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Sandy Grushow : ウィキペディア英語版 | Sandy Grushow
Sandy Grushow (born April 3, 1960) is the former Chairman of the Fox Television Entertainment Group and former Chief Creative Officer〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.medialinkllc.com/news/announcements/january-30-2010/ )〕 of MediaLink, a multimedia advisory firm that provides critical counsel to clients in the marketing, media, entertainment, and technology industries.〔http://www.medialinkllc.com/〕 Grushow currently serves as CEO of Phase 2 Media, a board member for The Weather Company (parent company of The Weather Channel), and works with MediaLink in the role of senior media advisor.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/envelope/cotown/la-et-ct-sandy-grushow-joins-board-of-weather-channel-parent-20130605,0,5567358.story )〕 ==FOX== Grushow spent nearly 25 years at the Fox Entertainment Group, where he helped to create the Fox Broadcasting Company as it appears today. Grushow began his career in the feature film marketing department of 20th Century Fox, overseeing creative campaigns for movies such as ''Big'', ''Die Hard'' and ''Broadcast News''. In 1988, Grushow was asked by then chairman Barry Diller to invigorate Fox’s new broadcast TV network as he had the motion picture studio. Grushow built the network’s advertising and promotions department from the ground up between 1988 and 1990, launching signature FOX hits ''The Simpsons'', ''In Living Color'', ''COPS'' and ''90210''.〔Daniel Frankel (Grushow Heads to Medialink ) ‘’TheWrap.com’’ January 22, 2010〕 In addition to marketing, Grushow added programming and scheduling responsibilities to his purview in 1990 when he was named executive vice president of the FOX entertainment division. In 1992, at the age of 32, Grushow assumed the presidency of the Fox Entertainment Group entire network division, making him the youngest executive to ever hold the title of network president.〔John Lippman (Grushow Gets Programming Job at Fox TV ) “LATimes.com” December 1, 1992〕 In that leadership role, Grushow oversaw the development and launch of ''The X-Files'', ''Melrose Place'', ''Party of Five'', ''Living Single'' and ''MADtv'' while also expanding the network from four to seven nights of primetime programming. In 1996, following Grushow's successful network run, he was tasked with building FOX's television studio division, 20th Century Fox Television 〔Sallie Hofmeister (Sandy Grushow to Become President of Fox TV ) “LATimes.com” January 10, 1997〕 Grushow inherited an eighth-place studio with five shows on the air. With Grushow at the helm as President, the studio’s output ballooned to 22 shows; surpassing Warner Bros. Television to become the top ranked studio. In 1999, Grushow was tapped by Rupert Murdoch and Peter Chernin to return to the network he helped build. In a new role as Chairman of the Fox Television Entertainment Group, Grushow oversaw both the television studio and the network.〔Bill Carter. (The Media Business: Advertising; Goodbye to Ally and Scully and Mulder at Fox. Hello to Mr. Grubb and John Doe ) “The New York Times” May 17, 2002〕 Over the next five years, his group helped develop and launch broadcast stalwarts ''Malcolm in the Middle'', ''Titus'', ''Boston Public'', ''Dark Angel'', ''American Idol'', ''24'', ''The O.C.'', ''The Bernie Mac Show'', and finally, ''House''.
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