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・ Jeff Schlupp
・ Jeff Schmidt
・ Jeff Schmidt (baseball)
・ Jeff Schmidt (musician)
・ Jeff Schmidt (writer)
・ Jeff Schneider
・ Jeff Schneider (artist)
・ Jeff Schroeder
・ Jeff Schroeder (Big Brother U.S. contestant)
・ Jeff Schuh
・ Jeff Schultz
・ Jeff Schultz (actor)
・ Jeff Schulz
・ Jeff Schwarz
・ Jeff Schweitzer
Jeff Scott
・ Jeff Scott (American football)
・ Jeff Scott Soto
・ Jeff Scotts, West Virginia
・ Jeff Sebastian
・ Jeff Seely
・ Jeff Seeman
・ Jeff Seemann
・ Jeff Seeney
・ Jeff Segal
・ Jeff Seidel
・ Jeff Sellers
・ Jeff Sendobry
・ Jeff Serowik
・ Jeff Serr


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Jeff Scott : ウィキペディア英語版
Jeff Scott
Jeff Scott (born November 18, 1953) was the Senior Writer for Major League Baseball Productions from 1988 until the company was dissolved in 2015. He wrote more than 1100 television shows for various networks including Fox, ESPN, MLB Network, YES Network, ABC, NBC, NESN, Spike, FS1, NBC Sports, and A&E. Included amongst those shows is a Cal Ripken-like streak of writing 450 consecutive episodes of This Week in Baseball (TWIB.) In addition, he wrote the scripts for nearly 150 DVDs and home videos including more than 26 Official World Series films.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Behind the TWIB Notes )〕〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Bizarre world of baseball )〕 He wrote for and directed on-camera and record sessions with many celebrities, athletes, broadcasters and voiceover talents. His writing earned him 16 New York Emmy Awards,〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=YES wins 18 New York Emmy Awards )〕 a Boston/New England Emmy Award, 17 National Sports Emmy nominations, a Cine Golden Eagle award, and various other awards and honors some of which date back to his days writing for newspapers. Jeff Scott lives in rural New Jersey with his wife and niece. He is an avid gardener and a devoted Phillies, Eagles, 76ers and Flyers fan.
==Early career==
Scott’s writing career began in the early 1970s as a part-time sports writer for ''The Intelligencer'', in Doylestown, Pennsylvania. In 1975 he was hired as sports editor and feature writer for the News-Herald in Perkasie – a position he held for the next five years. Following a brief period in which he drove across the country for fun and then worked as a truck driver, deejay and day cook, he landed a job at The Free Press in Quakertown, Pa. There he served as a columnist, medical writer, movie reviewer and editor of a weekly entertainment magazine. In 1981, when Free Press publisher Charles Meredith III underwent quadruple bypass surgery, Scott received permission to observe the operation directly over Meredith’s chest. He then wrote a series of award-winning articles about it for The Free Press and then adapted the series for a feature story that appeared in Philadelphia Magazine in October 1981.
In the summer of 1983, producer/director Mike Tollin and Gary Cohen (Halcyon Days Productions) hired him to write ''This is the USFL'', the weekly highlight show for the new United States Football League, which aired on ABC from 1983-1985. Once the USFL disbanded, Scott remained with Halcyon Days Productions for several years as a freelance writer and producer. It was during this time that he and Tollin followed Phillies slugger Mike Schmidt during his quest for 500 home runs and then produced a film that chronicled the slugger’s effort. Scott was also an integral part of various other shows and videos including ''Men of October'', ''Legacy'', ''The Best of the USFL'' and ''Michael Bolton’s Winning Softball''. In the late 1980s, Scott wrote more than 1,000 one-minute radio shows for ''John Madden’s Sports Quiz'', ''John Madden’s Sports Calendar'' and ''Bob Costas’ Sports Flashback'' – before landing a job with MLB Productions writing for baseball television and the VCR/DVD industry.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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