- Michelle Bonner
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Michelle Bonner Education Northeastern University Occupation Anchor, ESPN Title ESPNEWS and SportsCenter Anchor Michelle Bonner on ESPN Official website Michelle Bonner joined ESPN in March 2005 as an ESPNEWS anchor and occasionally anchors SportsCenter, ESPN’s flagship sports news program.[1] Bonner came to ESPN from CNN in Atlanta, Georgia, where she was a sports anchor from 2003–2005.
Prior to CNN, Bonner was a sports anchor at Fox Sports in Los Angeles (2002–2003), the main sports anchor at Los Angeles’ KCOP-TV (1999–2002), and a sports anchor/reporter at KRIV-TV in Houston (1997–1999).
Bonner graduated from Northeastern University with a bachelor’s degree in English (1994). She began her broadcasting career at WCHS-TV as a news producer and fill-in sports anchor/reporter in Charleston, West Virginia, and also worked in Manchester, New Hampshire, and Bangor, Maine.
A native of Marblehead, Massachusetts, Bonner won the Edward R. Murrow Award of Excellence in Journalism in 2001 for a feature story on Marlin Briscoe, the first black starting quarterback in the NFL. This same year she received the Associated Press Award and Golden Mike for “Best Sportscast”. In 2000, she earned an Emmy award for “Best Newscast”.
References
External links
ESPN Inc. ESPN executives ESPN family of networks ESPN · ESPN2 · ESPN on ABC · ESPNews · ESPN Classic · ESPNU · ESPN Deportes · ESPN 3D · ESPN Plus · ESPN PPV · ESPN3 · ESPN Radio · ESPN Deportes Radio · ESPN Xtra · ESPN All Access · ESPN Goal Line · Longhorn NetworkESPN International ESPN Australia · ESPN Brasil · ESPN Dos · ESPN Latin America · ESPN+ · ESPN Star Sports · ESPN America · ESPN (UK) · ESPN Classic (UK) · SBS ESPNCanadian sports networks co-owned with CTV Specialty Television Current ESPN business ventures ESPN.com · ESPN Broadband · ESPN Films · ESPN The Magazine · ESPN RISE · ESPN Deportes La Revista · ESPN Books · ESPN MVP · ESPN Zone · ESPY Awards · ESPN IntegrationDefunct ESPN business ventures Sports properties Other properties Notable personalities J. A. Adande · John Anderson · Erin Andrews · Skip Bayless · Michelle Beadle · Stephania Bell · Chris Berman · Bonnie Bernstein · Michelle Bonner · Mike Breen · Hubie Brown · Jenn Brown · John Buccigross · John Clayton · Jonathan Coachman · Linda Cohn · Chris Connelly · Lee Corso · Colin Cowherd · Jay Crawford · Rece Davis · Chris Fowler · Ron Franklin · Peter Gammons · Mike Greenberg · Mike Golic · Jay Harris · Kirk Herbstreit · Lou Holtz · Brock Huard · Tom Jackson · Dana Jacobson · Brian Kenny · Shaun King · Mel Kiper, Jr. · Suzy Kolber · Tony Kornheiser · Kara Lawson · Dan Le Batard · Tim Legler · Bob Ley · Steve Levy · Rebecca Lobo · Jay Mariotti · Kenny Mayne · Sean McDonough · Chris McKendry · Barry Melrose · Jon Miller · Joe Morgan · Brent Musburger · Brad Nessler · Rachel Nichols · Wendi Nix · Woody Paige · Jesse Palmer · Mike Patrick · Bill Pidto · Derek Rae · Karl Ravech · Tony Reali · Jim Rome · Holly Rowe · Bob Ryan · John Saunders · Mark Schlereth · Stuart Scott · Howie Schwab · Dan Shulman · Michael Smith · Shelley Smith · Stephen A. Smith · Tommy Smyth · Samantha Steele · Hannah Storm · Michele Tafoya · Charissa Thompson · Mike Tirico · Scott Van Pelt · Dick Vitale · Sara Walsh · Michael Wilbon · Marcellus Wiley · Trey WingoOwners: The Walt Disney Company 80% - Hearst Corporation 20% Categories:- Living people
- American television sports anchors
- People from Marblehead, Massachusetts
- Women sports announcers
- Northeastern University alumni
- American television biography stubs
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