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ESPN’s Scott Van Pelt Leaves Viewers In Shock After Name-Dropping Popular Adult Website On Live TV [VIDEO]

This article was originally published on Total Pro Sports.

Scott Van Pelt with his arm out on SportsCenter
Scott Van Pelt (Photo via Twitter)

Scott Van Pelt is increasingly getting more uncensored as the years go on. Stephen A. Smith might be the face of the Worldwide Leader in Sports, but SVP is certainly more loved and liked among fans.

The popular SportsCenter anchor is the host of the midnight edition of SportsCenter. He has been doing so since 2015. When it comes to the late-night edition, almost anything goes, and anything can happen.

Usually, when he does reporting on all things sports, he gets to special segments that have nothing to do with sports. That included this week.

Scott Van Pelt Mentions Brazzers Live on His Show

Scott Van pelt in shirt and glasses
Sportscaster Scott Van Pelt ((Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)

SVP delivered yet another memorable one-liner on SportsCenter this week. His entertaining interactions with co-host Stanford Steve reached another milestone as they participated in a game show segment.

The goal of the segment was to determine which name actually refers to a television program. At one point, the segment went off the rails when four choices were presented to SVP. One of the choices was “Big Trick Energy.”

SVP first picked “Furries in a hurry” as a fake show. He was wrong. It turns out that Big Trick Energy was the real show. Van Pelt jokingly confused the cancelled show with content that appears on the adult website Brazzers.

“What is that on, Brazzers?” Scott Van Pelt said on ESPN. “What’s that even? I don’t know. I heard it was a thing.”

Big Trick Energy first premiered in 2021 and features magicians and daredevils entering the real world to shock people. The series premiered on TruTV and never made it past one season.

Unlike what he almost said on New Year’s with seeing two men kiss, his actual thoughts came out this time around.

Van Pelt is one of the longest-tenured broadcasters at ESPN with over two decades of experience.

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