Tagged: ‘Jemele Hill’

posted by on April 8, 2013 3:56 PM

Tony Reali provides the scoop on Around The Horn intro tribute to Game Of Thrones

Around The Horn often provides a window into pop culture beyond its focus on sports discussion and debate.

Witness the creative way ATH celebrated 10 years on the air in 2012 with Beatles-inspired opening artwork. Host Tony Reali also once famously recreated the memorable Copacabana scene from Goodfellas.

“We love to acknowledge the shows we love,” Reali said.

Reali and the ATH crew were showing the love again on Friday, March 29 when they paid tribute to the third season debut of HBO’s popular Game Of Thrones series. As seen in the video above – which took about eight weeks from concept to completion – the show’s panelists and Reali own keys to the kingdom in what they affectionately dubbed Game Of Horns. Reali discussed the show’s latest creative effort with Front Row. continue reading…

posted by on February 21, 2013 4:19 PM

Samantha Ponder shares the ins and outs of sideline reporting

ESPN's Samantha Ponder (Allen Kee / ESPN Images)

ESPN’s Samantha Ponder (Allen Kee / ESPN Images)


Snapshot of ESPN’s Regularly Assigned Sideline Reporters


Doris Burke
Cara Capuano
Paul Carcaterra
Heather Cox
Jeannine Edwards
Kaylee Hartung
Jemele Hill
Quint Kessenich
Jamie Little
Rebecca Lobo
Jessica Mendoza
Samantha Ponder
Dr. Jerry Punch
Holly Rowe
Lisa Salters
Pam Shriver
Shannon Spake
Maria Taylor
Vince Welch
Allison Williams

“Let’s go to the third member of our team today. . .”

It’s a “throw” like that, from the play-by-play announcer to the sideline reporter, that has become a staple of game coverage on ESPN and throughout the industry.

At ESPN, the roster of sideline reporters is deep, diverse and talented. Whether it’s Lisa Salters on the Monday Night Football sideline, Jeannine Edwards at a college basketball game or Quint Kessenich at a college football game, the network’s sideline patrollers have become the gold standard for sideline reporting, regardless of sport.

With a mix of experienced, familiar faces and up and coming reporters, ESPN is uniquely positioned to develop sideline reporters who add important perspective, information and interviews to game telecasts.

Samantha Ponder has been with ESPN for two years, starting as a reporter at Longhorn Network and then reporting from the sidelines for the Thursday Night College Football game package and debuting on College Football GameDay.

When football season ended, Ponder transitioned to the hardwood working courtside with some of the most recognizable voices in college basketball — Jay Bilas, Dan Dakich, Mike Tirico and Dick Vitale — on the Super Tuesday and Saturday primetime college basketball games.

She will be reporting from courtside at Rupp Arena for Missouri at Kentucky this Saturday at 9 p.m. ET on ESPN.

Front Row spoke with Ponder to get a recap of her time at ESPN and a look ahead to her bright future.

Is there a sideline reporter mission statement or an ultimate goal regardless of the sport?
Everyone is different. My goal is to give the viewer information they couldn’t get if they weren’t on the sideline. I don’t pre-plan stories. In my opinion, those are best told by the booth, from someone who has more than 20 seconds to explain.

I want to get timely, relevant information from observations on the field/court that a fan at home couldn’t know unless they were right there with me. What is the point of field/court access if it doesn’t provide new insight?

My focus is always injuries first, coach instruction/demeanor/commentary and player communication/demeanor second. Anything else needs to be interesting and not distract from the flow of the game.

What advice have you gotten from other female reporters?
First, I’d like people to know that the vast majority of us get along great and support each other. I’ve had great experiences with other reporters at ESPN. I’ve gotten advice from Shelley Smith about staying true to myself. Jenn Brown and I became friends when I was at LHN and often compare notes on things we experience. Holly Rowe does an amazing job of giving valuable information all while looking like she enjoys her job. It’s such a huge industry now. There’s plenty of room to be yourself and support other people at the same time.

