Here Das just you more facts coz u like the guy.
High School:
* Xavier College '92
*
Employer:
Fox Sports; TVNZ; HDNet USA; FEG Entertainment
Position:
TV Commentator
Location:
Melbourne, Australia
Description:
Michael Schiavello is the world's leading ringsports commentator.
Known as "The Voice" he has commentated events worldwide including:
Las Vegas, Beijing, Poland, Budapest, Taiwan, Tokyo, Seoul, Amsterdam, Honolulu, Auckland, Osaka, Sapporo, Saitama, Fukuoka, Macau, Hong Kong and around Australia.
His commentary has even featured on NBC on the JAY LENO SHOW!
Recently, Michael hosted and commentated the most watched reality TV show in history -- THE CONTENDER ASIA FINALE -- in Singapore for a worldwide TV audience including 22 countries on AXN, ESPN, ITV4 UK and soon to be seen on Fox 8. The show was produced by Mark Burnett Productions, the Hollywood team behind 'Survivor', 'The Apprentice', 'Rock Star INXS' and 'The Amazing Race.'
In August 2008 Michael commentated the Olympic Games in Beijing for 110 countries as part of the Asian Broadcasting Unio. He also commentated the 2006 Commonwealth Games in Melbourne.
He has commentated for such networks as:
Fox Sports
Fox 8
Main Event
HDNet USA
SBC South Africa
Sky Australia
Sky NZ
MBC
Al Jazeera
TV ONE (NZ)
TV2 (NZ)
TV3 (NZ)
InDemand USA
Viewer's Choice Canada
ESPN (USA)
Astro Malaysia
True TV Thailand
Channel 7 Thailand
Pro TV Romania
Direct Dish USA
He was also part of the largest pay-per-view event in Australian history when he commentated alongside Kostya Tszyu, Paul Briggs, Barry Michael, Adam Watt and Clinton Grybas for the Mundine vs Danny Green card at Sydney Football Stadium in 2006.
Known as "The Voice", Michael is renowned for his seemingly endless array of hilarious one-liners that he infuses into his commentary, they include such gems as:
- He's taken more knocks than a front door
- He's all over him like Paris Hilton on a home video camera
- He's worn more leather than The Village People
- He's got more kick than a Can Can dancer
- He's taken more strikes than a builder's union
Michael is former editor-in-chief of Blitz Publications -- Australia's largest sports and lifestyle magazine publisher, where he worked full-time between 1993 - 2000.
He still freelances for several magazines including Inside Sport magazine.
In 1998 Michael became the youngest writer EVER inducted into the CUB/Random House BEST AUSTRALIAN SPORTS WRITING AWARDS at age 23 for a story he wrote on Cathy Freeman entitled "Dreaming Freeman".
Michael is also a best-selling author, having published four books including the 1999 cult classic "Bouncer!" as featured on A Current Affair, and the novel 'Reflex Jack' released in 2001.
Michael even had a bit role in the American feature film 'Torn' shot in Melbourne in 2006 where he appeared alongside Costas Mandylor (Picket Fences, Mobsters).
For more check out Michael's official website:
www.thevoiceonline.info CITIES I'VE COMMENTATED IN
* Beijing
* Lodz Poland
* Taiwan
* Tokyo
* Amsterdam
* Las Vegas
* Singapore
* Honolulu
* Budapest
* Macua
* Hong Kong
* Seoul
* Osaka
* Sapporo
* Nagoya
* Fukuoka
* Saitama
* Yokohama
* Melbourne
* Brisbane
* Sydney
* Perth
* Surfers Paradise
* Auckland
MICHAEL SCHIAVELLO featured in...
RUDE BLOKE
By Ben Vernon
As Appeared in THE TOWNSVILLE BULLETIN, August 2007
IN many ways it must be a hard job calling sport on television.
And I mean the person calling the actual game, not the knob-end `colour man' sidekick.
That's a piece of piss. If you're Phil Gould, for instance, you can just watch while Ray Warren does all the
work and shout things like ``Unbelievable!'' occasionally and say crap like: ``I first saw this kid playing in the under-5s for Mareeba and I knew he was going to be special''.
No, I'm talking about the guys that actually call the game.
I'm not a huge fan of AFL but one of the best in the business is Dennis Cometti.
The man that gave us such classic moments as: ``Barlow to Bateman. The Hawks are attacking alphabetically ... ,'' when describing Melbourne star Adem Yze: ``Terrific player, terrible scrabble hand'' and: ``Exquisite goal by Glendinning. That was a Rock Hudson kick – looked straight but it wasn't''.
In other, Cometti-less, football codes one has to rely on horrific mistakes for entertaning commentary. How about this gem from a Kiwi rugby commentator: ``Andrew Mehrtens loves it when Daryl Gibson comes inside him''.
I don't think they'll playing that version of the game in heaven! But Test cricket – five gruelling seven-hour days that dribblers and former players feel compelled to fill with gibber – is arguably the most fertile ground for
commentary genius.
BBC commentator Brian Johnston came up with this alarming report in the early 80s as West Indies fast bowler Michael Holding came in to bowl to English all-rounder Peter Willey: ``The bowler's Holding, the
batsman's Willey''.
And this gem as Pommy captain and fast bowler Bob Willis took himself off after a spirited opening spell: ``The England captain has relieved himself at the pavilion end.''
And you can't go past the emperor of understatement, Richie Benaud, who came up with this one after Kim
Hughes copped one in the nether regions: ``.... and Kim Hughes returns to the crease with one ball remaining''.
But my favourite Benaud moment was when Pakistan skipper Wasim Akram lost the toss and yelled the F word frustration to a live TV audience. Without a pause, deadpan and drier than the Simpson desert, Benaud said: "Interesting to note, isnt it, that the word for extreme disappointment the same in English as it is in Urdu.'' They just don't make them like that any more.
But there is a new kid on the block – a commentator of such wit and descriptive genius he makes Oscar Wilde seem like a monosyllabic moron. His name is Michael Schiavello and it's likely not many of you have heard of him because he commentates on kick-boxing, but he is destined to become one of the greats.
Schiavello has a tremendous gift for simile.
I watched two kickboxing tournaments, purely to listen to this bloke's work, and this is the sort of stuff he comes up with in the quieter moments ..."He's working more angles than a protractor and got more moves
than a chessboard', `he's got more combinations than a Chinese takeaway, he's put on more strikes than a builder's union, he's all over him like a fat kid on a cupcake'.
But when one of the fighters is receiving some punishment is when Schiavello truly comes into his own.
``He's copped more jabs than a typhoid clinic, he's worn more leather than the Village People, he's taken more hits than Google, he's been scored on more times than my ex-girlfriend, he's taken more battering than a piece of flake, left himself more exposed than Janet Jackson's right nipple, taken more knocks than a front door, more hits than the Beatles/a pinata/a blackjack table, more kicks than a chorus line'' and on one memorable occasion when a fighter accidentally got kicked in the pills he came up with this: ``I hope he wanted to be a farmer because he's just picked up a couple of achers.''
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