Phil Vischer

Animator

Birthday June 16, 1966

Birth Sign Gemini

Birthplace Muscatine, Iowa, U.S.

Age 57 years old

Nationality United States

#46356 Most Popular

1966

Phillip Roger Vischer (born June 16, 1966) is an American filmmaker, animator, author, puppeteer, and voice actor.

He is the creator of the computer-animated video series VeggieTales alongside Mike Nawrocki.

He provided the voice of Bob the Tomato and about half of the other characters in the series.

Currently, he owns a small film business, Jellyfish Labs, based in Wheaton, Illinois.

Phil Vischer was born June 16, 1966, in Muscatine, Iowa, United States, and grew up in Chicago, Illinois with his brother, Rob Vischer, who is the President of the University of St. Thomas in St. Paul, Minnesota.

For three semesters, Vischer attended St. Paul Bible College (currently known as Crown College); around that time, he also worked at a small Christian video production company.

1980

According to Vischer's autobiography, Me Myself and Bob, Vischer and his longtime friend Mike Nawrocki founded Big Idea Productions in the late 1980s as GRAFx Studios.

It started out as a small business that used computer animation to make its films.

Eventually, Phil Vischer and Nawrocki created VeggieTales and renamed the company to Big Idea Productions.

The "Big Idea" for Vischer, was to teach children about right-from-wrong using God's messages from the Bible.

The characters they came up with were Bob the Tomato and Larry the Cucumber.

They chose vegetables to serve as the characters because they were easier to animate than human characters.

A normal segment of VeggieTales would begin with both talking vegetables on a countertop receiving a letter from someone asking about a particular Christian topic (selfishness, fear, lying, sharing, etcetera) followed by two short stories about the topic.

In the middle of the segment would be a silly song.

Not only would Vischer and Nawrocki serve as the producers and directors of the show, but they would also voice most of the characters in the franchise (the most by Vischer).

1990

The series was an enormous hit and, by the late-1990s, had earned the company millions of dollars every year.

1993

The studio's first big creation was 1993 direct-to-video VeggieTales episode "Where's God When I'm S-Scared?" which was released on home video in late 1993.

1994

Big Idea's next video was "God Wants Me To Forgive Them?!?" which was released in 1994 and included the help of their first professional voice actor Jeff Morrow.

1995

In 1995, the series' third video, "Are You My Neighbor?", was released and VeggieTales continued releasing at least one video per year and even released their own newsletter called "What's the Big Idea?".

1999

By 1999, Vischer slowly found himself running a company that was losing money due to a variety of circumstances.

Their series continued being a hit in the market, but Vischer's decision to take out a loan and produce their first full-length film, Jonah: A VeggieTales Movie, caused the company to slowly fall apart financially.

To make things worse, Big Idea's termination of their association with their long-time distributor Lyrick Studios (the company behind Barney & Friends and Wishbone), caused Lyrick's parent company, HiT Entertainment to file a lawsuit against the company for "breach-of-contract".

Vischer offered to settle with HiT for $500,000 but, HiT declined and the case went to trial after the judge denied Big Idea's motion for summary judgement.

2003

A jury ultimately ruled against Big Idea in 2003, awarding HiT & Lyrick $11M.

Although the verdict was later overturned on appeal, the damage was done and Big Idea filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in summer of 2003.

2004

After Big Idea was purchased by Classic Media in 2004, Vischer further worked on VeggieTales under contract as a writer until 2009 (and continued to provide the voice of Bob and others until 2017, when his contract ended).

Soon after Vischer's departure, VeggieTales was cancelled.

After selling Big Idea, Phil Vischer took two years off to recuperate.

He then started a brand-new production studio called Jellyfish Labs in order to launch his new business vision; JellyTelly, which he intended to be "a Nickelodeon for Christians." Phil Vischer said in his book that he believed that his heart had turned from God while being CEO of Big Idea and that the company's fall was a "wake-up call" and, because of this, Vischer limits his own power at Jellyfish Labs and allows God to "guide the company."

2009

In Late 2009, Vischer began production on a new spin-off series of his puppet show from JellyTelly entitled "What's in the Bible".

"What's in the Bible" is a 13-DVD series that walks children through the Bible, from Genesis to Revelation.

According to Vischer,"What's in the Bible" teaches "Christianity in the same way Walt Disney taught America about space travel and "Our Friend the Atom" on TV in the 50s and 60s, and the same way Carl Sagan taught America about "The Cosmos" on PBS in the 80s".

Vischer hired renowned YouTubers Rhett McLaughlin and Link Neal to write, sing, and perform several songs about the books of the Bible for the series.

The series was distributed by Tyndale House Publishers.

2010

The 13 episodes of "What's in the Bible " were released between March 2010 to March 2014.

2012

Beginning in 2012, Vischer began to host The Holy Post Podcast (formerly The Phil Vischer Podcast), a weekly podcast discussing life, pop-culture, media, and theology through the use of humor in what he characterizes as a "post-Christian" American culture.

The podcast, co-hosted by writer and former Christianity Today editor Skye Jethani and documentary producer & voiceover actress Christian Taylor, provides thorough critiques of American Christians' engagement with politics and the public square.

It regularly ranks in the top 100 podcasts.

2020

In June 2020, Phil Vischer launched a video streaming service named MrPhil.TV.

He said he launched the streaming service one month early due to the COVID-19 pandemic.