Streaming
Original content was created in two categories:
Inspired by Steven Spielberg's Survivors of the Shoah Visual History Foundation, Dean Valentine, then Disney Television president, recruited Michael Rosen for the pilot stage of the Archive of American Television -- now known as THE INTERVIEWS.
Rosen co-founded the endeavor with Valentine, Grant Tinker, David Wolper, and Thomas Sarnoff. Over the next 10 years, Rosen produced and directed over 2,000 hours of long form, unedited interviews with 500 television legends -- creating the world's largest digital collection of its kind.
Rosen co-founded the endeavor with Valentine, Grant Tinker, David Wolper, and Thomas Sarnoff. Over the next 10 years, Rosen produced and directed over 2,000 hours of long form, unedited interviews with 500 television legends -- creating the world's largest digital collection of its kind.
The TV Academy Foundation's ongoing mission is to document the history and continuing evolution of television by streaming rare interviews with industry giants such as Alan Alda, Milton Berle, Steven Bochco, Ed Bradley, James L. Brooks, Carol Burnett, George Carlin, Walter Cronkite, Ossie Davis, Michael J. Fox, John Frankenheimer, Andy Griffith, Florence Henderson, Don Hewitt, Quincy Jones, Norman Lear, Jerry Lewis, Sidney Lumet, Mary Tyler Moore, Carroll O'Connor, Sumner Redstone, William Shatner, Fred Silverman, Aaron Spelling, Ted Turner, Dick Van Dyke, and Dick Wolf.
The Interviews is a program of the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences Foundation.
Television
THE EMMYS -- While running the TV Academy Foundation's "Archive of American Television," Michael simultaneously created the Academy's first ever production entity, which he ran for over five years. Rosen produced and directed 100s of TV projects that marketed the annual Primetime Emmy Awards.