Knowledge

Olbermann (TV series)

Source 📝

338:, Olbermann tosses his notes at the camera following its conclusion (although he did this more on the Current TV series) and pretends to play the organ chord that closes the musical piece. Although the Worst segment is usually lighthearted in nature, Olbermann will occasionally use the segment to profile someone who did something so bad there is no other place to discuss them and will usually dispense with his end of segment theatrics by either throwing to break or by spinning his chair around so his back is facing the camera. Other times, for instance when Olbermann complimented model 764: 734: 436:: The closing segment of every show. The segment leads off with Olbermann relaying some tidbits of sports news from earlier in the day, although some news breaks while the program is airing. These are followed by Olbermann commenting on sports highlights, usually from the previous day's action since the show's 5:00 PM airtime usually does not allow for current day highlights. As he recaps them Olbermann will rely on 573:. After signing off, Olbermann crumples what is left of his notes and tosses them at the camera, with the lens "shattering" for effect. In his final show on July 24, Olbermann, after a long montage of hilarity and quirks, thanked all of his directors, artists, and colleagues. He then signed off by saying "Bye, Felicia" one last time and threw his signed Abdul-Jabbar basketball toward the camera to close the series. 603:"This Week in Keith History" - an interlude that finds Olbermann providing amusing reactions to clips from his earlier ESPN stint that he has not seen in advance ("I haven't seen it, I don't know what it is, I didn't get a hint, and yes I did pay for that haircut"). This segment was only featured for the first two weeks of the show and has since been dropped. 489:
The original sixty-minute format included all of the above segments, with the exception that there were two rounds of Keith Lights segments; the first recapped sports action to that point in the program and included the top sports news of the day while the second added any additional action that had
329:
them 'The Worst Persons In the Sports World'." Occasionally though the 'completely' is dispensed with if the target's behavior was particularly egregious, along with the theme music for extended commentary. Three targets per night are featured, ranked "worse," "worser," and "worst" just as they were
501:
is next, by the way, I'm Olbermann." In April 2014, the show again flipped the order of the monolog and the rundown so that the monolog returns to its cold open style and the rundown leads into the first commercial. For the show's finale, Olbermann, instead of opening with a monolog, explained "his
257:
Since Olbermann's return to the ESPN family was formally announced in July 2013, much mention had been made in media coverage of the anchor's abrasive off-screen demeanor and his acrimonious partings with several of his previous employers, including his 1997 departure from ESPN. Both Olbermann and
459:. For golf highlights, Olbermann portrays course reporter "Bob Slurm" and speaks in a hushed tone like a stereotypical golf broadcaster would. A further running gag with the golf highlights involves Olbermann getting "caught" portraying Bob Slurm; since he uses the hushed tone, he has to hold his 262:
debut (ESPN VP/Programming Jamie Horowitz has noted Olbermann's openness to ideas and suggestions for the program); the anchor himself has owned up to his tempestuous past and his efforts to rebuild bridges with his old colleagues. Olbermann had also indicated he is happy returning to covering
535:
when he was briefly the station's sportscaster in 1984, died in January 2014 Olbermann began adding the news close to his signoff and employed names of people featured earlier in the show (although he uses "news" and "Eyewitness News" interchangeably; oddly enough, Olbermann's time as a local
446:
days, such as saying a high-pitched "Hello!" for a collision between two players and "bye, Felicia" for plays that result in someone being dismissed or left behind (such as a strikeout or a fast break). Olbermann also lightheartedly mocks other sports announcers. For instance, for basketball
485:
claiming that he was contractually forbidden from speaking about politics on the show, Olbermann said, "There’s nothing preventing me from doing it other than common sense," although he hinted that some aspects of politics would be covered if it crosses paths with the sports world.
