American television talk show host and sportswriter/columnist
Tony Kornheiser
|
---|
Kornheiser in 2011
|
Born
| Anthony Irwin Kornheiser
(
1948-07-13
)
July 13, 1948
(age 75)
New York City, U.S.
|
---|
Nationality
| American
|
---|
Occupations
| - Sports columnist
- radio and podcast host
- television host
- color commentator
|
---|
Years active
| 1970?present
|
---|
Spouse
| Karril Kornheiser
|
---|
Children
| 2
|
---|
Website
| tonykornheisershow
.com
|
---|
Anthony Irwin Kornheiser
[1]
(
; born July 13, 1948)
[2]
is an American television sports
talk show
host and former
sportswriter
and
columnist
. Kornheiser is best known for his endeavors in three forms of media: as a writer for
The Washington Post
from 1979 to 2008, as a co-host of
ESPN
's Emmy Award-winning sports debate show
Pardon the Interruption
since 2001, and as the host of
The Tony Kornheiser Show
, a radio show and podcast. Longtime ESPN executive John Walsh once declared that "in the history of sports media, [Kornheiser] is the most multitalented person ever."
[3]
Early life
[
edit
]
Kornheiser was born in New York City and raised in nearby
Lynbrook
.
[2]
[4]
He was the only child of Estelle (
nee
Rosenthal; 1915?1978) and Ira Kornheiser (1910?2000).
[5]
[6]
His father was a dress cutter.
[3]
During his youth, Kornheiser spent his summers at
Camp Keeyumah
in Pennsylvania. One of his counselors was future NCAA and NBA basketball coach
Larry Brown
.
[7]
[8]
Kornheiser attended
George W. Hewlett High School
, where he was the sports editor of the school newspaper.
[3]
[9]
He graduated in 1965.
After high school, Kornheiser went to Harpur College (now
Binghamton University
), where he majored in
English literature
and began his journalism career at the
Colonial News
(now called
Pipe Dream
).
[10]
[11]
He graduated with a
Bachelor of Arts
in 1970.
[12]
Kornheiser has frequently spoken positively of his college years.
[10]
[13]
[14]
For a brief period of time after college, he worked with children with
disabilities
.
[15]
Print career
[
edit
]
Early writing career
[
edit
]
Kornheiser began his career in
New York City
, where he wrote for
Newsday
between 1970 and 1976.
[16]
His first work at
Newsday
consisted of covering high school sports.
[17]
Kornheiser then moved to
The New York Times
, where he wrote between 1976 and 1979.
[16]
In 1979,
George Solomon
recruited Kornheiser to join
The Washington Post
as a general assignment reporter in Style and Sports.
[16]
[18]
In 1980, Kornheiser also authored a profile of
Nolan Ryan
that served as the cover story for the charter issue of
Inside Sports
.
[19]
He became a full-time sports columnist at the
Post
in 1984.
[12]
[18]
He also began writing columns for the
Post
's Style Section on November 12, 1989.
[18]
In the 1990s, Kornheiser usually wrote three columns per week, which were a Tuesday column and a Thursday column in the Sports Section and a Sunday column (written for a more general audience) in the Style Section. He also started working for
ESPN Radio
in 1997 and kept his column at the
Post
.
[12]
As part of his ESPN Radio contract, Kornheiser wrote columns called "Parting Shots" for
ESPN The Magazine
between 1998 and 2000.
[20]
Writing style
[
edit
]
Kornheiser's columns were usually sarcastic with touches of humor.
[21]
[22]
The most distinct style of his columns was that he often used an
alter ego
in italics to question his points of views for
self-deprecation
, like "
Excuse me, Tony...
"
[5]
[23]
At times, he would also use exaggeration for the sake of humor.
[24]
According to Stephanie Mansfield of
Sports Illustrated
, Kornheiser was regarded by many as "the wittiest columnist" in American newspapers.
[25]
Robert Weintraub of the
Columbia Journalism Review
praised him, in retrospect, for his "blend of beauty and precision."
[26]
Kornheiser was also capable of being "deadly serious" when need be.
[27]
The Bandwagon columns
[
edit
]
In 1991, Kornheiser created a string of now-famous Bandwagon columns to describe the
Washington Redskins
' Super Bowl run that year.
