
Hannah Storm
'Hannah Storm' (born 'Hannah Storen' on
June 13,
1962) is an
American television news
journalist and a current co-host of
CBS' ''
The Early Show''.
Early life and career
Hannah is the daughter of sports executive
Mike Storen, who was a commissioner of the old
American Basketball Association, and also president of the
Atlanta Hawks in the
NBA.
She graduated from
Westminster Schools of
Atlanta in
1979 and the
University of Notre Dame in
1983, with degrees in political science and communications.
She took her professional surname during her stint as a
disc jockey for a
hard rock radio station in
Houston, Texas in the mid-1980s. At the time, the station was known as 97 Rock/KSRR (for "Kick Ass Rock and Roll").
While at Notre Dame, she worked for
WNDU-TV, a
NBC affiliate in
South Bend,
Indiana which was owned by
The University of Notre Dame at the time. After graduating college, she took a job as a disc jockey at KNCN-FM (C-101) in
Corpus Christi,
Texas. Six months later, she got a job at a Houston rock station doing part-time sports work. Storm stayed in Houston for four years doing a variety of radio and television jobs, including hosting the
Houston Rockets halftime and postgame shows on television.
CNN
After a brief stint in Charlotte at WPCQ in
Charlotte (now
WCNC) as a sports anchor and reporter, she moved over to
CNN in
1989 and was now in front of a national audience. She stayed there for three years, and was one of the group of rotating co-anchors for ''
CNN Sports Tonight''. During her stint at CNN, she met fellow sportscaster
Dan Hicks, whom she later married in
1994 and with whom she has three daughters.
NBC Sports
In
1992, Storm left CNN and was hired by NBC. She has worked four
Olympic Games, as well as
NBA and
WNBA basketball, the
National Football League,
figure skating, and
Major League Baseball. Storm became the first woman in
American television history to host a major network's sports package when NBC had her host baseball games from
1994 to
2000, and then the
NBA games from
1997 to
2002. She also covered NBA games on
cable for
Turner Network Television.
She has introduced
Robert Schnakenberg's series of books primarily based on the stories of WNBA players, these books are named ''Women Who Win''. She also wrote a book named ''Go Girl: Raising Healthy, Successful Girls Through Sports''.
Albert Belle
While covering the
1995 World Series for NBC, Storm unwittingly came into the crosshairs of volatile
Cleveland Indians slugger
Albert Belle. Apparently, prior to Game 3, Storm was waiting in the Indians' dugout for a prearranged interview with Indians leadoff man,
Kenny Lofton. Then out of nowhere, Belle came screaming
profanities towards Storm.
''The Early Show''
In
October 2002, she moved to
CBS News as co-host of ''
The Early Show'' when it debuted a four-anchor format.
Storm revealed on camera during ''The Early Show'' that she had a congenital defect known as
port-wine stain under her left eye, which was later removed by a
plastic surgeon using a
laser technique.
External links
★
Hannah Storm reveals truth about vascular birthmarks John Morgan
★
Hannah Storm: Early Show Anchor