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E.W. Scripps to Receive NAB Distinguished Service Award
1/31/2012
WASHINGTON: The E.W. Scripps Company will receive
the NAB Distinguished Service Award during the 2012 NAB Show. The award
recognizes members of the broadcast community who have made significant and lasting
contributions to the broadcasting industry. Previous award recipients include
Michael J. Fox, Mary Tyler Moore, President Ronald Reagan, Edward R. Murrow,
Bob Hope, Walter Cronkite, Oprah Winfrey and Charles Osgood, among others.
The award will be accepted by Scripps President
and CEO Rich Boehne at the opening keynote session on April 16 in Las Vegas.
The E.W. Scripps Company is a diverse,
134-year-old media enterprise with interests in television stations, newspapers
and local news and information Web sites.
"A media pioneer since the 1800s, the
Scripps Company is held in the industry's highest esteem," said NAB
President and CEO Gordon Smith. "In recognition of the company's
commitment to excellence, innovation and outstanding service to local communities,
we are proud to present Scripps with the Distinguished Service Award whose
recipients are among broadcasting's most respected leaders."
"Scripps is humbled to receive the most
prestigious and coveted honor the broadcasting industry can bestow," said
Boehne. "Only one other company in the storied history of the
Distinguished Service Award has had the privilege of joining the ranks of the
industry's greatest names. On behalf of the Scripps family and the thousands of
Scripps employees who constantly find innovative ways to make their communities
better places to live, I express our deepest appreciation to the NAB for this
remarkable recognition."
Scripps was founded in 1878 by Edward W. Scripps,
who borrowed $10,000 from his brothers to help launch America's first
information revolution. With the loan, the young entrepreneur set out to build
one of the first newspaper chains under common ownership and later founded
United Press International, a service that became a leading force in worldwide
journalism.
The company launched radio stations in the 1930s,
then some of the country's first local television stations in the 1940s. Two of
the company's first TV stations are still among its most successful: WEWS in
Cleveland, whose call letters were selected to match the founder's initials,
and WCPO in Cincinnati, named for its affiliation with The Cincinnati Post.
Over the years Scripps has branched out into
cable networks and new media ventures, but its roots remain focused on local
media. The company's portfolio of locally focused media properties includes: 19
TV stations (10 ABC affiliates, three NBC affiliates, five Azteca America
affiliates and one independent); daily and community newspapers in 13 markets,
and the Washington, D.C.-based Scripps Media Center, home of the Scripps Howard
News Service.
The NAB Show will be held April 14 - 19 in Las
Vegas.
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