Jane Chastain
Jane Chastain (née Steppe;{{Cite magazine |url=https://vault.si.com/vault/1975/04/21/getting-into-the-picture |title=GETTING INTO THE PICTURE |last=Kirkpatrick |first=Curry |date=April 21, 1975 |magazine=Sports Illustrated}} born March 12, 1943) was the first woman to do a sports play-by-play for a major networkSchwartz, Lou. "Women in Sportscasting: A Brief History." American Sportscasters Online, www.americansportscastersonline.com. Accessed 29, March, 2019. and is a current conservative political writer and commentator.{{cite web|access-date=2019-05-14|title=A Woman's Place|url=https://www.villagevoice.com/2001/01/16/a-womans-place/|website=Village Voice|first=Jeff|last=Ryan|date=January 16, 2001}}
Early life
Chastain was born in Knoxville, Tennessee.{{Cite news|title=Lady Football Expert Is Speaking Today|last=Hart|first=Raymond|date=November 2, 1970|work=The Plain Dealer}} to Lina Katherine (née Abernathy) and Quentin Steppe, their only child. The family moved to Smyrna, Georgia (outside of Atlanta), where she attended school.{{Cite news|title=April Is A Young Girl ...Named Jane Steppe|last=Mrs. Ed|date=April 16, 1964|work=Coper City Advance}} As a child she had buck teeth, which earned her the nickname "Bugs Bunny." She was also awkward. Braces, maturity, modeling school, and speech training removed these childhood deficiencies. She spent the last two years of high school working as a model in Atlanta and then enrolled at Georgia State College to continue her career. However, her modeling was somewhat limited by her 5'3" frame. One day she happened to see herself on a TV monitor and realized that if she had a career in television, size wouldn't matter.{{Cite news|title=Jane Chastain of 'Girls Rules' visits area relatives|date=October 8, 1971|work=Maryville-Alcoa Times|page=10}} Her initial ambition was to have a kids show.{{Cite news|title=Lady Football Expert is Speaking Today|last=Hart|first=Raymond|date=November 2, 1970|work=The Plain Dealer}}
Career
Chastain began her sportscasting career in 1963 when she heard that WAGA-TV (Atlanta) was casting about for a young girl to play the part of a football coach and make weekly predictions. She landed the job and turned out to be good at it. Her fame spread. The following year a Toronto newspaper asked her to predict the winner in the Grey Cup. She successfully picked the underdog to win. Slippery Rock State College invited her to their Pennsylvania campus for a season preview where they awarded her letters in five sports and made her an honorary member of the coaching staff.{{Cite news|title=I Feel Like One of the Boys|last=Bisher|first=Furman|date=October 2, 1965|work=TV Guide magazine|pages=28–29}} She began doing a scoreboard show after the games and eventually became the weekend sports anchor. She appeared on the October 25, 1964, episode of What's My Line? as Mrs. Jane Thomas (episode available on YouTube). During her time in Atlanta, she broke many sports journalistic barriers. In 1967 she became the first female on a National Baseball League playing field and was admitted to the Atlanta Braves and the Atlanta Falcons press boxes.{{Cite news|title=No Newspaper Substitute|last=Twombly|first=Wells|date=September 5, 1970|work=The Sporting News|page=46}} After her marriage to Roger Chastain in 1968, she moved to Raleigh, North Carolina, and was hired by WRAL-TV.{{Cite news|title=Jane Chastain, America's First Female Sportscaster Remembers Her Early days|last=Cape|first=Barbara|date=1988|work=Delaware Gazette}} In 1969 she was hired by Miami TV station WTVJ-TV.{{Cite news|title=Gal Sportscaster Keeps Male TV Rivals on the Ball|last=Rukenbrod|first=Joe|date=May 30, 1969|work=Fort Lauderdale News|page=46D}}
While in Miami working as a sports reporter, she did a daily radio show, "Girls Rules," explaining the finer points in sports, which was syndicated to 205 stations in all 48 contiguous states. She gained the respect of Dolphins coach Don Shula, who admitted that he was skeptical of her ability when he first arrived, but she soon gained his respect.{{Cite news|title=Jane Chastain: Just One of the Boys|last=Balfour|first=Malcolm|date=January 16, 1972|work=Tropic Magazine|pages=14–18}}
