February 26, 200718 yr ^^I'm a UC fan, but I understand your point melanie. I am also often perturbed by the fact that the Enquirer does nothing more than cover the typical sports. Barely a mention of the Big East Champion UC Men's Soccer Team....or the unbelievable recruiting classes UC womens Bball has gotten the past two years and so on. They do cover what they think people want to hear...instead of taking the initiative and doing what they feel is a good story to cover. They wait for others to take the risk first, and then follow suit.
February 26, 200718 yr That's a problem with all journalism, not just the Enquirer. They have to appeal to as many people as possible and answer to advertisers. Just be glad that we live in a time where any bit of information is available (via internet). But to be honest, I think UC deserves priority simply because they have more sports and the politics are more complex. Xavier is a small private school and it doesn't have as many sports fans. They don't even have a football team. It kinda disturbs me how popular sports are. I was watching gladiator last night and saw them throw bread at peasants in the bleachers of the coliseums. They were all cheering, the same way fans do when they throw t-shirts at everybody during the games. Instead of seeing people get mauled by lions, we watch modern college and pro sports and reality shows and it distracts us from whats really going on in the world.
February 28, 200718 yr David - bear in mind that the striking similarity you noticed is likely so striking because the movie based the fan behavior on how our fans behave, if I had to guess...the point about the occasional creepiness of sports stands - but I wouldn't read too much into the bread scene...
March 1, 200718 yr >That's a problem with all journalism, not just the Enquirer. They have to appeal to as many people as possible and answer to advertisers. Just be glad that we live in a time where any bit of information is available (via internet). There is still a wide gap between newspaper journalists and TV or radio. If you're lucky a local newspaper will have about 5 staffers who are more or less the most knowledgeable people in the area about the area. As an example I'll give former Plain Dealer columnist Tom Suddes, who now teaches at OU and is probably the single most knowledgeable person alive when it comes to Ohio state politics and the political goings-on in northern Ohio for the past 30 years. Meanwhile there's no chance such a person exists at a TV newsroom because the days when TV reporters were former newspaper reporters is long over. The local and nation TV news broadcasts are in the business of creating an emotion through sight and sound, plain and simple. It's a "we care" and "you're part of something when you watch this channel" emotion mixed with a "we're authoritative" element since after all it's TV. Sure, two dozen people on this forum are more knowledgeable about things around the state than the people paid to report on it, but we're not on TV. TV = authority. In Cincinnati I'd say somewhat ironically the exceptions to the poor reporting are the longtime TV sports guys like Dennis Jansen, John Popovich, and Ken Broo. In fact the amount of knowledge and skill in finding an angle the top sports writers have goes well beyond the average general assignment reporter. Andy Furman? Alan Cutler? Marty Brennaman? Ridiculously knowledgeable people, each well beyond any name that comes to mind for local general news reporting.
April 17, 200718 yr I came across this article from Seattle. They have two papers operating under a JOA similar to the Enquirer and Post. Think this could happen here?? P-I, Times settle JOA litigation By DAN RICHMAN AND BRAD WONG P-I REPORTERS Seattle will remain a two-newspaper town, at least for now. The four-year legal dispute between the Hearst Corp., the publisher of the Seattle P-I, and The Seattle Times Co. has been settled, the companies announced early Monday. Related content - Previous JOA coverage Under the settlement, announced on the day the two sides were expected to begin binding arbitration, Hearst will drop all legal claims against the Times Co. It will also give up a portion of future profits it had stood to receive if it folded the P-I, in exchange for a $49 million payment from the Times Co. P-I reporter Dan Richman can be reached at 206-448-8032 or [email protected].
April 17, 200718 yr I actually think the Enquirer is doing a good job lately of being positive about the city.
April 17, 200718 yr The positive stories are around, but they are much much smaller and less noticeable than the negative ones they love to publish. Another key point is that they continue to publish almost all negative 'letters to the editor'. I asked why my transit letter was not published, and I got an unsatisfying response to say the least. But they don't hesitate to publish that moron who thinks that any kind of government = communism and an ultimate dictatorship. They publish the morons, but they don't like to use well thought out comments (most of the time). They definitely have a LOOOOONG ways to go!