[22]
[28]
He first came up with the idea when the Redskins trounced the
Detroit Lions
, 45?0, in the opening game of the season.
[29]
He officially unveiled the first "Bandwagon" column when the team had an undefeated 4?0 record.
[28]
From then on, the Bandwagon column appeared every Tuesday, celebrating "the fun and hilarity of sports."
[29]
[30]
As the season progressed and the team's performances improved, a growing number of fans read the Bandwagon column in earnest.
[26]
[29]
When the Redskins advanced to
Super Bowl XXVI
, Kornheiser and his
Post
colleagues
Jeanne McManus
and
Norman Chad
drove in a 38-foot recreational vehicle decorated as the Bandwagon for a 1,200-mile journey to
Minneapolis, Minnesota
.
[31]
[32]
Kornheiser later described the Bandwagon columns as "the most fun I ever had as a writer."
[29]
Late writing career
[
edit
]
In the early 2000s ? because of his work on both radio and
Pardon the Interruption
?
Kornheiser stopped writing Style Section columns and only wrote one column a week. His last Style Section column was published on September 30, 2001.
[33]
Three of his books ?
Pumping Irony
,
Bald as I Wanna Be
, and
I'm Back for More Cash ?
are compilations of his Style Section columns.
[12]
In 2005, Kornheiser started to write short columns called
A Few Choice Words
with his photo in the Post's Sports Section. These short, sports-related columns appeared on the second page of the
Post'
s Sports section and were much shorter than the full-length columns Kornheiser used to write for the paper. This was the first time that the
Post
displayed a columnist's photo beside his column. He called these short columns "columnettes,"
[34]
[35]
writing three per week unless he had other duties. He did not write columns between April 26, 2006, and August 7, 2006, to prepare as an analyst of ESPN's
Monday Night Football
.
[3]
Starting August 8, 2006, he wrote columns called
Monday Night Diary
to describe his adventures on
Monday Night Football
.
[36]
His short-column space was later replaced by Dan Steinberg's
D.C. Sports Bog
.
[37]
On May 14, 2008, it was announced that Kornheiser had accepted a
buyout
from the
Post
.
[38]
"I love the paper. They were great to me every day that I was there," he told
Reuters
. "But I don't do much for the paper anymore."
[39]
Kornheiser had not written a regular column for the paper's print edition since 2006.
[39]
However, Kornheiser and Wilbon continued to tape a "Talking Points" mini
online TV
feature for the
Washington Post
until June 2, 2009, when an installment termed the final one was posted on the
Post
's site. In it Wilbon says he thinks there will be further installments while Kornheiser seems certain it is a permanent decision management has made.
[40]
On May 20, 2010, Kornheiser said on his radio show that in fact he was fired by the
Washington Post
, saying "they fired me in a despicable way." On September 11, 2013, Kornheiser repeated his account: "
Raju Narisetti
fired me from the
Washington Post
and I hate his guts."
[41]
Radio and podcast career
[
edit
]
Radio era
[
edit
]
Kornheiser hosted
The Tony Kornheiser Show
first locally on
WTEM
? known as Sports Radio 570 ? in
Washington, D.C.
between May 25, 1992, and November 14, 1997. The Kornheiser-led show was part of WTEM's original lineup.
[42]
[43]
The show was then syndicated by
ESPN Radio
between January 5, 1998, and March 26, 2004.
[44]
He was back on
WTEM
locally between November 10, 2004, and April 28, 2006, after which point Kornheiser put the show on hiatus in order to prepare for his duties with
Monday Night Football
.
[45]
His show was also carried for a short while by
XM Satellite Radio
,
[46]
airing between February 28, 2005 and April 28, 2006.
[45]
After completing the
2006 season
on
Monday Night Football
, Kornheiser signed with
WTWP
, Washington Post Radio, to relaunch his radio show on February 20, 2007.
[47]
[48]
The show aired live from 8:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. and was then replayed from 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
XM Radio
carried his show on a thirty-minute delay, from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m., beginning March 5, 2007, on
XM Sports Nation
, Channel 144.
