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Rising City’s Jared Meister, 38, is set to appear in a Custer County Court on July 14 after being accused of killing a rare ...
ESPN’s “Around the Horn” graced the air with almost 23 years of sports talk, featuring laughter, emotion and joy before it concluded Friday. Medill Prof. J.A. Adande (Medill ’92), who ...
After nearly 23 years, ESPN’s iconic sports debate show Around the Horn aired its final episode on Friday, days after Los Angeles-based SportsCenter halted production earlier this week.
The two shows have aired back-to-back from 5 p.m.-6 p.m. ET on ESPN’s schedule since “Around the Horn” debuted. “The absence of explanation and the silence said enough for me.
The mute button was pressed for the last time on “Around the Horn.” The legendary show produced its final broadcast on Friday after a two-decade run on ESPN spanning nearly 5,000 episodes.
It's a show that's been around longer than Oprah, David Letterman's run on The Late Show, and Sesame Street. Now, after 4,953 episodes, 'Around the Horn' signed off the airwaves of ESPN.
Over the past 23 years, ESPN viewers have been treated to 4,953 episodes of "Around the Horn." During the final episode, Cowlishaw and several other panelists received a well-deserved send-off.
Around the Horn host Tony Reali opened the show’s 4,953rd and final episode Friday with a nod to GoodFellas and closed it with an invitation to viewers to find him on his new YouTube channel.
For longtime viewers, however, the show began with a perfect callback. Tony Reali, who has hosted the show since 2004, is a major fan of the movie Goodfellas and has previously acted out parodies from ...
Tony Reali throws a wad of paper at the camera during the taping of the show at the 'Around the Horn' studio in ESPN's studios at Pier 17 in New York, N.Y., on May 1, 2025.
Tim Cowlishaw goes ‘Around the Horn’ one final time as beloved ESPN studio show signs off Episode No. 2,114 will be Cowlishaw’s last, though he’s not so much retiring as the network is ...
It was invented by the originators of the ESPN game show “ Around the Horn ” and used with embarrassing frequency on me, arguably the most muted panelist in the show’s nearly 23-year history.