Jim Lampley
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Jim Lampley (born on April 8, 1949 in Hendersonville, North Carolina) is an American sports broadcaster, news anchor, movie producer, and restaurant owner. He has been in several television shows, but is better known for his participation in the HBO Boxing series (officially HBO World Championship Boxing). He currently works alongside Larry Merchant and Emanuel Steward in that series.
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[edit] Early career
Lampley's career as a broadcaster began in 1974, when he was chosen among others in what ABC called a talent hunt. ABC executives thought that Lampley's youthful looks would make him endearing to the college crowds they looked to attract for their college football games. At ABC, he covered such events as baseball games, the 1986-1987 Indianapolis 500, five Olympics, as well as the program Wide World of Sports.
In 1985, Lampley along with Al Michaels served as anchors for ABC's coverage of Super Bowl XIX, the first ever Super Bowl that ABC televised. Lampley would subsequently preside over the postgame, trophy presentation ceremony.
[edit] CBS
In 1987, Lampley moved to CBS, where he took over duties as sports news anchor on the daily news show in Los Angeles, and also was a correspondent. That same year, he began working for HBO, covering the boxing fights and HBO's annual telecast of Wimbledon. He also attended the Albertville Olympics in 1992, as a news anchor for KCBS-TV.
[edit] NBC
That same year, Lampley moved to NBC, where he helped cover the 1992 Barcelona Olympics and the 1996 Atlanta Olympics. In 1993, Lampley took over studio hosting duties for Bob Costas on The NFL on NBC. Lampley would move to play-by-play duties for NBC's NFL telecasts the following year and was subsequently replaced by Greg Gumbel. Before the Atlanta games, in 1995, he began working at the Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel HBO series. For his participation in that show, he has earned three Emmy awards. In 1998, he covered the Nagano Olympics and the Goodwill Games for Turner, and in 2000, he covered the Sydney Olympics, again for NBC.
In 2004, Lampley was the daytime anchor for NBC's Olympics coverage for the 2004 Summer Olympics, as well as anchoring the USA Network's coverage of the Games. In 2006, Lampley served as a central correspondent for the 2006 Winter Olympics which aired on the networks of NBC Universal. Torino 2006 was the 13th Olympics Lampley covered, surpassing the record set by America's original voice of the Olympics, Jim McKay.
[edit] HBO
Most casual fans, however, probably know Lampley more than anything else, for his work on HBO World Championship Boxing show, and on the HBO pay-per-view telecast. As commentator in these shows, he has had the opportunity to call some of boxing's most famous moments, such as Thunder Meets Lightning, when Julio César Chávez saved himself from a decision defeat by knocking out Meldrick Taylor (who was leading the fight on two of the three official scorecards) with only two seconds to go in the last round; James "Buster" Douglas's upset of Mike Tyson for the World Heavyweight championship; and the first Riddick Bowe-Andrew Golota fight at Madison Square Garden, where a riot occurred following the Pole's disqualification for low blows. Lampley is criticized by many viewers for allegedly being biased in favor of certain HBO "house fighters", while many enjoy his charisma and magnetic voice.
Lampley also hosted a series called Legendary Nights in 12 installments in honor of HBO's three decades covering boxing in 2004, recounting 12 memorable fights broadcast on HBO in that timespan.
[edit] Recent developments
Lampleys movie production company, Crystal Spring Productions, has produced a handful of movies, including 2000's Welcome to Hollywood. The company has plans of producing a movie about tennis player Pancho Gonzalez, with Benjamin Bratt in the leading role.
Lampley is the former owner of two restaurants in Utah, both of which were named the Lakota Restaurant and Bar. He is the father of three girls and one boy, and he resides in the north county area of San Diego.
In 2005, Lampley turned political and began posting on The Huffington Post website, where he revealed his belief that George W. Bush stole the 2004 election via vote tampering in Ohio.[1] He also had to retract a claim that American deaths in Iraq are several times higher than official reports after finding out his source was fraudulent.[2][3]
In addition to hosting Olympic coverage and commentating on boxing, Jim Lampley can often be heard on The Jim Rome Show as a substitute host. Rome said, "Jim Lampley is the smartest guy in the Jungle", on June 7, 2006. Lampley, though, has been subject to criticism for his grammar awkwardness. Lampley has also filled in for nationally-syndicated liberal talk radio host Ed Schultz.
