John Tinker (TV producer)
John Tinker (born July 11, 1958) is an American television producer and writer. Tinker is the co-creator of the CBS drama Judging Amy, and has been an executive producer and writer on American television shows such as the CBS drama Chicago Hope, the ABC drama The Practice, and the NBC drama The Book of Daniel. Prior, Tinker won the 1986 Emmy for Outstanding Writing in a Drama series for the script "Time Heals", which he co-wrote with Tom Fontana and John Masius. He is the son of Grant Tinker and the brother of Mark Tinker. John graduated Middlebury College in 1981.
References
|
---|
| 1955–1975 | |
---|
| 1976–2000 |
- Sherman Yellen for "John Adams: Lawyer" (1976)
- William Blinn & Ernest Kinoy for "Show #2" (1977)
- Gerald Green for "Holocaust" (1978)
- Michele Gallery for "Dying" (1979)
- Seth Freeman for "Cop" (1980)
- Steven Bochco, Michael Kozoll for "Hill Street Station" (1981)
- Steven Bochco, Michael Kozoll, Jeff Lewis, Michael I. Wagner, Anthony Yerkovich for "Freedom's Last Stand" (1982)
- David Milch for "Trial by Fury" (1983)
- Tom Fontana, John Masius, John Ford Noonan for "The Women" (1984)
- Patricia Green for "Who Said It's Fair, Part 2" (1985)
- Tom Fontana, John Masius, Joe Tinker for "Time Heals, Parts I & II" (1986)
- Steven Bochco, Terry Louise Fisher for "The Venus Butterfly" (1987)
- Paul Haggis, Marshall Herskovitz for "Business as Usual" (1988)
- Joseph Dougherty for "First Day/Last Day" (1989)
- David E. Kelley for "Blood, Sweat, and Fears" (1990)
- David E. Kelley for "On the Toad Again" (1991)
- Diane Frolov / Andrew Schneider for "Seoul Mates" (1992)
- Tom Fontana for "Three Men and Adena" (1993)
- Ann Biderman for "Steroid Roy" (1994)
- Lance A. Gentile for "Love's Labor Lost" (1995)
- Darin Morgan for "Clyde Bruckman's Final Repose" (1996)
- Stephen Gaghan / David Milch / Michael R. Perry for "Where's Swaldo?" (1997)
- Bill Clark / Nicholas Wootton / David Milch for "Lost Israel: Part II" (1998)
- David Chase / James Manos, Jr. for "College" (1999)
- Rick Cleveland & Aaron Sorkin for "In Excelsis Deo" (2000)
|
---|
| 2000–present | |
---|
|