
Fourth-place NBC fired chief programming executive Kevin Reilly on Tuesday only three months after giving him a new three-year contract.
Reilly was replaced by the two-man team of Ben Silverman and Marc Graboff. Silverman owns a production company responsible for bringing shows like “The Office” and “Ugly Betty” to American television, while Graboff is a veteran TV executive concentrating primarily on the business side.
NBC Universal acted quickly because it was eager to bring on Silverman, who had told NBC Universal chief executive Jeff Zucker within the past two weeks that he was thinking of selling Reveille Productions, his independent firm.
“This was really much more about a moment in time with regard to Ben Silverman than it was about anybody else,” Zucker said.
Silverman said that he considered the late NBC entertainment executive Brandon Tartikoff a mentor and that he grew up as a latchkey kid in New York watching NBC. “This has been a dream job for me ever since I was a little kid. I want to find big shows that are quality shows,” Silverman said. “To me, the hallmark will be quality with noise.”
Despite developing “Heroes” and receiving critical praise for shows like “Friday Night Lights,” Reilly had been unable to stop NBC’s long slide from the heyday of “Friends” and “Seinfeld.” The network had two of its least-watched weeks in memory in April, and watched from the sidelines as Fox’s “American Idol” and ABC’s “Grey’s Anatomy” generated heat in May.
The firing comes at an awkward time for parent company NBC Universal, less than two weeks after NBC released a new fall schedule to lukewarm response and just as NBC is preparing to sell commercial time for next fall.
“Ben Silverman is the best- known and most beloved television executive on Madison Avenue,” Zucker said. “The timing has absolutely nothing to do with our fall schedule.” No changes are planned to that schedule, the executives said.
Silverman and Graboff will be responsible for all of NBC’s primetime, daytime and late- night programming. Both will report to NBC Universal president Jeff Zucker, with Graboff concentrating on the business side and Silverman on creative efforts and scheduling.



