Jenn Brown

For the Swedish singer, see Jennifer Brown.
Jenn Brown

Brown in 2009
Born Jennifer Lynne Brown
(1981-03-23) March 23, 1981
Gainesville, Florida, United States
Residence Los Angeles, California, United States
Education University of Florida
Occupation Sports broadcaster, television host
Height 1.61 m (5 ft 3 in)[1]
Spouse(s) Wes Chatham (m. 2012)
Website www.jennbrown.com

Jennifer Lynne "Jenn" Brown (born March 23, 1981) is an Emmy Award Winning American sports broadcaster and television host. A former Division I Collegiate Athlete for the University of Florida, she is often on the sidelines of the biggest college football and baseball games for ESPN. She was the first female correspondent for Inside the NFL and can be regularly seen covering both boxing and MMA. She spent eight years as a reporter and host for ESPN and recently sidelined the show American Ninja Warrior.[2]

Brown spent two years working for the NFL Network as a studio host and reporter. Prior to working with NFL Network, Brown spent 8 years as a reporter and host for ESPN. She spent 3 years reporting from the college football sidelines on ESPN’s Thursday Night Primetime Game along with ABC and ESPN’s Saturday Noon Package. She also served as a reporter for College GameDay (football), the College World Series, Little League World Series, Summer and Winter X Games, the NFL Draft, National Signing Day and the ESPYs. She was a Los Angeles based Bureau reporter for ESPN contributing interviews and reports for ESPN’s news-gathering operation for SportsCenter, College GameDay and College Football Live. She co-hosted ESPNU's popular college football show RoadTrip with Jonathan Drubner which covered the biggest college football and basketball rivalry games throughout the year.

Background

Brown was born in Gainesville, Florida, and raised in Orlando, Florida. Her parents were Olympic gymnastics coaches, and her mother founded several gymnastics schools across the country that trained gymnasts to compete in the Olympics.[3]

Brown grew up with a passion for sports. She played seven sports at Bishop Moore High School and broke the record for the most varsity letters by a male or female athlete with 14.[4] Brown captained and played five sports in one year (diving, volleyball, basketball, softball and track). She was also chosen as one of the top 10 athletes in Central Florida in 1999.[5]

She went on to attend the University of Florida on an academic scholarship and played four years on the Florida Gators softball team.[5] Brown captained the team her senior year, and she finished fifth on the team's career stolen base list.

Brown received several academic honors while at the University of Florida including being named a two time National Fastpitch Coaches Association (NFCA) Academic All-American,[6] four time SEC Academic Honor Roll,[7] National Society of Collegiate Honors, Verizon Academic All-District, two time academic Dean's List and two time academic President's List.[5]

Brown graduated summa cum laude and was planning to attend law school to become a sports agent, but got her big break hosting a travel TV show on HDNet called The Wild Side, which was a remake of the famous show Wild On on E!.

Brown resides in Los Angeles, California. She is married to actor Wes Chatham.[8] They have one son, John Nash Chatham [9] and have another boy due in May 2016.[10]

Career

TV hosting

Jenn Brown

Prior to ESPN, Brown worked for Showtime Sports as a reporter in 2008 and 2009. Brown was a special correspondent on Inside the NFL for 2 seasons, which won an Emmy Award for Outstanding Studio Show in 2008.[11] She was also a live event reporter for boxing and MMA events for both Showtime Sports and CBS. In 2009, Brown was one of the hosts on ABC's Primetime show The Superstars.

Brown worked for E! Entertainment the summer of 2008 as a correspondent on E! News Now. Prior to joining E!, Brown hosted shows for networks like CBS, ESPN, CMT and HDNet. She was the host for a nationally syndicated Mountain Lifestyle show called 48 Straight, The Mountain Experience, which she hosted with Jonny Moseley. Brown also co-hosted with Moseley The Collegiate Nationals for CBS Sports. In 2007 she hosted the reality TV show I Want To Look Like a High School Cheerleader Again on Country Music Television.

She was a co-host on the NBC and Esquire Network summer primetime show American Ninja Warrior, as well as hosting A Football Life: Backstory and NFL GameDay Scoreboard on the NFL Network.[12]

Acting work

Her acting credit includes Two Tickets to Paradise, which was written, produced, starred and directed by D. B. Sweeney. She's also appeared in 2 episodes of the TV show Kingdom on DirecTV playing herself.[13]

Modeling

Brown has been featured in several ad campaigns for Under Armour's athletic clothing line.

See also

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, April 28, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.