[49]
Kornheiser went on hiatus from the show following the June 28, 2007, broadcast because of his
Monday Night Football
duties. The show was hosted by David Burd and included the same supporting cast. The show was called
The Tony Kornheiser Show Starring David Burd
during the hiatus.
[50]
Kornheiser returned to the show as the full-time host from January 21, 2008, to June 27, 2008, after which point WWWT ? the successor to WTWP ? declined to renew his contract due to declining ratings.
[51]
The show aired live from 8:00 a.m. to 10:00 a.m. and was replayed from 2:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m on WWWT, as well as on
XM Sports Nation
, XM channel 144 from 8:15 a.m. to 10:00 a.m. He announced during this period in 2008 that he would not be back on the radio until he was done with
Monday Night Football
.
The Tony Kornheiser Show
was on the air daily Monday through Friday from 10:00 a.m. to noon on Washington, D.C. radio station
WTEM
and streamed live on the station's website, ESPN980.com, until June 2016.
[52]
The show was also available as a podcast. There was originally a 24-hour "podcast delay," a source of many jokes amongst fans and show members alike.
[53]
The delay ended in 2015, allowing listeners to download episodes a few minutes after the live broadcast.
[54]
Podcast era
[
edit
]
On June 2, 2016, Kornheiser announced that his show will be relaunched as a podcast-only show.
[55]
[56]
According to Kornheiser, the reason to do a podcast-only show was to own his content and do the podcast a little closer to his home. However, the show format would still be the same as the radio show, albeit slightly shorter in length.
[57]
Kornheiser's son, Michael, handled the social media for the podcast and launched a website with information about how to subscribe.
[57]
On September 6, 2016, Kornheiser returned from his summer vacation with the first full episode of the new podcast.
[56]
The first episode was titled "We're Back!!! The Tony Kornheiser Show Returns" and ran for 1 hour and four minutes.
[58]
Most parts of the old show ? including "Old Guy Radio" and the Mailbag ? were retained.
[59]
Gary Braun and
Chris Cillizza
joined Kornheiser in studio.
Michael Wilbon
of
ESPN
and
Steve Sands
of the
Golf Channel
were the first guests joining by phone.
[58]
The podcast-only show is produced in partnership with sports talent agency IMG and on-demand audio company DGital Media.
[60]
The podcast is available at 11 a.m. ET via
iTunes
,
Google Play
,
Spotify
,
Stitcher
, and
TuneIn
.
[61]
Throughout its many iterations, a central quality of the show has been its eagerness to discuss issues other than sports, including news, politics, entertainment, and the idiosyncrasies of modern life.
[62]
[63]
In its early years, the show amassed a large and loyal following that remains to this day.
[4]
[64]
The fans ? who refer to themselves as "littles"
[65]
[66]
? have an annual musical convention
[43]
and use "La Cheeserie" as a catch phrase (in reference to a cheese counter at D.C.-area liquor store Calvert Woodley).
[67]
[68]
Television career
[
edit
]
Kornheiser appeared on a local weekly Washington Redskins TV show during the NFL football season on Washington's Channel 50 in the early 1980s with
Pete Wysocki
, a popular former Redskins linebacker and local hero, which was televised from a local restaurant/bar in Washington, D.C. called "Champions."
[69]
[70]
He appeared on ESPN's
The Sports Reporters
beginning in 1988 and continuing during the 1990s.
[3]
[12]
He sometimes guest-hosted the program when the then-host of the show,
Dick Schaap
, was away. He was also a panelist on
Full Court Press
hosted by
George Michael
on
WRC-TV
in Washington, D.C. during the NFL off-season until that show was canceled in December 2008 due to budget cuts.
[71]
[72]
He also made a number of appearances on
Redskins Report
on WRC.
[73]
He has appeared on numerous other ESPN productions, including
SportsCenter
,
Who's Number One?
, and multiple player's/sportspeople's profiles for
SportsCentury
.
[74]
[75]
Pardon the Interruption
[
edit
]
Pardon the Interruption
(abbreviated
PTI
) is a
sports
television show
that airs weekdays on various
ESPN
TV channels,
TSN
,
BT Sport ESPN
,
XM
, and
Sirius satellite radio
services, and as a downloadable
podcast
. On
PTI
, Kornheiser and co-host
Michael Wilbon
discuss, and frequently argue over, the top stories of the day in "sports... and other stuff" (as Kornheiser put it in the show's original promo).
