Brad Galli

Brad Galli
Born Bradley Galli
1989 (age 2627)
Detroit, Michigan
Education Marquette University, Communications
Occupation Sports Anchor, and Sports Television Anchor
Notable credit(s) Sports Anchor/Reporter, (WXYZ-TV)
Family Brother, Kyle Galli, 24. coach at Brother Rice football

Brad Galli (born 1989 in Detroit, Michigan) is a sports reporter for WXYZ-TV in Detroit.

Career

Brad Galli is a sports anchor at WXYZ-TV in Detroit, Michigan. He regularly covers the Detroit Red Wings, Tigers, Lions, Pistons, as well as college and high school athletics. He is featured during the week on Action News at 5, 6, and 11 p.m. Galli can also be seen regularly with reports for the Suburban Ford 7 Sports Cave.[1]

Brad earned an Emmy in 2016 for Excellence in Sports Anchoring in Michigan by the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences. He won his first Emmy in 2014 for Excellence in Sports Reporting. Brad was also nominated in 2012 and 2013.

He anchored WXYZ's 4 p.m. news, called 'The Now Detroit' from 2014-15, before returning to the sports team to anchor.

Galli joined WXYZ in 2011, working with longtime WXYZ sports anchors Don Shane and Tom Leyden. [2]

Personal

Galli currently resides in Beverly Hills, Michigan.

Education

High school

Galli graduated from Brother Rice High School (Michigan) in 2007 where he played football and was a part of the 2005 MHSAA State Championship team.[3]

College

Galli graduated from Marquette University with a degree in communications and a minor in Theology. He worked as the Sports Director at MUTV (Marquette University Television) for two years before graduating from the Milwaukee school in 2011.

He covered the Marquette basketball team and created the popular show, "Marquette Basketball Weekly,"[4] that drew over 30,000 views in two seasons. It is the most watched show in Marquette University Television history.[5] Galli introduced ESPN basketball analyst Chris Broussard at a College of Communication Axthelm lecture in April 2011, and led a panel of discussion after the lecture.[6]

In 2012, he returned to Marquette to serve as the emcee of the men's basketball banquet.[7]

External links

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/28/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.