192:
claimed that ESPN wanted Olbermann to tone down his critical commentary, but the network claimed the move was to cut costs related to Olbermann's salary and the use of the space at Times Square Studios, claims later confirmed by an aborted move of
288:
where he criticizes a figure and demands action. Others are more lighthearted in nature such as his "Mr. Cranky" predictions. Another occasional feature on his monologs were musings on sports history, lore and his take on
610:
and renamed to its current name when the show moved to Current, this segment saw Olbermann commenting on the "wild and wacky" stories in the world of sports with accompanying video clips. These segments were dropped when
753:
of about one hour. Receiving little promotion, the program was removed from the schedule at the start of October 2013. With the September 2014 move to an afternoon timeslot (combined with the launch of additional
421:
would have a discussion focusing on various sports issues of the day, usually in a humorous fashion. The segment was temporarily on hiatus while Bruno focused on his return to daily sports radio hosting on
948: 648:
following him. The format for these shows was largely scrapped, and Cowherd had his own segment at the end of the show where he ranked whether or not a sports figure was having a good day.
590:(or whoever happened to be hosting the show that day) in Bristol and briefly discuss the upcoming half-hour. The tosses were cut out of each subsequent reairing and dropped altogether when 188:
On July 10, 2015, two days after ESPN declined to renew his expiring contract, Olbermann announced on air that the series would be coming to an end on July 24. The announcement came after
667:
anchor) the "Keith Lights" segments returned. When Torre substituted the shows were more interview driven. In both cases, the program would often be reduced in length to thirty minutes.
284:: Olbermann opens the show speaking for approximately six minutes about a sports issue of the day. Some of these commentaries are along the lines of the "Special Comment" segments on 892: 451:
when a player makes a three-point shot. using accentuated, For baseball highlights, particularly those where home runs are featured, Olbermann puts a spin on the home run call of
569:'s trademark "good night and good luck" signoff, which he had begun to use while at MSNBC, and had recently begun incorporating the phrase "hap'nin" in honor of his schoolmate 497:
adopted a more rigid format. The opening monolog and format rundown switched places, with Olbermann starting the show with the list of topics and introducing the program with "
166:
was originally a sixty-minute nightly program, usually starting at 11:00 PM Eastern. For a brief period of time, specifically during the ESPN networks’ coverage of the
1002: 299:
feature adjusted for the sports audience, on people or organizations that have performed something egregious that sets them up for Olbermann's ridicule, and like
548: 976: 463:
close to his face so he can be heard and often the camera cuts away from the highlights while Olbermann is still in character. The voice is also used with
232:
between 1992 and 1997; it's also Olbermann's second stint at ESPN's secondary network, ESPN2, where he briefly served as original anchor of the network's
1460: 185:
added two additional repeat airings; the first aired at 6:30 p.m., the second one in the usual 2:00 a.m. slot, and the last at 5:00 a.m.
1415: 829: 791: 471:. Sometimes, if there are not any games to recap, the segment instead focuses on past highlights with the title "Keith Lights Throughout History". 1338: 1450: 467:
highlights in mid-February, and Olbermann interviews the trainer of the Best in Show dog the day after the show, as he did during the run of
1455: 361:, the "worst" ranking is done fully light-heartedly and disclaimed as the only place in the show's format where the story could fit in. 1215: 711: 317:; Olbermann pokes fun at "the miscreants, losers and riffraff, the unwashed and the unloved," suggesting that viewers "don't take it 367:: Olbermann conducts an interview with a featured guest, whether it be from the world of sports or entertainment. ESPN contributors 1012: 758:
channels), the program began airing simultaneously with U.S. broadcast most weekdays on one of the TSN channels, usually TSN2.
426:
in Philadelphia; he returned on April 2, 2015, with the segment done on Bruno's end most weeks via satellite from ABC O&O
628:
for various reasons. These were initially done out of necessity due to Olbermann's previously announced commitment to anchor
309: 181:
was moved from its nightly spot to a late afternoon time slot and began airing at 5:00 PM Eastern in a thirty-minute format.
722:
hosted the show in his absence. Olbermann gave an apology for his Twitter comments on his first day back from suspension.
1465: 860: 404: 1429: 1126: 199:
to the same facility and releases of other network talent at the end of their contracts throughout 2015 and into 2016.
