Keith Olbermann (born January 27, 1959, New York City, New York, U.S.) is an American television journalist, liberal political commentator, and sportscaster perhaps best known as the host of the nightly news and analysis program Countdown with Keith Olbermann (2003–11) on the cable news network MSNBC.
Olbermann grew up in Westchester county, New York, and attended Cornell University in Ithaca, where he graduated in 1979 with a B.S. in communications. At Cornell he was the sports director for Ithaca’s student-run commercial radio station, WVBR. He worked briefly as a newswire sports reporter, eventually joining the Cable News Network (CNN) in 1981. After a short stint in 1984 as a sports anchor for the Boston television station WCVB, he relocated to Los Angeles, where he spent the next five years working as a radio sports broadcaster, garnering 11 Golden Mike Awards and being named Best Sportscaster of the Year three times. Olbermann’s audience widened in 1992 when he became a cohost of ESPN’s SportsCenter, a position he held until 1997, when he became the host of his own newscast, The Big Show with Keith Olbermann, on MSNBC. He left the network in frustration after his show was renamed White House in Crisis and dedicated to covering the Monica Lewinsky scandal. In 1998 he joined Fox Sports Net as anchor of the weekly sportscast The Keith Olbermann Show, but in 2001 he was fired after he reported that Rupert Murdoch—head of the Fox Broadcasting Company—was seeking to sell the Los Angeles Dodgers baseball team. Olbermann spent the next two years working as a sportscaster for the ABC (American Broadcasting Company) radio network.
(Read Monica Lewinsky’s Britannica essay on cyberbullying.)
In 2003 Olbermann returned to MSNBC to host Countdown with Keith Olbermann, which summarized the five biggest news stories of the day as Olbermann provided commentary and conducted interviews. Four years later he became a cohost of the weekly Football Night in America on NBC (National Broadcasting Company); he left after the 2009–10 season. In November 2010 he was suspended for several days from MSNBC after it was revealed that he had made political donations without securing approval to do so. Olbermann stepped down as host of Countdown in January 2011. Shortly thereafter it was announced that he would host a news and commentary program on Current TV, a cable channel cofounded by Al Gore; the new show debuted in June 2011. In March 2012, however, Current TV terminated Olbermann’s contract. In August 2013 he began hosting Olbermann on ESPN2. The late-night talk show, which aired during the week, was regularly preempted by live sporting events, and it was ultimately moved to an earlier time slot, where it failed to attract a wide audience. The program ended in 2015.
Olbermann subsequently moved to the magazine GQ, where he began hosting the Web series The Closer with Keith Olbermann, which focused on the 2016 U.S. presidential election. After Donald Trump won, the show was retitled The Resistance. It continued until November 2017, when Olbermann announced that he was retiring from political commentary. The following year he returned to ESPN and was given a variety of roles, including guest hosting SportsCenter. However, he left ESPN in 2020 to host a YouTube series about that year’s election. Olbermann wrote several books, notably The Worst Person in the World (2006) and Truth and Consequences: Special Comments on the Bush Administration’s War on American Values (2007). Trump Is F*cking Crazy: (This Is Not a Joke) was published in 2017.