She jumped to national TV with "The Jane Chastain Show – Everything You've Always Wanted to Know About Sports but Were Afraid to Ask."{{Cite news|title=Syndication: Chastain Sports Show in 86 Markets|last=Green|first=Ted|date=August 30, 1974|work=Backstage|page=5}}
CBS hired her in 1974 to provide commentary for various televised sports events. During the CBS National Football League telecast of a game on October 13, 1974, she became the first female NFL announcer, brought in as a commentator alongside Don Criqui and Irv Cross. The mail and telephone calls ran heavily against her.{{Cite news|title=Get that Broad Out of the Booth|last=Podolsky|first=Rich|date=December 21, 1974|work=TV Guide|pages=10–12}} Bob Wussler, CBS vice president in charge of sports, admitted that he made a mistake by using her on a major team sport and not introducing her slowly. "The biggest problem was that she was the first."{{Cite news|title=Women Move in on Sports Mike|last=Maher|first=Charles|date=January 20, 1975|work=Los Angeles Times|page=Part III, 1}}
Chastain was used on occasional NFL broadcasts the rest of the 1974 season and also worked the college Sun Bowl Game that season. She also worked on some CBS National Basketball Association telecasts. She landed an exclusive interview with Portland Trail Blazers' 7'2" center Bill Walton, who had been injured. She went live on CBS's halftime show and was praised for her work. Soon afterward, she informed the network that she was pregnant. After that she was assigned mostly features.{{Cite news|title=CBS Pictured Jane plain|last=Deeb|first=Gary|date=June 21, 1977|work=Chicago Tribune|page=Section 4, Page 3}}
When the network failed to renew her contract, she returned to Miami television, where Bernie Rosen, the long-time sports director for WTVJ, was only too happy to have her. "She was always good. She knew her stuff. She could do everything well. She was a terrific interviewer. She had everything going for her, but the timing (at the network) was all wrong. Nowadays, she'd be a superstar."{{Cite news|title=Chastain, TV pioneer: 'I had to pay a high price'|last=Fink|first=David|date=August 4, 1986|work=Pittsburgh Post-Gazette|page=10}} In 1977, she moved to Los Angeles, where she began working for KABC-TV.{{Cite news|title=Chastain's Humiliation Over|last=Deeb|first=Gary|date=June 22, 1977|work=The Miami Herald|page=Section C, Page 1}}
During the 1980s, Chastain began turning her attention toward politics. She hosted a radio program, What Washington Doesn't Want You to Know, as well as served on a number of boards and commissions.{{Cite web|url=https://janechastain.com/jane-chastain-bio/|title=About Jane|date=2019|website=Jane Chastain|language=en|access-date=2019-04-16|archive-date=2020-03-29|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200329174127/https://janechastain.com/jane-chastain-bio/|url-status=dead}} She writes for conservative-leaning online publications such as WorldNetDaily, and has written several books about politics.
Personal life
Chastain married Skip Thomas, a local television host and producer (1962–1965) who had nothing to do with her athletic success.{{Cite news|title=I Feel Like One of the Boys|last=Bisher|first=Furman|date=October 2, 1965|page=29}} She married industrial designer Roger Chastain (1968–present), who, at the time, was one of the Southeast's leading sports car drivers.{{Cite news|title=No Newspaper Substitute|last=Twombly|first=Wells|date=September 5, 1970|work=The Sporting News}} They are pilots and live on a private runway in southern California. They have one son, Blayne, born June 16, 1975.{{Cite web|url=https://janechastain.com/jane-chastain-bio/|title=About Jane|access-date=2019-04-01|archive-date=2020-03-29|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200329174127/https://janechastain.com/jane-chastain-bio/|url-status=dead}}
References
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External links
- [http://janechastain.com/ Official site]
- {{YouTube|U_3Q37kVY4I|What's My Line Oct 25, 1964}}
{{NBA on CBS}}
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Category:Women sports commentators
Category:American sports journalists
Category:American political writers
Category:American sports announcers