Media in Cincinnati


The Cincinnati metropolitan area is a large, three-state media market centered on Cincinnati, Ohio, slightly overlapping the Dayton media market to the north. The Cincinnati market is served by one daily newspaper, The Cincinnati Enquirer, and a variety of weekly and monthly print publications. The area is home to 12 television stations and numerous radio stations. The E. W. Scripps Company was founded in Cincinnati as a newspaper chain and remains there as a national television and radio broadcaster. The term "soap opera" originally referred to Cincinnati-based Procter & Gamble, which created some of the first programs in this genre.

Newspapers and magazines

The Cincinnati Enquirer, a morning daily published by Gannett Company, is the sole remaining daily newspaper in Cincinnati. Its Northern Kentucky edition is called The Kentucky Enquirer. Cox Media Group's daily Journal-News competes with the Enquirer in Cincinnati's northern suburbs in Butler and Warren counties in Ohio. Until 2008, the Enquirers main competitor in the market was The Cincinnati Post, the flagship newspaper of the E. W. Scripps Company, known as The Kentucky Post in Northern Kentucky.
Southwest Ohio has a long history of weekly community newspapers, beginning with The Western Star of Lebanon in 1807. Currently, Gannett publishes 16 titles in the Greater Cincinnati area as The Community Press and 10 titles in Northern Kentucky as The Community Recorder, while Cox publishes Today's Pulse in Butler and Warren counties.
Cincinnati's main alternative newspaper is Cincinnati CityBeat, a newsweekly published by SouthComm. Other specialty weekly newspapers include The Cincinnati Herald, published by Sesh Communications for the city's African-American community; The American Israelite, serving the Jewish community; the Cincinnati Business Courier, published by American City Business Journals; the Cincinnati edition of La Jornada Latina, serving the region's Hispanic community; and the Messenger, published weekly or biweekly by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Covington.
College student newspapers include The News Record, published thrice-weekly at the University of Cincinnati; the Xavier Newswire, published weekly at Xavier University; The Northerner, published weekly at Northern Kentucky University; and The Miami Student, published biweekly at Miami University.
Cincinnati is a monthly lifestyle magazine published by Emmis Communications. The Catholic Telegraph is a monthly newspaper published by the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Cincinnati. Cincy and NKY are business-oriented magazines for Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky, respectively.

Television

The 15-county Cincinnati metropolitan area is the 36th largest local television market in the United States, with an estimated 868,900 television-viewing households and cable penetration at 56.5%.
The Cincinnati market is served by five full-power commercial television stations, four of which have full-time local news operations:
Cincinnati-based Block Broadcasting owns one low-power station with numerous digital subchannels:
The non-profit organization Public Media Connect owns PBS member stations WCET channel 48 and WPTO channel 14. These stations' digital subchannels carry Create, World, and The Ohio Channel programming. WPTO also carries a simulcast of sister station WPTD channel 16 in Dayton. Kentucky Educational Television, a state network, owns WCVN-TV channel 54 in Covington, as well as low-power translators W20CT-D in Augusta and W23DM-D in Falmouth.
WKOI-TV channel 43 is a full-power Christian station owned and operated by the Trinity Broadcasting Network from Milford Township, Butler County, Ohio. WDYC-LD channel 36 is a low-power Christian station affiliated with Daystar.
Cable television is provided by Time Warner Cable in Ohio and Northern Kentucky and by Comcast Cable in Southeast Indiana. Cincinnati Bell provides IPTV service under the FiOptics brand. Local cable-only channels include Fox Sports Ohio and Spectrum Sports. Waycross Community Media and the Intercommunity Cable Regulatory Commission operate public, educational, and government access channels on cable systems in Cincinnati.
Dayton television stations are also available over the air and on cable systems in Cincinnati's northern suburbs.

