Chasen's Restaurant, Beverly Hills, California, United States
Brandon Tartikoff attends the premiere party for Durante on November 1, 1989, at Chasen's Restaurant in Beverly Hills, California.
School period
Gallery of Brandon Tartikoff
Lawrenceville School, Lawrence, New Jersey, United States.
Brandon Tartikoff studied at Lawrenceville School.
College/University
Gallery of Brandon Tartikoff
Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, United States
Brandon Tartikoff went on to study broadcasting at Yale University, where he contributed to campus humor magazine The Yale Record. He graduated from Yale as a Bachelor of Arts with honors in 1970.
Career
Gallery of Brandon Tartikoff
1994
20th Century Fox Studios in Century City, California, United States
Producer Brandon Tartikoff attends UCLA Women's Cancer Research Benefit on May 7, 1994, at 20th Century Fox Studios in Century City, California.
Gallery of Brandon Tartikoff
1983
Pasadena Civic Auditorium, Pasadena, California, United states
Brandon Tartikoff attends 35th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards on September 25, 1983, at the Pasadena Civic Auditorium in Pasadena, California.
Gallery of Brandon Tartikoff
1984
United States
Brandon Tartikoff reading on the sofa.
Gallery of Brandon Tartikoff
1985
United States
Television executive Brandon Tartikoff and comedian Bob Hope.
Gallery of Brandon Tartikoff
1985
National Broadcasting Company, Burbank, California, United States
Host Johnny Carson and Brandon Tartikoff, President of NBC Entertainment, with announcer Ed McMahon on October 23, 1985.
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1986
Spago's Restaurant, Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, United States
Grant Tinker, Michael J. Fox, Brandon Tartikoff, and a guest sighting at Spago's Restaurant in Hollywood on September 3, 1986.
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1989
Dodgers Stadium, Los Angeles, California, United States
Brandon Tartikoff and Corbin Bernsen during Hollywood All Star Charity Baseball Game - August 26, 1989 at Dodgers Stadium in Los Angeles, California, United States.
Gallery of Brandon Tartikoff
1989
Century Plaza Hotel, Century City, California, United States
Producer Brandon Tartikoff and wife Lilly Tartikoff attend NBC Affiliates Party on July 15, 1989, at the Century Plaza Hotel in Century City, California.
Gallery of Brandon Tartikoff
1990
Los Angeles, California, United States
Brandon Tartikoff and Will Smith and guest during NBC Allstars Party 1990 in Los Angeles, California, United States.
Gallery of Brandon Tartikoff
1991
Beverly Hilton Hotel, Beverly Hills, California, United States
Producer Brandon Tartikoff attends 28th Annual Publicist's Guild of America Awards on March 22, 1991, at the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Beverly Hills, California.
Gallery of Brandon Tartikoff
1991
Century Plaza Hotel, Century City, California, United States
Jeff Sagansky and Brandon Tartikoff attend NAACP Gala Honoring Eddie Murphy on July 19, 1991, at the Century Plaza Hotel in Century City, California.
Gallery of Brandon Tartikoff
1993
California, United States
Brandon and Lilly Tartikoff
Gallery of Brandon Tartikoff
1993
Rose Bowl, Pasadena, California, United States
Jon Voight and Brandon Tartikoff attend The Stars Come Out for Super Bowl XXVII on January 30, 1993, at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California.
Dodgers Stadium, Los Angeles, California, United States
Brandon Tartikoff and Corbin Bernsen during Hollywood All Star Charity Baseball Game - August 26, 1989 at Dodgers Stadium in Los Angeles, California, United States.
Century Plaza Hotel, Century City, California, United States
Producer Brandon Tartikoff and wife Lilly Tartikoff attend NBC Affiliates Party on July 15, 1989, at the Century Plaza Hotel in Century City, California.
Beverly Hilton Hotel, Beverly Hills, California, United States
Producer Brandon Tartikoff attends 28th Annual Publicist's Guild of America Awards on March 22, 1991, at the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Beverly Hills, California.
Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, United States
Brandon Tartikoff went on to study broadcasting at Yale University, where he contributed to campus humor magazine The Yale Record. He graduated from Yale as a Bachelor of Arts with honors in 1970.
(The brain child behind the success of NBC Entertainment g...)
The brain child behind the success of NBC Entertainment gives an anecdotal look at network television with stories about the making of such hits as "Cheers" and "The Cosby Show."