[76]
[77]
Kornheiser's lively segments with Wilbon on the radio and on
Full Court Press ?
which mirrored their actual discussions in the newsroom of
The Washington Post ?
sparked the idea for
PTI
well before the end of his run at ESPN Radio.
[25]
[78]
The show won a
Sports Emmy Award
for best Daily
Outstanding Studio Show
in 2010,
[79]
2017,
[80]
and 2019.
[81]
When
Monday Night Football
moved from
ABC
to
ESPN
, Kornheiser received and accepted an offer to be a
color analyst
on
Monday Night Football
in early 2006.
[82]
[83]
He was originally passed over in favor of
Sunday Night Football
commentator
Joe Theismann
; however, when play-by-play man
Al Michaels
left ABC to call
Sunday Night Football
for NBC, Kornheiser was brought in alongside Theismann and new play-by-play announcer
Mike Tirico
.
[84]
As such, Kornheiser was part of the broadcast team covering the
New Orleans Saints
' 23?3 victory over the
Atlanta Falcons
in the Saints' first game in the
Superdome
after
Hurricane Katrina
.
[85]
[86]
Unlike Wilbon, Kornheiser does most episodes of
PTI
in-studio due to his self-admitted
fear of flying
.
[25]
Prior to joining
MNF
, his last trips outside of the studio were to cover
Super Bowl XXXVI
in
New Orleans
and to attend the NFL owners meetings in
Orlando
in 2006; Kornheiser both times traveled via train, though returned from the Orlando trip via airplane. On the April 6, 2006 edition of
PTI
, he expressed his dismay at the amount of travel required for
MNF
. Though he has mentioned on his radio program that he is taking steps to overcome his
aviophobia
, he in fact spent a five-week period on the road traveling to mainly western
MNF
sites, doing
PTI
via satellite.
[21]
Kornheiser returned for a second season of
Monday Night Football
. On January 9, 2007, Kornheiser told
Newsday
, "If they would like to have me back, my inclination is that I would like to do it again."
[87]
On May 18, 2009, ESPN announced that Kornheiser would be leaving
Monday Night Football
due to fear of flying.
[88]
Former
Oakland Raiders
and
Tampa Bay Buccaneers
head coach
Jon Gruden
replaced Kornheiser in the
MNF
booth.
[89]
Entertainment
[
edit
]
The 2004?2005
sitcom
Listen Up
, which aired on
CBS
, was loosely based on Kornheiser's life. It featured
Jason Alexander
as Tony Kleinman.
[90]
[91]
The sitcom's material mostly came from Kornheiser's columns (collected in
I'm Back for More Cash
) that he contributed to the "Style" section of the
Washington Post
, which took a humorous view of his family life.
[92]
[93]
Kornheiser had a cameo appearance as a bar patron in a 2015 episode of
The Americans
.
[94]
In June 2016, Kornheiser participated in the roast of political commentator and strategist
James Carville
.
[95]
Restaurant
[
edit
]
In January 2017, it was announced that Kornheiser was part of a new ownership group for Chad's (formerly Chadwick's),
[96]
a bar and restaurant located in the Friendship Heights area of
Washington, D.C.
[97]
The group also included former Maryland basketball coach
Gary Williams
, TV host
Maury Povich
, and D.C. businessman and socialite Alan Bubes.
[97]
Kornheiser is quoted as saying: "Did I always want to be part of a restaurant? No. But now with a podcast and trying to own my own content, the ability to put it on during the mornings or during the day and to have other people use it, that would be fun for me."
[98]
In April 2017, Kornheiser announced that Chad's would be renamed Chatter.
[99]
The new owners made several improvements, including remodeling the interior and adding a podcast studio.
[63]
[100]
Kornheiser began recording episodes of
The Tony Kornheiser Show
at Chatter on May 1, 2017.
[101]
Many fans of the show visited the restaurant to listen live.
[63]
[67]
On June 28, 2019, Kornheiser announced that the podcast would move to a new location after the summer break due to the closure of Chatter.
Personal life
[
edit
]
Kornheiser currently resides in the
Chevy Chase
neighborhood of
Washington, D.C.
