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Best Story About
a Personal Tragedy
The physical and emotional pain of a miscarriage is a very personal matter,
and only those who have shared the experience can fully understand the
feelings involved. In a very moving report, Channel 19's Tricia Macke
bared her soul by interspersing her own story with tales of other women
who have suffered miscarriages. She offered new insight into an all-too-common
tragedy and allowed viewers to know her as someone who's more than just
a news anchor. While the story aired during November sweeps, Macke's classy
handling of the subject matter prevented it from seeming exploitive.
Best Exploitation
of a Personal Surgery
Channel 5's Lisa Cooney donated her kidney to a friend and subsequently
shared her story with viewers. We don't want to downplay the importance
of organ donation, but airing the story during February sweeps made Cooney's
and Channel 5's motivation seem a little suspect. It was like some sick
form of prostitution: organs for ratings. The whole thing was too self-congratulatory,
trying to show off the humanitarian side of Cooney and in turn her employer.
Best Advertisement
for a Local Restaurant
The low-budget Cactus Pear TV commercials in which the owner, Swamy (an
East Indian who also owns Mayura next door), tries to pass himself off
as Mexican. Hilarious.
Best Campaign Commercial
The Bob Bedinghaus action figures used by Todd Portune to mock his opponent.
Best Crap About
a Flush
A female custodian at the Hamilton County Courthouse sued a Cincinnati
Police officer for being a "potty Nazi." Sheila Williams accused
the officer, Charles Taber, of arresting her simply because she wouldn't
let him use a bathroom she'd closed for cleaning.
Best Saturday Night
Local TV Show
The Zone on Channel 9. It's a Christian music show with lots of "uplifting"
messages and is probably the best locally produced show we've seen in
a while, possibly because it doesn't look local.
Best Sunday Morning
Local TV Show
Hot Seat on Channel 9. The panel of regulars (Peter Bronson of The Enquirer,
Kitty Morgan of Cincinnati Magazine, Eric Kearney of The Herald and Fred
Nelson and Aaron Herzig of Civic Solutions) sounds off from all points
on the political compass. And don't miss their best feature, "What
They're Not Telling Us."
Best Springer Comparison
Without the Strippers
Sportscaster Dennis Janson tries to do the Jerry Springer thing by stirring
us up with his thoughts several nights a week on the Channel 9 news. Mostly
feel-good material, but an intelligent opinion in the midst of local news
fodder is a nice break.
Best Place to Sober
Up
The Enquirer's comics page. The dreadful Pokemon was replaced by the totally
bland James, which is not only unfunny, it's not even fun to look at.
Best Questionable
Price Hike
Saturday's Cincinnati Post went up to 75 cents. There are no new sections,
additional columns or writers: just the same ragtag Post we've been reading
for years.
Best Loss to the
Local Journalistic Community
The departure of the ever quotable, ever unpredictable Charlie Winburn,
who quit Cincinnati City Council for a post with the Ohio Civil Rights
Commission. Our council stories, and our fax machines, will never be the
same.
Best Loss to the
Hamilton County Community
Commissioner Bob Bedinghaus' defeat in November by Todd Portune, who became
the first Democrat in 36 years to win a county commission seat. Throughout
the contentious stadium-building process, from sales tax hike to Paul
Brown Stadium cost overruns, Bedinghaus was openly disdainful of the public's
role in spending their money. His arrogance - along with the Bengals'
horrible record - helped turn county residents against the stadium projects.
Best Move to Keep
the Public Ill-Informed
The decision by Clermont County Police to encrypt their scanners, thus
shutting out the public from the inner workings of the police department.
No longer can reporters, or the average Joe for that matter, listen in
on emergency calls and the general discussions of cops on the airwaves.
The move to buy the expensive encryption devices is ill-advised: Essentially,
it's spending the public's money to shut the public out. Rarely is it
a good idea for law enforcement to operate in secret.
Best Practical
Thinker
Cincinnati City Councilman Pat DeWine seems to be getting things done
in a practical, no-nonsense manner. He does it without much fanfare or
self-congratulation. A Republican on council who sees the way? We're impressed!
