Reilly began his career as a freelance production assistant in
New York City where he worked on over 150 commercials and music videos. To pursue a career in television, he took a road trip to
Los Angeles, initially earning a position as a publicist with
Universal Pictures and later hired by
Brandon Tartikoff as a manager of creative affairs at
NBC in 1988.[8][9][11]
In his early years at NBC he developed Saved by the Bell.[12][13][14] He later supervised Law & Order in its first season and developed the pilot episode for ER while serving as vice president of drama development from 1992 to 1994.[15][16][17][18]
In 2000, Reilly joined FX as president of entertainment.[6] While at FX, he helped the new network become a profitable, creative business. While there he also transitioned the network's programming from syndicated reruns to original programming including The Shield, Nip/Tuck, and Rescue Me.[17][22][23] Within a year of his arrival, FX made cable history with its seminal series, The Shield broke cable ratings records when it premiered and received both a
Golden Globe Award for
Best Drama Series and an
Emmy Award for
lead actorMichael Chiklis in 2002.[11][24][25] Reilly also championed Lucky, the first television project from the
Cullen brothers.
2003–2007: Second stint at NBC
In June 2003, Reilly was named the president of primetime development at NBC.[17] In May 2004, he was promoted to president of the network's entire entertainment division, which included primetime, daytime, and late night programming.[24] Reilly's second tenure at the network was marked by volatility largely due to the fact that major properties like The West Wing, Friends, Frasier, and Will & Grace came to a conclusion.[11][26]
Despite NBC's poor performance, Reilly oversaw the development of some of the network's more prominent shows that helped to define the network in that decade. His vocal support of The Office helped it survive its low-rated first season. He also helped get My Name Is Earl on the air despite objections from other NBC Universal executives.[27] Reilly has been credited with developing other shows such as Heroes,[27]30 Rock,[28]Friday Night Lights,[29]Deal or No Deal, America's Got Talent, and others.[11][26]
Despite having received a new three-year contract at NBC in March 2007, Reilly's employment with NBC Universal was terminated in late May 2007, and he departed soon after.[30][31][32] Under his administration, NBC's programs received 69 Emmy nominations that year, and a total of 235 nominations and 50 wins.[28]
2007–2014: Return to Fox
Six weeks after leaving NBC,[32] Reilly was hired as president of entertainment at Fox. The move reunited him with
Peter Liguori whom he also worked with while at FX.[33] Early in his tenure at Fox, Reilly developed and launched the
J. J. Abrams thriller Fringe,[13] and
Seth MacFarlane's Family Guy spinoff, The Cleveland Show. He also was involved in the launch of Fox Inkubation, a joint venture with
20th Century Fox that provided funding to animators to create two-minute shorts that could eventually be developed into television pilots.[34] Through the program,
Justin Roiland first generated the concept for what would become the Adult Swim show Rick and Morty.
Reilly was promoted to chairman of entertainment for Fox in August 2012.[40] He later introduced the shows Brooklyn Nine-Nine, Bob's Burgers, and The Mindy Project.[41][42]
At Fox, Reilly oversaw the network's leadership and investment in digital and social media.[43] He is credited as "the architect" behind the
Animation Domination High-Def,[44] an independent digital animation subsidiary generating alternative animation for digital channels and a late-night block on Fox.[45]
Reilly also initiated a "no
pilot season" strategy (designed to nurture fewer new Fox shows with more investment).[46][47][48] Prior to his departure, he also greenlit shows, including Empire, Gotham,[46] and The Last Man on Earth.[49] During his time at Fox from 2007 to 2014, the network had a seven-year run as television's top-rated network for adults aged 18 to 49.[41] He left Fox in May 2014.[50]
2014–2020
TBS, TNT, and Turner Entertainment
In November 2014, Reilly was named the president of TNT and TBS and chief creative officer of Turner Entertainment. In the role, he oversaw the TBS and TNT networks[51][52] and led growth opportunities across Turner's entertainment properties including TBS, TNT,
truTV,
Adult Swim,
Super Deluxe and ELEAGUE.[53][54]
In 2016, Reilly led TNT to cut 50% of the ad load of the network's new dramas, starting with Animal Kingdom.[54][55] Reilly has also gained notice for modernizing and reinventing the types of series seen on TNT and TBS, introducing dark original dramas at TNT, including Claws[56] and The Alienist, and edgy comedies at TBS, including Full Frontal with Samantha Bee, The Detour, Wrecked, Angie Tribeca and The Last O.G..[16][55] He also led TBS to experiment with "binge-viewing" by airing all 10 episodes of Angie Tribeca’s first season repeatedly over 25-hours without commercials in January 2016 and again in November 2016 with the network’s newest original series, Search Party, which debuted all 10 episodes of first season during Thanksgiving weekend. Under Reilly's leadership, in 2017 TBS also introduced new unscripted shows including Snoop Dogg Presents the Joker's Wild and Drop the Mic.[57][58]
At Turner, Reilly made investments in digital and social media content and pushed for multi-platform ratings measurement. In October 2015, Reilly oversaw the launch of
Super Deluxe and pushed for investments in ELEAGUE, the first major foray into professional
eSports video game competitions in prime-time TV by a traditional media company, and companies like
Refinery29.
In 2018, Fast Company named Turner among "The World's Most Innovative Companies" in the video category citing Reilly's development of shows like Full Frontal with Samantha Bee and The Alienist with helping reinvent the company's TBS and TNT networks.[59] In October 2019, Reilly worked with
Tony Khan to bring AEW (All Elite Wrestling) to TNT in 2020.[60] AEW signed a four-year contract extension in 2020 will begin airing a second weekly show on the network in 2021.[61]
In May 2019, Reilly signed a new, four-year deal with
WarnerMedia that would have kept him at the company through 2022. It had expanded his oversight of the company's basic cable networks to include
truTV in addition to TBS, TNT, and the direct-to-consumer streaming service (
HBO Max).[1] Reilly departed in August 2020 amidst a company-wide restructuring.[73][74]
Board memberships
Reilly has been chairman of the board of trustees and remains on the board for The Nature Conservancy of California.[75] He is also a member of the Los Angeles Chapter of the Young Presidents' Organization and served 8 years on the board of trustees for the American Film Institute,[76] the Television Academy,[77] and on the advisory board for the Peabody Awards.[78] Reilly also serves on the Advisory Council for Cornell's College of Agriculture and Life Sciences.[79]