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Bonnie-Jill Laflin is an American model, television personality and sportscaster. Laflin has also worked as an actress and most notably as a scout for the Los Angeles Lakers, making her the league's first female scout.〔 She was also assistant general manager of a Lakers NBA Development League team. ==Biography== Laflin grew up in San Francisco, California, the daughter of a law enforcement officer father. She first gained public attention as a cheerleader with the Golden State Warriors of the NBA and is a former National Football League San Francisco 49ers and Dallas Cowboys Cheerleader. Laflin's work as a cheerleader and model helped her into television with recurring roles on ''Baywatch'' in the 1998-1999 season, and ''Ally McBeal'' in 2000. Laflin then became a TV personality, hosting ''Hotlines'' (2003) and ''United Rockcrawling & Off-Road Challenge Series'' (2004). Laflin was also a correspondent for ''Prime 9 News'' with KCAL-TV in Los Angeles, California (2003), and a correspondent for ESPN's Cold Pizza. Her accolades in the sports industry also include broadcasting jobs for CBS, Fox and NFL Network. She is the creator and host of a basketball TV show for China, Muho TV (spoken in English with Chinese subtitles).〔(Muho TV YouTube )〕 Laflin played Dierks Bentleys love interest in CMT's 2005 Sexiest Video of the Year "Come a Little Closer". In 2005, Laflin appeared as one of the suitcase-holding models during the airing of the opening week of ''Deal or No Deal'' on NBC. Laflin was ranked #89 on the ''Maxim'' Hot 100 Women of 2005.〔http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20050510005399/en/MAXIM-MAGAZINE-Unveils-Hot-100-2005-Eva#.VJsrX8916IA〕 She has also worked as a model for Fredericks of Hollywood and Venus Swimwear, and her print campaigns include Coors Light, Bacardi, Wrangler, Fed Ex, and McDonalds. Laflin has been featured in several magazines including ''FHM'', ''Maxim'', ''GQ'', ''Sports Illustrated'', ''ESPN the Magazine'', ''Women's Health'', ''Fitness RX'', ''Origin'' and ''New Beauty''. Laflin was named among the Top Hooters Girls as part of the restaurant chain's 25th anniversary in 2008.〔"The Top Hooters Girls of all time." ''Hooters Magazine''. July/August 2008. p. 107.〕 Laflin has worked with the Los Angeles Lakers as a professional basketball scout making her the league's first female scout,〔 and as one of the two assistant general managers of the Lakers' developmental team, the Los Angeles D-Fenders. On March 7, 2012, Laflin announced she and Kareem Rush will pair up in a fantasy basketball sports radio program on SiriusXM named “The Rush Hour”. The show launched on October 23, 2012;〔(【引用サイトリンク】date=October 23, 2012 )〕 The show was renewed for 2013. In 2013, she appeared as an in-studio guest on KNBR's ''Damon Bruce Show'', once to discuss the San Francisco 49ers' run to Super Bowl XLVII,〔https://twitter.com/BJLaflin/status/294886159270678528〕 and another time to discuss Bay Area sports in general.〔http://instagram.com/p/gG3dn4oVbE/〕 She also appeared on the show, now on KGMZ, in October 2014 at Kansas City's Kauffman Stadium to discuss the San Francisco Giants' 2014 World Series run.〔15:15 mark at http://media.957thegame.com/a/98661087/the-damon-bruce-show-10-29-14-hour-1.htm〕 Laflin's other radio shows include "Playboy Fantasy Football on Sirius/XM", and University of Texas pre- and post-football game shows for ESPN Austin. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Bonnie-Jill Laflin」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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