Jesse Palmer's Secret For Longevity In The Broadcast Industry
RIGHT ABOUT NOW
Jesse Palmer's Secret For Longevity In The Broadcast Industry
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Right About Now with Ryan Alford

Join media personality and marketing expert Ryan Alford as he dives into dynamic conversations with top entrepreneurs, marketers, and influencers. "Right About Now" brings you actionable insights on business, marketing, and personal branding, helping you stay ahead in today's fast-paced digital world. Whether it's exploring how character and charisma can make millions or unveiling the strategies behind viral success, Ryan delivers a fresh perspective with every episode. Perfect for anyone looking to elevate their business game and unlock their full potential.

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SUMMARY

In this episode of "Right About Now with Ryan Alford," Ryan interviews Jesse Palmer, former NFL quarterback and current ESPN analyst and host of "The Bachelor." Jesse shares insights on his journey from football to television, emphasizing the importance of living in the moment, hard work, and preparation. He reflects on memorable career moments, the value of a positive mindset, and lessons learned from mentors. The conversation also covers his transition to hosting "The Bachelor," maintaining impartiality, and balancing his multifaceted career, offering listeners inspiration for personal and professional growth.

TAKEAWAYS

  • Jesse Palmer's journey from college football quarterback to NFL player and ESPN analyst.
  • Transition from sports to reality television, specifically his experiences on "The Bachelor."
  • The importance of maintaining a positive mindset and living in the moment.
  • Insights into Jesse's work ethic, preparation, and dedication to his broadcasting career.
  • The role of family and positive influences in personal and professional success.
  • Memorable moments in Jesse's broadcasting career, including significant games and experiences.
  • The evolution of "The Bachelor" franchise and its impact on reality TV.
  • Jesse's approach to hosting "The Bachelor" and maintaining impartiality.
  • The significance of hard work and preparation in achieving longevity in a competitive field.
  • Lessons learned from sports and coaching that apply to his current career.

