wrestling / News

Jackie Redmond Reflects On Her Broadcasting Career & How She Landed WWE Gig

January 15, 2026 | Posted by Yash Mittal
Jackie Redmond Cody Rhodes WWE Saturday Night's Main Event 12-13-25, Nikki Bella Image Credit: WWE

WWE RAW backstage interviewer Jackie Redmond recently appeared on Chris Van Vliet’s INSIGHT podcast, where she reflected on her broadcasting career, how she landed a job in WWE, and more.

Redmond joined WWE in 2021 as the new co-host of RAW Talk and Talking Smack alongside Matt Camp. Fast forward to 2026, and the Canadian sports broadcaster is a well-known face on WWE programming, conducting backstage interviews on Monday Night RAW and even co-hosting pre-shows ahead of Premium Live Events. A lifelong hockey lover, Jackie has been in sports broadcasting for over a decade now, having covered the NHL for years. She currently covers the same for TNT Sports and MSG Sportsnet.

Below are the highlights:

How long has Jackie Redmond been a sports broadcaster?

“Since 2011. I know it’s crazy. It’s nuts. I feel like I’ve been doing it for, like, five [years]. It doesn’t feel in the moment like I’ve been doing it as long as I have, although, until you start thinking about all the things that you’ve done, the successes, the failures, then you go, ‘Oh yeah, I guess it’s been that long.”

How did she get into broadcasting?

“I was on a reality show. I won a contest because a lot of people told me when I first started out, ‘You’re just a contest winner,’ and I was like, ‘I’ll show you. I will show you that I’m not just a contest winner.’ Yeah, the show was called Gillette DRAFTED: The Search for Canada’s Next Sportscaster, and so it was very like American Idol, but for broadcasting; that’s what I did. I was on season three, and there was different iterations of the show. The show I was on, there was a top 10, we had a challenge every week. There was a bottom three, and then someone would get eliminated. The whole tagline of the show was, ‘You will not be drafted.’ And at the end, one person gets drafted; they get a one-year contract to work at the Score Television Network, which doesn’t exist anymore, but it got bought by Sportsnet.”

Jackie Redmond on how did she land up a job in WWE

“So I was in Montreal covering the Stanley Cup final between Montreal and Tampa. I mean, this business is funny, right? Because years prior to this, because that would have been 2021. Around 2016-2017 again, Renee Paquette calls me and is like, ‘Hey, WWE might be interested in you. What do you think? I told them I’d call you first just to see kind of what you think.’ And she’s been such a great person to me. I know we talked about her earlier, but whenever I’ve reached out to her for any type of advice, she’s always been there, even as the years have passed. So she had called me and told me that my name had been brought up and asked me what I thought. I said, ‘Well, what is the gig?’ And I was still in Toronto at this time, and just like, it would be hosting.

“She goes, ‘I see everything you’re doing in Canada right now with misplays of the month, and you’re hosting our equivalent to SportsCenter on the weekends. You’re doing all this great stuff. I feel like they might put you in NXT; you might be in the middle of nowhere.’ Experience outside of WWE isn’t the same as experience inside of WWE. And she goes, ‘So I don’t know if you’d be into it.’ So I said, ‘You know what? Let me think about it.’ And at the same time, I got an opportunity at NHL Network, and so I ended up not doing the WWE thing, and it never went further than a convo with Renee on the phone. It was very much like early stages, like, ‘Hey, your name was mentioned by somebody.’ So I end up taking the hockey show. My dream job, right?

“I’m covering hockey two hours a day, live television. Best thing for me to ever happen as a broadcaster, because when you’re live for two hours straight, oh, man, you make some mistakes, but you learn how to kind of roll with the punches. So years go by, and I’m covering the final in Montreal, and I am not even joking, I get a phone call. I don’t know the number. I pick it up, and it’s Michael Cole, and he’s like, ‘Hey, I know your agent. I got your contact info from your agent. We are looking for someone to host our post-shows, our Raw Talk, and our Talking Smack, and we’re kind of changing them a little bit. We want them to be a little bit more like a real sports post-show where you come into a studio, and you talk about what happened. Maybe you go back to the venue; there’s an interview, yada yada yada.’

“So I literally get a cold call from Michael Cole, which is so weird. I’m in Montreal, and I’m like, ‘I can’t wait to text my sister after this,’ and be like, Michael Cole just called me. How weird is that?’ I guess my agent was supposed to give me a heads up but didn’t get me the heads up in time that the call was coming. So I had been on their radar, and yeah, he called me, and I said, ‘Do I have to stop doing this hockey show that I’m doing?’ And he said, ‘Well, where’s the hockey show?’ And I said, It’s in New Jersey. He said, ‘Well, Connecticut’s a 90-minute drive. It’s only twice a week, Mondays and Fridays. You do both. It’s fine with us if it’s fine with you.’ So I did the audition, and he called me pretty much after the audition, and said, ‘You got it; if you want it, it’s yours.’ Those were crazy days, because our show was [from] four to six Eastern time. So on Monday, I’d be on the air four to six hours live, and then I would leave from the NHL Network and drive right to Connecticut, get there basically, with the traffic and stuff, right on time for Monday Night Raw to start, watch the show, and then go live again.”

Check out the interview below: