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The Cincinnati Enquirer

The Cincinnati Enquirer is a morning daily newspaper published by Gannett in Cincinnati, Ohio, United States.

Type

Daily newspaper

Beryl Love

1841 (1841)

  • 30,138 daily
  • 46,542 Sunday
(as of Q3 2022)[1][2]

First published in 1841, the Enquirer is the last remaining daily newspaper in Greater Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky, although the daily Journal-News competes with the Enquirer in the northern suburbs. The Enquirer has the highest circulation of any print publication in the Cincinnati metropolitan area. A daily local edition for Northern Kentucky is published as The Kentucky Enquirer.


The Enquirer won the 2018 Pulitzer Prize for local reporting for its project titled "Seven Days of Heroin".[3][4]


In addition to the Cincinnati Enquirer and Kentucky Enquirer, Gannett publishes a variety of print and electronic periodicals in the Cincinnati area, including 16 Community Press weekly newspapers, 10 Community Recorder weekly newspapers, and OurTown magazine. The Enquirer is available online at the cincinnati.com website.


In the 1864 presidential election, the newspaper opposed the reelection of Abraham Lincoln. On his second inauguration the paper wrote, "Mr. Lincoln commences today, a second term unfettered by constitutional restraint as if he were the Czar of Russia or the Sultan of Turkey."[5] From 1920 to 2012, the editorial board endorsed every Republican candidate for United States president. By contrast, the current editorial board claims to take a pragmatic editorial stance. According to then-editor Peter Bhatia, "It is made up of pragmatic, solution-driven members who, frankly, don't have much use for extreme ideologies from the right or the left. ... The board's mantra in our editorials has been about problem-solving and improving the quality of life for everyone in greater Cincinnati."[6] On September 24, 2016, the Enquirer endorsed Hillary Clinton for president,[7] its first endorsement of a Democrat for president since Woodrow Wilson in 1916.[6]


The Kentucky Enquirer consists of an additional section wrapped around the Cincinnati Enquirer and a remade Local section. The front page is remade from the Ohio edition, although it may contain similar elements.


Reader-submitted content is featured in six zoned editions of Your HomeTown Enquirer, a local news insert published twice-weekly on Thursdays and Saturdays in Hamilton, Butler, Warren, and Clermont counties.[8]


Since September 2015, the Enquirer and local Fox affiliate WXIX-TV have partnered on news gathering and have shared news coverage and video among the paper, broadcasts, and online media.[9] In 2016, the Enquirer launched a true crime podcast called Accused that reached the top of iTunes' podcasts chart.


Under then-editor Peter Bhatia, the Enquirer became the first newsroom in the nation to dedicate a reporter to covering the heroin epidemic full time.[10] That reporter, Terry DeMio, and reporter Dan Horn helped lead a staff of about 60 journalists to report the heroin project that won the newspaper its second Pulitzer Prize.[11] The award was the first the newsroom won for its reporting, but its second win overall. The first Pulitzer win was awarded to Jim Borgman for editorial cartoons in 1991.[12]

 – crime author

Amber Hunt

Current employees:


Former employees and contributors:


Former Enquirer owners and publishers:

Nicholas Bender. "Banana Report." Columbia Journalism Review. May/June 2001.

Graydon Decamp. The Grand Old Lady of Vine Street. Cincinnati: The Cincinnati Enquirer, 1991. (Official history).

Douglas Frantz. "After Apology, Issues Raised In Chiquita Articles Remain." The New York Times. July 17, 1998. p. A1, A14

Douglas Frantz. "Mysteries Behind Story's Publication." The New York Times. July 17, 1998. p. A14.

Lew Moores. "Media, Myself & I". . January 7, 2004.

Cincinnati CityBeat

Lew Moores. "The Day the Music Critic Died." Cincinnati CityBeat. February 11, 2004.

Randolph Reddick. The Old Lady of Vine Street. Ph.D. dissertation, 1991. (A study of the four years of employee ownership).

Ohio University

Nicholas Stein. "Banana Peel." Columbia Journalism Review. September/October 1998.

(October 1960). "Epilogue For a Lady: The Passing of the Times-Star" (PDF). Bulletin of the Historical and Philosophical Society of Ohio. 18 (4): 260–277. OCLC 52305709.

Taft, Robert Jr.

Cincinnati.Com (official site)

Cincinnati.Com (official mobile site)

(official iPhone site)

NKY.com (official site)

Enquirer.com (official site)

Cinweekly.com (official site)

Gannett Co. Inc. official site

Gannett Co. Inc. profile of The Cincinnati Enquirer

Newsdex (an index to historical newspapers in the Cincinnati area), http://newsdex.cincinnatilibrary.org/uhtbin/cgisirsi/x/0/0/49.

Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County