Broadcast journalism treats expertise as a destination. The deeper the knowledge, the stronger the reporting. That sounds reasonable until you watch someone build a career by repeatedly walking into situations where they know almost nothing.
Kelli Stavast, spent years covering sports she had never expected to touch professionally. NASCAR, Olympic diving, freestyle skiing, off-road desert racing, boxing, dog shows, IndyCar. The list looks random enough to suggest a career assembled by accident.
What ties those assignments together is not the sports themselves. It is the skill required to survive the first week.
Every new assignment began with the same disadvantage: someone else in the room knew more. Athletes knew more. Coaches knew more. Analysts knew more. Longtime fans knew more. Stavast’s job was not to erase that gap. Her job was to use it.
The common image of a reporter is someone who arrives with answers. The reality is often the opposite. Good reporting begins with identifying what you do not know, then finding the people who do. Curiosity is not a stepping stone to expertise; it is the thing that remains valuable after expertise arrives.
That lesson appeared early in Stavast’s career and followed her through every stop that came after. The venue changed. The process did not.
Whether standing beside a NASCAR pit box, interviewing divers at the Olympic Games, or learning the language of a Westminster Dog Show competitor, the assignment was essentially the same: enter unfamiliar territory, learn quickly, ask intelligently, and translate complexity into something useful for viewers.
Stavast spent a career making that principle practical across 12 different sports.
The remarkable part is not that she covered twelve sports. The remarkable part is that each new sport demanded the same discipline, and each one strengthened it.
By the time NBC called about freestyle skiing at the Winter Olympics, the sport itself was almost beside the point. She had already practiced the harder skill for years: becoming effective before becoming comfortable.
“I had so many stressful moments along the way in a much smaller format,” she said. “It took the edge off.” https://www.imdb.com/name/nm4247856/bio/
Why the Outsider Asks the Better Question
Walk an expert into a press room and you get answers that arrived before the questions did. The expert knows enough to assume. The assumption is sometimes right. When it is wrong, the broadcast gets thinner than it should have been, and the expert does not always notice where it slipped.
What No Curriculum Covers
The mechanics of broadcast journalism are teachable. How to hold a microphone. How to listen while talking. How to write a live shot under deadline. Any good program covers these.
The curriculum cannot include the specific pressure of arriving somewhere unfamiliar, knowing nobody, and still being expected to surface the one detail the viewer cannot find anywhere else. That pressure has to be lived. The only way to build tolerance for it is to encounter it often enough that the discomfort stops being the story.
Stavast encountered it twelve times, at the highest level in the world, in venues ranging from Irwindale to the Olympic Games. The assignments did not make her an expert in any of the sports. They made her better at the thing that actually runs a broadcast.
The uncomfortable assignments teach it, one at a time, in venues most people have never heard of. It was not a plan. Looking back, it might as well have been.
