Andrea Kremer
Andrea Kremer was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States on February 25th, 1959 and is the Sportscaster. At the age of 65, Andrea Kremer biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.
At 65 years old, Andrea Kremer physical status not available right now. We will update Andrea Kremer's height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, and measurements.
Andrea Kremer (born February 25, 1959 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) is a multi-Emmy Award-winning American television journalist.
She and Hannah Storm became the first all-women booth to call any major men's team sport, not just football.
Kremer has served as Chief Correspondent for the NFL Network and has previously oversaw the network's coverage and in-depth analysis on health and safety.
She has worked as a reporter for HBO's Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel, as well as co-host of We Need To Talk, the first all-female nationally syndicated weekly sports show on CBS.
She served as a sideline reporter for NBC on the network's coverage of Sunday Night Football from 2001 to 2011. Kremer was given the coveted Pete Rozelle Radio-Television Award by the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2018.
More than 25 Super Bowls, the NBA Finals and All-Star Game, Major League Baseball's All-Star Game and League Championship Series, college football bowl games, Stanley Cup Playoffs and Finals, NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament, 2012 Olympic swimming trials, and the PGA Championship have all been covered, including the PGA Championships in the United States.
Personal life
In Boston University's School of Journalism, Kremer teaches "The Art of the Interview," a course of her own creation. She was named Andrew R. Lack Fellow at Boston University in 2015. She has taught at Stanford, Winthrop, DePaul, and Endicott College.
Kremer has appeared at Amarantus Bioscience, Citi, Goldman Sachs, First Republic Bank, Fidelity, NFL All Access, The Boston Company, and the Philadelphia Eagles. She supports the Brain Tumor Society, Best Buddies, Tom Coughlin Jay Fund Foundation, the Marvin Lewis Community Fund, and Right to Play.
John Steinberg, a Boston archaeologist, is married to Kremer.
Early life and career
Kremer was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on February 25, 1959. She graduated from Friends Select School in Pennsylvania and later became a University of Pennsylvania undergraduate. Kremer became a member of sorority Phi Sigma Sigma Sigma Sigma Tau Tau Tau Tau Tau Tau's and pursued her passion for ballet while studying with the Philadelphia Civic Ballet Company while at the University of Pennsylvania.
Kremer began her career in 1982 as the sports editor of the Main Line Chronicle in Ardmore, Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania, the state's largest weekly newspaper. Kremer's mother encouraged her to apply for a position after completing a story on NFL Films, the National Football League's television production arm.
She left the Chronicle in 1984 to join NFL Films as the country's first female producer. She started off working on HBO's Inside the NFL. Kremer served as a writer, producer, and on-air personality on This is the NFL until 1989. "All the Best" and "Gift of Grab" were two of her "All the Best" and "Gift of Grab." In 1986, she was nominated for writing and editing the NFL Films special "Autumn Ritual." While at NFL Films, she served as a contributing reporter to the Philadelphia Eagles Pre-Game Show on WIP-AM.
Professional career
She became ESPN's first female reporter in 1989. She began as a Chicago-based reporter and then moved to Los Angeles to work as a reporter in 1994. In addition to ESPN.com, ESPN Radio, and ESPNEWS, she worked on ESPN, Sunday Night Countdown, and Outside the Lines. As a substitute host for Up Close, she moderated a roundtable discussion and conducted interviews. Many of her stories revolved around domestic violence, sexual assault, and heroin use.
Kremer joined ESPN in 2006 to become a sideline reporter for NBC Sunday Night Football and to help with the national broadcast of Football Night in America.
She was a reporter in Beijing on NBC's coverage of the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver and the 2008 Olympics. During her stay in Beijing, she wrote about swimming, scuba, and Michael Phelps' pursuit of eight gold medals. She covered Phelps and Ryan Lochte's match and Phelps' becoming the most decorated Olympian of all time at the 2012 Olympics. In 2010, she concentrated her Olympic coverage on speed skating in Vancouver.
In February 2009, she served as the sideline reporter for Super Bowl XLIII. Michele Tafoya was fired after Sunday Night Football in 2011 and was replaced by Michele Tafoya.
Since 2007, Kremer has been a reporter for HBO's Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel, reporting a number of highly acclaimed profiles and interviews to Emmy Award-winning newsmagazine's Emmy Award-winning newsmagazine feature. Bikram Yoga's sexual harassment probe, which was named one of the year's most surprising stories, was published in a magazine. During her time with Bryant Gumbel, she interviewed Robert Kraft, Kobe Bryant, Pete Carroll, Phil Jackson, Lane Kiffin, Barrett Robbins, DeMaurice Smith, Bill Parcells, Joakim Noah, Jim Harbaugh, and John Harbaugh.
With former NFL quarterback Boomer Esiason, Kremer became a regular contributor to NFL Magazine. After four issues, the magazine was discontinued.
Kremer joined NFL Network as a Chief Correspondent and oversaw the network's coverage and in-depth coverage of health and safety in 2012. Darrelle Revis, a defensive back, suffered from an ACL tear, was the subject of her article. During his prison term for heroin possession and return to the field with the Green Bay Packers, she interviewed Johnny Jolly. Laurent Robinson's concussion was also covered in a newspaper.
Kremer joined We Need to Talk, the first all-female national television sports show. The weekly show, which was broadcast in prime time, featured a rotating group of female panelists debating all aspects and sports news. The show received the Gracie Grand Award for On Air Talent: Sports Program at the end of the program's inaugural season.
Kremer and Hannah Storm made sports history by naming an NFL game for the first time. During the 2018-2019 NFL season, they called their first game on September 27, 2018, and there have been 11 Thursday Night Football games on Amazon Prime Video.