Best Non-Campaign
Mayor Charlie Luken seems to have already won this fall's election for
Cincinnati's first "strong mayor." He's scared off any competition
by being largely noncommittal. We're trying to figure out what's so strong
about that.
Best Friends to
Animals
Those PETA girls sure know how to sell a message. First it was "Drink
beer, not milk." Then the Lettuce Ladies showered the city with vegan
awareness during the Big Pig Gig dressed in nothing but fake lettuce covering
their, uh, buns. Most recently, Cincinnati got a glimpse of the Tiger
Lady on a rather wet and cold February day clad in black undies and a
sign covering her breasts to protest circuses that use animals.
Best Phone Forecasting
Here's the daily regime: Get up. Turn on the laptop. Make coffee. Call
the Channel 9/Cincinnati Post weatherline and listen to Jessica Jameson
purr her morning forecast like some 1-900 phone sex girl. Jameson's sultry
voice is enough to make cold fronts and overcast skies sound provocative.
Best Reason Not
to Watch the News
The "newscaster/reporter as news" trend. Pete Delkus breaks
his leg, and Channel 9 sends out a camera crew. Channel 9 does a special
report about a gunman who briefly took over its newsroom 20 years ago.
Channel 19 gives an entire segment to on-air personalities Andy Trinen
and Wendy Shaw after their wedding and honeymoon. And, as already mentioned,
Channel 5's Lisa Cooney donates a kidney as a sweeps stunt.
Best Reason Not to
Read the Paper
Newspaper industry magazine Editor & Publisher revealed the contents
of the secret 1998 settlement between The Enquirer and Chiquita, making
it clear that
to avoid costly litigation, the paper promised it would never again allow
then-editor Larry Beaupre to print anything negative about Carl Lindner,
his family or any of his companies. The paper also promised it would hunt
down anyone in its own newsroom who had copies of stolen voice mails used
in the original investigative series that blew up in The Enquirer's face,
and that it would destroy all evidence collected for the series in 2003.
Most unsettling in this debacle is that if a major local businessman can
force The Enquirer to lay off negative coverage of of his company, then
the paper could agree to do it again.
Best Motto You'll
Never See Inscribed on an Enquirer Souvenir T-Shirt
The words "craven legacy," which is how a later Editor &
Publisher editorial described The Enquirer's settlement agreement with
Chiquita Brands International.
Best Helicopter
Grounding
The retiring of the Fox 19 helicopter (due to it not being cost-effective)
couldn't be a better move for the station. It gives traffic reporter Dan
Carroll a permanent home in the studio. It's about time. Carroll is knowledgeable
and accessible with a strong sense of humor that transforms into an appealing
early morning repartee on Fox 19 in the Morning. Let's hope the copter
grounding doesn't mean he'll be benched.
Best Guilty Pleasure
The best reason to request local Channel 25 from Time Warner Cable might
be the cheesy syndicated fare like Blind Date, Sex Wars and Change of
Heart.
Best Master of
Ceremonies
Sister Jean "Cookie" Crowley, asked to be the honorary grand
marshal of the city's 2001 St. Patrick's Day parade. The Sisters of Charity
nun has spent her entire life working in local orphanages and with troubled
youth. Sister Jean comes by her Irish roots honestly: The Price Hill resident
and her family hail from County Cork, and her father founded Crowley's
Irish bar in Mount Adams.
Best Reason to
Kick Ourselves, Part 1
Letting Argosy Casino open across the border in Lawrenceburg, Ind. Thanks
to the incredible success of the riverboat gambling operation, Argosy
has fed more than $100 million in tax revenue to the tiny city (pop. 4,700).
The town's entire annual operating budget was only $3.3 million a few
years ago. Now the town is poised to build a convention center that will
steal business from us. Nice going.
Best Reason to
Kick Ourselves, Part 2
As Cincinnati struggles to provide vital services and fix delapidated
public schools, city officials are proposing to spend $1 million on improvements
at city-owned golf courses. It's questionable whether the city should
even be in the business of running golf courses, a horrendously expensive
recreational line item that serves primarily a middle class that can afford
the renovation equipment involved.