On January 3, 2007, he was arrested for domestic abuse against fiancée Candice Sanders, Miss California USA 2003, by the San Diego County Sheriff's Department, and was also being held on suspicion of violating a restraining order and dissuading a witness. Police arrested Lampley outside of San Diego on Wednesday night after he allegedly threw Sanders against the wall of her apartment after drinking and smoking marijuana. He has posted bail of $35,000.[4]
On February 2007, he was charged with violating a restraining order filed against him by former girlfriend Candice Sanders. Jim Lampley was sentenced to three years of probation on February 21, 2007 after pleading no contest to a misdemeanor charge of violating a restraining order. He was also ordered to stay away from Sanders for 3 years.[5]
Most media coverage has failed to provide the details as to his TRO violation. Lampley was visiting the office of his property manager to make arrangements allowing Ms. Sanders to reside in his apartment until the legal proceedings concluded. As he exited the building, the detectives there to interview Ms. Sanders noticed Lampley exiting the office and made their arrest. Since he was within 100 yards of his apartment, this was a technical violation of the TRO and the only reason for the arrest. There was no contact with his former fiancee.
Superior Court Judge Laura Parsky sentenced Lampley to three years probation, a 52-week mandatory domestic violence class, fined Lampley $674 and ordered him to do 40 hours of public volunteer work. The court dismissed charges for the alleged attack. The district attorney's office reviewed Sanders' allegations of domestic violence and found "insufficient evidence." Gloria Allred, defense attorney for many high-profile cases was observed at the courthouse, allegedly to investigate representing Ms. Sanders. Ms. Allred ultimately had no involvement with this case. Lampley's son, Aaron was prepared to testify on his father's behalf. The restraining order previously imposed dissolved on the date of the sentencing. Judge Parsky is the daughter of noted GOP advisor and appointee by the last 5 GOP administrations, Gerry Parsky.
In 2007, appeared on TLC's "My Unique Family" with ex-wife and former KCBS C0-anchor Bree Walker (son Aaron has ectrodactyly, which was genetically transmitted from his mother; his half-sister Andrea also has this condition). In February, Bree Walker announced she was checking into rehab for alcohol abuse in an effort to better her family.
Lampley portrayed himself in the March, 2007 movie release of "Blades of Glory" starring Will Ferrell and Jon Heder, a comedy about the first male pairs team in the history of national and international figure skating competition.
[edit] Highlights
- Olympics Host: 1984 (Los Angeles), 1984 (Sarajevo), 1988 (Calgary), 1988 (Seoul), 1992 (Albertville), 1992 (Barcelona), 1994 (Lillehammer), 1996 (Atlanta), 1998 (Nagano), 2000 (Sydney), 2002 (Salt Lake City), 2004 (Athens), 2006 (Torino)
- Boxing, Play by Play: HBO World Championship Boxing, HBO Pay-Per-View, HBO Boxing After Dark (from premiere to April 2006 and sporadically afterwards)
[edit] References
- ^ http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jim-lampley/the-biggest-story-of-our-_b_576.html
- ^ http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jim-lampley/the-ultimate-deception_b_2838.html
- ^ http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jim-lampley/a-poor-choice-of-sources_b_2891.html
- ^ "Jim Lampley Arrested For Felony Domestic Violence", Alaska Report, 2007-01-05. Retrieved on January 5, 2007.
- ^ http://www.latimes.com/sports/la-sp-newswire22feb22,1,6584644.story Los Angeles Times (accessed 02-23-2007)
[edit] External links
Preceded by Jim McKay |
Television voice of the Indianapolis 500 1986-1987 |
Succeeded by Paul Page |
Categories: Current events | Articles lacking sources from January 2007 | All articles lacking sources | 1949 births | Living people | People from North Carolina | People from San Diego | American sports announcers | American bloggers | American television journalists | Boxing commentators | Los Angeles television anchors | American radio personalities | Sports Emmy Award winners | Major League Baseball announcers | Motorsport announcers | University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill alumni | National Football League announcers