In Hollywood, there is a rumor that Jimmy Burrows earned $100 per minute from residuals alone. This may or may not be true. Each minute. all the time. Just from shows that had already aired, that would come to about $144,000 per day, or about $50 million annually. It’s debatable whether the math holds up exactly. The fact that James Burrows, who passed away on June 19, 2026, at the age of 85, left behind an estimated net worth of $600 million, built almost entirely through television comedy, is undeniable.
That’s an impressive figure for a man whose name most casual viewers probably couldn’t recognize, who never produced a franchise, and who never directed a blockbuster movie. For more than 50 years, Burrows worked in the background of the most popular comedies on television, amassing wealth in the same way that successful sitcoms amass viewers: gradually, steadily, and through sheer quality repeated over time.
The son of renowned Broadway writer Abe Burrows, who wrote Guys and Dolls and How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying, he was born in Los Angeles in 1940. James had an unusual early education because his father lived in the wings of major Broadway productions while he was growing up in New York. Before most people had even considered a career in entertainment, he became an expert in timing, staging, and the unseen mechanics of what makes an audience laugh. He went to Oberlin College and later graduated from the Yale School of Drama, but he resisted the allure of the entertainment industry for years because he was reportedly concerned about being perceived as just his father’s son.

When James L. Brooks and Allan Burns hired him to direct an episode of The Mary Tyler Moore Show in 1974, he made his television debut. A door that never completely closed was opened by that one chance. Burrows established himself as a mainstay at MTM Enterprises, directing a series of programs that are now considered a course in the history of American comedy. The Bob Newhart Program. He won two consecutive Emmy Awards for directing Rhoda. Taxi in 1980 and 1981. He was one of the most reputable comedy directors in television at the end of that decade.
Cheers followed. The show, which was co-created with Glen and Les Charles and debuted on NBC in 1982, barely made it through its first season. With every decade that goes by, it becomes more difficult to accept that it came in last in the ratings that year. Over the course of 11 seasons, Burrows directed the vast majority of its 275 episodes. He was a primary director and co-creator of one of the most valuable sitcoms ever made. The royalties followed Burrows indefinitely when Cheers went into syndication and continued to air on local channels, cable, and eventually streaming. It’s hard to overstate the math underlying that type of long-tail income.
But Burrows’s affiliation with popular shows wasn’t the only thing that made him worth contacting. It was his standing as a pilot director, the person that producers trusted when a new comedy needed to make a strong first impression. Over the course of his career, he directed over fifty pilots, including the first episodes of Friends, Frasier, The Big Bang Theory, Will & Grace, Two and a Half Men, and Third Rock from the Sun. Burrows’ backend participation and residuals increased with each successful pilot that ran for years. It’s a financial model that calls for persistence and patience, both of which he obviously possessed in large quantities.
It seems almost paradoxical. Burrows quietly amassed one of Hollywood’s biggest individual fortunes without ever becoming a household name in a business that was fixated on names above the title. Eleven Emmys were won by him. In 2015, he was given a Lifetime Achievement Award by the Directors Guild of America. In 2016, NBC honored him with a prime-time tribute special that included almost all of the cast members from the shows he had influenced. However, most people would not have recognized him if they had passed him on a Manhattan street.
By all accounts, Jimmy Burrows was okay with that. He once claimed that he would practically do the work for free because the laughter from a studio audience was so fulfilling. It’s difficult to tell if he meant that. The $600 million that was in his possession at the time of his passing indicates that he received more than sufficient payment for his contributions to American comedy.