We cut through the noise to cover the topics that matter for your personal and professional growth. Today, we're diving deep with Jesse Palmer to unlock the playbook for success, discussing everything from his journey in college football and ESPN to becoming part of the most talked about franchise and pop culture, the Bachelor. I hope you enjoy this episode. You gotta be careful who your circles are. Every football player's got a tiny circle. You've got the team, you've got the offense, but you get like four or five dudes, different positions that you kind of run with. You gotta be careful who those guys are. I was always trying to make sure they were positive people that were appreciative of what we were doing and loved what we were doing. This is right about now with Ryan Allford, a Radcast Network production. We are the number one business show on the planet with over one million downloads a month. Taking the BS out of business for over six years and over 400 episodes. You ready to start snapping necks and caching checks? Well, it starts right about now. There's a joy and a happiness. You know, some people, you feel like they carry the way to the world. They have issues or whatever. It may even be polarizing maybe for people with you, because I always just sense and have always liked this about you. There's just kind of like this. I'm in this moment and I'm enjoying it and I'm a happy person. And this always respected that about you. And the more I talk to you sitting here, it feels real. Even when I appreciate it. And I don't know if you've ever talked about that. I don't know. And I don't know where that comes from, just that joyous spirit or happiness. You're the first person that's ever actually asked me that. I try to think of myself as being a guy that's in the present. I try to stay cognizant of that. You know, it might have to do with playing football all those years. And just listening to buddies and teammates always talk about what it could have should have. I shouldn't have come to Florida, man. I should have gone to South Carolina. I would have been a starter and I'd be in the league right now if I'd done that. If I didn't come here, I wouldn't have torn my ACL. I should have never married that girl. If I didn't do that, I would have had this time to do these things. And on the flip side of that, people always just so worried about the next contract. What was happening way down the line. And it just seems so stressful to me. And I wasn't even the one saying those things. Those weren't even my thoughts, but just being surrounded by all that fear all the time. And that almost a negative energy, but the nervous energy. That's a good way to put it. It was draining on me. And I just felt happiest and the most comfortable when I just really thought about the here and now. And at ESPN, when we're in studio and we're doing a halftime, I'm just really trying to enjoy that moment and that halftime. And I'm not worrying about the one hour long college football final that's going to go live at 2 a.m. that we're all going to be dreading because we've been awake for 15 hours. You know, it's just people told me that's a very Buddhist way of thinking about things. And I'm not a Buddhist. It's just how I have tried to compartmentalize things because our lives can at times seem there's a lot going on. And it gives you that anxiety. I don't even have kids yet. I can't imagine who we're talking before we start. You've got four boys. Dude, I can't imagine you having to think about balancing that and your wife and your kids and now your podcast and your job and your family and your travel. How do I know how you do that either? You must be the same. You must just be in the moment. Is there a moment that sticks out one of your best moments? I'm sure you've had a ton now. Whether it's at a game or the interview is so high or maybe in studio, is there a moment or two that are standouts at this point? Yeah, it's funny. You can think back and I remember so many games and amazing environments that I was in at the time. There have been a few old crap moments though. The first was when I called my first game with Brett Mossberger. Oh, yeah. He's such a legend. Oh, yeah. And he's a guy that's called so many big games in college football in the NFL. He's been to like Ali Frazier. He's done so many different things, Olympics ever. But we were in South Carolina doing a Texas A&M South Carolina game. And the broadcast started and the place is going nuts. And they're playing space Odyssey. The place is absolutely freaking out. And all of a sudden, he comes on and you hear the classic. You are looking live. And I had this whole crap moment where I just froze crap. Like I'm in the booth with Brett Mossberger about to call this game. How cool is that? And then him and I called an Iron Bowl. We did a damn Auburn game, which was incredible. Him and I called the Rose Bowl, which I still can't believe I did that. It's like stuff that when I started at ESPN, my first game I called was Rice versus UTEP. And it was the greatest thing of all time. Yeah. Like it was, it was the greatest thing. You're definitely a junkie. If you told me that like down the road, I'd get a chance to be in, in Pasadena, Rose Bowl with Brett Mossberger. I mean, it's amazing the journey and how lucky I've been. Honestly, I don't take a second of that job for granted. What do you think attributed to your longevity with the ESPN? But you're easy to work with, I'm sure. It's kind of where I was wanting to go like this nature and nurture thing with you, man. I can't quite put my finger on it. You know, both your joy in doing things, your attitude. I'm almost kind of getting at what makes you successful. While also asking that longevity is not easy in this sport, the ESPN is described. This kind of goes back to my football. I just work really, really hard at it and I study a lot. I watch a lot of tape. I watch so much film. Every year I've got just books and binders of notes that I've taken watching teams. I put a lot into it and a lot of people that do this job, everybody sort of has their own path and their own way that they operate. Some guys are great at just not studying and just kind of showing up and watching the game and just giving it to your rod and live. I do it the way I used to play quarterback. Where you watch film, you study the opponent, you do it for a week, and then you're able to sort of take everything that you've studied and you've got in your head and you sort of kind of spit it out on game day with respect to what you're seeing. So I hope part of my longevity has to do with the product that I'm putting out and a lot of that really is preparation and really really hard work. I'm not the guy that just kind of shows up and wings it for the fans and the viewers at home. Hopefully that comes across. No, it does. I always feel like you're over-prepared. It does come across. It's a compliment. Robotically. Not because you're a robot, but the detail. Yeah, it's there. Is it nature and nurture for you, man? Is this all like is your parents just raise you well or do you just built this way? I was very, very lucky. I had two incredible role models and my mom and my dad. They definitely instilled a lot of discipline in me, a lot of work ethic and a lot of gratitude and appreciation. Growing up at a very young age and I think staying close to them throughout my entire life and having the messages reinforced over and over I think has definitely helped a lot and I think trying to be around like-minded people. We talked a lot about my teammates back in the day and football's a funny thing. College football especially. There's like 120 dudes in the locker room and there's a lot of guys. You got to be careful who your circles are. Every football player's got a tiny circle. You got the team, you got the offense, but you get like four or five dudes, different positions that you kind of run with. You got to be careful who those guys are. I was always trying to make sure they were positive people that were appreciative of what we were doing and loved what we were doing. I think family and I think my circle, my teammates and my buddies I think are and my wife, families, is really the biggest reason. I remember like playing for Sean Payton with the New York Giants and I remember like he would grind. He was like a John Brittan disciple who would grind all hours of the night. We'd be in our quarterback meeting Friday morning. Sean had the biggest eye bags. He was crushing dip coffee. It was like double-fisting coffees and was going through it and he would put so much work into our game plan. Our playbook for that was huge and we would lose a game and be really disappointing and just put up six points and just all 160 yards. And I said thank to myself, man, how's he going to change? Obviously that was not a good outcome. We lost the game. That was embarrassing. How's he going to change his preparation the next time into his credit? He never did. He just trusted the process. He went back in the office at 4am on Monday and just started the whole thing again, trusting that in believing in what he was doing was right. That really sort of taught me you've got to find whatever it is that it gets you ready and just believe in it. And I have good days in studio and I have bad days in studio and I have good days in the booth and I have bad days in the booth. But I don't try to deviate too much from what got me here and what's allowed me to be successful these last 15 years. Yeah. I think it's good for people to hear that because, dude, man, you look like you got it all together. You're a good-looking guy. You've been on the bachelor which we're going to get to and it's like, but no, this guy has busted his ass working hard preparing and it doesn't just get handed. It's hard work. It's good for people to hear that from you because, you know, you deal. I'm sure you've dealt with that on your life. Oh, you're easier or something. Yeah, for sure. Listen, no doubt about it. And I tell people to sell the time. My career at Florida and playing in the NFL and being on the bachelor to some extent, did that help me land the SPN? Absolutely, it did. Of course it did. Yeah. But once you get there, what do you do with it? Because we've also had a lot and we've had NFL Hall of Famers at the SPN that got a job because of that, but they didn't last very long. Yeah. Because they didn't work very hard. But at the end of the day, it's your resume. Your game tape, your film, and what you put out on camera at the SPN in studio and in the booth, that is your resume. And it speaks for itself. Let's talk about the bachelor. You were the bachelor and you're the host of the bachelor placing Chris Harrison. I don't know how old you are. How are you 40 yet? Are you getting there? I'm in there. You're in there. I'm getting in there. I know there's somewhere. We're in there somewhere. But Chris Harrison looks whatever, but he's done the bachelor for 28 years or whatever. So you got to follow him up and think you've done a great job. I don't know. Just talk about that bachelor experience. What's that's been like? Yeah, it's been wild. I mean, going back to 2004 when I became the bachelor, that was kind of this. That was this amazing opportunity. It's funny. I've always sort of been a guy that just kind of tries to take opportunities and make the most out of them and just kind of have fun with again, kind of being in the moment not worrying about what the repercussions are of it. I'd be lying if I told you that in 2004, I knew what I was doing. If I had said, trust me, I'm going to do that. I'm playing in the NFL right now. I'm going to do this job. And in a couple of years, this is totally going to open doors for me and my broadcast and group. I had no idea in 2004 that I wanted to be on television at all. That whole thing happened. Beyond a shadow of his doubt, I don't know if it really helped me with ESPN, but it definitely helped me with Food Network, with Good Morning America. And obviously, being the host of the bachelor now, years and years later, Daily Mail and some of these other shows that I've been associated with. It has been so cool this year, coming back years and years later to be part of the franchise again. And the amazing thing has just been how much bigger the show is now. Dude, when I did it in 2004, reality TV was like a brand new thing. Yeah. And I remember being in the locker room with all the guys in the New York Times, like Michael Strahan, Tiki Barber, and Monty Tumer. I'm having to explain to them what reality TV is. And then also what the bachelor is. What is that? So wait, you're going on a reality show to get a date? Is that kind of what you're doing? Like, it's a little bit more than that. Like, you're going on, you're hopefully going to get married. It's all on reality TV and explain all that. And then today to fast forward, the budget's obviously way bigger, obviously. The travel's crazy. It's still the nuts and bolts are the same and the concept of it is the same. But the fans and bachelor nation is just grown by leaps of bounds. They've multiplied. I can't think of another show that has a fan base so into it and just so so emotional about it and so invested in it. It's like a Clemson fan base or an SEC fan. And that's what it feels like. Yeah, right. It's just they are so passionate about it. And that's been really, really cool to sort of be back part of that. I think you've done a really good job. Last thing I want to say because I didn't know because your charismatic guy and you've been the bachelor and I was like, how's he going to be Switzerland? Because that's kind of what Chris Harrison like his greatest attribute was he was so switched. That's why you respect him. How is Jesse going to do this? Not because you're arrogant or you got to be a center of attention. It's just more of a you're that guy. I think you've done admirable job of finding that neutral zone. So I'll give you. I appreciate it too. Yeah, try to not make it about me. I don't want to be like the old Uncle Jesse. He was like, but in my day, I would have done this. Yeah. This is what you need to say. He says Clayton's this is his game. This is his deal. He's got to figure it out. I'm sort of there to try to keep him. Trying to give him the seven hire as much as I have over the phone. I'm like, dude, just lay out. Yeah, lay out. Yeah. But times he's swinging for finances. Jesse, everybody knows probably where to find you. But where do you direct people when they're wanting to keep up with you? Oh, just Instagram. Jesse Palmer on Instagram and Jesse Palmer TV on Twitter. This is pretty much it. Hey, yeah. Hey, I really enjoyed this. I hope we can do it again down the road and would love to stay in touch. Absolutely, brother. Thanks so much for having me on. I really appreciate it. We really appreciate him. You don't want to find us. Search for Jesse Palmer. You'll find all of the content from today. I'm Ryan Alfred on all the platforms. We'll see you next time on the Radcast. This has been right about now with Ryan Alfred, a Radcast Network production. Visit RyanisRate.com for full audio and video versions of the show. 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