Vin Di Bona

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Vin Di Bona
Vin Di Bona.jpg
Di Bona in 2010
Born
Vincent John Di Bona

(1944-04-10) April 10, 1944 (age 77)
Other namesJohnny Lindy
Alma materEmerson College
University of California, Los Angeles
OccupationTelevision producer
EmployerVin Di Bona Productions
FishBowl Worldwide Media
Notable work
MacGyver
Entertainment Tonight
America's Funniest Home Videos
Spouse(s)Gina Di Bona (Divorced)
Erica Gerard
(m. 2006)
Children1

Vincent John "Vin" Di Bona[1] (born April 10, 1944) is an American television producer of the television shows MacGyver, Entertainment Tonight, and America's Funniest Home Videos. He runs an eponymous production company called Vin Di Bona Productions. In 2010, Di Bona launched a second business, FishBowl Worldwide Media, an independent production company developing properties for film, television, digital platforms and brands.

Early life[]

A native of Cranston, Rhode Island,[2] Di Bona began his career in the entertainment industry as a singer, under the stage name Johnny Lindy (the last name was taken from the Cranston area restaurant owned by his parents and where Di Bona worked as a pre-teen); releasing two records by the age of 16, which became hits regionally. However Di Bona turned his aspirations to making film and television in 1962, later saying "Guys who sang romantic ballads were up a creek without a paddle. So I adapted."[2]

Personal life[]

In 2006, Di Bona married Erica Gerard, a television production executive he had known from his days at CBS. He has a daughter, Cara Di Bona Swartz and a step-daughter, Jamie Goldstein.

Education[]

He received an education at Emerson College in Boston, where he served as manager of WECB, the campus radio station.[3] Di Bona met his first wife, Gina, with whom he has a daughter, Cara. After graduating from Emerson in 1966 and earning a Master of Fine Arts degree in film at UCLA, he worked for nine years at Boston's then-NBC affiliate, WBZ-TV (channel 4; now a CBS-owned station).

Career[]

After he left WBZ-TV, Vin moved with his family to Los Angeles. Di Bona did not find a job for about eight months but finally became employed at CBS directing and producing documentaries, which earned him four Emmys and a Peabody Award.[2]

Di Bona is considered one of the pioneers of reality TV, thanks to Battle of the Network Stars, which Di Bona produced in 1976.[3] By the 1980s, Di Bona had become a producer for the syndicated newsmagazine Entertainment Tonight and later served as a producer for one season on the ABC series MacGyver; he was also a director for the American Music Awards and the Academy of Country Music Awards and produced taped segments for the , among others. He also produced a short lived children's cartoon titled Tea Time with Space Dinosaur.[2]

Di Bona's first two television series creations were spawned from Japanese programs. Di Bona developed the ABC series Animal Crack-Ups, based on a popular Tokyo Broadcasting System game show called Waku Waku. America's Funniest Home Videos was inspired by another Tokyo Broadcasting System series, the variety show Fun TV with Kato-chan and Ken-chan.

America's Funniest Home Videos, currently in its 29th year and the longest-running primetime entertainment show on ABC, reached a milestone 600 episodes in 2017. The show eventually led to three spinoffs, America's Funniest People, the short-lived World's Funniest Videos, and Videos After Dark; along with similar home video shows Show Me The Funny for Fox Family Channel (later ABC Family, now Freeform) and the syndicated series That's Funny. Di Bona also produced several made-for-TV movies and a Showtime series, . In 1991, Di Bona secured the rights to produce a revival of Candid Camera; Allen Funt, who owned the rights to the show and agreed to the deal mainly because he needed the money, later spoke out against the revival in his 1994 autobiography. Funt stated that Di Bona had overused product placement and that neither he nor his choice of host, Dom DeLuise, grasped the concept of the show.[4]

Di Bona was chair for for four years. Having served for many years on the board of trustees for his alma mater, Emerson College, he is now the Board's vice-chairman. He is also chairman of Emerson's 2013 fund-raising committee and donated one million dollars to kick-start the effort. Di Bona received the 2,346th star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame on Thursday, August 23, 2007. In 2009, objects from America's Funniest Home Videos were accepted into the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History, including the camcorder used to shoot the first winning video in 1989.

