Part 1: Eugene Jarvis cut his teeth in the Atari pinball division before going on to produce the groundbreaking Defender for Williams Electronics. Also for Williams (contracted as Vid Kids, his new company with Defender co-creator Larry DeMar) was Stargate, Robotron: 2084 and Blaster. Jarvis left Vid Kids in 1984 to attend Stanford University where he gained an MBA in 1986. He then returned to Williams to design the OTT run and gun title Narc (programmed with George Petro) and, with Mark Turmell, Robotron’s spiritual successor, Smash TV. To this day Eugene produces popular arcade video game titles for his own studio, Raw Thrills Inc.
TDE EP21 - Gravitar and Missile Command programmer Rich Adam
TDE EP20 - Gottlieb, Atari and Epyx alumnus Matt Householder
TDE EP19 - Asteroids, Centipede and Gauntlet programmer Ed Logg
TDE EP18 - Former Atari VP Steve Calfee
TDE EP17 - Pinball audio engineer and Gottlieb alumnus David Thiel
TDE EP16 - Art of Atari author Tim Lapetino
TDE EP15 - Atari Programmer Bob Flanagan
TDE EP14 - Q*Bert co-creator Jeff Lee
TDE EP13 - Atari veteran Dennis Koble
TDE EP12 - Atari market researcher Carol Kantor
TDE EP11 - GCC’s Steve Golson (Ms. Pac-Man, Super Missile Attack)
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TDE EP10 - Rampage co-creator Brian Colin
TDE EP09 - Kevin Hayes of Atari Ireland
TDE EP08 - The Pit co-designer Andy Walker
TDE EP07 - Joust and Sinistar designer John Newcomer
TDE EP06 - Doug Wismer of Canadian monitor manufacturer Electrohome
TDE EP05 - Mike Hally of Atari on Lucasfilm, Star Wars, lost classic Akka Arrh and Gravitar
TDE EP04 - Owen Rubin of Atari on Space Duel and Major Havoc
TDE EP03 - ACAM Founder and President Gary Vincent
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