170:, the show temporarily aired at 6:00 PM in a thirty-minute format. During this period a repeat of the program aired on 160:, premiered on August 26, 2013, and featured Olbermann offering commentary and analysis on issues in the sports world. 633: 1032: 812: 565:
who used to say this to all of his students and who died in October 2014. Previously Olbermann signed off by using
464: 513:
Alright, I've done all the damage I can do here. In New York, Keith Olbermann, ESPN; for (x), (x), and the entire
240:
debut, Olbermann gained notice as an anchor/commentator on hard news and political discussion, serving as host of
1114: 706:
Olbermann was suspended on February 24, 2015, for a week after he made disparaging comments on Twitter regarding
313:
as background music. This segment is "more gentle and sarcastic" than its counterpart's sharp political tinge on
1048: 873: 242: 1187: 908: 452: 1201: 542: 502:
crack staff did everything for me today so I don't have to work", which immediately led into first guest
376: 687: 219: 1387: 683: 842: 1408: 561:
Olbermann's signoff line is taken from Arthur Naething, an English teacher of Olbermann's at the
1303: 1155: 269:, "If you cover politics for eight years without interruption like I did, you need a change." 1236: 1064: 1007: 925: 304: 277:
The format rundown below was the format in use when the show was reduced to thirty minutes.
76:
60 minutes (August 26, 2013- September 5, 2014) 30 minutes (September 8, 2014-July 24, 2015)
1380: 953: 153: 8: 1345: 1317: 1107: 503: 460: 343: 1222: 755: 481: 455:
where he follows the call with a series of three-syllable names, usually starting with
380: 265: 536:
sportscaster in Boston and Los Angeles did not see him work for any station using the
1373: 746: 582: 399: 350: 1394: 1296: 566: 389: 379:
were frequent guests as are ESPNW contributor Sarah Spain, who like Olbermann is a
1310: 1289: 949:"Indians manager Terry Francona and Outshine Fruit Grape Bars: A true love story" 750: 586:
to follow it on the schedule and at the end of the show, Olbermann would toss to
515: 211: 167: 142: 34: 1331: 1275: 1254: 1100: 719: 695: 675: 660: 562: 368: 354: 339: 195: 1077: 523:
Olbermann's signoff pays tribute to two people who influenced his life. After
1444: 1324: 909:"Keith Olbermann Defaces A-Rod; Reveals Apologies, Drama Behind ESPN Return," 691: 671: 652: 645: 641: 629: 157: 146: 1268: 1169: 570: 442: 372: 228: 1282: 1229: 1208: 1162: 554: 524: 448: 437: 408: 346: 258:
ESPN executives had reported "no friction" between them in the run-up to
1359: 1352: 1261: 1194: 715: 707: 679: 656: 655:
and required some intermittent substitutes. The two most frequent were
637: 418: 394: 251: 1141: 768: 763: 456: 384: 215: 138: 84: 1092: 1082: 792:"Olbermann Returning to ESPN2 with Daily Late-Night Show Aug. 26" 587: 528: 427: 358: 349:
done while under the influence of alcohol, or ribbed his friend,
182: 171: 830:"ESPN Shifts Olbermann to Permanent Afternoon Slot in September" 383:
graduate (which Olbermann routinely discusses during the show);
874:"Keith OESPN Wants Keith Olbermann to Quit Doing "Commentary"," 738: 733: 532: 423: 861:"Keith Olbermann Latest To Learn He's Out At ESPN Via Twitter" 417:: Every Friday, Olbermann and his former ESPN Radio colleague 1401: 1123: 247: 149: 99: 1003:"Keith Olbermann promises no politics on his new ESPN2 show" 580:
first made the move to 5:00 PM, it coincided with a move of
1148: 742: 223: 509:
Olbermann would close the show in the following manner.