Best Reason to
Kick Ourselves, Part 3
While the city frets over how to build a convention center expansion west
across I-75 and after Nordstrom pulled out on its deal after the land
was cleared, the Regal Hotel between them remodeled. Expanding the convention
center east to the hotel/ex-Nordstrom block could have killed multiple
birds with one stone, but it's not going to happen now.
Best Reason to
Kick Paul Daugherty
Sure, he's a wonderful sportswriter, but sometimes his Enquirer news column
leaves us wondering. Like the time he totally jumped on the study that
found men and women listen differently - men using one side of the brain
while women using both - and called it an excuse for not listening. OK,
if you're a regular guy you can say that and look stupid, but if you're
a reporter, it's just unprofessional to say you don't listen well.
Best Scam Letter
to an Advice Columnist
Psychologist Jill Bley worked herself into a frenzy after a reader asked
her about a tongue-in-cheek organization called Citizens Against Breast
Feeding.
Best Scam of the
Media by the Media
WEBN, convincing The Enquirer that they were giving away $10,000 left
by a devoted listener who had recently died. The paper, never letting
the facts get in the way of a good story, jumped on the tale, even knowing
the source, WEBN staffers, are famed practical jokers.
Best Way to Alienate
Minorities
Cincinnati Police took the initiative to provide 24-hour protection for
a cross erected by the Ku Klux Klan on Fountain Square. At least one crime
victim ended up waiting for assistance, because police were busy watching
the cross.
Best Exploitation
of One's Own Child for Political Purposes
Restaurant owner Jeff Ruby refuted accusations of racism in connection
with Ujima Cinci-Bration by offering photographs of his daughter on a
date with a black youth.
Best Effort to
Extend the First Amendment to Indian Hill
The United Steelworkers took their protest to the home of the chairman
of AK Steel, only to be arrested for violating city ordinances against
soliciting. Indian Hill dropped charges after the union threatened a civil-rights
lawsuit.
Best Prediction
Likely to Come True
Channel 9 weathercaster Larry Hanley bravely prophetized, "It looks
like December will wrap up this weekend," in a weather report that
aired Friday, Dec. 29.
Best Correction
to Come Back to Haunt You
Wouldn't you think the one obituary that would get the most attention
from Enquirer editors would be the one for Jim Behr? After all, for a
quarter century, Behr was the staunchest stickler for detail and nit-picking
critic of the local paper, a reader who pointed out grammatical and factual
inaccuracies in daily phone calls. He'd even been named "honorary
editor" of The Enquirer. Yet The Enquirer was forced to print correction
upon clarification, running the obituary in its entirety not once, but
twice, to atone for all the errors. Somewhere, Jim Behr is laughing.
Best Proof Cincinnati
Has Too Many Rules
Prior to Riverfest, a celebration already laden with restrictions and
prohibitions, the Cincinnati Police Division issued a statement reminding
the public that no "liquid beverages" are allowed, finally closing
the loophole that had allowed so many non-liquid beverages into the party.
Best Indicator
Some Activists Have Too Much Free Time
PETA warned pet-owners that Riverfest fireworks can frighten cats and
dogs, urging residents to keep pets inside, close the windows and "turn
on a radio or TV to drown out the noise."
Best Way to Make
Cops Look Stupid
When a grand jury indicted two Cincinnati Police officers in the death
of a suspect, Keith Fangman, president of the Fraternal Order of Police,
said, "We no longer know the meaning of 'assault.' "
Best Street Theater
The Anarchist Cheerleaders who chanted revolutionary rants during protests
against the TransAtlantic Business Dialogue in November. There's nothing
like hippy chicks in short skirts performing rhymed vulgarities as police
in riot gear glare menacingly.
Best Evidence Grassroots
Activism Is Alive in Cincinnati
The protests against the TransAtlantic Business Dialogue (TABD) conference.
