Robert Kintner

In 1933 Kintner was hired by the New York Herald Times as their official White House Correspondent. During 1938 to 1941 had a nationally syndicated column, Capital Parade. During World War II He served in the U.S. Army Air Force, when he left the Air Force in 1944 he held the rank of lieutenant colonel.

Richard Kelly

James Richard Kelly, better known as Richard Kelly, is an American film director and writer, known for writing and directing the cult classic Donnie Darko in 2001.

Colby Donaldson

Colby Donaldson is an American actor and television personality. He hosts his own hit series on History called Top Shot. He is also the host of Top Gun, the supporting series on H2.

Top Shot premiered in the summer of 2010 and is currently in its fourth season. The show is comprised of weekly competitions using historic weapons between 18 skilled marksmen, with eliminations each week. The final marksman standing gets the Top Shot crown, a $100,000 cash prize, and a contract with Bass Pros Shops. Donaldson hosts the show throughout the season and executes the eliminations.

Donaldson’s show on H2, Top Gun, is a coinciding series largely based on the weapons used during the Top Shot episodes. As the host, Donaldson, along with two weekly experts, demonstrate the firepower of the week’s featured weapon and describe its history. The show is in its first season.

Donaldson made his start in Hollywood when he was a runner-up during Survivor: The Australian Outback during the show’s second season. He also competed on Survivor again during Survivor: All Stars and Survivor: Heroes and Villains. Other television shows Donaldson has been in include Bones, Reba, Just Shoot Me, Rachael Ray, and he appeared on the big screen in Red Eye.

Jonathan Drubner

Jonathan Scott Drubner is a stand up comedian, writer, and television personality. He is the former host and producer for the ESPNU College Road Trip. Drubner has also served as co-producer to head writer for the ESPY Awards since 2005. His work on the show earned him an Outstanding Original Music and Lyrics Emmy nomination in 2009 for the song I Love Sports, which was performed during the show.

In 2007 Drubner made a guest appearance on ABC College Football Awards Show as a photographer pranking college football stars. Prior to joining ESPN, Drubner he served as executive producer, writer, and talent for multiple video game related programs for Spike TV, MTV, and AOL.

Additionally, Drubner has provided marketing and copywriting services for such companies as Reebok, Heineken, Sony, and Movietickets.com

Jonathan graduated from the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications at Syracuse University. In his spare time, he volunteers as a mentor for Stoked, where in 2009 he was awarded with the Stoked Mentoring Pair of the Year award with Erik Tobar. In July 2012, Drubner was named associate director at L&S Advisors, Inc.

George Eads

George Eads has a number of successful television and film credits during his career. He starred in the title role of the cable movie Evel Knievel (2004). In 2003, he was seen in the cable movies The Dog Walker and Monte Walsh.

He played Thumper in the series Grapevine, on CBS, also starred in the series Savannah and guest starred in several episodes of ER. His other television film credits include The Spring, Broken Crown, and The Ultimate Lie. Among feature film credits are Only in America and Dust to Dust.

Eads has been nominated four times for the “Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Drama Series” for his work on CSI:Crime Scene Investigations. He won this award along with the rest of the cast in 2005. He was also nominated for a Teen Choice Award in 2006.

Roger Ebert

Ebert was an American film critic and historian, journalist, screenwriter and author. He was a film critic for the Chicago Sun-Times from 1967 until his death in 2013. In 1975, Ebert became the first film critic to win the Pulitzer Prize for Criticism. As of 2010, his reviews were syndicated to more than 200 newspapers in the United States and abroad.

Ebert also published more than 20 books and dozens of collected reviews. Ebert and Chicago Tribune critic Gene Siskel helped popularize nationally-televised film reviewing when they co-hosted the PBS show Sneak Previews, followed by several variously-named At the Movies programs. The two verbally sparred and traded humorous barbs while discussing films. They created and trademarked the phrase “Two Thumbs Up,” used when both hosts gave the same film a positive review.

After Siskel died in 1999, Ebert continued hosting the show with various co-hosts and then, starting in 2000, with Richard Roeper. In 2005, Ebert became the first film critic to receive a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. Neil Steinberg of the Chicago Sun-Times said Ebert “was without question the nation’s most prominent and influential film critic.” Tom Van Riper of Forbes described him as “the most powerful pundit in America” and Kenneth Turan of the Los Angeles Times called him “the best-known film critic in America.”