Brandon Tartikoff was an American television executive. He was the president of the National Broadcasting Company (NBC) from 1980 to 1991.
Background
Brandon Tartikoff was born on January 13, 1949, in Freeport, New York, United States to the family of a clothing manufacturer Jordan and a cruise company employee Enid Tartikoff. His parents noticed early on that their son had a different relationship to television than most kids. Instead of just watching television shows, Tartikoff always viewed the entertainment critically. After watching the premiere of the situation comedy Dennis the Menace, according to The Last Great Ride, the young boy remarked, "They could have made that show much better."
Education
After completing Lawrenceville School, Brandon Tartikoff went on to study broadcasting at Yale University, where he contributed to campus humor magazine The Yale Record. He graduated from Yale as a Bachelor of Arts with honors in 1970.
While at Yale, Brandon Tartikoff developed a keen interest in television management and production, working as an account executive and sales manager at such stations as WNHC-TV in New Haven, Connecticut, as well as in Hartford, Connecticut. And even while he was on vacation, Tartikoff spent his holidays in Los Angeles looking for a job in network television. Upon graduating from Yale, he found gainful employment in advertising and local television at a series of local stations, including WLS-TV in Chicago, Illinois.
Brandon Tartikoff had only been out of Yale three years when American Broadcasting Company (ABC) affiliate WLS-TV in Chicago, Illinois, hired him as its executive in charge of dramatic programming. Tartikoff improved the station's ratings by writing a comedy-variety show and coming up with creative promotions. For example, Tartikoff originated programming stunts such as "Not for the Weak Week," when the station broadcast lots of horror films.
Tartikoff's career really started to take off in 1976, when the president of ABC, Fred Silverman, saw a WLS promotion called Gorilla My Dreams. When Silverman learned that Tartikoff had come up with the idea, he hired the young programmer to be the manager of dramatic development for ABC. Within a year, Tartikoff had earned a promotion to the position of program executive for current dramatic programming at the network.
In 1978, Silverman took a job as the president of the rival network NBC. Tartikoff followed him to NBC and immediately began climbing through the executive ranks of the network. By 1980, at the age of thirty-one, Tartikoff had been named NBC's president of programming. At this time, NBC ranked a distant third among the three major broadcast networks in terms of the overall audience. The network had a number of unpopular programs and faced financial difficulties. Many people in the television industry wondered whether the new management team could lead NBC out of its slump.
Unfortunately, NBC continued to struggle under Silverman, and he resigned as head of the network in 1981. But Tartikoff remained on as president of programming under new network president Grant Tinker, a former television producer with the Mary Tyler Moore Productions. Tinker gave Tartikoff a great deal of freedom to make programming choices, and the young executive soon found a formula for success. Tartikoff decided to support solidly written, critically well-received programs even if they failed to attract strong ratings at first. Some of the shows he saved from cancellation were Family Ties, Cheers, Hill Street Blues, and St. Elsewhere. All of these shows went on to find an enthusiastic audience and become hits.
Tartikoff also participated in the creation of several new shows as president of programming at NBC. In 1984, for instance, he saw the African American actor and comedian Bill Cosby perform on The Tonight Show and decided to work with Cosby to develop a family comedy series. Tartikoff brought in producers Tom Werner and Marcy Carsey to help create The Cosby Show, which aired from 1984 to 1992 and reached the top spot in the annual TV ratings for four seasons. The success of The Cosby Show led to increased opportunities for African Americans on television and helped energize the sitcom format.
Tartikoff's programming choices, although sometimes risky, paid off for NBC by enhancing its reputation as a high-quality network. Of course, Tartikoff promoted some forgettable shows during his tenure at NBC, such as The Bay City Blues and Jennifer Slept Here, but he also helped develop some tremendously successful programs, such as Miami Vice, L.A. Law, and Seinfeld. During that period of time, he also involved in the creation of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine and Beggars and Choosers.
During his years at NBC, Tartikoff not only became one of the most powerful figures in television, but he also emerged as a sort of celebrity. He made several guest appearances on TV programs, gave interviews on talk shows, and even hosted Saturday Night Live. "So much of what NBC is about today is due to Brandon," Dick Ebersol, president of NBC Sports, told People. "He was the most competitive person I ever knew, and for the first time in history, NBC cared about winning. He always won with style, grace, and most of all humor." By the time Tartikoff left NBC in 1991, the network had been ranked number one for six seasons in a row.
