Early work In 1980, as America's Junior Miss, Moran earned an internship at CBS affiliate
WCTV in
Tallahassee, Florida. As an intern, she conducted office work, filing reports on the
University of Georgia and
Florida State University football games. Moran's first job after graduating college in 1984, was in
Los Angeles, California, as a reporter for
ESPN's
Sports Focus with Dr. J,
Julius Erving. From 1986 to 1987, she co-hosted Movietime with
Greg Kinnear. Movietime was a movie trailer and entertainment news service that later evolved into
E!. In 1989, Moran moved to
New York City to co-host
NBC Sports'
NBA Inside Stuff with
Ahmad Rashad. In 1990, she eventually transitioned to
ABC Sports Network, as a sideline reporter for
college football with
Brent Musburger and
Dick Vermeil, and
college basketball with
Jim Valvano and Brent Musburger. In 1990, she became the first woman to have an
NBA Trading card created in her honor. In 1992, Moran began anchoring the Emmy award-winning
ABC's
Wide World of Sports, following legendary sportscasters,
Jim McKay and
Frank Gifford. She was the show's fourth anchor ever, and the first woman to host the show solo (when
Becky Dixon hosted in 1987–88, she did it alongside Frank Gifford).
Entertainment Tonight On May 5, 1994, Moran began working for
Entertainment Tonight (ET) as an anchor and correspondent in their New York City office. By 1995, she eventually transitioned to ET's Los Angeles headquarters and later succeeded
Leeza Gibbons. Shortly after joining
Entertainment Tonight in 1994, Moran was named one of ''
People Magazine's'' "50 Most Beautiful People". While at
Entertainment Tonight for 9 years, Moran interviewed several high-profile celebrities, including
Oprah Winfrey and
Julia Roberts. Moran hosted
The Weekend Show and was the primary substitute anchor for
Mary Hart. She also covered exclusive reports on major television and film sets. In 1996, she launched a signature weekly segment called, "ET One to One with Julie Moran". In 1996, Moran was the head anchor from
ET covering the
1996 Olympic Games in
Atlanta, Georgia. From 1994 to 2001, Moran was the primary substitute anchor, weekend anchor, and senior correspondent for
ET.
Later years After leaving
Entertainment Tonight in 2001, Moran began spending time raising her daughters and working seasonally as a host for special events. In 2001, she co-hosted the prestigious
73rd Academy Awards pre-show for ABC with
Chris Connelly and
Jim Moret. She also co-hosted the
Grammy Awards pre-show for CBS in 1999 with
Ellen DeGeneres. In 1998, 1999, and 2000, Moran hosted the
Miss Universe pageant,
Miss USA pageant, and the
Miss Teen USA pageant. In 2002, she co-hosted the
Miss America pageant again with
Wayne Brady. Moran created, produced, and hosted ''
The Insider's List with Julie Moran'' starting in 2004. The weekly series aired on the
Fine Living Network. She hosted the pre-show for the
AFI Life Achievement Awards at the
Kodak Theatre in Los Angeles, California in 2002, 2003, and 2004. The shows honorees were
Tom Hanks,
Robert De Niro, and
Meryl Streep. In 2012, Moran became a special correspondent for
Access Hollywood. She began hosting
Lifetime's morning show,
The Balancing Act in 2013. ==Personal life==