Nine veteran Cincinnati sports journalists from print and broadcast media were chosen for the 2024 class of the Greater Cincinnati Journalism Hall of Fame.

The ceremony on Sept. 16 was held in conjunction with the 2024 Excellence In Journalism contest awards. Both programs are sponsored by the Greater Cincinnati Professional Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists (SPJ.)

Learn more about the inductees in the videos below!

  • A smiling man in a dark suit with a white shirt and striped tie, standing against a plain gray background.

    Kevin Barnett

    WKRC-TV Executive Sports Producer

    If you met Kevin Barnett as he was growing up in St. Bernard, you knew he would find a career in sports.

    A self-proclaimed statistics nerd, he devoured box scores of games and collected baseball cards to check out the numbers.

  • A middle-aged man with red hair wearing a black suit, white shirt, and dark gray polka-dot tie, posing against a plain gray background.

    Ken Broo

    WKRC-TV, WLWT-TV & WCPO-TV sports anchor/reporter

    Ken Broo has been up and down the dial of radio and television stations in Cincinnati and across the country for nearly 50 years. But, no matter where he landed, the lure of the Queen City always brought him back to the shores of the Ohio River.

  • A middle-aged man with dark hair, wearing a black suit and a light blue collared shirt, smiling slightly against a gray background.

    Paul Daugherty

    Cincinnati Post and The Cincinnati Enquirer sports columnist and author

    From the time he was sports editor of his high school newspaper in Bethesda, Maryland, Paul Daugherty knew he what he wanted to do with his life. He was a sports fan who loved to write, so he combined the two.

  • A middle-aged man wearing glasses and a dark sweater, standing against a plain light gray background.

    John Fay

    The Cincinnati Enquirer Cincinnati Reds beat writer (honored posthumously)

    For six decades, Fay’s byline appeared in The Cincinnati Enquirer, and he earned a reputation for his ability to cover anything well. “The curse of versatility,” one colleague called it.

  • Close-up portrait of an elderly man with white hair, light skin, wearing a dark checkered suit, light blue shirt, red patterned tie, and American flag lapel pin, against a plain gray background.

    Dennis Janson

    WKRC-TV & WCPO-TV sports anchor

    Denny Janson’s broadcasting career started humbly in 1965 when the Elder High School sophomore was hired to answer the WSAI-AM Radio request line. It was immediately clear this Price Hill native would quickly rise through the ranks.

  • Portrait of an elderly African American man with gray hair and a goatee, dressed in a dark suit, white shirt, and a red paisley tie, smiling against a plain gray background.

    Wayne Box Miller

    WLW Bengals Radio Network Pregame/Halftime/Postgame host, sports marketer, WDBZ Sports Director, ,and DEI Director at St. Xavier High School

    You might need a super-computer to keep track of everything Wayne Box Miller has done in radio and television, journalism, sports marketing and education.

  • A close-up photo of an elderly man wearing a dark blue suit, light blue shirt, and red polka-dot tie, with a friendly smile, short gray hair, and a neutral gray background.

    John Popovich

    WCPO-TV Sports Director

    The broadcasting bug bit John Popovich as a student at Struthers High School near Youngstown. He worked for the school’s radio station, WKTL (Key To Life), then followed his brothers and sisters to Ohio University in Athens.

    His ambition was to combine radio, television and sports into a career.

  • Headshot of a smiling middle-aged woman with blonde hair wearing a bright pink blazer and a white flower necklace, standing against a gray background.

    Betsy Ross

    Cincinnati’s first female sports reporter at WCPO plus work at WLWT-TV, WXIX-TV, ESPN & Game Day Communications Founder

    Some people might hesitate at volunteering for something new and untested, but not Betsy Ross.

    She’s set a high standard for women in both broadcasting and business.

  • Portrait of a smiling middle-aged man with gray hair, wearing a dark pinstripe suit, a light purple shirt, and a floral tie, set against a plain gray background.

    George Vogel

    WLWT-TV sports anchor/reporter

    When George Vogel graduated from Georgetown, Ohio, High School in 1975, he wasn’t sure what career he wanted to pursue.

    He enrolled at Southern State Community College for two years while driving a truck making freight deliveries for a Georgetown company