The Coalition for a Humane Economy, a group cobbled together by like-minded
social justice organizations in Greater Cincinnati, hosted teach-ins to
educate people on globalization and the WTO. The Independent Media Center
set up a mechanism for people to record and report on issues surrounding
the TABD meeting. Protesters used creative tactics to get their message
heard in downtown Cincinnati. Even the mainstream media played along,
providing surprisingly even-handed coverage of the activists' issues.
Best Evidence Cincinnati
Police Don't Get It
The police didn't quite play along with the anti-TABD activists, however.
About 50 protesters were arrested, most of them during the weekend's final
march, which, ironically, was against police brutality. About half of
those arrested pled no contest to get out of jail, but of the half that
requested a trial, not a single person was convicted in court. Three lawsuits
have now been filed against the city for false arrests. And, on top of
that, the police sent Coalition for a Humane Economy (CHE) a bill for
$16,000 for providing a police presence. CHE has refused to pay.
Best Evidence Some
of the Media Don't Get It
Of all the inaccurate reporting during the TABD conference and the protests
surrounding it, Channel 19 takes the cake. They stated in one newscast
that the protesters didn't know what they were protesting. This was based
on comments from one interview, which hardly counts as fair and accurate
reporting on a topic as global as the TABD. For every person who didn't
understand the events going on around them, there were hundreds upon hundreds
of others, braving cold weather and terrifying cops, who knew exactly
the issues in question.
Best Evidence There
Are Smart, Cultured People in Cincinnati
WAIF celebrated its 25th anniversary as Cincinnati's community radio station
and even leaked word that it might be moving soon to new studios. Congratulations,
Stepchild Radio!
Best Familiar Voice
on a Public Station, Part 1
Brian O'Donnell, affectionately known as Brian O'D, maintained his presence
Saturday mornings on WNKU, even though he cut back his day by a few hours.
And he still does weekdays spinning the Classical hits on WGUC.
Best Familiar Voice
on a Public Station, Part 2
It's great to hear Niki Dakota (Niki Buehrig) back on the air doing evenings
and weekends on WNKU. One of the area's better singer-songwriters, she'd
left town a few years ago as musicians tend to do, but now she's back.
And, to their credit, WNKU has gotten her alter ego back on the air. Her
smooth delivery, quirky sense of humor and obvious love of the Alt Country/Folk
she plays are infectious.
Best Familiar Voice
on a Public Station, Part 3
Every now and then, during a WVXU fundraiser, for instance, you'll catch
a snippet of Ron Esposito's velvet fog voice and remember the halcyon
days when he used to emcee the station's Audiosyncracies program. Ron's
still active in town playing in bands and promoting concerts, but we miss
his voice in the afternoons. Come back, Ron!
Best Reason to
Wish Bill Cunningham Was Back in His Time Slot
His successor on the WLW night shift, J.R. Gach, is - if you can believe
it - even more of a nutcase than Sick Willie. Most recently, he characterized
the Japanese sailors killed by a U.S. submarine as "yellow monkeys."
Gach makes hate-monger Cunningham resemble a Nobel Peace Prize candidate.
Best Substitute
for Napster
One of the true measures of a great radio station has been whether a three-song
series sounds like it came right off one of your mix tapes. 97X comes
the closest to pulling that trick off on an hourly basis. And if you can't
grab the Oxford signal, listening to the station's Web broadcast (www.woxy.com)
works great.
Best Kept Secret
The name of the Cincinnati family that just dropped a cool million bucks
into the creationist museum being built by the Answers in Genesis group
in Florence. The $14-million Creation Museum and Family Discovery Center
will open in 2002. The Answers in Genesis group holds the account of the
creation in Genesis literally and dates the Earth to about 10,000 years
old. Next door, look for the Earth Is Flat and Christopher Columbus Is
a Fraud Museum, scheduled to open in 2003.
Best Job Switch,
Win-Win Situation
Thom Collins, curator of contemporary art at the Cincinnati Art Museum,
took the job of senior curator at the Contemporary Arts Center. Under
the deal, the city doesn't lose one of its premier contemporary art experts,
and the CAC gains some new vision as it ramps up construction of its new
facility.
