David Owen Plaut (born September 2, 1953) is an American filmmaker and author. During his 42-year career at NFL Films he was a creator and show runner of television series for ESPN, HBO, Showtime, NBC Sports Network and NFL Network. He was nominated for 12 national Sports Emmy Awards, and was a seven-time winner. Plaut was senior producer for the annual Super Bowl champions video and DVD from 1985 to 2018. He was a writer/producer on over 900 weekly NFL TV series episodes. Outside of NFL Films Plaut authored five books, and was the book critic at USA Today Sports Weekly for fifteen years.
Plaut was born and raised in Cincinnati, Ohio. His father, Arthur Plaut, had a varied career in media with King Records, Ziv Television Programs and local radio station WSAI, along with his own local advertising agency. DavidâÂÂs mother Bette (nee Ginsburg) also worked in advertising at Dancer Fitzgerald Sample and in public relations before becoming a stay-at-home mom for David and his sister Amy. He was raised in the Jewish religion.
Plaut attended Cincinnati public schools until 1967, when his father accepted a job with KSDO radio in San Diego. After the move, Plaut attended Patrick Henry High School. Immediately following his graduation in 1971, Plaut began a five-year association with the San Diego Chargers football team as a training camp administrative assistant. He returned to southern California at the beginning of summer to rejoin the Chargers after completing each of his undergraduate academic years at Northwestern University. Plaut majored in Radio/TV/Film and earned his bachelorâÂÂs degree in 1975.
After college graduation, Plaut worked with NBC Sports during the 1975 NFL season as an on-site TV crew member for the networkâÂÂs west coast game broadcasts. In January 1976 he was hired by San Diego radio station KGB as an on-air personality. Appearing on a daily broadcast entitled âÂÂStuds on Sports,â Plaut wrote and performed comedy sketches lampooning contemporary local and national sports subjects.
In late spring 1976, Plaut was offered a production job by Steve Sabol, president of NFL Films. The two had first met in 1973 when Sabol brought a location crew to the Chargersâ training camp. Plaut accepted the offer and moved east to the companyâÂÂs Philadelphia studios that August.
PlautâÂÂs first years with NFL Films were highlighted by a series of comedy shorts he produced for NBCâÂÂs pregame show Grandstand. Most were parodies or satires about topical NFL stories, which included "End Zone Antics", "Metric Football", "As the Pigskin Turns", "NFLâÂÂs Wild Kingdom" and "Dr. Grogan and Mr. Hyde". In 1978 Plaut produced his first long-form comedy, a one-hour special entitled Super Bowl: Laughter and Legend, hosted by Ed McMahon.
Eventually, Plaut would go on to produce six additional full-length football follies films. The most noteworthy was 1987âÂÂs NFL TV Follies, starring improvisational comic Jonathan Winters. In the film, a fictitious TV channel decides to junk its failing format and switch to all-football programming. It enabled Plaut and co-producer Dave Douglas to create parodies of childrenâÂÂs shows, crime dramas, sci-fi fantasies, nature documentaries, household product commercials, local news and highbrow public television programming, among others. NFL TV Follies anticipated the creation of the actual all-football channel, NFL Network, 16 years before its inception. Ironically, many of PlautâÂÂs productions during the final decades of his career with NFL Films would be broadcast on NFL Network.
During the 1980 and 1981 seasons, Plaut was producer for Irv Crossâ weekly feature "Focus on Football", which aired on the CBS pregame show, The NFL Today.
In the mid-1980s, NFL Films began producing proprietary programming for the growing home video market. When the 1985 Chicago Bears became a national phenomenon, Plaut was chosen to produce what was referred to in-house as an âÂÂinstant highlight.â Just five days after Chicago defeated the New England Patriots in Super Bowl XX, Plaut completed a one-hour film on the Bearsâ season. Within a few weeks it was in stores and available to Chicago-area fans. Since then, NFL Films has produced a Super Bowl champions video every season. Eventually other sports followed their lead, and now every major North American professional sport annually releases an âÂÂinstant highlightâ film honoring their championship team.
