American sports anchor and reporter
Trenni Casey
Born (1977-04-30 ) April 30, 1977 (age 47) Education Marquette University Occupation(s) Sports anchor and reporter
Trenni Casey (née Kusnierek ; born April 30, 1977[citation needed ] ) is an American sports anchor and reporter for NBC Sports Boston .[ 1]
Early life
Casey is a graduate of Muskego High School and a 1999 journalism graduate of Marquette University .[ 2]
She appeared as herself on the TV show Change of Heart around 1999.[ 3]
Career
Casey has previously worked at WDJT-TV (2001-2002), FSN Pittsburgh (2003-2007), ABC Sports (2005), and FSN Wisconsin (2008), and as a reporter and former studio host for the MLB Network . She has also done some work for the Big Ten Network and the NFL Network .[citation needed ] For one season, she worked with Kevin Harlan and Rich Gannon as a sideline reporter for Green Bay Packers preseason.[citation needed ]
From 2011 to 2013, Casey worked for WTMJ (AM) and ESPN 540 in Milwaukee as a sports reporter and talk show host .[ 4] [ 1]
Casey was hired by NBC Sports to work as a curling reporter during the 2014 and 2018 Winter Olympics ,[ 5] [ 6] and she also covered tennis for NBC Sports at the 2016 [ 7] and 2020 Summer Olympics .[ 8]
Casey has also worked at WEEI-FM in Boston as a weekend and substitute program host.[ 1]
Casey falsely accused a group of West Point cadets of flashing a "white power " symbol during the Army-Navy game in 2019, and she demanded their immediate expulsion. Casey refused to apologize after a subsequent investigation quickly exonerated the cadets, who were in fact playing the well-known "circle game ".[ 9] [ 10] [ 11] [ 12]
References
^ a b c "Trenni Kusnierek" . insideradio.com . 12 October 2016. Retrieved 19 October 2017 .
^ "Marquette alumnae open up about their careers as women in sports journalism" , Marquette University.
^ Mark Gresbach (27 October 2013). "Change of Heart " . YouTube. Archived from the original on 2021-12-21. Retrieved 17 October 2017 .
^ "Trenni Kusnierek Joins WTMJ-A" . allaccess.com . Retrieved 7 January 2017 .
^ Dougherty, Pete (January 14, 2014). "Catalon, Strader among 84 Olympic broadcasters for NBC" . Times-Union . Retrieved February 15, 2014 .
^ Barton, Chris (February 12, 2018). "Sunday Conversation: NBC's curling reporter Trenni Kusnierek on the sport's cult appeal" . Los Angeles Times . Retrieved February 23, 2018 .
^ Sorgi, Jay (August 22, 2016). " 'It was amazing': Wrapping up Rio with WTMJ alum Trenni Kusnierek of NBC Sports" . WTMJ .com. Retrieved February 23, 2018 .
^ "RECORD 180 COMMENTATORS JOIN NBC OLYMPICS' COVERAGE OF THE GAMES OF THE XXXII OLYMPIAD FROM TOKYO, JAPAN" . NBC Sports Pressbox . 2021-07-20. Retrieved 2021-08-10 .
^ @kirkminshow (20 December 2019). " "The evidence strongly supports the finding that [the Army/Navy cadets] made the 'OK' hand gestures... because they…" (Tweet ) – via Twitter .
^ "Hate Symbol Flashed on Live TV During Army-Navy Football Game" . 17 December 2019.
^ "We deserve a better media in 2020" . 30 December 2019.
^ @kirkminshow (18 December 2019). ".@BosPublicRadio contributor @Trenni says cadets who made the "OK" hand gesture at the Army-Navy game should be dis…" (Tweet ) – via Twitter .
External links
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