Tyler Farr

Tyler Farr was first introduced to country music at age 16, when he spent a summer on the road with his stepfather, who played lead guitar for country icon George Jones. Tyler received several vocal scholarship offers and accepted one at Missouri State University. He grew to love country music and decided to move to Nashville to pursue a career as an artist. Farr met award-winning songwriter and fellow outdoorsman, Rhett Akins. After listening to some of his music, Rhett proposed a collaboration. He eventually landed a publishing deal with Sony ATV/Monument Publishing, and then got a recording contract on Sony Music Nashville’s BNA Records.

Redneck Crazy, his debut album, was finished and ready to go in 2013. Released on September 30, it broke into the top 5 on Billboard Hot 200 and climbed higher to No. 2 on the Country Albums chart. The title track moreover soared to the second place on the U.S. Country Songs chart.

Suffer in Peace was Tyler’s second studio album that was released on April 28, 2015 via Columbia Nashville records. Its lead single A Guy Walks Into a Bar, was released on August 18, 2014. The album debuted on the Billboard 200 at No. 4, and the Top Country Albums chart at No. 2, selling 36,300 copies for the week, and 41,629 units in total album activity (including streaming and TEA). The album has sold 91,200 copies in the US as of August 2015.

Willie Geist

Willie Geist is co-host of NBC’s Today 9 a.m. hour and the co-host of MSNBC’s Morning Joe. He is also a contributor to NBC News programs and to the NBC Sports Group, where he reports for NBC Olympics and NBC Sports Network. In addition to his television duties, Geist hosts the video blog Zeitgeist on nbcnews.com.

Geist came to MSNBC from the world of sports television. He was a producer and writer for the debate show I, Max on Fox Sports Net. Before that, Geist was an editor and producer for CNN/Sports Illustrated, a 24-hour sports network based in Atlanta. He later became a field producer and reporter for CNN Sports. Geist has authored the 2010 New York Times bestseller American Freak Show, and is co-author of Loaded! Become a Millionaire Overnight and Lose 20 Pounds in 2 Weeks or Your Money Back!, a satire of the self-help genre.

Donald Gibb

Donald Richard Gibb, sometimes credited as Don Gibb, is an American actor, best known for his roles as the hulking, dimwitted fraternity brother “Ogre” in several installments of the Revenge of the Nerds film series, and as Leslie “Dr. Death” Krunchner on the HBO sitcom 1st & Ten.

With his brawn, bulk, scraggly beard and mustache, deep, growly voice and forceful screen presence, Gibb has frequently been cast as scruffy bikers, loutish rednecks and over-aggressive macho athletes. He started out in movies in the early 1980s with uncredited bit parts in Any Which Way You Can (1980), Stripes (1981), and Conan the Barbarian (1982).

He achieved enduring cult fame as the outrageous Ogre in the hilarious Revenge of the Nerds (1984), reprising this role in the second and fourth sequels. He was likewise memorable as raucous martial arts fighter Ray Jackson in the exciting BloodSport (1988) and wild man tennis player Ripper in The Amusing Jocks (1984). He had a recurring role as fierce defensive lineman Leslie “Dr. Death” Crunchner on the HBO situation comedy 1st & Ten: The Championship (1984). Among the television series Donald has done guest spots on are Alice (1976), The A-Team (1983), Magnum, P.I. (1980), Knight Rider (1982), The Facts of Life (1979), Hunter (1984), Night Court (1984), MacGyver (1985), Quantum Leap (1989), The X-Files (1993) and The Young and the Restless (1973).

Donald Gibb lives in Chicago, Illinois and is the co-owner of and spokesman for the Chicago karaoke bar Trader Todd’s.

Chris Hansen

Christopher Edward Hansen became a reporter for Lansing NBC affiliate WILX in 1981 during his senior year at Michigan State. He reported for various radio stations and newspapers in Michigan until he joined NBC News in 1993 as a correspondent for the news magazine Now with Tom Brokaw and Katie Couric. Hansen is most known for his reporting on the NBC news show, Dateline.

Some of his most notable work includes coverage of the Columbine massacre, the Oklahoma City terrorist attack, the Unabomber, and the TWA Flight 800 disaster. Hansen was responsible for most of Dateline’s coverage of the 9/11 terrorist attacks, as well as stories on terrorist groups and the operations of Al-Qaeda. He also hosted a series of Dateline NBC reports under the title To Catch a Predator.

Chris has received numerous awards, including seven Emmys, as well as awards for excellence from the Associated Press and United Press International.