1065:"ESPN Statement on Keith Olbermann's Penn State Tweets" 893:"Olbermann Set to Return to ESPN and Sports News," 218:, having served as a popular co-anchor (alongside 771:: Airs on ESPN Australia delayed to 11:00 PM EST. 411:, who was Olbermann's designated emergency guest. 1442: 968: 786: 784: 606:"Time Marches On" - originated as "Oddball" on 1108: 888: 886: 1033:"Keith Olbermann Returning To TV On Turner," 781: 651:In early 2014, Olbermann suffered a bout of 357:, for a story about his over-consumption of 813:"Keith Olbermann Finalizes Deal With ESPN," 725: 714:, which raises money for pediatric cancer. 519:team, go forth and spread beauty and light. 1461:American English-language television shows 1115: 1101: 902: 883: 663:, and in the former case (since Virk is a 624:Guest hosts have occasionally shown up on 1216:ESPN2 College Football Saturday Primetime 858: 712:Penn State IFC/Panhellenic Dance Marathon 540:branding as WCVB brands its newscasts as 490:been completed in the intervening time. 475:Politics are not entirely off limits on 1049:"Larry King to Guest-Host 'Olbermann,'" 1443: 1000: 975:Miller, James Andrew (July 17, 2013). 974: 447:highlights he will do an imitation of 152:. The show, broadcast live daily from 1122: 1096: 946: 1451:2010s American television talk shows 1078:"Time For "Batting Practice" To End" 994: 926:"About Toccata and Fugue in D Minor" 640:was the first substitute host, with 527:, with whom Olbermann had worked at 236:in 1993–1994. In the decade before 558:format while Olbermann was there). 263:sports on a regular basis, telling 210:marked the second tour of duty for 13: 1430:List of programs broadcast by ESPN 1001:Pierce, Scott D. (July 25, 2013), 843:"ESPN, Keith Olbermann Part Ways," 597: 14: 1477: 1456:American sports television series 859:de Moraes, Lisa (July 9, 2015). 794:. ESPN Media Zone. July 13, 2013 762: 732: 670:Other guest hosts have included 634:Major League Baseball postseason 552:branding and KCBS was using the 465:Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show 1070: 1058: 1042: 1026: 977:"Olbermann Will Return to ESPN" 940: 1067:from "ESPN", February 24, 2015 918: 867: 852: 836: 822: 806: 619: 615:was reduced to thirty minutes. 243:Countdown with Keith Olbermann 57: 1: 1188:Arena Football League on ESPN 947:Lewis, Ryan (June 24, 2015). 775: 701: 202: 310:Toccata and Fugue in D Minor 7: 1202:College Football Scoreboard 741:: Was initially carried on 434:Late Headlines/Keith Lights 321:seriously, I don't mean it 10: 1482: 1466:ESPN2 original programming 1283:ESPN National Hockey Night 479:; rebuffing a report from 407:, and comedian and writer 1425: 1246: 1179: 1133: 272: 105: 95: 90: 80: 72: 67: 56: 48: 40: 30: 23: 16:American sports talk show 1409:Wednesday Night Baseball 726:International broadcasts 137:was a television sports 745:, normally at midnight 1053:The Hollywood Reporter 1037:The Hollywood Reporter 521: 190:The Hollywood Reporter 1237:Wednesday Night Hoops 1008:The Salt Lake Tribune 546:, while KTLA had the 511: 397:, MLB.com