, as well as
Rehoboth Beach, Delaware
, with his wife Karril.
[102]
[103]
They have two children, Michael and Elizabeth.
[3]
[104]
Kornheiser is Jewish.
[105]
[106]
Kornheiser was a member of the Young Democrats club while in high school.
[9]
As of 1990, Kornheiser was a registered Republican, although he did so because his wife was a registered Democrat and the couple wanted to "receive mailings from both sides."
[107]
Later, he referred to the decision to register as a Republican as a "mistake."
[107]
Kornheiser voted for
Barack Obama
during the
2008
and
2012
presidential elections.
[108]
During a podcast episode released on January 31, 2017, Kornheiser stated: "I land on the liberal side of the fence almost all the time, certainly on social issues."
[109]
Kornheiser has a pronounced
fear of flying
.
[21]
[25]
He regularly goes to bed early.
[21]
[110]
He can name all fifty U.S. states and their capitals in alphabetical order.
[111]
In 2006, Kornheiser revealed that he had
skin cancer
and had received treatment.
[112]
Criticism
[
edit
]
General
[
edit
]
While earning a name as a critic of many people and organizations, he has appeared sensitive to criticism directed toward his own work.
[113]
[114]
Stephen Rodrick
wrote for
Slate
that Kornheiser was allowed by ESPN to argue aimlessly on television and that his
Washington Post
column was being used to plug side projects rather than gather news from cited sources.
[115]
Kornheiser called on Slate, owned by the
Post's
parent company, to fire Rodrick.
[116]
After Kornheiser's first game on
Monday Night Football
, Paul Farhi wrote in
The Washington Post
that Kornheiser had emphasized the obvious, played third fiddle, and was reminiscent of
Dennis Miller
"in a bad way."
[117]
Kornheiser responded during an interview on
The Dan Patrick Show
on August 15, 2006, saying that Farhi was a "two-bit weasel slug" and his own newspaper had back-stabbed him. His response generated more criticism from media outlets, including the
Post
.
[118]
Other criticism came from
Toronto Argonauts
play-by-play commentator
Mike Hogan
, who said, "The thing that really bothers me is that Kornheiser doesn't seem to know his place. If you're there for comic relief, that's one thing. But for God's sake, leave the football analysis to guys who actually played the game."
[119]
Former NFL offensive lineman
Mike Schad
also criticized Kornheiser, saying that "when people watch a game, they want to learn something. I don't need a guy who's sarcastic or trying to be funny. I love listening to
Ron Jaworski
on Monday Nights. He played the game and has lots of good insight and Kornheiser just gets in his way."
[119]
Mike Golic
? an ESPN colleague of Kornheiser's who had expressed skepticism regarding the latter's prospects as an on-air analyst because he was never an athlete
[120]
? said that Kornheiser's performance on
MNF
was "fine."
[121]
Kornheiser's response was, "I just want to wring Golic's neck and hang him up over the back of a shower rod like a duck."
[121]
During a
Monday Night Football
telecast on September 15, 2008, Kornheiser made a comment about a clip of the
ESPN Deportes
crew's call of a
Felix Jones
touchdown, saying, “I took high-school Spanish, and that either means ‘nobody is going to touch him’ or ‘could you pick up my dry cleaning in the morning.’” Later in the broadcast, Kornheiser apologized on-air for the remark.
[122]
On February 23, 2010, it emerged that ESPN had suspended Kornheiser for two weeks for comments he made on his radio show about fellow high-profile ESPN personality
Hannah Storm
's wardrobe that day.
[123]
Hannah Storm in a horrifying, horrifying outfit today. She's got on red go-go boots and a Catholic school plaid skirt. Way too short for somebody in her 40s or maybe early 50s by now. And she's got on her typically very, very tight shirt. So she looks like she's got sausage casing wrapping around her upper body. I mean, I know she's very good, and I'm not supposed to be critical of ESPN people, so I won't ... But, Hannah Storm, come on now! Stop! What are you doing? ... [She's] what I would call a
Holden Caulfield
fantasy at this point.
