Scott Goldstein

In the early 1950s, facing unauthorized work stoppages by the Teamsters Union, he was approached by and became a reluctant partner with Philadelphia mobster Harry Rosen (a.k.a.

For three years he served as producer of the critically acclaimed hit show “LA Law”; winning two Emmy and Golden Globe awards.

He was the program's supervising producer for the entire length of the series and directed numerous episodes with star Neil Patrick Harris.

The two-hour Fox network special, hosted by Dean Cain, Carrie Fisher, Leonard Nimoy, and William Shatner, was the definitive history of science fiction on television and focused on how the genre sheds light on the real world.

In 2002, he created one of the first live PBS Interactive Specials, Endgame: Ethics and Values In America,[3] hosted by Carol Marin with Michael Josephson.

It enabled viewers to enter the lives of fictional characters forced to make critical decisions with profound moral, ethical or social implications.

The interactive films deal with situational ethics involving issues ranging from teen age drunk driving to free vs hate speech to gay bullying in high schools.

“In Our Times”: a multi screen look at global genocide throughout the ages with emphasis on human rights abuses in contemporary society, Mr. Goldstein produced, wrote and directed the documentary Holocaust[6] for the New York Tolerance Center.

The film, narrated by Joe Mantegna, examines the reasons behind the mass slaughter of Jewish citizens and questions how Germany, arguably the world's most technologically sophisticated nation, could be reduced to barbarism.

[7] The film, narrated in the first person by Anthony Hopkins, tells the previously untold story of Hank Greenspun, who was one of the last the fire breathing, give-’em-hell crusading newspaper publishers.

man for Bugsy Siegel at the Flamingo Hotel; a convicted heavy arms runner to the Yishuv during 1948 Arab–Israeli War; and an indictment to incite, through his news column, the murder of Senator Joseph McCarthy.