and former 1381:The Sports Reporters 1180:Pregame and postgame 1055:, September 26, 2013 954:Akron Beacon-Journal 154:Times Square Studios 1346:MLS Soccer Saturday 1318:Highly Questionable 594:moved back to ESPN 504:Kareem-Abdul Jabbar 440:he used during his 325:literally, we just 177:In September 2014, 1247:Former programming 1223:NBA Coast to Coast 981:The New York Times 913:Hollywood Reporter 897:The New York Times 878:Hollywood Reporter 817:Hollywood Reporter 632:' coverage of the 482:The New York Times 381:Cornell University 266:The New York Times 81:Production company 1438: 1437: 1374:Outside the Lines 915:, August 23, 2013 899:, August 25, 2013 880:, January 7, 2015 832:. ESPN MediaZone. 636:in October 2013. 583:Outside the Lines 400:Houston Chronicle 351:Cleveland Indians 282:Opening monologue 246:, which aired on 216:ESPN organization 130: 129: 49:Original language 41:Country of origin 1473: 1395:Stump the Schwab 1297:The Fantasy Show 1117: 1110: 1103: 1094: 1093: 1088: 1087: 1074: 1068: 1062: 1056: 1046: 1040: 1030: 1024: 1023: 1022: 1020: 1015:on July 29, 2013 1011:, archived from 998: 992: 991: 989: 987: 972: 966: 965: 963: 961: 944: 938: 937: 935: 933: 922: 916: 906: 900: 890: 881: 871: 865: 864: 856: 850: 849:, August 7, 2015 840: 834: 833: 826: 820: 810: 804: 803: 801: 799: 788: 767: 766: 737: 736: 567:Edward R. Murrow 493:In October 2013 430:in Philadelphia. 390:Baseball Tonight 145:on the American 126: 124: 116: 114: 91:Original release 59: 21: 20: 1481: 1480: 1476: 1475: 1474: 1472: 1471: 1470: 1441: 1440: 1439: 1434: 1421: 1332:Mike & Mike 1311:Golic and Wingo 1290:ESPN SpeedWorld 1242: 1175: 1134:Scheduled shows 1129: 1121: 1091: 1076: 1075: 1071: 1063: 1059: 1047: 1043: 1031: 1027: 1018: 1016: 999: 995: 985: 983: 973: 969: 959: 957: 945: 941: 931: 929: 928:. TripAtlas.com 924: 923: 919: 907: 903: 891: 884: 872: 868: 857: 853: 841: 837: 828: 827: 823: 819:, July 16, 2013 811: 807: 797: 795: 790: 789: 782: 778: 761: 731: 728: 704: 622: 600: 598:Former segments 538:Eyewitness News 516:Eyewitness News 405:Richard Justice 275: 212:Keith Olbermann 205: 196:Mike & Mike 168:Australian Open 143:Keith Olbermann 122: 120: 118: 112: 110: 109:August 26, 2013 35:Keith Olbermann 17: 12: 11: 5: 1479: 1469: 1468: 1463: 1458: 1453: 1436: 1435: 1433: 1432: 1426: 1423: 1422: 1420: 1419: 1412: 1405: 1398: 1391: 1384: 1377: 1370: 1363: 1356: 1349: 1342: 1335: 1328: 1321: 1314: 1307: 1300: 1293: 1286: 1279: 1276:ESPN Hollywood 1272: 1265: 1258: 1255:Boxing on ESPN 1250: 1248: 1244: 1243: 1241: 1240: 1233: 1226: 1219: 1212: 1205: 1198: 1191: 1183: 1181: 1177: 1176: 1174: 1173: 1166: 1159: 1152: 1145: 1137: 1135: 1131: 1130: 1120: 1119: 1112: 1105: 1097: 1090: 1089: 1069: 1057: 1041: 1025: 993: 967: 939: 917: 901: 882: 866: 851: 835: 821: 805: 779: 777: 774: 773: 772: 759: 727: 724: 720:Pablo S. Torre 703: 700: 696:Steve Weissman 676:Bram Weinstein 661:Pablo S. Torre 621: 618: 617: 616: 604: 599: 596: 563:Hackley School 473: 472: 431: 415:The Bruno Bash 412: 369:Jason Whitlock 362: 355:Terry Francona 