Radio

The 13-county Cincinnati metropolitan area is the 30th largest radio market in the United States, with an estimated 1.8 million listeners aged 12 and above. Of the market's 22 metered radio stations, iHeartMedia owns seven, Cumulus Media owns five, Hubbard Broadcasting owns four, Radio One owns three, and Cincinnati Public Radio owns two.
WLW and WCKY are clear-channel stations that broadcast at 50,000 watts, covering most of the eastern United States at night.
Call signFrequencyFormatOwnerDescription
WKRCTalkiHeartMedia55KRC, "The Talk Station"
WLWNews/TalkiHeartMedia"The Big One," "The Nation's Station," and "Home of the Reds"
Serves as flagship station for the Cincinnati Reds Radio Network
WNOPReligiousSacred Heart Radio, Inc"Greater Cincinnati's Catholic Radio Station"
WPFBReligiousSacred Heart Radio, Inc"Sacred Heart Radio"
WGRIGospel"Inspiration 1050"
WCVXReligious"Christian Talk 1160"
WDBZGospelRadio One"Cincinnati's Inspiration Station"
WCVGGospelGreat Lakes Radio"Cincinnati's Voice of Gospel"
WSAISportsiHeartMedia"Fox Sports 1360"
WMOHTalkVernon R. Baldwin, Inc."The Ticket"
WDJOOldiesAlchemy Broadcasting"Cincinnati's Rock & Roll Oldies Station"
WCKYSportsiHeartMedia"Cincinnati's ESPN 1530"
WCNWReligiousVernon R. Baldwin, Inc."Without Christ, Nothing Works"
WAIFVariety"What Radio Was Meant To Be"
† Shares frequency with WJVS, operating all other times
WJVS88.3 FM‡Campus radio"Joint Vocational School"
‡ Shares frequency with WAIF, operating Mon-Fri 8:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. during the school year.
WMWXAlbum Oriented RockSpryex Communications, Inc."The New Breed Of Rock"
WKCXAlbum Oriented RockSpryex Communications, Inc."The New Breed Of Rock"
WMKVNostalgiaLifeSphere
WYHH89.7 FMChristianBible Broadcasting Network, Inc.
WORIChristian ContemporaryAir 1
WGUCClassicalCincinnati Public Radio"Cincinnati's Classical Public Radio"
WVXUNPR; Public RadioCincinnati Public RadioMostly news and informational programming, some entertainment and music
WOFXClassic RockCumulus"The FOX"
WAKWChristian ContemporaryPillar of Fire"Star 93.3"
WNNFCountryCumulus"Nash FM"
WREWHot ACHubbard Radio"Mix 94.9"
WVQC-LP95.7 FMVariety, community, non-profitMedia Bridges"Radio Free Cincinnati"
WFTKActive rockCumulus Media Partners"96 Rock" "Cincinnati's Pure Rock" plays pure rock from the grandfathered classics like Ozzy Osbourne, Metallica and AC/DC to the newer and harder rock like A Perfect Circle, Seether and Sevendust.
WYGYCountryHubbard Radio"The Wolf"
WOXYRegional MexicanTSJ Media"La Mega"
WRRMAdult ContemporaryCumulus Media Partners"Warm 98"
WHKOCountryCox Radio"K99.1"
WOSLUrban ACRadio One"100.3 R&B"
WIZFHip-HopRadio One"The Wiz"
WKRQTop-40Hubbard Radio"Q 102"
WEBNRockiHeartMedia"The lunatic fringe of American FM."
WGRRClassic HitsCumulus Media Partners"Cincinnati's Greatest Hits"
WNLTChristian ContemporaryVernon R. Baldwin, Inc.K-Love
WUBECountryHubbard Radio"B 105"
WNKNClassic CountryGrant County Broadcasters"Classic Country and Country Legends"
WNKRClassic CountryGrant County Broadcasters"Classic Country 106.7"
WKFSTop-40iHeartMedia"KISS 107 FM"

Recent station reorganization

Since late 2006, a number of trades and format changes have caused some confusion in the Cincinnati radio market.

2006