Plaut was also part of the production crew that produced home videos celebrating the greatest moments in Philadelphia and Chicago sports history. Soon after he co-produced a home video for The Sporting News, The Greatest Moments in American Sports History.
In the late 1980s Plaut became the lead producer for all prime-time historical content aired on ESPN, first for Monday Night Magazine, then for the weekly feature Distant Replay. He also began producing 90-minute programs in the NFLâÂÂs Greatest Games series, starting with his 1997 production of the Cowboys-Packers Ice Bowl. He would go on to produce a dozen shows in the series.
Plaut also created and produced for ESPN an anthology series covering the greatest sporting events and personalities of the 20th century, Sports Almanac, which ran for two seasons. In 1998 he co-produced the Emmy-nominated ESPN special Replay! â The History of the NFL on Television. In 2001, as part of ESPNâÂÂS Black History Month programming, Plaut wrote and directed Black Star Risen: The Alan Page Story, the first of two films he would ultimately produce on the life of the Hall of Fame player and Minnesota Supreme Court justice.
With the debut of NFL Network in 2003, Plaut contributed multiple episodes for such series as , A Football Life and The Timeline. He was also the creator and co-showrunner for Caught in the Draft, a series devoted to the history of the NFL college draft. On January 15, 2016, his production of Super Bowl I: The Lost Game was the highest-rated non-game program ever to air on NFL Network.
In 2009 he was co-showrunner for Full Color Football: The History of the American Football League, timed to premiere during the 50th anniversary of the AFL. The five-episode series was carried on Showtime. Along with his over-the-air films, Plaut produced eight feature-length team histories for NFL Filmsâ home video division between 1999 and 2013. PlautâÂÂs final production at NFL Films was the Eaglesâ Super Bowl LII Champions home video, completed just a week before his retirement.
In 2022 Plaut came out of retirement to produce and direct Give Me Liberty: The Early Years of Patrick Henry High, a one-hour documentary chronicling the experimental San Diego high school he attended from 1968-71. In 2025, the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences nominated the film for Best Documentary in the Pacific Southwest Chapter Emmy Awards competition.
PlautâÂÂs first professional assignment came in 1974, when he wrote a piece for Pro!, the NFLâÂÂs official game program. The story covered the career of player-turned-official Pat Harder. Plaut went on to write several other articles for Pro! (later named Gameday), including a personality profile on Washington quarterback Joe Theismann and a feature focused on NFL teamsâ humorous road trip travel mishaps.
In 1989 he wrote the first of three baseball books for Philadelphia-based publisher Running Press. His fourth baseball book, Chasing October: The Dodgers-Giants Pennant Race of 1962 was published by Diamond Communications in 1994. In 2012, an updated version of Chasing October was released as an e-book and audio book to mark the 50th anniversary of that season.
From 1991 to 2006 Plaut was book critic for USA Today Baseball Weekly (later renamed Sports Weekly).
In 2010 Plaut collaborated with NFL Films colleague Greg Cosell and former NFL quarterback and ESPN analyst Ron Jaworski on The Games That Changed the Game: The Evolution of the NFL in Seven Sundays, published by ESPN Books. It was the nationâÂÂs top-selling pro football book that season.
In 1973 Plaut provided the voice characterizations of puppet character âÂÂGrouchy the Crocodileâ for an attraction at Lion Country Safari amusement park in Irvine, CA. The character's voice resembled film and TV comedian Groucho Marx.
Edgar Award-winning author Stuart Kaminsky named one of the recurring characters in his Toby Peters mysteries series after Plaut, who was a film student of his at Northwestern University from 1971 to 1975.
âÂÂLease with an Option to Die,â the October 22, 1985 episode of the TV series The A-Team, featured a villain named David Plaut (played by veteran character actor Brion James). The episode was written by Bill Nuss, a college friend of PlautâÂÂs.