April 25, 200718 yr Not what you were expecting?? :-D I took this at my friend's wedding reception at the Belle Mead Plantation in Nashville this fall. Apparently John McLean, publisher of the Cincinnati Enquirer in the late 1800's, owned a racehorse by the same name that was stabled there. <img src="http://farm1.static.flickr.com/174/472061845_8dcc98af0c.jpg?v=0"> As a special bonus I give you a living animal - my dog - enjoying the skyline <img src="http://farm1.static.flickr.com/213/472061847_904e20bacc.jpg?v=0">
April 29, 200718 yr Nothing like stroking your own ego... A new Enquirer BY TOM CALLINAN, [email protected] April 29, 2007 These days some of the biggest news is about the change traditional newspapers are facing as new media sources emerge to meet the changing needs and tastes of news and information audiences. Gannett, The Enquirer's parent company, is widely regarded as leading the industry in that change with a concept called the Local Information Center. And The Enquirer team has been involved with, and is a leader in, many of Gannett's plans. In the past, newsrooms tended to be set up for a once-a-day printed newspaper, a model out of line with modern social and readership trends. The Local Information Center is a 24-hour-a-day, seven-day-a-week approach that uses new technologies and techniques to gather the news and get it back to you through whatever form of delivery you may want. David Wells is The Enquirer's Community Conversation editor.
April 30, 200718 yr "Talking with the readers - most important listening to the readers' reactions - is a key part of the philosophy of the Local Information Center." They NEVER talk with their readers in their blogs. They post the topic and then completely leave the conversation. I expected there to be more comments at the bottom of that story's page, but there were only about a dozen last time I checked. And only one or two could be considered positive.
July 27, 200717 yr Why doesn't the Enquirer's website offer any translation options for other languages...particularly Spanish?
July 28, 200717 yr Just another example of the Cincinnati enquirer's BS headline misrepresentation, I called the complaint department about these, its my latest pet peeves, :-D :yap:... I have lived in the CBD for 4 years, Main St and/or 8th St. & have never experienced a power outage of anykind whatsoever, rain, snow, sleet or hail, summer, winter, spring or fall!! Two blocks doesn't constitute downtowwn!! Explosion darkens downtown THE ENQUIRER E-mail | Print | digg us! | del.icio.us!  No one was injured in an underground explosion on Vine Street downtown about 9:20 p.m. Tuesday. Officials on the scene weren’t sure what caused the explosion, but they said it was probably electrical in nature. The only visible damage was a shattered potted plant on Vine Street near National City Bank, between Third and Fourth streets.  document.write('');  A small utility lid was blown off and street lights for several blocks were out. Duke Energy sent a crew to the scene and traffic was shut down on Vine. "WRONG TURN, RIGHT INTO LAKE,,, WTF... The word lake isn't used in the story, only the headline!! I'm thinking an actual lake, Ceaser creek, Deer creek, Eastfork, etc etc.. NO, its a pond!!! yeah there is an actual difference. And the word 'pond' is used 7 times!! :|" Wrong turn, right into lake BY AMANDA VAN BENSCHOTEN | [email protected]E-mail | Print | digg us! | del.icio.us!  BOONE COUNTY - Nobody was injured when a car ended up in a pond in southern Boone County this morning, though it did give neighbors and emergency officials a scare. The vehicle was discovered around 8:10 a.m. in a 10-foot-deep pond off Klotz Lane, a private drive in the 8000 block of Camp Ernst Road. Suzanne Sherwood, 53, of Camp Ernst Road, spotted the vehicle and called her neighbor, Todd Moore, 34, who owns the property and pond. Then she called 911. Moore ran out of his house and dove into the pond, said Boone County Sheriff's Spokesman Tom Scheben.   Sheriff's deputies Chris Combs and B.T. Pickett also jumped into the pond when they arrived on the scene, searching for possible trapped occupants of the car. Police later learned that the teenage driver of the car, 16-year-old Erin Torbeck of Burlington, had managed to get out of the vehicle before it ran into the pond. Torbeck, who had been on an overnight camping trip with friends nearby, left in the morning for her babysitting job. She drove across a field, up a slight embankment, across Klotz Lane and into the pond, Scheben said. He said she managed to get out of the vehicle before it became submerged, then walked back to the campsite and asked a friend to take her to work. None of the campers contacted police about the incident. It is still under investigation, but Scheben said a preliminary investigation indicates Torbeck was simply unfamilar with the area. "I apologize for the rant, but its frustrating that my city/our city has such an amateur newspaper" "using the word amateur loosely" :laugh:
