“As for the substance of the conversation, it is not reflective of our decision-making on staffing assignments for the NBA, which has largely been driven by the circumstances of the pandemic.”. [24], "Express lane to Bristol: Why so many D.C. sports personalities end up at ESPN", "Co-anchor of NBC's 'TODAY Show,' Host of ESPN's 'The Jump' named 2018 Medill convocation speakers", "ESPN's Rachel Nichols asks the tough questions", "Rachel Nichols: Reporter and E:60 Correspondent", "Rachel Nichols refused to let Roger Goodell off the hook", "CNN's Rachel Nichols Confronts Floyd Mayweather over Domestic Abuse Charges", "How The Jump became TV's smartest basketball show", "ESPN Reimagines NBA Pregame Coverage with New Strategy", "Nichols teams with Post mentors Wilbon, Kornheiser on PTI - ESPN Front Row", "The Esquire Survey: The Sexiest Women on the Planet", "The 10 Most Powerful Voices in Sports Media: Simmons, Barkley and More", "Weddings; Rachel Alexander, Max Nichols", "Max Nichols, Rachel Nichols Husband: 5 Fast Facts You Need to Know", "Hard-Nosed Sports Reporter, Still Hit On in the Locker Room, Gets CNN Back in the Game", "Feb 28- ESPN's Rachel Nichols on working with Pierce & Perk, Tatum's ascension, & being a role model for girls", https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Rachel_Nichols_(journalist)&oldid=985252382, College basketball announcers in the United States, National Basketball Association broadcasters, Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License, This page was last edited on 24 October 2020, at 21:38. In 2013, she left ESPN for CNN and began hosting Unguarded with Rachel Nichols in October of that year. Find out more about our policy and your choices, including how to opt-out. Says she helped him with his middle at the platform, and … [16] She was also named to Sports Illustrated's "Twitter 100" in 2013 and 2014[17][18] and to Sports Illustrated "MMQB 100". The NBA has worked wonders to honor and pay tribute to … [5][12] ESPN NBA analyst Rachel Nichols is sickened by the National Basketball Association’s silence on the passing. [13] The footage appears to be from a video feed streaming out of Nichols’ hotel room there — and she was “clearly unaware” that she was being filmed as she spoke on the phone. Rachel Michele Nichols (née Alexander, born October 18, 1973) is a sports journalist who is currently a television host for ESPN, a sports reporter, and an anchor. The incident marks the second time a high-profile female ESPN employee has been secretly recorded while in a hotel room. Nichols was born Rachel Michele Alexander. This week, four Rachel Nichols videos were anonymously sent to Deadspin about the ESPN host discussing private matters about the channel with an unidentified man.The videos were recorded from the cell phone and Deadspin reported that someone intended for them to 'expose' Nichols as a 'backstabber'.ESPN responded to the videos, unhappy with the invasion on Nichols' privacy. [2], Nichols began her career as a sports journalist in the 1990s, first writing for the Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel sports page (1995–1996) before covering the NHL's Washington Capitals for the Washington Post (1996–2004). In all, four videos were sent anonymously to a Deadspin reporter late Tuesday. “It’s indefensible and an intrusion on Rachel’s privacy,” ESPN told Deadspin. Nichols, whose face wasn’t shown on the footage, was talking to an unidentified man about several topics at ESPN, including her career, other staffers and details of the network’s upcoming coverage of the NBA Finals as the league preps its restart at Walt Disney World in Orlando, according to the report. [8] Sports Illustrated has called Nichols "the country's most impactful and prominent female sports journalist. The videos were sent to Deadspin “as an attempt” to discredit Nichols and portray her as a “back-stabber,” an anonymous source told Deadspin in a text message. Rachel Michele Nichols (née Alexander, born October 18, 1973) is a sports journalist who is currently a television host for ESPN, a sports reporter, and an anchor. A NOTE ABOUT RELEVANT ADVERTISING: We collect information about the content (including ads) you use across this site and use it to make both advertising and content more relevant to you on our network and other sites. Find out more about our policy and your choices, including how to opt-out. [22][23] She also has one older brother and one younger brother. Sources told the outlet that an unidentified ESPN employee started recording the video feed on a phone before sending it out to others at the network. [14], She has been named one of Esquire's "Women We Love"[15] and one of The Hollywood Reporter's "10 Most Powerful Voices in Sports Media". Both Florida and Connecticut, which is the home to ESPN’s Bristol headquarters, are two-party consent states, meaning both participants must agree to being recorded — meaning that the person who recorded the call may have committed a crime. Rachel Nichols responds to Amin Elhassan thanking her for him getting his start at ESPN. Nichols, the 46-year-old host of ESPN’s “The Jump,” was surreptitiously taped in four videos that appeared to be a cellphone recording of a video feed, Deadspin reports. In 2019, she was named host of NBA Saturday Primetime on ABC and the NBA Finals on ABC. Michael David Barrett, then 46, was arrested a year later and was ultimately sentenced to more than two years in prison. [11] During this same period, Nichols also worked the sidelines for Turner Sports' NBA on TNT program from 2013–2016, working both regular season and playoff games.

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