Did you come into ESPN with any goals or expectations?
This all happened very quickly. I’ve said before that I didn’t have cable growing up, so I didn’t get to watch ESPN as a kid. If someone told me I would be covering the Phoenix Suns for my hometown station I would have thought I had the coolest job ever, so doing what I do now is so far beyond my expectations.

My goal is cheesy but I like to keep it simple: I want to do the best with what God gave me and make the people around me feel important along the way. If I ever master that perfectly, I’ll find a new goal.

Did you always want to be a sideline reporter? continue reading…

posted by on January 29, 2013 12:15 PM

Front & Center: Michael Smith and Jemele Hill

“His & Hers” with Michael Smith and Jemele Hill debuts this coming Monday. (Joe Faraoni / ESPN Images)

“His & Hers” with Michael Smith and Jemele Hill debuts this coming Monday.
(Joe Faraoni / ESPN Images)

Click HERE to listen or visit iTunes to download the podcast and be sure to SUBSCRIBE to the Front & Center podcast. Also, make sure to check out the ESPN Radio app, available for the iPad.

They will argue. They will bicker. They will poke fun at each other.

And that will just be the first 30 seconds of ESPN Audio’s newest podcast, His & Hers with Michael Smith & Jemele Hill, which debuts next Monday, Feb. 4 on the front page ESPNRadio.com, ESPN PodCenter and on iTunes.

Smith, the host of Numbers Never* Lie, and Hill, an ESPN.com columnist and frequent contributor on various ESPN shows, are excited to have a project they can call their own.

In the Front & Center podcast above, Smith and Hill discuss, among other things: their decade-long friendship; their desire to both make news and include newsmakers as guests; and what sets their pairing apart from other sports podcasts.

posted by on January 19, 2013 12:00 PM

ICYMI: The Week on Front Row

ESPN covered all the angles concerning the controversies surrounding Notre Dame’s Manti Te’o and disgraced cycling champion Lance Armstrong.

Friday evening, Te’o told ESPN’s Jeremy Schaap that he was a victim and “never” part of an elaborate hoax.

Armstrong confessed — in an interview with Orpah Winfrey televised Thursday — that he used performance-enhancing drugs when he won seven straight Tour de France crowns. Friday, former teammate Tyler Hamilton reacted to Armstrong’s statements in an interview with Outside The Lines host Bob Ley. The video above is a portion of the interview.

ICYMI: Highlights from the past week on Front Row

• Go inside ESPN Digital Media’s third annual Hackathon, where more than 85 ESPN developers, designers and engineers were given 48 hours to submit working prototypes of what could be ESPN’s next top-ranked digital product.

• A This is SportsCenter spot featuring Boston Celtics point guard Rajon Rondo and his larger-than-life hands launched this week. SportsCenter’s John Anderson shared a behind-the-scenes look at the shoot.

• Jim Boeheim’s Car Wash visit to ESPN’s Bristol, Conn., headquarters on Monday provided a chance for a timely reunion with ESPN Communications publicist Keri Potts, who worked for Boeheim while attending Syracuse University.

• Columnist and commentator Jemele Hill was a panelist for ESPN’s third annual Content of Character special. Front Row spoke to Hill about the roundtable discussion and the importance of social media.

Row of Four
Our favorites from across ESPN over the past week continue reading…

posted by on January 14, 2013 4:55 PM

Content of Character debuts tonight on ESPN2 followed by live Facebook chat with Jemele Hill

(L-R) Richard Lapchick, Jemele Hill, Bob Ley, Kevin Powell and Robert Smith (Kimberly Jarvis/ESPN Images)

(L-R) Richard Lapchick, Jemele Hill, Bob Ley, Kevin Powell and Robert Smith are on the “Content Of Character” roundtable. (Kimberly Jarvis/ESPN Images)

BE190795-DF68-4DAE-8409-F3CBED0AFC00Columnist and commentator Jemele Hill is a panelist on ESPN’s third annual Content of Character special (7 p.m. ET, ESPN2; re-air Saturday, Jan. 19 on ABC), a roundtable on race relations and sports in America as the Martin Luther King Day holiday approaches.