July 28, 200717 yr Oh yeah.. when I called (513) 768-8299, to complain, the lady admitted that the story about 'Explosion darkens downtown' was over-exaggerated!! Contact The Enquirer The Cincinnati Enquirer 312 Elm Street Cincinnati, OH 45202 Click here to contact The Post ENQUIRER CUSTOMER SERVICE (513) 721-2700 CINCINNATI.COM CUSTOMER SERVICE (513) 768-8420 ENQUIRER HUMAN RESOURCES (513) 768-8200 CIRCULATION Missed Delivery (513) 651-4500 Home Delivery (513) 651-4500 Single Copy Sales (513) 768-8153 ADVERTISING Display Advertising (513) 768-8220 Legal Advertising (513) 768-8184 Classified Advertising (513) 421-6300 PRESIDENT AND PUBLISHER Margaret E. Buchanan (513) 768-8094 OPERATING COMMITTEE Advertising Vice President: Carol Hahn (513) 768-8201 Assistant to Publisher: Marianne Navin (513) 768-8094 Circulation Vice President: Gary J. DiSanto (513) 768-8126 Finance Vice President: Mary Devish (513) 768-8007 Human Resources Vice President: Keith Bulling (513) 768-8213 Kentucky General Manager: Dennis Hetzel (859) 578-5518 Market Development Vice President: Steve Simpson (513) 768-8621 Editor/Content & Audience Development Vice President: Thomas E. Callinan (513) 768-8551 New Media Vice President: James C. Jackson (513) 768-8245 Production Vice President: David E. Preisser (513) 369-3500 Information Technology Vice President: Terri J. Hovey-Randell (513) 768-8043 NEWS Report Errors or Comment (513) 768-8299 Executive Editor: Hollis Towns (513) 768-8311 Deputy Managing Editor: Julie Engebrecht (513) 768-8147 Business Assistant Managing Editor: Carolyn Pione (513) 768-8373 Kentucky Enquirer Assistant Managing Editor: Dianne Gebhardt-French (859) 578-5566 Editorial Page Editor: David Wells (513) 768-8310 Photography: Liz Dufour (513) 768-8401 Photo Reprints: Robin Buchanan (513) 768-8308 Sports Editor: Josh Pichler (513) 768-8437 Features Assistant Managing Editor: Bill Cieslewicz (513) 768-8398 Online Assistant Managing Editor: Chris Graves (513) 768-8370
July 29, 200717 yr The Enquirers idea of interactivity: http://news.enquirer.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070726/CINCI/307260049
July 29, 200717 yr WOW!... Difficult to keep up with that multitasking interactive exercise. :roll: I would be more worried about keeping the 12 pack out of the same bag as the chips & sandwich buns, than the few $'s I might save. The enquirer @ its best. :cry:
July 29, 200717 yr HAHAHA I had fun just scanning in the items and hearing it make all those sounds. It's amazing the shopping bag can hold so much. Like the refrigerator pack of coke. And the now-squished bread.
July 30, 200717 yr The Enquirer is owned by the Gannett Company, originally of Rochester, NY and now headquartered in Northern Virginia. Their biggest newspaper is USA Today, but they also own a number of city papers throughout the country, including The Indianapolis Star, The Courier-Journal (Louisville), and The Arizona Republic (Phoenix). They also own a number of local television stations as well. It's always been a bit of a mystery as to why The Enquirer takes such a conspicuously anti-city, anti-downtown stance. The most egregious example of this was their "comparison" some months back between Cincinnati's dead downtown and Indianapolis' thriving downtown. The biggest difference between the two, The Enquirer noted, was that Indianapolis had nearly 20,000 downtown residents. The Enquirer did mention somewhere in the middle of the article that The Enquirer was taking each city's definition of their downtown as the areas of comparison, and therefore they were comparing a 0.8 square mile in Cincinnati with a 3.5 square mile section of Indianapolis. Why this didn't strike the editors as a strange method of comparison, I don't know. I wouldn't be surprised that the reason the newspaper business is slipping is because newspapers are owned by these faceless corporations that have no interest in the municipalities they serve except to draw revenue from advertisements. There is a huge disconnect between what these type of publishers expect to get out of the paper and what the readership expects to get out. The fact that they have become a natural monopoly doesn't help anyone. In between these two groups lie the professional reporters/editors, who dream of the days of The Front Page and attempt to live their dreams of influence through the limited opportunities that exist in the newspaper world. The Enquirer, for some reason, seems to have become a backwater that catches the pettiest and most bitter of these people.
