Nancy Humphreys
One of Hollywood's leading entertainment journalists, Nancy O'Dell became a fixture in Tinseltown as co-host of "Access Hollywood" (Syndicated, 1996-) and a reliable backstage correspondent at entertainment awards shows. Born Nancy Humphries the Charleston, SC native began her broadcasting career as a news reporter and anchor at television stations in Myrtle Beach and Charleston, where her investigation into lax DUI processing resulted in a change to the state law and an award from the Associated Press. O'Dell went on to co-anchor the news at NBC affiliate WTVJ in Miami, FL before she was recruited to join the first season of the entertainment magazine show "Access Hollywood" as a weekend anchor and weekday correspondent. Three years later, she assumed the role of co-anchor on the show's daily broadcasts and solidified her reputation as one of the top entertainment reporters in the city - particularly with her on-location coverage of the Oscars, Emmys, Grammys and Golden Globe awards. In addition to O'Dell's journalistic contributions to NBC's "Today" (NBC, 1952-) and the news magazine "Dateline NBC" (1992-) she was also a highly visible spokesperson for the March of Dimes, hoping that her countless guest spots in film and television (where she usually played her bubbly self) would help bring awareness to the cause. A former Miss Carolina of 1987, O'Dell began co-hosting Miss USA and Miss Universe pageants in 2004 and 2005 respectively, expanding into television production as a consulting producer on "Nashville Star" (USA, 2003-07; NBC, 2008) which she also hosted during its first season. O'Dell was announced as a contestant on season eight of "Dancing with the Stars" (ABC, 2005-), but had to withdraw from the competition before the show began airing when she injured her knee during training, required rehabilitative surgery in 2009. Later that same year, O'Dell left "Access Hollywood," joining competitor "Entertainment Tonight" (Syndication 1981-) in January 2011 and becoming the show's host in May of that year after longtime fixture Mary Hart retired. In the fall of 2016, O'Dell unexpectedly became a sidenote in that year's presidential election when Republican presidential candidate was heard on an infamous leaked 2005 audiotape with "Access Hollywood" co-host Billy Bush discussing the fact that Trump had made unsuccessful romantic overtures to O'Dell while she was married (his exact phrase was "I moved on her like a b---h, but I couldn't get there") before going on to make other scandalous claims.