News

Brambleton spotlights cornhole fun in Fox 5 DC segment

FOX 5 DC put Brambleton cornhole on air with Kim Adams, turning a neighborhood game into a visible part of the community’s summer push.

Tanya Okafor··2 min read
Published
Listen to this article0:00 min
Brambleton spotlights cornhole fun in Fox 5 DC segment
AI-generated illustration

FOX 5 DC’s Cornhole Fun in Brambleton, VA! segment put Brambleton Vice President of Marketing Kim Adams on camera and carried the game into a wider Washington-area audience. The video post went up on June 29, 2026, two days after FOX 5 DC’s Zip Trip stop in Brambleton at 22875 Brambleton Plaza in Ashburn.

That setting matters because Brambleton has built itself as more than a housing development. The community, in Loudoun County and near Washington, D.C., says its history dates back to 2001. It describes Brambleton Town Center as a social hub with restaurants, shopping, movies, a health club, a library and events such as concerts and festivals, the kind of backdrop that makes a casual cornhole feature feel like part of the neighborhood’s regular rhythm rather than a one-off promotion.

Brambleton also leans hard into the kind of amenities that keep people outside and in motion. The community says it has more than 20 miles of trails and four pool complexes, and it said more than 490 homes were sold there in 2024. That scale gives a TV segment like this a built-in audience, especially in a place that markets itself as walkable, accessible and friendly.

For cornhole, the exposure fits a larger growth pattern. The American Cornhole Organization says it was established in 2005 by Frank Geers, part of the push to standardize the sport’s rules and equipment as the game moved beyond tailgates and backyards. ESPN has described cornhole as more than a backyard pastime, a social activity that can turn strangers into friends, and Brambleton’s TV spot played directly into that lane.

The result was not a bracket result or a title shot, but it still served the sport. Corhole kept its place in the public eye as a recurring neighborhood activity, the kind that can feed local leagues, fundraisers and casual play long before it reaches a championship stage. In Brambleton, that pipeline looked less like a tournament and more like a community habit taking shape on television.

This article was produced by Prism’s automated news system from verified source data, official records, and press releases, then run through automated quality and moderation checks before publishing. The system is built and supervised by the people who set the standards it runs under. Read our full AI policy.

Did this article answer your question?

Discussion

More Cornhole News