In March 2010, Kornheiser commented: "The last time I looked, the roads were made for automobiles...We're going to be dominated as if this was Beijing by hundreds of thousands of bicyclists... They all wear... my God... with the little water bottle in the back and the stupid hats and their shiny shorts. They are the same disgusting poseurs that in the middle of a snowstorm come out with cross-country skiing on your block. Run 'em down... Let them use the right, I’m okay with that. I don’t take my car and ride on the sidewalk because I understand that’s not for my car... Why do these people think that these roads were built for bicycles?... They dare you to run them down."
[125]
Cyclist
Lance Armstrong
replied. "Disgusting, ignorant, foolish. What a complete f-ing idiot."
[125]
Kornheiser later apologized to Armstrong on-air and offered to go on a bike ride with him.
[126]
In June 2010, Green Bay Packer quarterback
Aaron Rodgers
criticized Kornheiser's performance on Monday Night Football, saying: "He's terrible... I don’t think he’s funny. I don’t think he’s insightful. I don’t think he knows, really, anything about sports."
[127]
Rodgers also criticized ESPN analyst
Ron Jaworski
and other ESPN employees during the interview. Kornheiser responded in an interview by saying: "If he thinks I'm no good, he wouldn't be the first. Or the last," and "I tried to establish some rapport with that. I guess that rapport didn't exist."
[128]
The two have since reconciled. Kornheiser and Rodgers even played a round of golf together with
Barack Obama
and
Mark Kelly
in April 2016.
[129]
In October 2015, Kornheiser was interviewing
Huffington Post
editor
Howard Fineman
about the conservative movement in Congress when he asked if
Tea Party
members are "like
ISIS
trying to establish a
caliphate
here," which Fineman called a "good analogy" but without the violence.
[130]
Honors
[
edit
]
Kornheiser was a finalist for the 1997
Pulitzer Prize for Commentary
.
[131]
In 2008, Kornheiser was inducted into the
National Jewish Sports Hall of Fame
.
[132]
In 2012, Kornheiser was ranked No. 8 in the list of the 100 most important sports talk radio hosts in America compiled by
Talkers Magazine
.
[133]
In 2016, the
Tony Kornheiser Show
was ranked No. 1 as America's Top 20 Local Sports Midday Shows for 2015 by Barrett Sports Media.
[134]
In May 2017,
Binghamton University
? Kornheiser's
alma mater
? awarded him an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters.
[135]
On July 9, 2017, Kornheiser was inducted into the Washington, D.C. Sports Hall of Fame alongside such notable names as Olympic swimmer
Katie Ledecky
and former NFL commissioner
Paul Tagliabue
.
[136]
On October 4, 2017, Kornheiser and
Michael Wilbon
shared the
National Press Club
's 2017 Fourth Estate Award, which "recognizes journalists who have made significant contributions to the field."
[137]
White House visits
[
edit
]
On July 12, 2013, Kornheiser, Michael Wilbon and
Tony Reali
were guests at the
White House
.
[138]
After lunch, the trio met in the
Oval Office
with President
Barack Obama
.
[139]
Obama invited Kornheiser and Wilbon to play golf with him the following day, which happened to be Kornheiser's 65th birthday.
[140]
Kornheiser also played golf with Obama on a number of other occasions, including in September 2013,
[141]
June 2014,
[141]
July 2014,
[142]
July 2015,
[143]
April 2016,
[129]
and May 2016.
[144]
Books
[
edit
]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
Kornheiser, Tony.
"Riding the Coattails of His Royal Airness"
.
The Washington Post
. Retrieved
August 3,
2022
.
- ^
a
b
Contemporary Authors
.
Cengage
. November 2003. p. 278.
ISBN
9780787639952
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
e
f
Best, Neil (June 24, 2006).
"Are you ready for some football?"
.
Newsday
.
Archived
from the original on February 18, 2018.
- ^
a
b
Borenstein, Noah (August 9, 2002).
"Of Fatherhood and Tiger Woods: ESPN's Tony Kornheiser Says Viewers Dig His Real-Guy Image"
.
The Forward
. Archived from
the original
on December 20, 2002.
- ^
a
b
Kornheiser, Tony (July 16, 2000).
"Fire in The Sky"
.
The Washington Post
.
ISSN
0190-8286
.
Archived
from the original on February 17, 2018.
- ^
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