Dave Holmes tried out
for the first season of ESPN's "Dream Job" reality show
last year and just missed the final cut.
When the chance came to try out for the second season, he could
have chucked it all and said "forget it."
And, the 22-year-old broadcast news major almost did.
As he told the Cleveland Plain Dealer recently, he asked himself,
"Do I really want to go through this all over again?"
Fortunately, he changed his mind and went to Cleveland for the
tryouts. He told program host Stuart Scott on Tuesday, "I told
myself I have to give this a shot to find out what would happen."
Though the road was anything but smooth, Holmes overcame long odds
Tuesday night and ran away with the Dream Job title, a one-year
contract on ESPN's Sports Center and a new car.
Dave outlasted and outperformed 11 other contestants over the past
two months. Selected as a Wendy's Wild Card, Dave improved his performance
each week and capitalized on his strengths in writing and creating
news packages.
His final show competitor, Grant Thompson, a Harvard graduate and
an actor, seemed to have the inside track on the job going into
the final night, as he had received positive comments from the judges
over the past seven weeks.
The voting wasn't even close, however. On the final show, with
so much at stake, Dave "stuck the landing." His performance
drew lavish praise from three of the four judges and from Scott.
Viewers voted to cut Thompson, but the Denver Post's Woody Paige
voted against Holmes, although he praised his performance that night.
With the vote 1-1, "Cold PIzza" co-host Kit Hoover voted
to cut Thompson, and Stephen A. Smith, sportswriter for the Philadelphia
Inquirer and ESPN NBA analyst, enthusiastically supported Holmes.
|
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| Dave Holmes, senior broadcast
news major (left), receives the keys to a new Mazda from ESPN
personality and "Dream Job" host, Stuart Scott. Photo
courtesy of ESPN |
That did it.
ESPN VP of Talent, Al Jaffe, didn't even have
to vote, although he said he would have voted to cut Thompson.
When the decision was announced, colorful confetti
rained from the ceiling and screams of delight came from the audience.
The screams came from members of Dave's family
(he's from Uniontown, Ohio), his girlfriend and from members of
the TV2 news staff who made the trip to NYC to support him, Carrie
Young, Natalie Pasquarella, Mike Paquin, Chuck Thornton and Brooke
Whitney.
Later, on SportsCenter, he competed in a trivia
game to set his salary. He'll make a cool $70,000.
Daily Kent Stater reporter, Lauren Anderson, was
in New York for the show. Read
her account here.
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