Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Broadcaster. Share them with your friends on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or your personal blogs, and let the world be inspired by their powerful messages. Here are the Top 100 Broadcaster Quotes And Sayings by 98 Authors including Brad Listi,Rachel Caine,Ben H. Winters,Will.i.am,Charles Kuralt for you to enjoy and share.
I'm a radio nerd. I've loved radio since I was a kid. I'm a huge Howard Stern fan.
A first-class storyteller
Energetic rumormonger who calls himself Dan Dan the Radio Man.
We need creative people working with broadcasters, making smart content to inspire people to be geniuses.
I didn't have the ambition to be a broadcaster. I was going to be a newspaper reporter the rest of my life, but that opportunity came along.
I've been lucky to broadcast some great events and to broadcast the exploits of some great players.
I think Bob Costas is terrific. He's so knowledgeable. He can talk about any subject, not just sports.
I love sports. So if I was like a sports anchor or something like that. I would love to do that.
People like Bryant Gumbel and Bob Costas are terrific broadcasters because they get challenged every day.
I broadcast thru Time
Broadcasting's best days lie ahead as both an engine of local economies and as an integral part of tomorrow's technological world.
He used to watch NBC until he decided Brian Williams was a good-natured goof who's too fond of YouTube videos.
A journalist is a reporter out of a job.
Opportunity is often missed because we are broadcasting when we should be tuning in
To be the announcer where you live is a very special opportunity.
war correspondent
I am pretty proud to be the Super Bowl correspondent for Inside Edition. It is the most coveted assignment, and the most watched event in our country - every year. The pomp and circumstance during Super Bowl week leading up to the game is just incredible.
I am simply the very best sports entertainer
When I went to Ann Arbor, University of Michigan, what I really wanted to be was a radio announcer.
Television reporters aren't really called reporters. They are called researchers. And that's really all they are.
I think of myself as a journalist and a storyteller.
I'm Howard Stern with a vocabulary. I'm the man he wishes he could be.
I used to be a journalist.
I'm the Legendary Radio Head
Press agent - a man who hitches his braggin' to a star.
On radio, you're an artist. On TV, you're a servant.
The best basketball announcer is one who allows you to close your eyes.
Broadcasting was something, I don't want to say it came easy, but it's something I'm comfortable doing.
I wanted to be a radio announcer.
I'm a communicator.
With the Giants I broadcast the debut of Hall of Famer Willie Mays.
Sports are, and should be, a joy. And it delights me that the joy I felt through the years of broadcasting games was projected onto the audience.
If I wasn't doing SportsCenter, I'd still be on the couch watching my favorite teams play. I have such passion, and I've always tried to keep that passion even in the workplace.
Robert Osborne either has the best job in the world, or comes very close. As millions of viewers know, Osborne is the resident host of the great Turner Classic Movies (TCM) channel, the most reliable source of pure enchantment in the cable universe.
I am a journalist.
Journalism: A profession whose business is to explain to others what it personally does not understand.
Women in sports television are allowed to read headlines, patrols sidelines, and generally facilitate conversation for their male colleagues. Sometimes, they even let us monitor the Internet from a couch.
Anyone with an Internet service provider can be a pundit or whatever they want.
If I couldn't broadcast baseball games, I think I would make a good impression on people.
To be a good sports journalist takes many things, but the main thing it takes is the ability to listen and follow your nose - see something, sense something and follow it.
I'm not on the radio all day long. I'm not on TV.
I don't want to brag, but I do more homework on the course than any other announcer. I chart the greens to get all the breaks. I walk down into the greenside bunkers. I walk into the fairway bunkers to see whether a player can reach the green from them.
I'm actually the daytime host of the Olympics on NBC.
I'm a behind-the-scenes guy. I've got a face for radio.
I am broadcaster's biggest cheerleader because I genuinely believe in it. Where else can you get 20 million people a week watching 'NCIS' or 'American Idol?' Where else can you get 120 million watching the Super Bowl?
You can be a great reporter and not be such a great talk show host.
In terms of broadcasting, you have to make decisions about where you want to spend your time.
Who is the player and who's being played?
Guys like Howard Stern, Bill O'Reilly, Jim Rome, Bill Maher, those are the guys I love and respect as broadcasters.
Im a B-list celebrity trying to give it an honest look. They see me do actual work ... I try to be the viewer with a microphone.
I never considered a career in broadcasting, not even as a kid.
I'm a big fan of TV.
I'm not a journalist. I'm a pundit. I'm a commentator, I'm somebody with an opinion.
I'm a pundit. I'm, like, paid to be a narcissistic blowhard and be in front of the camera.