August 2013 also will mark the 50th anniversary of King’s I Have a Dream speech.

After the one-hour special airs tonight, Hill and fellow panelist Kevin Powell will answer viewer questions live for 15 minutes on ESPN’s Facebook page.

Front Row spoke to Hill about the roundtable discussion, which also includes moderator and Outside The Lines host Bob Ley, ESPN football analyst Robert Smith, race relations expert Richard Lapchick and — via satellite — Ryan Clark of the Pittsburgh Steelers.

What’s the biggest difference between this show and last year?
The biggest difference is we changed studios. The conversation this year was much more intimate and as a result, I think it allowed me and the other panelists to be more open and feel a natural comfort immediately.

How do you feel about using social media to respond to fans? continue reading…

posted by on January 11, 2013 4:54 PM

ESPN’s Content Of Character roundtable debuts Monday; rapper COMMON contributes poetry

This month, ESPN continues its initiative to celebrate the legacy of civil rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. August 28 will mark the 50th anniversary of Dr. King’s I Have a Dream speech; his Jan. 15 birth is a national holiday celebrated this year a week from Monday (Jan. 21).

BE190795-DF68-4DAE-8409-F3CBED0AFC00

ESPN2 will air Content of Character, a roundtable discussion of sports and race relations in America (Monday, 7-8 p.m. ET, re-airs Saturday, Jan. 19 on ABC). The third annual special is moderated by Bob Ley; panelists include ESPN commentators Jemele Hill and Robert Smith, Pittsburgh Steelers star Ryan Clark and authors Kevin Powell and Richard Lapchick. Wright Thompson contributes writing to the special.

Feature producer Sharon Matthews worked with actor/rapper COMMON on a spoken-word introduction to the program and a mid-show segment.

She tells Front Row how COMMON became involved with the project and what it was like to work with him.

What’s the concept behind the Content of Character “tease,” or opening?
We want to pay homage to Dr. Martin Luther King’s famous “I Have a Dream” speech through spiritual and poetic prose. On such an important anniversary, we wanted to revisit the telling of the speech and discuss how far we’ve come in sports and the issues that still remain 50 years later.

Shannon Mathews (C) with COMMON (R) (Alex Wong)

ESPN feature producer Sharon Matthews (center) with COMMON (right) on-set in Los Angeles. (Credit: Alex Wong)

How did COMMON become involved? continue reading…

posted by on December 22, 2012 8:00 AM

ICYMI: The week on Front Row

In the video above, ESPN Marketing’s latest spot captures the holiday spirit to promote ABC and ESPN’s coverage of all five NBA games on Christmas Day, highlighted by ABC’s doubleheader — the New York Knicks at the Los Angeles Lakers at 3 p.m. ET and an NBA Finals rematch of the Oklahoma City Thunder at the Miami Heat at 5:30 p.m.

ICYMI: Highlights from the past week on Front Row

• Earlier this year, Jemele Hill embarked on a new chapter in her professional career as a sideline reporter for ESPN and ESPN2 Friday college football games. Hill shares some of her standout experiences thus far.

• Get to know the new X Games host Ramona Bruland. She shares some of her favorite athletes, bands, food and more. continue reading…

posted by on December 18, 2012 8:00 AM

Versatile Jemele Hill reflects on her first season as a sideline reporter

First-year ESPN sideline reporter Jemele Hill. (Phil Ellsworth/ESPN Images)

Earlier this year Jemele Hill embarked on a new chapter in her professional career: She became a sideline reporter for ESPN and ESPN2 Friday college football games with Carter Blackburn and Rod Gilmore.

The ESPN.com columnist and on-air contributor has had plenty of adventures during her first regular season on the college football sidelines. Now she’s slated to cover four bowl games, the first of which is Thursday’s San Diego County Credit Union Poinsettia Bowl between BYU and San Diego State (8 p.m. ET, ESPN). [Hill will also work the Little Caesar's Bowl (Dec. 26) and the Music City Bowl (Dec. 31) on ESPN and the Outback Bowl for ESPN Radio (Jan. 1, 2013).]

Hill shares some of her standout experiences thus far.

