Cincinnati
While it is home to leading corporations across a wide swath of sectors, Cincinnati continues to battle social woes including high crime and racial tension, with the five-year anniversary of the city's race riots approaching in April. Newspaper readers in the greater Cincinnati-northern Kentuck...
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Published in | Mediaweek Vol. 16; no. 13; pp. 11 - 14 |
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Main Author | |
Format | Magazine Article Trade Publication Article |
Language | English |
Published |
New York
Adweek, LLC
27.03.2006
Emerald Expositions LLC |
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | While it is home to leading corporations across a wide swath of sectors, Cincinnati continues to battle social woes including high crime and racial tension, with the five-year anniversary of the city's race riots approaching in April. Newspaper readers in the greater Cincinnati-northern Kentucky region could witness the end of an era next year; speculation abounds that one of the city's two competing daily newspapers will be silenced when a longstanding joint operating agreement between the two expires Dec 31, 2007. In local television, the Cincinnati market ranks 34th in the US with 880,190 television households. Four of Cincinnati's six commercial broadcast television stations produce local morning news and late news. In local cable, Time Warner Cable, Adelphia and Insight Communications are the main service providers. Although it ranks 28th in terms of population, the Cincinnati radio market is the nation's 22nd-largest in revenue. Clear Channel owns the market's ratings and revenue leader, News/Talk outlet WLW-AM. |
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ISSN: | 1055-176X |