January 2012

vinayak1000's picture

How to become a TV Anchor on a Sports Network

I actually was not that interested in this growing up as I preferred to be actually playing in the sport (basketball in my case). But, as you get older, it does sound like a pretty solid gig. It seems fun and almost a hobby and people make a career and lots of money out of it.

I guess the first thing really is getting your foot in the door. Most TV anchors have had some sort of experience at smaller market networks before landing something big at ESPN or Fox Sports. Add as much experience as possible in the field. Starting small is really the key in this industry unlike something like investment banking where it is becoming common for a junior at an Ivy League college to already have a summer internship at J.P Morgan.

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Choosing a Sports Management Program

I wrote about how the sports job market is expected to grow in my previous post and it should because the sports industry in the United States is a $200 billion one. But, I am finding it difficult to get a ranking of the top sports management programs and I have resigned to the fate that there probably just isn’t one.

So how to go about picking a sports management program? I guess it’s a lot about location more than anything else from the advice that I have gotten think New York, Boston and Dallas. That would mean the Tisch Center for Hospitality, Tourism and Sports Management at NYU should be a pretty solid fit. The other schools that have been highly touted for sports management are the University of Massachusetts – Amherst, Ithaca College and George Washington University.