Jeff Ingold
’90 has worked on “The Office” and “Scrubs.”
(courtesy Jeff Ingold ’90)
PROFILE--Jeff Ingold ’90 Working for laughs
If you think being a television executive means watching TV all
day, you’re partly right. While other people are fighting
their morning commutes, Jeff Ingold ’90, senior vice president
for comedy development at NBC, is watching a rough cut of a new
show while he takes a spin on the treadmill.
As the person responsible for finding new comedies for NBC, Ingold
also spends his days reading scripts and working with teams to develop
pilots, the test episodes used to demonstrate a new show’s
viability. There’s no formula for success, Ingold says, but
one of the keys is finding great characters and even better actors
to play them. “If you love the characters, you’ll be
willing to watch them week after week,” Ingold says —
characters like Michael Scott, the cringe-inducing boss played by
Steve Carell on The Office. In 2006, Carell won a Golden
Globe for the role, and the show won the Emmy for best comedy.
A history major at Princeton and captain of the squash team, Ingold
joined NBC after getting his M.B.A. at the University of Southern
California. He worked his way up through the ranks, supervising
day-to-day production of shows like Just Shoot Me and Will
and Grace, before moving into development. In his new position,
he has worked on popular sitcoms including The Office and
Scrubs.
With the explosion of new digital devices, drawing viewers to
the TV has become tougher, says Ingold, who lives in Los Angeles
with his wife and two children. “We’re forced to come
up with things that are more attention-grabbing, because the viewer
is sitting there with one hand on the cell phone and one eye on
the computer.” Paradoxically, the Internet also has made his
job more interesting. Ingold and his team scour Web sites for budding
comedians. Last year, the strategy paid off. Ingold snapped up three
performers his executives discovered online, including two recent
college graduates whose endearing slapstick sketch on YouTube about
a pair of brothers trying to shoot a Mother’s Day photo has
been viewed almost 3 million times. The two actors are now working
on a pilot for NBC. Ingold is developing that show and eight others,
a handful of which might make it into the fall lineup.
By E.B. Boyd ’89
E.B. Boyd ’89 is a freelance writer in San Francisco.