Bob Tischler

Robert Tischler is an American television writer, audio engineer and television producer. Tischler engineered the National Lampoon's first comedy album[1] and with Michael O'Donoghue co-created and produced the National Lampoon Radio Hour. A friend of John Belushi's since the Radio Hour days, Tischler produced four Blues Brothers albums, the first of which, Briefcase Full of Blues, reached No. 1 on the Billboard 200 and went double platinum.

Bob Tischler
Born
United States
OccupationWriter, television producer

Tischler joined NBC's Saturday Night Live television program when Dick Ebersol took creative control in 1981 and became head writer of SNL for four seasons, leaving the show in 1985. Tischler produced David Brenner's late-night talk show Nightlife during the 1986-'87 season and has since written for and produced a number of television series, including What's Alan Watching?,[2] Empty Nest, Something So Right and Boy Meets World.

Career

Bob Tischler was making radio spots for movie studios when, after hiring improvisational actor Christopher Guest as voice talent, Guest and Tischler became friends. "Chris got me into show business," Tischler later recalled.[3] When Guest became involved with National Lampoon's 1972 Radio Dinner album, he called on Tischler to help.[3] Tischler co-produced the record with Lampoon magazine writers Tony Hendra and Michael O'Donoghue.

gollark: No, and why.
gollark: So this may eventually allow stuff like P2P potatoUPDATES™.
gollark: The first one is the actual data, the second one is metadata (currently just the hash of the data section).
gollark: You are wrong. Anyway, the manifests are effectively just two lines of deterministic JSON (i.e. JSON with all keys sorted and no whitespace, so it'll always hash the same way).
gollark: Eventually I could even start signing the manifests so that you could safely download potatOS from *anywhere* and verify that it's the right thing easily.

References

  1. Stein, Ellin (June 24, 2013). "Chapter 6: The Breaking of the Table". That's Not Funny, That's Sick: The National Lampoon and the Comedy Insurgents Who Captured the Mainstream. W.W. Norton & Company. ISBN 9780393084375.
  2. "What's Alan Watching?". The New York Times. 1989.
  3. Kornbluth, Jesse (October 1, 1984). "Revived from New York, It's 'Saturday Night'!". New York Magazine. New York Media, Inc.: 54.
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