Best Job Switch,
Lose-Lose Situation
Former Enquirer Editor Larry Beaupre took the managing editor's job at
the Scranton (Pa.) Times. Beaupre couldn't land a job for more than a
year after being ousted from The Enquirer and its parent company, Gannett,
over the Chiquita mess. But having to take a job in Scranton is the new
definition of living in media ignominy.
Best Example of
Absurd Logic
The president of the Greater Cincinnati Health Council warned, in a recent
Enquirer guest column, that local hospitals will be forced to reduce free
medical care to the poor in the wake of recent financial losses. Consider
this: There are no "for-profit" hospitals in Greater Cincinnati.
Every single hospital enjoys tax-exempt status as a "non-profit"
institution, which means they're charitable institutions that are required
to serve the indigent in exchange for their precious tax-exempt status.
The Council implied this mission is optional and that free care can somehow
be reduced at will. The day that happens, maybe Bethesda, Mercy and Christ
can begin paying their taxes. Just like Humana and other corporately owned
hospitals. And just like the rest of us.
Best Mad Dreamer
Jungle Jim's owner, Jim Bonaminio, bought an extra two acres of land from
the city of Fairfield so he can install the monorail system he purchased
from Paramount's Kings Island. Bonaminio dreams of a Jungle Jim theme
park around his giant grocery, which will include a Desert Storm military
restaurant. Look for the monorail to go on line this summer.
Best Candidate
to Hold a Supporting Role in a Scandal
The newly formed Port Authority. Think New York City docks. Think Jersey.
Think On the Waterfront. Then think about how this "public"
agency trusted with coordinating all future riverfront development tried
to hold powwows behind closed doors. The Authority failed to notify the
public and media of scheduled meetings to the point of holding board meetings
in an inaccessible 29th floor executive suite of Cinergy Corp.
Best Names We're
Sick and Tired of Hearing
Kate Pahls and Rodger Bingham. Pahls is the Mariemont woman who was one
of 10 contestants on ABC's The Mole reality game show; Bingham of Crittenden,
Ky., was a member of the CBS Survivor II team. No offense, but if we never
read a fawning interview or see your scantily clad photograph in The Enquirer
and The Post again, we could - if you'll excuse the expression - survive
just fine.
Best Overlooked
Accomplishment
The Fort Washington Way project. Yes, it was a royal pain to commuters.
But the massive $314 million construction job came in relatively on time
and on budget, with minimal man hours lost to accidents. In an era of
outrageous cost overruns for stadiums and other massive public projects,
the city transportation director, John Deatrick, and project manager,
Fred Craig, deserve a hand.
Best Lawsuit by
a Disgruntled Media Type
You wouldn't think this category would have much competition, but it does.
Cases in point: Anchor Norma Rashid suing Channel 5. Ex-Enquirer Editor
Larry Beaupre suing his former paper. Even Pat Minarcin, the television
anchorman who blew the lid off the Donald Harvey murders at Drake, suing
his TV station in Baltimore. Next thing you know, a certain Best of Cincinnati
editor might have to sue his bosses for a better office with a view of
Fountain Square. Hint, hint.
Best Political
Prosecution
The case against Dr. Jonathan Tobias, assistant coroner at the Hamilton
County Morgue who was indicted with photographer Thomas Condon. It turns
out the county prosecutor, after saying Condon's photos of dead bodies
were the most shocking thing he'd seen in 25 years of law enforcement,
offered Condon a plea bargain to testify against Tobias. Clearly it's
more important to convict the coroner office's scapegoat than to prosecute
a "shocking" photographer.
Best Mike Brown
Imitation
Cincinnati Bell threatened to move its headquarters out of downtown unless
the city provides a solution to parking shortages. Operating the bus system
apparently doesn't count.
Best Hope for Ending
Corruption in Butler County
Prosecutor John Holcomb died.
Best Insult at
a City Council Meeting
The two men who seem to delight in disrupting the meetings by calling
Mayor Charlie Luken a "punk faggot."
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