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Paul Finebaum is an American sports author, former columnist, and television-radio personality. His primary focus is sports, particularly those in the Southeast. After many years as a reporter, columnist, and sports talk radio host in the Birmingham area, Finebaum was hired by ESPN in 2013 for its new SEC Network.
"SEC Nation" host Laura Rutledge jokes with Paul Finebaum about the rain hitting his bald head at Ayers Hall before the Alabama game Saturday, October 20, 2018, at Neyland Stadium in Knoxville ...
Paul Finebaum signed with ESPN Radio to host The Paul Finebaum Show, which is simulcast by SEC Network, along with Finebaum's previous flagship station WJOX-FM. [15] [16] During college football season, it airs SEC Nation, a travelling pre-game show similar to ESPN's own College GameDay, hosted by ESPN commentator Laura Rutledge. The network ...
Show moved to America Right. Paul Finebaum - Evening host of hour-long Alabama based talk show. The show was dropped from XM Radio in 2006, but would return on Sirius XM College Sports Nation. Dr. Laura - Former afternoon host who moved to America Right. Ed Schultz replaced her. Matt Drudge - Former host of The Drudge Report every Sunday night ...
College football was on the docket for ESPN’s Get Up this morning. Laura Rutledge and Paul Finebaum were on the daily morning show to discuss a variety of topics, including the potential Heisman ...
Paul Finebaum has been talking about college football — mostly the Southeastern Conference — for decades. He doesn't like how the new 12-team College Football Playoff is shaping up.
SEC Nation is an ESPN entertainment show previewing college football games from the Southeastern Conference. Based on the format of College Gameday, the show previews SEC football games from a SEC school each week. The show airs from 10 a.m. until 12 p.m. Eastern Time every Saturday on SEC Network. The two-hour pregame show has several ...
Finebaum’s four-hour talk show hit the SEC Network’s airwaves a decade ago, but Alabama remains the show’s heartbeat. And the show becomes appointment viewing after an Alabama loss.