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・ The Hot Band
・ The Hot Box
・ The Hot Breakfast
・ The Hot Chick
・ The Hot Choc-late Soldiers
・ The Hot Club of Cowtown
・ The Hot Desk
・ The Hot Flashes
・ The Hot Gates
・ The Hot Heiress
・ The Hot Hits Live from LA
・ The Hot House
・ The Hot Kid
・ The Hot l Baltimore
・ The Hot Lies
The Hot List
・ The Hot Mikado
・ The Hot Mikado (1939 production)
・ The Hot Monkey
・ The Hot n' Heavy
・ The Hot Potato
・ The Hot Puppies
・ The Hot Rock
・ The Hot Rock (album)
・ The Hot Rock (film)
・ The Hot Rod Dogs and Cool Car Cats
・ The Hot Scots
・ The Hot Shoe
・ The Hot Soldier
・ The Hot Spot


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The Hot List : ウィキペディア英語版
The Hot List

''The Hot List'' (also styled ''HotList'') was a news, talk and analysis television show and also the flagship program on ESPNEWS. Since its debut in January 2004, the program aired Monday through Friday from 3-6pm ET.
==About the show==
The show originally consisted of one host (David Lloyd), along with an update anchor, who delivers news updates every thirty minutes. The show has since switched to a dual-anchor format, with Lloyd being joined by a rotating co-anchor. Cindy Brunson and Bram Weinstein are common co-hosts. Throughout the program, Lloyd and a rotating co-anchor are joined by analysts, players and insiders to break down and discuss the top stories in the sports world. ''The Hot List'' is also sometimes shown as a simucast on ESPN and/or ESPN2.
From the show's debut until September 2006, Brian Kenny hosted the show. In October 2006, he became an anchor on ''SportsCenter'', and was replaced on ''The Hot List'' by Elliott and Bunin, who had been substitutes for Kenny in the past. However, beginning in August 2007, David Lloyd, who had been the host on ''ESPNEWS Pregame'', took over as the permanent host. Michael Kim had been the primary update anchor since 2004, but Ben Becker has also served in that role. In the spring of 2008, the show's current dual-anchor format was adopted.
In 2006, two special edition five hour shows debuted. On Mondays during the NFL season, an extended five hour show began at 1pm ET to kick off ESPN's coverage of ''Monday Night Football'' with Josh Elliott and Mike Hill co-hosting and Eric Allen and Qadry Ismail as analysts. This replaced ''Monday Quarterback'' which was hosted by Trey Wingo with Mike Ditka and Eric Allen. On Thursdays, the show aired a special college football preview show, again five hours with Dari Nowkhah hosting along with analysts Jim Donnan and Lou Holtz.
''The Hot List'' was discontinued on January 2, 2009 as ESPNEWS reverted to half-hour blocks of sports news throughout the day on January 5, 2009.

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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