In my next life, I would like to be Charlie Rose or Howard Stern or maybe something in between.
I think the biggest mistake anyone can make is trying to be the next someone, and try to mimic or copy someone who is already out there because you have to produce your own personality and your own sound, and go from there. That is something all great broadcasters have been able to do.
I've always thought of myself as a reporter.
A business commentator who correctly announces that "the business did better this year because it had done poorly last year" is likely to have a short tenure on the air.
He (Sandy Koufax) throws a 'radio ball,' a pitch you hear, but you don't see.
If I wasn't an actor, I'd probably be working in journalism.
Being a reporter and chasing down an assignment isn't an easy thing to do, especially when you're dealing with athletes that are so focused and trying to get their little game plan together to perform under adverse conditions ... it's tough.
REPORTER, n. A writer who guesses his way to the truth and dispels it with a tempest of words.
I was hired by the 'Tom Joyner Morning Show' to do commentary that makes people think. I want my audience to feel like they are learning and not being pandered to.
It is every producer's dream to be part of a dedicated, hard-working team that produces an outstanding broadcast like the 'CBS Evening News with Scott Pelley.'
Do you know what White House correspondents call actors who pose as reporters? Anchors.
I'm a storyteller, I'm an actor, an entertainer.
The news anchor is exactly that - an anchor, a center, a focus.
I'm a writer. Now I've started to be on television. I have a big mouth. And I have good TV teeth, they say.
During a long career in TV broadcasting, I spent a lot of time contributing to other people's creations.
I'm a hockey coach and a single mother of two who commutes. I don't watch TV. I watch news, and that's it!
My real heroes have always been sportswriters.
Sally Jenkins of the 'Washington Post' is the best sports columnist in the country. Second best is Gene Wojciechowski of ESPN, and third is Dan Wetzel on Yahoo!
Trying to be a first-rate reporter on the average American newspaper is like trying to play Bach's St Matthew Passion on a ukulele: The instrument is too crude for the work, for the audience and for the performer.
In radio, you are the game, so to speak - you have to describe every aspect. In TV, I've always felt less is more, and it's really a question of my setting up the color analyst more than anything else.
ESPN is a very anchor-driven network, which I love.
Journalist: a person without any ideas but with an ability to express them; a writer whose skill is improved by a deadline: the more time he has, the worse he writes.
If I'm being honest, I think I'd be good at television; I just don't know if I am interested, because you are kind of geographically responsible to a location, and frankly I don't know if I retired from tennis so that I could sit around tennis tournaments 12 hours a day.
First reporter to broadcast live from the floor of the New York Stock Exchange.
I never say I work in television, I say I get to work in television.
A journalist is a person who has mistaken their calling.
I did everything when I started. In Miami I did news, I did weather, I did sports, I did disk-jockeying. And I did a sports talk show every week - every Saturday night.
I remember telling my classmates when I was 8-years-old that (being a sportscaster) is what I wanted to do. That was the only thing I ever wanted to do with my life.
I'm a worker. I like to work and I like to provide work for other people. I like to put people on my show who normally would never have a chance at being on television.
It's in my blood to be on the radio every day. I've done it since I was 16 years old.
Don [Hewitt, 60 Minutes exec producer] told me, "You have set broadcast journalism back 20 years." Naturally, I was both proud and elated although too modest to say so, but broadcast journalism recovered with alacrity, my contract wasn't renewed, and the incident was forgotten.
I've never really had a TV career. I've been a soldier and a climber.
Television isn't my career. Business is.
I don't consider myself to be a media guy. It just happens to be that I've had opportunities in the media. I don't consider myself to be on a career path. I'm just a Christian and a Catholic priest.
I'm running a radio station.
Sports commentating is the answer for a restless brain like mine. I can never get bored because there is an infinite amount to know.
The joy of being a broadcaster is, if you're still allowed to choose your own music.
If I weren't playing baseball, I would be a radio or sports broadcaster. In college at South Carolina I did some stuff with the radio station and really liked it.
I watch ESPN all day long.
I know I could be the host of 'SportsCenter' in two years if I changed my show today to sports.
I'm a terrible interviewer. I'm not a journalist - although I have a Peabody Award - and I'm not really a late-night host. What I am is honest.
I've always been fascinated with radio and broadcasting. I did fake radio shows as a kid, where I was a DJ and stuff like that.
A sports journalist doesn't have to be sporty any more than a political journalist has to be an opportunistic liar.
I'm a sports-watcher. I played football and baseball, coached baseball. So I watch those things.
I'm a casual watcher. I like to stream everything.
The really great athletes make their news on the field, not off the field.