Vin Di Bona is executive producer of Upload with Shaquille O'Neal, which features the basketball superstar and TNT NBA analyst Shaquille O'Neal. The show consists of O'Neal and friends rounding up the week's online video clips, as well as creating their own viral videos and commenting on and parodying current pop culture stories. [5] The TruTV show also counts executive producers , Susan Levison, attorney-executive producer Ellen Stiefler, and writer-executive producer among its staff. Vin Di Bona is bringing Dr. 's book The Heart Speaks to television at ABC as a weekly medical television drama with Sony Pictures Television.[6]

Controversy[]

In 1992, Arleen Sorkin, who is white, was fired as co-host from the television show America's Funniest People by Di Bona. In response, Sorkin filed a lawsuit against Di Bona, claiming that she was dismissed from the show due to her race, after ABC Chairman Dan Burke had suggested to Di Bona that Sorkin be replaced by an African-American or a person of another ethnic minority. Sorkin sought $450,000 for lost earnings and an additional unspecified amount for harm to her professional reputation and emotional injury. Sorkin additionally claimed that after she denounced the move as unfair, Di Bona changed plans and hired new cohost Tawny Kitaen, who is also white.[7]

In an interview for Ben Shapiro's Primetime Propaganda, Di Bona was asked if the accusation by many conservatives that "Hollywood is a leftist town" and leftist political perspectives dominate scripted television shows was accurate. Di Bona responded that it is "probably accurate, and I'm happy about it."[8][9] This was a double-barreled question, however, because it asked if Hollywood is a politically left-wing town and if leftist ideologies dominate scripted shows. Shapiro used Di Bona's answer as evidence in his book that producers, executives and writers in the entertainment industry discriminate against conservatives and are using television to promote a socialist political agenda. Di Bona responded by accusing "Shapiro of misrepresentation, saying he never revealed his political agenda."[10]

In March 2019, DiBona's two production companies, Vin Di Bona Entertainment, Inc. and Fishbowl Worldwide Media, Inc., along with individual defendant Phil Shafran, were sued for sexual harassment, sexual assault, and retaliation by three former female employees. The lawsuit, Case No. 19STCV09487 is pending in Los Angeles Superior Court.[11]

References[]

  1. ^ Littleton, Cynthia. "Putting the fun in 'Home Videos'; Vincent John Di Bona, executive producer of television program America's Funniest Home Videos", Broadcasting & Cable, May 20, 1996. Retrieved March 8, 2011 from HighBeam Research.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b c d Emily Benedek. "How the 'Funniest' Thing Happened; Vin Di Bona, Making 'Home Videos' Into a Sunday-Night Smash.", The Washington Post, April 3, 1990. Retrieved March 7, 2011 from HighBeam Research.
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b https://web.archive.org/web/20080403143325/http://www.variety.com/profiles/TVSeries/main/173514/Battle%20of%20the%20Network%20Reality%20Stars.html?dataSet=1. Archived from the original on April 3, 2008. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  4. ^ Reed, Allen Funt with Philip (1994). Candidly, Allen Funt: A Million Smiles Later. New York: Barricade Books. ISBN 1-56980-008-1.
  5. ^ "Shaquille O'Neal TruTV series". Deadline Hollywood.
  6. ^ "Variety".
  7. ^ "Former TV Co-Host Suing Producer". Buffalo News. 1993-04-18. Archived from the original on 2012-11-05. Retrieved 31 October 2010.
  8. ^ "Primetime Propaganda: DiBona Celebrates Blacklisting Conservatives". Retrieved 2016-12-21.
  9. ^ Bond, Paul (2011-06-02). "TV executives confirm Hollywood's liberal agenda". Reuters. Retrieved 2016-12-21.
  10. ^ Goldstein, Patrick (2011-06-13). "'Propaganda' is hard to prove". Retrieved 2016-12-21.
  11. ^ "LA Court".

External links[]

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