340:Chrissy Teigen 334:. Also, as on 290: 274: 271: 250:and, briefly, 204: 201: 128: 127: 107: 103: 102: 97: 93: 92: 88: 87: 82: 78: 77: 74: 70: 69: 65: 64: 61: 54: 53: 50: 46: 45: 42: 38: 37: 32: 28: 27: 15: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 1478: 1467: 1464: 1462: 1459: 1457: 1454: 1452: 1449: 1448: 1446: 1431: 1428: 1427: 1424: 1418: 1417: 1413: 1411: 1410: 1406: 1404: 1403: 1399: 1397: 1396: 1392: 1390: 1389: 1385: 1383: 1382: 1378: 1376: 1375: 1371: 1369: 1368: 1364: 1362: 1361: 1357: 1355: 1354: 1350: 1348: 1347: 1343: 1341: 1340: 1339:MLS ExtraTime 1336: 1334: 1333: 1329: 1327: 1326: 1325:Madden Nation 1322: 1320: 1319: 1315: 1313: 1312: 1308: 1306: 1305: 1301: 1299: 1298: 1294: 1292: 1291: 1287: 1285: 1284: 1280: 1278: 1277: 1273: 1271: 1270: 1266: 1264: 1263: 1259: 1257: 1256: 1252: 1251: 1249: 1245: 1239: 1238: 1234: 1232: 1231: 1227: 1225: 1224: 1220: 1218: 1217: 1213: 1211: 1210: 1206: 1204: 1203: 1199: 1197: 1196: 1192: 1190: 1189: 1185: 1184: 1182: 1178: 1172: 1171: 1167: 1165: 1164: 1160: 1158: 1157: 1153: 1151: 1150: 1146: 1144: 1143: 1139: 1138: 1136: 1132: 1128: 1125: 1118: 1113: 1111: 1106: 1104: 1099: 1098: 1095: 1085: 1084: 1079: 1073: 1066: 1061: 1054: 1050: 1045: 1039:, May 6, 2013 1038: 1034: 1029: 1014: 1010: 1009: 1004: 997: 982: 978: 971: 956: 955: 950: 943: 927: 921: 914: 910: 905: 898: 894: 889: 887: 879: 875: 870: 862: 855: 848: 844: 839: 831: 825: 818: 814: 809: 793: 787: 785: 780: 770: 765: 760: 757: 752: 748: 744: 740: 735: 730: 729: 723: 721: 717: 713: 709: 699: 697: 693: 692:Ryen Russillo 689: 685: 681: 677: 673: 672:Robert Flores 668: 666: 662: 658: 654: 649: 647: 646:Jeremy Schaap 643: 642:Colin Cowherd 639: 635: 631: 630:Turner Sports 627: 614: 609: 605: 602: 601: 595: 593: 589: 585: 584: 579: 574: 572: 568: 564: 559: 557: 556: 551: 550: 545: 544: 539: 534: 530: 526: 520: 518: 517: 510: 507: 505: 500: 496: 491: 487: 484: 483: 478: 470: 466: 462: 458: 454: 453:John Sterling 450: 445: 444: 439: 435: 432: 429: 425: 420: 416: 413: 410: 406: 402: 401: 396: 392: 391: 386: 382: 378: 374: 370: 366: 363: 360: 356: 352: 348: 345: 341: 337: 333: 328: 324: 320: 316: 312: 311: 306: 302: 298: 294: 293:World's Worst 291: 287: 283: 280: 279: 278: 270: 268: 267: 261: 255: 253: 249: 245: 244: 239: 235: 231: 230: 225: 221: 217: 213: 209: 200: 198: 197: 191: 186: 184: 180: 175: 173: 169: 165: 161: 159: 158:New York City 155: 151: 148: 147:cable network 144: 140: 136: 135: 119:July 24, 2015 108: 104: 101: 98: 94: 89: 86: 83: 79: 75: 71: 66: 62: 55: 51: 47: 44:United States 43: 39: 36: 33: 29: 26: 22: 19: 1416:WUSA on ESPN 1414: 1407: 1400: 1393: 1388:SportsNation 1386: 1379: 1372: 1366: 1365: 1358: 1351: 1344: 1337: 1330: 1323: 1316: 1309: 1302: 1295: 1288: 1281: 1274: 1269:ESPN2 Garage 1267: 1260: 1253: 1235: 1228: 1221: 1214: 1207: 1200: 1193: 1186: 1170:SportsCenter 1168: 1161: 1154: 1147: 1140: 1081: 1072: 1060: 1052: 1044: 1036: 1028: 1017:, retrieved 1013:the original 1006: 996: 984:. Retrieved 980: 970: 958:. Retrieved 952: 942: 930:. Retrieved 920: 912: 