ARNOLD SHAPIRO

EXECUTIVE PRODUCER

Arnold has produced nineteen series, five television movies, and more than fifty primetime reality specials.  Among the 150 awards Arnold has received are an Academy Award, 16 Emmy Awards, the Peabody, three Humanitas Prizes, and the George Polk Journalism Award from Long Island University.  In 1995, Arnold was given an honorary doctorate from the University of Massachusetts.  Among his accomplishments are:

“Big Brother” hosted by Julie Chen.  Thirty-three episode summer reality series for the CBS Television Network (2001, 2002, 2003). 

“The Family”  Nine one-hour episodes for ABC.  Reality series hosted by George Hamilton in which family members compete against each other for control of a million dollar fortune. (2003)

“Flipped” 20 half-hour episodes for MTV.  Teens must face the consequences of their own actions- each in a life-altering day.            (2000-2002).

“Small Town Ecstasy,” on HBO’s “America Undercover.”  Special about the dangerous effects of the drug Ecstasy on one small-town family.  (2002)

“Rescue 911,” hosted by William Shatner, aired for seven seasons on CBS (1989-1996). It holds the unique distinction of saving more than 350 lives based on what viewers learned from watching the program.  "Rescue" received over two dozen awards from every major emergency medical association in America.

“Scared Straight!,” hosted by Peter Falk, received an Academy Award, 8 Emmys, and 25 other awards.  Twenty-three years later, it remains among the most shocking and well-known TV documentaries ever broadcast.  The follow-up, “Scared Straight! 20 Years Later,” hosted by Danny Glover, premiered to critical and commercial success on UPN in 1999.

“The Teen Files” (1998-2000), hosted by Leeza Gibbons, a series of seven UPN specials dealing with teen SMOKING, DRINKING (1999 Emmy Award: Outstanding Children’s Program), HATE, SEX, VIOLENCE, DRUGS, and SURVIVING HIGH SCHOOL (2001 Emmy Award: Outstanding Children’s Program). Series also won 2000 Governors’ Award from Academy of Television Arts & Sciences.

“The Story of Santa Claus,” featuring the voices of Ed Asner, Betty White and Tim Curry, is an animated musical Christmas special which has aired annually on CBS since 1996.

“Break The Silence: Kids Against Child Abuse” (1994), hosted by Jane Seymour on CBS and winner of a Peabody Award, holds the distinction of being the first primetime network non-news special to air without commercials.

“Kids Killing Kids” (1994) was the first primetime drama to air commercial-free, and on two networks simultaneously -- CBS and FOX.  Showing the tragic consequences of kids carrying guns, it received the Emmy for Outstanding Children's Program; it now airs on FOX Family Channel.

  “The Man With Three Wives” (1993, CBS), starring Beau Bridges, was the highest-rated two-hour TV movie of the 1992-1993 season.  The film is based on the true story of a physician who married...and married...and married...and died of heart failure at age 53.

  “Scared Silent: Exposing and Ending Child Abuse,” hosted by Oprah Winfrey, is the most watched non-fiction special ever broadcast on American television.  In 1992, it made history by being the first non-news program to air simultaneously on three networks -- NBC, CBS, and PBS, followed by ABC.