July 30, 200717 yr The problem is that you need A's to get into the "good" journalism schools and people who got a lot of A's in high school tend not to have strong opinions, be scrappy, be from a poor background, etc. Instead you get a lot of either kiss-up kind of people who are good at creating social conflaggerations in the newsroom or you get mice. The funniest is when one of these big-city papers decides to cover some "hip" item because the staff can't handle it. In Columbus there is a weekly feature in the alternative paper called "Night Moves" where they review bars and it's glaringly obvious the writer never, you know, went to bars before she got this assignment. On one hand these smaller alternative papers are much better positioned to pounce in a lot of ways but because their staffs are so small everything comes down to one or two writers. But it's still generally the case that a traditional resume gets someone in the door at one of those places, and if you have a really impressive journalism resume at age 22 it means instead of working summers doing roofing or loading trucks you were in air-conditioned internships with people who typically also had followed a well-trodden path toward a journalism career.
July 30, 200717 yr The problem is that you need A's to get into the "good" journalism schools and people who got a lot of A's in high school tend not to have strong opinions, be scrappy, be from a poor background, etc. Instead you get a lot of either kiss-up kind of people who are good at creating social conflaggerations in the newsroom or you get mice. I think that is the stupidest thing I've ever seen you post.
July 30, 200717 yr ^I have to agree with C-Dawg and jmeck on this one. I'm not trying to insult anyone, but honestly, I don't understand what on earth a journalism school is for. At least if you are simply trying to be a newspaper reporter. Six months on the job should be all the experience one needs. When I graduated from college in the winter of 2000 and came back to Cincinnati, I called a guy my dad knew who worked at The Enquirer to see if there was a possibility to get a job there. He said that basically they would never hire me without either first having gone to journalism school or having worked at one of those Community Presses, like the Eastern Hills Journal. I had made the call because it sounded like it might be fun and I actually enjoy copy-editing. I wasn't set on being a journalist for a career, I hadn't done anything yet with my life but go to school. But it seemed a bit ridiculous to me that people I had graduated with would be quickly snapped up by big New York investment banking firms or government agencies like the NSA or CIA but I wasn't qualified to watch a trial and write what happened, after which I might ask a few people some questions. Ridiculous. It reminds me of a quote I once read from some old Irish journalist at The New York Times in the eighties, "Did you ever notice how everyone here graduated from Harvard, Columbia and Mount St. Mary's College in Maryland?"
July 30, 200717 yr I'm not arguing that journalism school is of any use, or that it produces better journalists - my guess would be just the opposite. But the assertion that "people who got a lot of A's in high school tend not to have strong opinions, be scrappy, be from a poor background, etc." is just utter nonsense.
July 30, 200717 yr >conflaggerations Could have used some copy editing on this post. But not as bad as a piece I read somewhere recently by the managing editor of a paper that read "for all intensive purposes", probably the action of a copy editor. >And it's also funny that OU's newspaper, The Post, is actually sh!ttier than a lot of the other university newspapers in Ohio. Well what's really funny is that they spent all that money moving the The Post and everyone out of the old Baker Center into the new one, thinking something was going to improve. It still depends entirely on individuals and the way they work together. The place opened in January 2007 and they actually built a darkroom in the Post's office. The last person stopped using film two years ago and yet because it's a huge university project that little detail got pushed through. Also I heard a rumor of someone on the Post's staff (a staunch Democrat, btw) "going home" with Ashley Herzog a year or two ago, but I can't offer any details. >ournalists - my guess would be just the opposite. But the assertion that "people who got a lot of A's in high school tend not to have strong opinions, be scrappy, be from a poor background, etc." is just utter nonsense. Getting A's and being intellectually curious, observant, and willing to act on ideas are completely unrelated things, although university mission statements and teaching statements would like you to believe otherwise. >reminds me of a quote I once read from some old Irish journalist at The New York Times in the eighties, "Did you ever notice how everyone here graduated from Harvard, Columbia and Mount St. Mary's College in Maryland?" I was at a party in Boston one time where one of my friends ran into a girl he went to Cornell with who declared she was working for the Boston Globe (she was about 23). When prodded she confessed she was working out of the Worcester office and because I'm from here and I'm used to people being self-deprecating I joking asked how the craft show beat was going. She went bonkers coming back at me with the whole "what have you done?" thing and she ended up leaving about ten minutes later. But that's sort of my point and the point of a lot of others, that these people get into journalism out of feelings of inferiority and place it so centrally in how they view themselves that they balance their whole self-image on how people view what they do. And on one hand journalism is pretty cool in that you get to see a lot of stuff, but on the other hand you're not really getting your hands in it so don't pretend like you are. That said it does have its moments. Next week I'm taking photos of Weird Al, which is going to rule!
