Jeremy Borash

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Jeremy Borash
An image of Jeremy Borash.
Statistics
Ring name(s) J.B.
Jeremy Borash
Billed height 5 ft 10 in (178 cm)[1]
Billed weight 180 lb (82 kg)
Born May 28, 1977 (1977-05-28) (age 31)
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Resides Nashville, Tennessee,
Orlando, Florida
Debut 2000

Jeremy Borash (born May 28, 1977 in Minneapolis, Minnesota), also known as JB is an American professional wrestling play-by-play commentator, announcer, booker, producer and website designer. He was heavily involved in the now defunct World Wrestling All-Stars promotion, and has been an influential staff member of Total Nonstop Action Wrestling since its inception in 2002. He is currently a member of the TNA creative team.[citation needed]

Contents

[edit] Career

Born just outside of Minneapolis, Jeremy Borash started a career in broadcasting at the age of 15, hosting both a nightly radio talk show and live television show in the Twin Cities. Borash's radio show on KSMM in Minneapolis, and television show "Jeremy Borash Live!" won several Minnesota broadcasting awards, as well as leading to on-air positions at KSTP and KDWB in the Twin Cities.

After graduating from Brown Institute for Broadcasting in Minneapolis, Borash took a position at the age of 19 as a program director/morning show host at KOOL 92 FM in Fort Dodge, Iowa. His popular "Borash in the Morning" show featured a wide variety of entertainment, including such acts as actually hypnotizing local politicians on the air, skydiving from 13,000 feet over Fort Dodge, and his popular breakfast drive thru, where Borash would personally deliver free breakfast to his listeners cars as they drove by. His involvement in local community activities included serving on the board of the United Way, as well as Honorary Chairman for the March of Dimes, which received national attention when Borash became the youngest person ever nominated for radio's prestigious Marconi Award for Broadcasting as America's Small Market Personality of the Year in 1996. He also earned honors in 1998 by becoming a Guiness Book of World Records holder for executing the longest, continuous on-air fart. It lasted 1 minute, 22 seconds. A record that still holds up today.

[edit] Career in radio

Upon receiving this honor, offers came from around the country, and Borash chose to move back to Minnesota, as morning show host of KXLP in Mankato, Minnesota. At 22, Borash lasted only four months in Mankato, citing major creative differences with management after a New York radio consultant directed the station to name his on-air persona "Flash Borash." Borash soon found redemption months later, as he helped launch the syndicated "Ruth Koscielak Show," and as co-host, was back on the very station group he was fired from months earlier through the show's midwest syndication.

[edit] Career in wrestling

[edit] Beginnings in wrestling

While working weekdays on the Koscielak show in Minneapolis, Borash started a weekly Saturday morning wrestling show at the very station he started with at the age of 15. Through the show, Borash met internet wrestling pioneer Bob Ryder, who quickly pitched the show concept to Eric Bischoff of Ted Turner's World Championship Wrestling.

[edit] WCW

In March 1999, WCW Live! premiered to an online audience with their first guest on the show, Hulk Hogan. WCW Live! went on to become the most listened to streaming audio program in the world, often reaching 50k live audio streams nightly in an era of this new technology. While doing the nightly 2 hour internet show for WCW, Borash continued his stint on the Ruth Koscielak Show until August 1999, when he left Minneapolis to work full time in the offices of WCW in Atlanta, where he went on to become one of the head writers for WCW Monday Nitro on TNT, as well as WCW Thunder on TBS.

Later that year, Borash premiered for the first time on WCW TV, co-hosting the year end special for WCW on TBS. Borash went on to make several appearances on WCW television as a play-by-play announcer for WCW Monday Nitro and WCW Thunder. His role eventually led to an on-air character as Vince Russo's stooge, including a memorable episode where Borash was attacked by Goldberg while driving Russo in his own pope-mobile vehicle at the Cow Palace in San Francisco.

[edit] World Wrestling All-Stars

After WWE purchased WCW in March 2001, Borash met Australian concert promoter Andrew MacManus and together they launched the World Wrestling All-Stars organization. Later that year, Borash left for Australia and worked out of the offices of MacManus in Surfer's Paradise on the Gold Coast of Australia. The promotions first tour of Australia concluded with a live pay per view from the Sydney Superdome called "The Inception," which Borash provided play-by-play alongside Jerry "The King" Lawler. In a dark match before, "The Inception", Borash appeared as Mr. White Bread IV, a masked wrestler who passed out slices of bread to the fans. He lost to a boxing kangaroo named, Bosco. The WWA would go to produce numerous international tours, as well as live pay per view events from Las Vegas, Nevada, Glasgow, Scotland, Melbourne, Australia, and Auckland, New Zealand where Borash served as executive producer and host.

[edit] Total Nonstop Action Wrestling

Borash interviewing Gail Kim prior to Lockdown.
Borash interviewing Gail Kim prior to Lockdown.

In March 2002, Borash returned to the United States to join Jeff Jarrett in launching TNA Wrestling in Nashville, Tennessee. As the second employee the company hired, Borash worked in several positions for the organization including ring announcer, video editor, and show writer.

In January 2006, Borash became the backstage interviewer for TNA's Impact! on Spike TV, a position he dreamt of as a child, watching his idol Mean Gene Okerlund in the AWA growing up in Minneapolis. Since becoming backstage inverviewer, Borash actually became involved with the kayfabe politics of TNA, as his respect for Kurt Angle led him to be a constant presence during many of Angle's backstage segments and even gained him membership into Angle's stable, the Angle Alliance. He was humorously Karen Angle's maid of honor at her wedding vows renewal to Kurt on the Valentine's Day edition of iMPACT.

In April 2007, Borash launched TNA Today on TNAWrestling.com, a show he hosts from the TNA corporate offices. The show is consistently in the top 10 most viewed videos of the day on YouTube.com, and is currently billing itself as the most viewed online daily video program in the world. On August 11, 2007, TNA Today reached the #1 position on YouTube's most viewed videos of the day, a position the show has since held on numerous occasions.

In early 2008, Borash announced that Samoa Joe was voted the MVP of TNA. Joe then attacked Borash, thus (kayfabe) injuring him, which is why Borash began wearing a neck brace on television.

[edit] Documentary of ECW and Hardcore Homecoming

While working for TNA, Borash took up video editing and producing, and with only a laptop and video camera, set out to make a documentary on ECW, the organization Borash credits for rekindling his childhood love for professional wrestling. His critically acclaimed "Forever Hardcore" led to Borash co-promoting "Hardcore Homecoming," a reunion of ECW wrestlers in Philadelphia's famed Viking Hall, the place where it all started. The Hardcore Homecoming event still holds the record for the largest gate of any independent show in US wrestling history, and was considered a historical success for the era, culminating with a surprise barbwire rematch of one of the most famous matches in ECW history with Terry Funk vs Sabu vs Shane Douglas, with featured referee Mick Foley. The show led to a Hardcore Homecoming tour, and the show's DVDs broke Billboard's Top 10 Sports and Rec DVD releases. The recent release of Forever Hardcore and Hardcore Homecoming in the UK debuted at #1 and #2 on the Sports and Recerational charts, over two years after their US release.

[edit] Other television appearances

Year Title Role Notes
2005 Blue Collar TV Himself along with other TNA Superstars

[edit] Filmography

Year Title Role Notes
2003 Head of State "Wrestling announcer"
2005 Forever Hardcore Director

[edit] References

[edit] External links