After retirement, Schlereth hosted an afternoon sports talk radio show on
Denver AM radio 760 The Zone with fellow former Broncos lineman
David "Doc" Diaz-Infante. The show was frequently referred to as the "Stink and Doc" show. Schlereth was a part-time analyst with ESPN for a time, commuting from Denver to Connecticut, before leaving 760 to go full-time with ESPN in 2004. He was an analyst on
NFL Live (2004–2017) and
SportsCenter. Schlereth revealed on the
Mike and Mike in the Morning show that he was considering a career in acting, mainly on soap operas, under the name Roc Hoover. He announced on May 4, 2007, that he was cast as Detective Roc Hoover, a recurring role, on the soap opera,
Guiding Light. Schlereth was a featured athlete on
Athlete 360, a
sports medicine television show. After the
2010 NFC Championship Game, Schlereth was critical of
Chicago Bears quarterback
Jay Cutler, tweeting "As a guy who had 20 knee surgeries you'd have to drag me out on a stretcher to leave a championship game!" In 2012 Schlereth appeared on the
Discovery Channel show
American Guns. He worked with the staff at Gunsmoke gun shop to find a suitable firearm he could use on a hunting trip with his son. Since 2015, Schlereth has appeared as himself in a number of episodes of HBO's
Ballers. Since 2017, Schlereth has been a
color commentator for NFL games broadcast on
Fox NFL, initially being paired with
Dick Stockton on the #6 team for 4 seasons, until being paired with former ESPN colleagues
Adam Amin and
Lindsay Czarniak on the #3 team. He also co-hosts a radio show in Denver on
104.3 The Fan, and appears as an analyst on
FS1 television programming. He was a frequent guest and fill-in host for
Mike Golic on
Mike and Mike in the Morning. He has also filled in for
Jim Rome on
Jim Rome is Burning. In 2024, Schlereth became a co-host alongside
Craig Carton and
Danny Parkins on
Fox Sports 1 (FS1)'s
Breakfast Ball. ==Personal life==