Dream Job
Dream Job | |
---|---|
Starring | Stuart Scott Tony Kornheiser |
Country of origin | United States |
No. of episodes | 22 |
Production | |
Running time | 60 minutes |
Original release | |
Network | ESPN |
Release | February 1, 2004 January 1, 2006 | โ
Dream Job is an American
Summary
The premise of Dream Job was to find a new anchor for ESPN's popular sports news program,
Season 1
Contestants
In September 2003, the show's producers went on a nationwide talent search to find those who wanted a chance to be an ESPN anchor. Over 10,000 people attended the talent search across the United States. The field was narrowed down to 10 contestants who would compete in the televised finals, which started in the Winter of 2004. Originally, the show wanted 11 contestants, 10 from the nationwide search, and another from a contest that was being sponsored by the popular fast food chain Wendy's. A 12th contestant would be selected as an alternate.
The last 12 contestants still in the running on the premiere episode ranged in ages from 21 to 40. They were:
- Maggie Haskins, the youngest contestant, a Chicago native who was a full-time student at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island. Haskins was originally the alternate, but producers later changed their minds and she competed from the show's first episode.
- Michael Quigley, the oldest contestant, an auto parts salesman from Lansdowne, Pennsylvania. Quigley quickly became known for his over-the-top anchoring style, similar to a play-by-play announcer.
- Aaron Levine, 21, a senior at Stanford University
- Mike Hall, 22, a senior at the University of Missouri
- Casey Stern, 25, an executive recruiter from Bellmore, New York
- Zachariah Selwyn, 28, an actor and a musician from Los Angeles
- Nick Stevens, 29, a Brooklyn-based comedian
- Chris Williams, 31, an attorney from Boston
- Jersey City
- Alvin Williams, 38, a retail manager from Montgomery, Alabama (Williams won the contest sponsored by Wendy's to become a contestant on the show)
- Kelly Milligan, 38, a Dallas attorney
- Lori Rubinson, 39, from New York City, now a host at WFAN
Judges
The judging panel consisted of:
- Tony Kornheiser, The Washington Post columnist and author, and co-host of ESPN's talk show, Pardon the Interruption.
- Kit Hoover, a former Fox News correspondent, cast member on the inaugural season of MTV's Road Rules, and co-host of the ESPN2 morning show, Cold Pizza.
- Washington Redskins.
- Al Jaffe, the Vice President of Talent at ESPN.
The judging panel's job consisted of giving criticism to the contestants after performing a task on the show and cutting contestants.
Episodes
There was one segment that recurred each week on the show called "My SportsCenter." Each contestant was to read a highlight, or, as they did in week 4, introduce packages done by the person they were co-anchoring their segment with. Each show also consisted of a different sporting event. These ranged from an analysis of the
The first two weeks of the show saw the contestants split into groups of 6, and each doing the "My SportsCenter" segment solo. To break a tie between Chris Williams and Michael Quigley at the end of the first show, Scott called a network executive who made the final decision to cut Chris Williams. Alvin Williams was cut the following week. In week 3, on March 7, 2004, the "My SportsCenter" segment became co-anchored, and Quigley and Rubenson were voted off. For the "My SportsCenter" segment in week 4, on March 14, 2004, all the eight remaining contestants were sent to Florida to do reports on
Finale
The two-hour finale, airing on March 28, 2004, would determine who the new SportsCenter anchor would be. In the first hour, only the judges would determine who got cut. Haskins and Selwyn, arguably the most popular contestants on the show, were cut, leaving Levine and Hall in the championship round. Haskins was tabbed by Jaffe as the show's most improved contestant. She was praised for having the best writing during her time on the show. When making the decision to cut Selwyn, Kornheiser said, "I probably just made a mistake." In hour two, the American viewing public would cut one more contestant. At the end of the night, Levine was cut by garnering 60% of the viewers' votes. Mike Hall was the first ever Dream Job winner.
Later that night on SportsCenter, Hall took his sports quiz and correctly answered 5 questions. Each correct answer was worth $5,000, increasing his first-year salary from $70,000 to $95,000. He graduated from the University of Missouri on May 15, 2004. He started his tenure as a regular SportsCenter anchor on July 19, 2004. He had done some
As for Selwyn, he became a color commentator on the
Season 2
David Holmes won season 2 of Dream Job.
Season 3
Judges
All five judges from Season 2 returned:
Contestants
The show's contestants were six former NBA stars vying to become ESPN's next NBA analyst:
- Dennis Scott, who spent most of his career with the Orlando Magic
- Dee Brown, who is most famous for winning the 1991 slam dunk contest with a no-look dunk while playing for the Boston Celtics (he also played for the Toronto Raptorsand the Magic before retiring)
- 1994
- high schoolplayer ever to be drafted directly into the league
- J.R. Reid, who averaged double figures in scoring during his first three years in the NBA
- Gerald Wilkins, one of the most popular New York Knicks ever
Dana Barros was originally slated to be one of the six contestants, but was missing from the show during its first episode, apparently dropping out at the last minute. He was replaced by the Orlando Magic's first-ever draft pick, Nick Anderson, but Anderson soon exited, and was replaced by Dennis Scott.
Summary
Due to Barros' absence, there were only five contestants for the season premiere. This meant that at the end of the episode, no one would be cut; ESPN thus touted the first episode as a "special preview" episode. Promotional ads for the show leading up to episode two said Nick Anderson would be Barros' replacement, but those ads quickly disappeared, as Anderson was then replaced by Dennis Scott. On episode two, Wilkins was the first contestant to go. The following week, Dawkins was gone, the victim of America's vote being used as a tiebreaker when he got his second cut vote of the night, though Scott also had two cut votes. Week four saw Reid saying goodbye, with Scott finally getting the boot in week five. That left Bullard and Brown in the last showdown for the Dream Job of ESPN NBA analyst. Bullard's mistakes got the best of him, and Dee Brown was the winner of the third season of the show, as Bullard got three votes to be cut.