Biggest surprise from the season:
That we watched film. I enjoyed that, because you learn nuances of the game that you wouldn’t have otherwise. I can draw formations in my sleep, thanks to Rod Gilmore.

What information have you taken the most pride in passing along to viewers?
In general, I always take more pride in giving out injury information. The majority of schools on the schedule don’t share injury information, so it’s up to me to use my powers of observation to relay to the viewer what’s happening.

What’s the most memorable game you’ve covered and why? continue reading…

posted by on November 2, 2012 3:26 PM

Lightning Round: Around the Horn panelists weigh in on show’s 10 years

Around the Horn celebrates its 10th anniversary today (5 p.m. ET). (ESPN)

This week marks the 10-year anniversary of ESPN’s Around the Horn, which debuted on Nov. 4, 2002.

The popular daytime sports talk and debate show will celebrate the milestone today at 5 p.m. ET on ESPN.

Host Tony Reali — who penned this for Front Row yesterday — will be joined by an expanded group of panelists including show regulars JA Adande, Kevin Blackistone, Tim Cowlishaw, Israel Gutierrez, Bomani Jones, Jackie MacMullan, Woody Paige, Bill Plaschke, Bob Ryan and Michael Smith.

A special guest will also make an appearance.

In recognition of the anniversary, Front Row asked a few of the ATH regulars for their thoughts on the show, its success and the experience of being part of it the past decade. (Note: No points were awarded for these answers and no one was muted.)

Bob Ryan, the legendary Boston Globe sports writer, who has been part of ATH since the very first show:
“What is amusing to consider is that what we are the most successful spin-off of its kind ever. We exist because of PTI’s success. I sense that we skew a bit younger, and that one of the keys to our popularity is the idea among kids that the young guy controls his elders, even to the point of muting, as well as judging. A younger host is essential, and Tony is ideal.

“Whether it was [original host] Max [Kellerman] or now Tony, this is the hardest hosting job in the history of TV, period. You need to keep things moving with perpetual ad-libbing, all while working the levers. And they both have made it look so damn easy, when it’s anything but. I know I’d never want to do it.”

Tim Cowlishaw of the Dallas Morning News, who made his debut on ATH’s second show (Nov. 5, 2002):
“The first person who contacted me about the show said it was probably going to be called ‘Zones’ or ‘Time Zones’ because they wanted a show where columnists from four time zones argued about sports. I was also told one of the ideas was that we would try to break news for the other cities — in other words, I would go on the show and tell Bob Ryan something that’s happening in Boston that he wouldn’t know. I thought ‘This is going to be a very difficult show.’”

Jackie MacMullan, ESPNBoston.com columnist — and one of ATH’s two female panelists, along with Jemele Hill — who debuted during ATH’s second week (Nov. 12, 2002): continue reading…

posted by on September 20, 2012 12:00 PM

Front & Center: Jemele Hill

Click HERE to listen or visit iTunes to download the podcast and be sure to SUBSCRIBE to the Front & Center podcast. Also, make sure to check out the all new ESPN Radio app, now available for the iPad.

If it’s Thursday, Jemele Hill must be in. . . well, she’ll have to check her calendar and get back to you. “If it’s not in my calendar, I don’t know where I am or what I’m doing!” said Hill, one of the busiest reporters/collumnists/analysts on the ESPN roster.

Hill will be in Monroe, La. as the sideline reporter for Friday night’s Baylor at University of Louisiana Monroe game (8 p.m. ET, ESPN) and then she’ll appear on Sunday’s Sports Reporters at 10:30 a.m. on ESPN2.

In between that, Hill’s feature on Alcorn State’s first-year head coach, Jay Hopson, will run on Sunday’s Outside the Lines (10 a.m., ESPN2). Hopson is the first white football head coach in Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC) history.

In the podcast above, Hill discusses her work on that story with producer Steve Buckheit; her multiple assignments across ESPN platforms and how she’s adjusting to her sideline reporting gig. There might also be a slight dig at her Friday night play-by-play guy, Carter Blackburn, at the end. Perhaps.

Portions of this podcast were edited.