Dayton Daily News

WHIO reporter to be honored at Broadcaste­rs Hall

-

WHIO-TV reporter Jim Otte and the host of WHIO Reports is among those slated this year to be inducted into the Dayton Area Broadcaste­rs Hall of Fame.

The hall announced Tuesday its 2017 slate of inductees. This year, six broadcaste­rs will be inducted along with four broadcasti­ng “pioneers” and a Community Service Award honoree.

The 10 inductees will be honored at a ceremony at the Marriott at the University of Dayton on Sept. 21.

These honorees are:

Christophe­r Geisen

:A popular co-host of the No. 1 rated “Kerrigan & Christophe­r Morning Show” on WTUE ratio from (1988 to 1999). First introduced to broadcasti­ng in 1973 in Erlanger, Ky., he has continues working in radio, as well as volunteeri­ng to charity events.

Joe Smith:

Smith is the long-time host of “Clubhouse 22” on WKEF-TV from 19701979 and vice president of production from 1980 to 1986. Smith is working today on-air in Portland, Ore., the hall said.

John King:

With 30 years of radio broadcasti­ng experience, King served as regional president, senior vice president, general manager, operationa­l manager, program director and on-air talent at stations in Dayton and around the country. Today, he is the senior vice president/market manager at Alpha Media USA in Dayton.

Presently, anchor and reporter at WKEF Television, Natasha has a history in the broadcasti­ng industry dating back to 1990 in Jackson, Tenn. where she began her career.

Today, he is senior vice president of programmin­g for iHeartMedi­a/ Dayton, program director at WMMX and morning show co-host of the “Jeff, Gina and Dave Show.” He is also the host of the Time Warp Cafe weekdays at noon and host of the 80’s Show, which is broadcast on over 40 iHeartRadi­o stations across the country.

Natasha Williams: Jeff Stevens: James ( Jim) Otte:

Otte is the reporter and producer of the WHIO I-Team at WHIO-TV and the host of “WHIO Reports,” a weekly public affairs program. His tenure with the station dates back to 1988. He began his broadcasti­ng career on Ohio Public Radio in 1982.

And those named “pioneers” include:

He began his broadcasti­ng career in 1952, in his hometown of Centralia, IL. He rose to the position of news director and managed the station for nearly two years before getting back into news.

He joined the WHIO-TV news department as daytime assignment editor before he became news director. He worked as a contributi­ng reporter on-air and anchored the newscasts Saturday evenings. Dick worked at WHIO-TV from 1965 to 1993.

Dick Bieser: Ed Hamlyn:

Hamlyn was the former news director at WDTN Television. He was born in Hamilton in 1917. He began his broadcasti­ng career with stops in Connecticu­t, Pennsylvan­ia and Texas, before landing in Dayton.

Joe Rockhold:

Rockhold hosted one of the first live entertainm­ent television shows in the Dayton area on WHIO-TV. He created the popular character “Uncle Orrie,” entertaini­ng thousands of Miami Valley young people. In addition to his work as “Uncle Orrie,” Joe Rockhold hosted various public affairs programs on WHIO.

Jack Jacobson:

Jacobson created many popular characters, including “Nosey the Clown.” Both Jacobson and Rockhold made television history at a time in the early 1950s when television was just coming of age.

Every two years, the hall names someone who “has been a friend of the media, as well as a dedicated and innovative leader in the community.”

This year’s Community Service Award will be given to Judge Alice O. McCollum.

Judge McCollum is the first woman to serve on the Montgomery County Court of Common Pleas Probate Division, having been first elected in 2002 and re-elected in 2008. Prior to sitting on the bench in the Probate Division, she was the first and only woman elected to the Dayton Municipal Court bench.

McCollum served the Dayton Municipal Court for 24 years and has served on many community boards.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States