As a teenager, Tammy Roebuck envisioned a career in sports broadcasting, and reached out to Gayle Sierens, a legendary Tampa TV news anchor who was the first woman to serve in a play-by-play role for an NFL game on NBC in 1987. Gayle encouraged Tammy to apply for an internship program, which led to Tammy’s introduction into broadcast television.
At the age of 19, Tammy became part of the first “radio with pictures” program in the country when she produced and directed the Ace award-winning program, QZOO Tube. Featured in the Broadcast Hall of Fame, QZOO Tube paved the way for radio shows to appear on television.
She continued her broadcasting debut by producing Tampa Bay Rowdies (Major League Soccer) games for Sports Channel Florida and, as station manager, she developed hundreds of 30-minute television shows.
In 2002, Tammy was named senior producer of Hillsborough Television (HTV22). Under Tammy’s guidance, HTV 22 was named the nation’s Best Government Television Station in 2004. In 2009, she was part of a group of layoffs by Hillsborough County and seized the opportunity to create her own company, Bean Productions. The company serves more than 200 clients, including Ruth Eckerd Hall and Florida Cancer Specialists.
Tammy also collaborates with her husband, actor Daniel Roebuck, and has worked on several short and independent films with him. Their projects are produced under the name Magic Bean Entertainment. Their first feature film, Getting Grace, hit theaters nationwide March 23rd. They are slated to begin principal filming of their next feature film The Hail Mary in the summer of 2018. It will be filmed in the Lehigh Valley in Pennsylvania, where they also filmed Getting Grace.
Learn more about Tammy at: IMDB