Black, crafting a tale of proto-slacker and rock wannabe Dewey Finn who, in desperate need of cash, takes a subsitute teaching job posing as his room mate and recruits a musically gifted class of young private school kids into a rock group to compete in a battle of the bands. Working with director Richard Linklater, White delivered a story and screenplay that dodged obvious cuteness, ditched the usual mawkish sentimentality of such a set-up and was long on laughs. The script also capitalized on Black's strengths, creating the best star vehicle for the comedian to date. As an actor, White was also spot-on as ex-rocker-turned-milquetoast substitute teacher Ned Schneebly, Black's beleagured roomie and doormat for his castrating girlfriend Patty (Sarah Silverman), and followed up with an on-screen appearance in the satrical remake of the cult classic film "The Stepford Wives" (2004). Not everything came up sevens in White's career, however: yet another stab at creating a TV series, "Cracking Up" (Fox, 2004) failed to catch on with audiences.