904: 896: 877: 869: 854: 846: 838: 824: 816: 808: 796:. Retrieved 749:, i.e. on a 705: 669: 665:SportsCenter 664: 650: 625: 623: 612: 607: 591: 581: 577: 575: 571:Chris Berman 560: 553: 547: 541: 537: 522: 514: 512: 508: 498: 494: 492: 488: 480: 476: 474: 468: 443:SportsCenter 441: 438:catchphrases 433: 414: 398: 393:contributor 388: 377:John Clayton 373:Buster Olney 364: 335: 331: 326: 322: 318: 314: 308: 300: 296: 292: 285: 281: 276: 264: 259: 256: 241: 237: 233: 229:SportsCenter 227: 224:main network 207: 206: 194: 189: 187: 178: 176: 174:at 2:00 AM. 163: 162: 133: 132: 131: 73:Running time 24: 18: 1230:NBA Tonight 1209:MLS on ESPN 1163:NFL Matchup 1127:programming 688:Matt Barrie 620:Guest hosts 555:Action News 525:Chet Curtis 449:Johnny Most 409:Bill Scheft 347:first pitch 295:: another 260:Olbermann's 238:Olbermann's 234:SportsNight 220:Dan Patrick 60:of episodes 1445:Categories 1360:NHL 2Night 1353:NASCAR Now 1304:First Take 1262:Cold Pizza 1195:Big Monday 1156:First Take 776:References 751:tape delay 716:Adnan Virk 708:Penn State 702:Suspension 684:Jay Harris 680:Max Bretos 657:Adnan Virk 638:Larry King 543:NewsCenter 419:Tony Bruno 403:columnist 395:Jonah Keri 365:X Joins KO 323:completely 319:completely 303:, retains 252:Current TV 203:Background 141:hosted by 123:2015-07-24 113:2013-08-26 68:Production 1367:Olbermann 1142:30 for 30 769:Australia 626:Olbermann 613:Olbermann 608:Countdown 578:Olbermann 549:NewsWatch 499:Olbermann 495:Olbermann 477:Olbermann 469:Countdown 461:lapel mic 457:Boba Fett 385:Grantland 336:Countdown 332:Countdown 315:Countdown 301:Countdown 297:Countdown 286:Countdown 222:) of the 214:with the 208:Olbermann 179:Olbermann 164:Olbermann 139:talk show 134:Olbermann 25:Olbermann 1019:July 29, 986:July 20, 960:June 25, 932:July 13, 798:July 20, 653:shingles 359:ice pops 353:manager 31:Starring 1083:YouTube 847:Variety 588:Bob Ley 529:WCVB-TV 428:WPVI-TV 344:Dodgers 342:on her 183:ESPNEWS 172:ESPNEWS 121: ( 117: – 111: ( 106:Release 96:Network 52:English 739:Canada 694:, and 533:Boston 424:WIP-FM 375:, and 273:Format 1402:Talk2 1124:ESPN2 1051:from 1035:from 911:from 895:from 876:from 845:from 815:from 576:When 248:MSNBC 150:ESPN2 100:ESPN2 1149:E:60 1021:2013 988:2013 962:2015 934:2010 800:2013 743:TSN2 718:and 710:and 659:and 644:and 387:and 327:call 305:Bach 85:ESPN 756:TSN 592:OTL 531:in 330:on 307:'s 289:it. 226:'s 156:in 63:434 58:No. 1447:: 1080:. 1005:, 979:. 951:. 885:^ 783:^ 747:ET 698:. 690:, 686:, 682:, 678:, 674:, 506:. 371:, 254:. 1116:e 1109:t 1102:v 1086:. 990:. 964:. 936:. 863:. 802:. 125:) 115:)

Index

Keith Olbermann
ESPN
ESPN2
talk show
Keith Olbermann
cable network
ESPN2
Times Square Studios
New York City
Australian Open
ESPNEWS
ESPNEWS
Mike & Mike
Keith Olbermann
ESPN organization
Dan Patrick
main network
SportsCenter
Countdown with Keith Olbermann
MSNBC
Current TV
The New York Times
Bach
Toccata and Fugue in D Minor
Chrissy Teigen
Dodgers
first pitch
Cleveland Indians
Terry Francona
ice pops

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.