Meet the Anglers: Brandon Coulter

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Bass Pro Angler Brandon Coulter

Major League Fishing

Brandon Coulter

Knoxville, Tennessee

One of a small group of anglers who have competed in Major League Fishing, the Bass Pro Tour, the FLW Tour, and the Bassmaster Elite Series, Coulter has collected nine Top 10s and more than 10 Top 20s in his professional career. In 2019, he won the Challenge Select Cup event on Lake Champlain.

FUN FACT

Coulter enjoys bowhunting and spending time with his children in his spare time.

Career Wins4
Top 10s10
Top 20s16
REDCREST Appearances1
Career Winnings$753,828

Rural Lifestyle & Entertainment Shows
The internationally-known “King of Polka,” 18-time Grammy award winner for “Best Polka Album,” and bandleader of arguably the most popular polka band in America—Jimmy Sturr—is taking to the stage for another slate of shows made for his fans and polka lovers across the country.
Filmed in front of a live audience at the historic Lyric Theatre in Lexington, Kentucky, “WoodSongs Old-Time Radio Hour” features an eclectic array of popular artists from genres of folk, blues, country, jazz, new-age, and rock.
When it comes to truck and tractor pulling, the National Tractor Pullers Association (NTPA) is a world leader as well as the sport’s oldest and most respected entity when it comes to premier competition. They host more than 280 sessions of pulling action throughout the U.S. and Canada.
Hosted by Emmy Award-winning journalist Tanji Patton, “Goodtaste with Tanji” focuses on chefs and popular dishes from restaurants across the culinary spectrum, along with wines, cocktails, and spirits, too. As a travelogue, the show visits restaurants, diners, and eateries across the Lone Star State in fun and adventurous settings, plus the program occasionally travels to neighboring states like Louisiana and New Mexico. In addition, the show educates viewers on wine pairings and value buys available in current wine trends.
Each week, “Rural Heritage” on RFD-TV treats its viewers to stories of farmers borrowing from yesterday to do the work of today. Using hand tools, natural farming methods and draft animal power, these men and women successfully compete with their neighbors who instead employ large, expensive modern machinery and rely on chemical fertilizers and insecticides to grow their crops.