July 30, 200717 yr >ournalists - my guess would be just the opposite. But the assertion that "people who got a lot of A's in high school tend not to have strong opinions, be scrappy, be from a poor background, etc." is just utter nonsense. Getting A's and being intellectually curious, observant, and willing to act on ideas are completely unrelated things, although university mission statements and teaching statements would like you to believe otherwise. Thank you for agreeing with me. Getting A's and being intellectually curious, observant and willing to act on ideas are not related. As opposed to what you said, which was that they are inversely related - you said "people who got a lot of A's in high school tend not to have strong opinions, be scrappy, be from a poor background, etc." And that's just dumb. You were right the second time - getting A's doesn't tell you anything about whether a person is scrappy has strong opinions.
July 30, 200717 yr Journalism shouldn't even be a major. And broadcasting has very little to do wtih writing/editing the news. You all take dumb electives that don't have to do with anything.
July 31, 200717 yr >Journalism shouldn't even be a major. And broadcasting has very little to do wtih writing/editing the news. You all take dumb electives that don't have to do with anything. What I never understood at OU was how so few people from Scripps paid The Post much attention, it's not like it was very competitive to work at The Post or the other papers in town. A lot of people had this attitude that summer internships and good grades were enough, but that really illustrates the problem with journalism as a major and the whole cult of internships. Then there's the Viscom department, which has this whole beef with The Post after it broke the Larry Nighswander case back in '02 or '03. To this day you run into people saying the girl made up the whole story...whatever. I heard a bunch of other crap on that story so even if she was making it completely up there were still other incidents with other girls. I think Nighswander's photography is totally cliche and it was unbelievable watching all these 18 and 19 year-olds worship the guy. People are like...he worked at National Geographic...well you know I think National Geographic is pretty lame too. Their writing is typically bad and the photography is inconsistent. I personally have a ton of beef with mainstream photojournalism and it's unlikely I'll ever pursue a job at a bigger paper like the Enquirer or Dispatch just because I can't stand the type of images that they more or less force you to take. Tabloids and magazines use visuals a lot more interesting and effective way, mainstream papers are totally uptight when it comes to their visuals, they end up illustrating nothing you don't know already.
August 5, 200717 yr >The chick's a typical Ann Coulter-styled hypocrite. She criticizes women for being "slutty", and is brutal on any group fighting for women's rights. Deep down, Herzog is probably the slut, and if anyone needs health insurance to cover birth control or Valtrex, it's likely to be her. It's deeply disturbing how much she actually looks like Coulter. Last night I was looking at some people's profiles on The Facebook and on one of them Ashley Herzog's mug appeared in the "friends" section. Really, if anything this illustrates why people shouldn't post so many photos of themselves online! A Delta Zeta. I should have known... I'm pretty sure this is near the bathrooms in The Blue Gator...
August 5, 200717 yr At UC, Tri-Delt is known for being the sluttiest sorority. They say if you can't get laid," try delt" :D Ann Coulter is way better looking than her though. But I will admit she has a nice body.
August 5, 200717 yr Jesus. I'm glad we're discussing the Cincinnati Enquirer, and not personally attacking individuals and groups as being sluts. I'm sure any tri-delts reading this thread are just THRILLED to watch us opine on their morals and behavior. Sheesh.
August 30, 200717 yr Too Tough for The Enquirer? Aggressive business reporter gets canned BY LEW MOORES | CITY BEAT August 29, 2007 Jim McNair, an award-winning business reporter at The Cincinnati Enquirer, was summoned to the human resources office at the paper Aug. 16 and fired. Blogs blazed with the news within days. NewsAche, a local blog devoted entirely to pointing out journalism deficiencies at The Enquirer, suggested he was "fired to placate advertisers." Bill Sloat, a former Cleveland Plain Dealer reporter who writes The Daily Bellwether blog, called McNair a "pain in the ass newsman, who could be a prickly pear and would poke his nose into uncomfortable places -- like the banking industry and homebuilders." ...
