
She and her husband paired to make the independent film A Plumm Summer. Guerrero occasionally writes a blog for the Los Angeles Times sports section and the Huffington Post. Guerrero also became the co-host of VH1's game show The World Series of Pop Culture. On June 15, 2006, Guerrero became a correspondent on the TV newsmagazine Inside Edition. Guerrero left the Monday Night Football team after one season and the ratings dropped to lower than before she arrived. She said that she never would have taken the job if she had known that they would change their minds.

The show hired her with the intention of going in a totally different direction with the job of sideline reporter - personality-driven and feature-driven - then discarded all of that and told her to just do the job in the usual fashion. Her performance on the broadcast was heavily criticized. In 2003, she left The Best Damn Sports Show Period to join ABC's Monday Night Football television crew. She also co-hosted The Best Damn Sports Show Period, alongside Tom Arnold and Michael Irvin, among others. Guerrero also starred in the San Diego Chargers magazine-style television show. She travelled to Egypt to tape the special Opening the Tombs of the Golden Mummies. In 1999, she moved to the Fox Network, where she participated in such shows as Sports Geniuses, Fox Overtime, Fox Extra Innings and the Toughman competition shows.

In 1997, she became a sports anchor on Los Angeles' KCBS-TV and later KTTV. She also guest-starred in Frasier (the 'Odd Man Out' and 'Frasier's Imaginary Friend' episodes), George Lopez and In the Heat of the Night. In the 1990s, she starred in Aaron Spelling's Sunset Beach as the scheming Francesca Vargas. Guerrero began her show-business career in the 1980s as a cheerleader for the Los Angeles Rams, after which she became Entertainment Director for the Atlanta Falcons and New England Patriots. To cope with the loss, her father enrolled her in theater therapy.Ĭareer Early career and acting roles In 1972, when Lisa was aged eight, her mother died of cancer. Guerrero spent her childhood living in San Diego and Huntington Beach, California. Guerrero was born in Chicago, Illinois, the daughter of Walter Coles, an American of English descent, and Lucy Guerrero, who was from Chile.
