Terence Moore

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Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Terence Moore is an American sports journalist based in Atlanta. Not only does he write columns for national Internet sites, but he has appeared often on national and local television, including The Oprah Winfrey Show, CNN, and various ESPN shows, most prominently "Outside The Line." He was a frequent guest on ESPN's Jim Rome Is Burning

Moore also appears on "The Ed Show" among other MSNBC entities, and he is part of various episodes of the NFL Network's Top Ten list. In addition, he has a regular segment every Sunday night on the highly rated "Sports Zone" show, which appears on Atlanta's WSB-TV (Channel 2), the most-watched ABC affiliate in the country. As for the Internet, Moore is a national columnist for Sports on Earth.com, and he writes weekly baseball columns for MLB.com and occasional columns for CNN.com.

Moore worked for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution (AJC) for nearly 25 years, where he was a sports columnist, from December 1984 through April 2009, when he took a voluntary buyout.[1][2] He has covered more than 25 Super Bowls, numerous World Series, Olympic Games, NBA Finals, Final Fours, Indianapolis 500s, championship fights, major golf tournaments and other sporting events.

Prior to joining the AJC, he spent five years at the San Francisco Examiner, where he covered the San Francisco Giants, Oakland Raiders and wrote columns during his last two years at the paper. Prior to going to San Francisco, Moore spent three years at the Cincinnati Enquirer, where he covered Indiana University and Purdue University sports, the Cincinnati Reds and Xavier University basketball.

Among the many awards he has received, Moore received an honor in 1999 from the National Association of Black Journalists for ranking as the longest-running African-American sports columnist in the history of major newspapers. He was the first full-time black sports reporter for both the Cincinnati Enquirer and the San Francisco Examiner.

Moore was born in South Bend, Ind., but courtesy of his father who was transferred several times across the Midwest as an AT&T supervisor, Moore went to high school in Cincinnati and in Chicago before he finished his prep days in Milwaukee, where he starred in baseball and football and became news editor of the high school newspaper.

Moore later majored in Economics at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio, where he graduated in 1978 with a bachelor's degree in business. He was on the staff at what is the oldest college newspaper in the United States for four years, the last year as sports editor.[3]

After leaving the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Moore was a national sports columnist for AOL FanHouse for two years before he formed Moore Sports Inc., which allows him to work for various media entities. Moore also does occasional lectures at Miami (Ohio)University, and he spent the 2014 Fall Semester at the school teaching an upper-level course he devised called "Sports Reporting in a Digital Age." He will teach an honors journalism class at Miami (Ohio) this fall. [4][5]

References

  1. (27 April 2009). To Braves, Hawks, Falcons, Thrashers: Good is for losers (Editors Note), Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Retrieved November 29, 2010
  2. About Terence Moore, Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Retrieved November 29, 2010
  3. Terence Moore '78, Miamian (Summer 2009), Retrieved November 29, 2010
  4. Washington, Wayne (1 February 2010). Black history: Complex heritage, The State (newspaper), Retrieved November 29, 2010 ("Terrence Moore, a former Atlanta Journal-Constitution columnist who now writes for AOL Fanhouse...")
  5. Terence Moore - FanHouse Columnist, FanHouse, Retrieved November 29, 2010

External links

http://mlb.mlb.com/news/columnists/?id=terence_moore


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