August 31, 200717 yr Enquirer's circulation up 3.4 percent BY CLIFF PEALE | CINCINNATI ENQUIRER August 31, 2007 CINCINNATI - The Enquirer increased its Monday-through-Friday paid circulation 3.4 percent to 202,220 copies during the year ended April 1, officials said Thursday. Sunday circulation fell 0.7 percent to 289,266. The annual reports came from the Audit Bureau of Circulations. In that organization's most recent ranking, The Enquirer ranked No. 3 in daily circulation growth nationally among the top 50 newspaper markets and No. 7 in Sunday circulation growth. ...
August 31, 200717 yr From what I've heard, I thought it's circulation was down? This is why we pulled some our advertising expenses from the paper to the web -on Cincinnati.com???
August 31, 200717 yr 2.1 million people in the metro yet only 202,220 subscribers. They can spin it anyway they like but that looks like a terrible percentage.
August 31, 200717 yr What they meant to say was that residents new to the metro area that were victims of our direct-mail campaign over the last 18 months have yet to cancel their subscription.
August 31, 200717 yr What they meant to say was that residents new to the metro area that were victims of our direct-mail campaign over the last 18 months have yet to cancel their subscription. :laugh:
September 7, 200717 yr Well the Enquirer ran arguably their best business writer out...now the Courier has picked him up... Newberry joins Courier staff September 7, 2007 | CINCINNATI BUSINESS COURIER CINCINNATI - Jon Newberry has joined the Business Courier as a staff reporter. He will focus on the legal system and manufacturing, and cover many local public and private companies. Newberry comes to the Courier from the Cincinnati Enquirer, where he had been a business reporter for the past 15 months. He had joined the Enquirer from the Cincinnati Post, where he'd been a business reporter for more than three years. ... Newberry can be reached at the Business Courier at (513) 337-9433 or at [email protected]
September 7, 200717 yr Top 200 Newspapers by Largest Reported Circulation 20. The Plain Dealer Plain Dealer Publishing Co. Cleveland, OH Sun 442,482 31. The Columbus Dispatch Dispatch Printing Company Columbus, OH Sun 343,616 41 Cincinnati Enquirer Gannett Company Inc. Cincinnati, OH Sun 290,500 77. Dayton Daily News Dayton Newspapers Inc. Dayton, OH Sun 166,066 78. Akron Beacon Journal Sound Publishing, Inc. Akron, OH Sun 164,902 81. The Blade Block Communications, Inc. Toledo, OH Sun 154,566 144. Repository Copley Press, Inc. Canton, OH Sun 81,788 145. Vindicator Vindicator Printing Company Youngstown, OH Sun 79,434 From: Audit Bureau of Circulation http://www.accessabc.com/products/top200.htm
September 7, 200717 yr In that list, notice that three of the top four papers appear to be locally owned
September 7, 200717 yr Metro Name Circulation Metro Pop % of metro getting the major daily Cleveland 442,482 2,114,155 20.9% Columbus 343,616 1,725,570 19.9% Cincinnati 290,500 2,104,218 13.8% Dayton 166,066 838,940 19.8% 2006 MSA pop
September 8, 200717 yr The %s in the MSAs all seem to culter in the 19% - 20% range, and Cicny is the one out of the range. I wonder if that 19-20 % range holds for other metro areas in the region, such as in Lex/Lou/Indy/Pbgh and Detroit.
September 8, 200717 yr I wonder if the other 6%-7% isn't currently made up by the Cincinnati Post and the Kentucky Post...plus, the Enquirer is also published under the banner The Kentucky Enquirer - any idea if its circulation is included?
September 8, 200717 yr In that list, notice that three of the top four papers appear to be locally owned Well, the PD is actually owned by Newhouse, the same company that owns Conde Nast. It appears that of that list, only two are locally owned -- The Vindicator and The Blade.
September 8, 200717 yr I wonder if the other 6%-7% isn't currently made up by the Cincinnati Post and the Kentucky Post...plus, the Enquirer is also published under the banner The Kentucky Enquirer - any idea if its circulation is included? That's exactly what I was thinking. Any clarification thomasbw?
September 9, 200717 yr it appears to be all of them included in that 290k, It can't be including the Cincinnati Post. It says it was looking at "% of metro getting the major daily"
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