After leaving NBC, Tartikoff spent one year as the chairman of a major motion picture studio, Paramount Pictures. Despite facing budget limitations, he managed to turn out several box-office successes, including The Addams Family, Wayne's World, and Indecent Proposal. Tartikoff also wrote a memoir, The Last Great Ride, about his years at NBC.
In 1992, Tartikoff and one of his two daughters were involved in a serious car accident. His daughter suffered a traumatic head injury, and Tartikoff resigned from his job at Paramount in order to help out during her recovery. Afterward, he became head of New World Entertainment, but he left a short time later when it was purchased by another company. Then Tartikoff started his own production company, which he called H. Beale after a character in the movie Network. In 1997, Tartikoff took a job with the Internet services company America Online (AOL) to help develop online entertainment programs.
When Brandon Tartikoff was only thirty-one years old, he became the president of programming for the NBC television network. During the ten years that Tartikoff remained in this position, his choices helped make NBC the highest-rated network in the United States.
In 2004, the National Association of Television Programming Executives (NATPE) honored Tartikoff by presenting the first annual Brandon Tartikoff Legacy Awards. "In the spirit of Tartikoff's generosity of spirit and creative leadership, the awards will celebrate a select group of television professionals who exhibit extraordinary passion, leadership, independence, and vision in the process of creating television programming," the organization explained in a press release quoted by PR Newswire.
Brandon Tartikoff Legacy Collection was formally accepted at University of Southern California School of Cinematic Arts. The collection has more than 4,000 letters, memos, press interviews and speeches from the NBC chairman who died in 1997. George Lucas had pushed for the film school to obtain the papers. He said he did this as “a big fan” of Tartikoff.
(The brain child behind the success of NBC Entertainment g...)
1992
Views
Brandon Tartikoff believed in everything he was doing and more than that he believed in the medium and the people who watched it. He was a visionary in his business. He believed in creative people and the talent, and he believed in the American audience.
Quotations:
"When I got cancer and was faced with at least an understanding of my mortality, nothing was a given anymore. It helped me channel my energies."
Personality
Tartikoff was proud of his own ability to construct and deliver a joke. Before he joined NBC as an executive he tried to join its late-night comedy show, ''Saturday Night Live'' as a writer.
Physical Characteristics:
While working in Chicago, Brandon Tartikoff was diagnosed with Hodgkin's disease, a type of cancer that affects the lymph nodes (part of the immune system). Although he underwent a difficult series of treatments that caused him to lose fifty pounds, Tartikoff did not take any sick leave. Once his cancer went into remission (stopped growing and became inactive), the young executive became determined to use the experience as motivation.
Tartikoff's cancer returned shortly after he embarked on this new venture. Once again, he continued to work while he underwent treatment, frustrating his doctors by ignoring their orders to rest. On August 27, 1997, Tartikoff finally lost his twenty-five-year battle against Hodgkin's disease and died at the University of California at Los Angeles Medical Center. His funeral was attended by hundreds of notable figures from the world of television, including Ted Danson, Jerry Seinfeld, Fred Silverman, Grant Tinker, and Danny De Vito.
Quotes from others about the person
"Brandon Tartikoff's legacy can be seen in some of television's biggest hits of the moment, whether it's Desperate Housewives, Lost, The Sopranos, or The Shield. They're examples of his legacy because he showed quality programming can succeed in commercial television. Brandon wasn't impatient. If he believed in a show, he gave it time to find its audience. Brandon understood what viewers wanted. He loved making television because he loved watching television." - PBS president Pat Mitchell
"Brandon wasn't impatient. If he believed in a show, he gave it time to find its audience. Brandon understood what viewers wanted. He loved making television because he loved watching television." - PBS president Pat Mitchell
"In an industry that is often very cynical and unforgiving, Brandon didn't have a cynical bone in his body." - Jeff Sagansky, president of CBS Entertainment, co-president of Sony Pictures Entertainment and a longtime friend
Interests
Sport & Clubs
baseball, Dodgers
Connections
Brandon Tartikoff married a former dancer with the New York City Ballet Lilly Samuels in 1982. They had two daughters: Calla Lianne and Elizabeth Justine.