Brian Colleran
11.1K posts

Brian Colleran
@BrianMyNBC5
Evening Anchor at @MyNBC5 Long Island native, @UofMaryland grad, husband and father of two. Links and RTs are not endorsements. Opinions are my own.

Who remembers ESPN The Magazine? It was one of my favs back in the day!



The Red Wedding in Game of Thrones was a pleasant night out compared to the Red Wedding in Alligator (1980). My dad rented this as a family film 🤣😂 Despite its rubberiness, it holds up ridiculously well. The 80s had some brilliant creature features

Kresge Announces Departure as Head Coach of Vermont Women’s Basketball - go.uvm.edu/ak11 #LetsRally


Some of the best who've ever done it. #themasters

Statement from the PGA of America


Three weeks after publicly discussing his PTSD diagnosis in the wake of brain surgery, Gary Woodland leads @TCHouOpen by six shots to the final nine. It's a reminder that anything is possible ⬇️ Amidst a successful TOUR career that counts the 2019 U.S. Open at Pebble Beach among four titles, Woodland took a competitive leave in summer 2023 and underwent surgery to remove a tumor that pushed on the part of brain controlling fear and anxiety. Woodland returned to competition in early 2024, and this marks his third full season back, but the road has been uneven. He has battled symptoms of PTSD while battling to regain elite form. During one round at the Procore Championship, a walking scorer startled him by standing closer than he might have liked, and suddenly his eyesight became blurry and he couldn't remember what he was doing. He eventually chose to go public with his PTSD diagnosis, which he received roughly a year ago, to hopefully free himself from the exhausting effort of pretending everything is fine, and also to help others. “I can’t waste energy anymore hiding this, and I’m blessed with a lot of support out here on the TOUR,” Woodland told Golf Channel after revealing the diagnosis. "I appreciate that love and support. But inside, I feel like I’m dying, and I feel like I’m living a lie. “I want to live my dreams and be successful out here,” he continued. “But I want to help people, too. I realize now I’ve got to help myself first – and hopefully this is the first step in doing that.” Since revealing his PTSD diagnosis, Woodland has seen an immediate uptick in results, leading to his virtuoso performance so far at Houston's Memorial Park. He's nine holes away from one of the more emotional (and popular) victories in recent memory.



